The Confederation of African Football (CAF) has introduced a school football competition to be played across the African terrain.
According to CAF, the Pan-African Schools Football Championship will be an intercontinental schools soccer tournament for both boys and girls focusing on grassroots growth and development to shape future leaders.
CAF President, Dr. Patrice Motsepe believes football has the power to change the narrative in the continent with a bottom-up approach.
“The best investment we can make to ensure that African football is amongst the best in the world and self-sustaining is to invest in schools and youth football development infrastructure for boys and girls. This is one of my key focus areas as President of CAF,” said Motsepe.
Taking up this credo, the Motsepe Foundation, a family foundation of the African business tycoon and philanthropist Dr Motsepe, has contributed an amount of $10 million to support the Pan-African Schools Football Championship initiative.
This past week a meeting of heightened importance was held which included notable key leaders and ministers from the West African Football Union (WAFU/ UOFA), representing the seven countries of the region (Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, Niger, Nigeria and Togo) wherein CAF received their significant endorsement of the Schools Football Championship program.
CAF believes football is an incredible catalyst for change. Not only does the beautiful game unite the world, it can educate, inspire and mobilize our youth to overcome their greatest challenges and become agents of change in their communities.
As an agent of change in the continent, CAF believes that schools are a vehicle for integration into African Society. CAF General Secretary Véron Mosengo-Omba said, “As our schools prepare our future leaders, a continental tournament will help instil football values like respect, discipline, teamwork and fair play into their hearts and minds.”
The competition is scheduled to commence in March 2022 and it will start with a bidding process for African countries to host the final phase of the continental tournament.
The tournament will be divided into three levels: It will start with the National School Football Championship to be held in March and August 2022. In this, each CAF Member Association will organize a national competition with its schools football teams.
It will continue with a Zonal Championship organized by each CAF zone where winners from national tournaments will compete between September and December2022.
It will end with the third stage; the Pan-African Interschool Championship finals where finalists of the zonal championship will meet: both boys and girls.
Details of this final stage will be around March/July 2023.
CAF hopes to generate enthusiasm and emulation among schools across the continent.
Mosengo-Omba added: “Much like the TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations, we want to generate an excitement throughout the continent and become a part of something truly momentous. We will host a bidding process and determine the host country like we do in these tournaments. We want it to be something to aspire to and be proud of.”