Prince’s Trust programme a big hit!

The Prince’s Trust is the UK’s leading youth charity, who provide young people practical and financial support, developing key work place skills such as confidence and motivation.

Prince’s Trust work with 14-30 year olds who have struggled at school, have been in care, are long-term unemployed or have been in trouble with the law.

In 1997 HRH, the Prince of Wales, launched the Football Initiative at Old Trafford. Since this time more than 17,000 young people have benefited from the support of over 65 professional football clubs through a long-term partnership supported by the Premier League and Professional Footballers’ Association.

Bristol City Community Trust’s community coach Sam Downes has been working with a group of ten youngsters from the Prince’s Trust since December 2012.

The Community Trust has provided the group with a wide range of support, including use of the Ashton Gate facilities, educational learning and assistance with community projects, as well as stadium tours to help engage and motivate the disadvantaged young people.

During December the group had an extra special session where were able to quiz Joe Bryan and Bobby Reid about life as a professional footballer, especially as the pair have both come through the club’s own Academy set-up.

Rosie Webb, Prince’s Trust Team Leader, said: “The sessions with Bristol City Community Trust have been great fun, really informative and the community coach works really well with the team.”

The Community Trust is looking forward to building on this partnership further in the 2013/14 season and developing more young people.

Street Games Doorstep Sports Club Survey

Bristol City Community Trust have teamed up with Access Sport and Street Games to run a very successful doorstep sports club. Based at City Academy on a Friday evening young people aged 14-18 years get the chance to come along and play football in a fun and safe environment for only £1. Since the start in August we have had on average 40 plus children at every session.

If you have attended a session then please click here to fill out a short survey.

For more information please contact the Trust office on 0117 963 0636.

The Bristol City Study Centre

The Bristol City Study Centre has really made a difference to the lives of thousands of young people over the last 10 years. Jodie Gardiner is just one of its success stories.

Jodie first came to the Study Centre when she was 15. She was considering a career as a teacher, but was low on confidence, and wasn’t sure she had what it took:-

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“I went to Hartcliffe school, which didn’t have a great reputation. People kept telling me it was a bad school, and the thought of doing what I needed to do to get into University was quite frightening. I wasn’t sure I could get the GCSE’s and A levels that I needed.

But everyone at the Study Centre was really positive. They took a real interest in me and got me involved in what they were doing right from the start. They never questioned my ability and kept telling me I was going to be an excellent teacher. That really rubbed off on me. My parents and teachers were very supportive too, but it was the staff at the Study Centre who really made the difference.

They had such enthusiasm, passion and respect for each other and the students. And they didn’t just get me making the tea which can happen on work experience. They got me fully involved in the classroom, and by the end of the week I thought, ‘I want to be teachers like them’”

For the next couple of years, Jodie carried on helping out at the Study Centre, helping deliver fun matchday packages for young people and their families. She went from strength to strength at school , and soon got the exam results she needed. By now she had decided she really wanted to be a teacher:

“Thanks to the staff at the Study Centre I had gained the confidence I needed, and I knew that I could do it”.

She applied to train as a teacher at Bath Spa University and is currently more than half way through her course. And she’s really clear who she has to thank.

“My time at the Study Centre was the best thing I have ever done. I can’t imagine not having been there – it was like it was made for me. All the staff there really made me believe in myself. They have made me the person that I am and the teacher I hope to become”.

Billy and Sam Downes

When you see the look in the eyes of Billy and Sam Downes as they pass the ball to each other across the hallowed Ashton Gate pitch, it’s clear to see what the twin brothers are focusing all their attention on these days – football.

For former Scotland international Tommy Hutchison, who has headed up Bristol City’s Football In The Community project for a decade, the success of the siblings marks a personal achievement every bit
as important as his 17 caps for Scotland, and his matches in the 1974 World Cup.

The twins come from a disadvantaged Bristol estate, and throughout their childhood, they appeared as if they could go off the rails.

There was a time when they paid little attention to their teachers or parents when it came to matters of discipline, but under Tommy’s wing, the lads have taken their first steps to becoming qualified football coaches. The former Coventry City, Blackpool and Swansea City midfielder first met the Downes twins when they were nine.

“Billy and Sam had plenty to say for themselves. They were cheeky and streetwise,” he says. “They are from a very deprived area of Knowle West. When I first went out there, it was to work with the police on a footballing project, to get up to 40 kids off the streets and into sport. But on my first visit to the local playing field on the estate we had to pick up 650 druggies’ needles, just to
make the pitch safe to play on.

“Some of the youngsters continued making a nuisance of themselves, but the vast majority of them were transformed when they had football to focus on.

CASE STUDY
“Billy and Sam were particularly decent footballers. The twins stopped causing trouble because they became engrossed in their football. They knew that if they messed about, they wouldn’t play.”

Hutchison lost touch with the Downes brothers in their early teens after the scheme he was running at the time had its funding scrapped by the Government.

He said: “These were two kids who were back on course to become a problem in the area.

“They went to school when they felt like it and were causing a lot of bother when they turned up. It was a real shame that the project that was doing them some good, was removed from under them because of a lack of funding.

“After that I’d only occasionally see them around, and I often wondered how they were getting on. They left Hartcliffe School as early as they could, and had been unemployed ever since.”

But then the twins approached Hutchison to ask if they could work alongside him again. The impact was immediate.

“I said to them, ‘You can come back but if you cause problems you are finished’,” Tommy recalls.

“They were two of the worst boys in Bristol at the time, but they have been as good as gold with me – maybe because they know what I’m like.

“A couple of times they have slipped back into lazy mode but the one thing that has impressed me is that they are trying.

“I was waiting for them to crack, but they haven’t. They have been very good. They know better than to be nothing other than polite.” Now Billy and Sam have joined Hutchison in spreading the word about football at schools in Bristol and the role it can play in combating crime and social deprivation. Sam said: “We both wanted to work in football, so we knew that this was our big chance to make a real go of it.”

But Billy says coaching a pitch full of youngsters that can be as naughty and cheeky as they once were is a daunting task.

“I think we were both a bit nervous about coaching the lads at first,” he said. “But you do get into it. The youngsters listen, because they know we’ve got something that we can teach them now.”

Tommy takes great pride in how the Downes twins have turned their lives around.

“When the penny drops, like it did with Sam and Billy, that’s when I get my kicks,” he says.

“Football in the Community is all about trying to get these kids off the streets. We use football to educate these youngsters, which is different to teaching them football.

“Kids can blame the area they are from, their parents or their teachers. At the end of the day they have to look at themselves.

“You can either go the right way or the wrong way. Billy and Sam have shown it can be done.”