NOCK rolls out Elite Youth camps with training for coaches

Milton Nyakundi
January 12, 2023 ·3 min read ·74 views
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The National Olympic Committee of Kenya has concluded an Elite National Youth Coaches training that precedes the ambitious Elite Youth Development Program. The program targets athletes aged between 12 – 18 years that starts with a camp on 9 – 18 January at Merishaw School, Isinya.

The training which was officially opened by NOCK Deputy Treasurer John Ogolla has enlisted 30 coaches (20 male, 10 female) nominated through various federations. It focuses on equipping coaches with knowledge on how to better handle, train and manage budding athletes.

This is in preparation for various Youth Games scheduled for 2023 – the Zone V Africa Youth Games in March (Ethiopia), Africa Youth Games in April (Congo, Brazzaville) and Commonwealth Youth Games in August (Trinidad and Tobago).

NOCK 2022-2024 Strategic Direction envisions deliberate efforts towards youth development as part of  the road to the Maiden Olympics to be held in Africa – the Dakar 2026 Youth Olympic Games.

The training is a multi-commissioned program with the Elite Development program, working closely with Youth Commission, NOCK Institute and Medical Commission.

Speaking during the training, Elite Development Commission Chairman Benjamin Musa emphasized on the importance of providing guidance and technical support to the coaches handling the youth teams.

“As a Commission, we’ve planned appropriate training sessions and loads for the respective age group. The short-term plan is for the Camp while the long term is the 2023 busy calendar,” he said.

“We want to align with the Coaches training plans and ensure our expertise in Strength and Conditioning, nutrition and science is at their disposal.”

Benjamin, also explained the Youth Camp was curated specially to ensure junior athletes smooth transition into Senior Elite athletes.

“We lose many athletes to doping, low self-esteem and pressure to perform. We’re teaching the coaches on bringing athletes close and  working closely with them without compromising growth. Not with the ‘winning at all cost’ mentality.”

Regina Gachora, President Kenya Junior Golf and a member of the Elite Performance Commission spoke on ‘Keeping Elite Teenage Girls interested in Sports’.

“We were all teenagers at some point, this is a special age-group,” he said.

“As Coaches, we are parents, role models and advisors. Let’s support our girls who are in the Youth Camp as they go through Puberty. Let’s encourage them and support their body transformation to ensure excellent performance.”

The last session saw strength and conditioning coach, Geoffrey Kimani talk about the guidelines of physical activity in regards to young athletes. Kimani reiterated on the importance of getting the building blocks and fundamentals of different sports by our coaches rather than focusing on the “train to win” mentality.

 With this knowledge, the coaches are expected to smoothly run the 10-day Youth Camp.

NOCK will officially launch the Camp on Wednesday, 11 January 2022 with the Ministry of Sports expected to grace the occasion.

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About the Author

Milton Nyakundi

Milton Nyakundi Oriku is a veteran multimedia journalist with over 20 years’ experience across broadcast, digital, and print media. He is the founder and Managing Editor of Kurunzi News and serves as its Senior International Correspondent based in the United States. He previously worked at the Kenya Broadcasting Corporation (KBC), rising to Assistant News Editor, and later served as Copy Editor at Mediamax Network. His career includes freelance commentary for major outlets such as KTN, and consultancy roles with Football Kenya Federation, StarTimes Kenya, and UAP‑Old Mutual. He is known for incisive political and sports reporting and evidence‑driven journalism.

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