Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

City FC Tigers “kick it” at a DC United Game

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

On May 15, 2010, the City FC Tigers (U11 coed) attended DC United’s Kicks for Kids program to see the DC United v Colorado Rapids match.  The kids had a great time and bonded off the field over a DC United game.  This unique experience also provided the players with a venue to learn from watching soccer pros and observe teamwork at play on the field.    The players on the City FC Tigers team attend schools across the District, including E.L. Haynes, Shepherd, St. Anne’s, Janney, Blessed Sacrament and West Elementary.  Without the generosity of Tom Schings and everyone at Sherwin Williams Co., the City FC Tigers would not have been able to attend.    Powered solely by volunteers and funded by generous donations, experiences like this offer City FC youth another perspective that motivate them to excel both on and off the field.

Discount enrollment at Sport & Health Clubs

Friday, January 30th, 2009

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) is pleased to announce a new partnership with Sport & Health Clubs for a corporate account, enabling our participants (City F.C. and DC Stoddert players, coaches, teachers, volunteers and their families) to receive discounted enrollment at Sport & Health clubs.

City F.C. / DC Stoddert participants and families are now eligible for dicounted memberships at Sport & Health Clubs.

City F.C. / DC Stoddert participants and families are now eligible for discounted memberships at Sport & Health Clubs.

This is an excellent and inexpensive way for City F.C. athletes to workout and receive FREE weight-training support from our coaches at group workout sessions. Moreover, there is no better way to get in shape than to workout with a group, and with this discounted rate, it has never been easier to do so.

For one person to enroll at the club’s Northwest branch on Brandywine Street near Wilson High School, it is $45/month; for couples, it is $65/month ($32.50 each); for families it is just $76/month (i.e., $19 each for family of four).

A complete list of Sport & Health’s branches is available HERE, and while City F.C. mostly attends the Northwest branch, various discounted terms are available for just about all of Sport & Health’s clubs. For more information, or to enroll, please contact the Northwest branch’s Brendon Hill at (202) 244-6090 or (202) 280-6219.

“To put this in perspective, my last gym membership at another club, using my employer’s corporate account, was more than $80/month for just myself,” says City F.C. director and coach Dan Driscoll.

Again, City F.C.’s coaching staff currently offers FREE weight-training support at the gym twice each week (currently Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6:15 pm at the Northwest branch near Wilson High School and Tenleytown metro). City F.C.’s program includes a 7-day workout manual. At the end of the school year, this program is coupled with City F.C.’s off-season training program.

More group training sessions with City F.C. coaches on hand will be added as demand rises.

Again, to enroll, please call Brendon Hill — (202) 244-6090 or (202) 280-6219 — and see that you are put under the new City F.C. account.

For more information about the City F.C. partnership with Sport & Health clubs, please contact Dan Driscoll (202-277-8513 // dbdriscoll@gmail.com).

City Football Club (“City F.C.”), a program of DC Stoddert Soccer, was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a curriculum combining excellent soccer coaching and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

Senior Showcase set for Saturday, Jan. 10

Monday, January 5th, 2009

City Football Club is pleased to announce the first annual D.C. Senior Showcase!

City F.C. is pleased to host the first annual D.C. Senior Showcase match for District high school soccer players.

City F.C. is pleased to host the first annual D.C. Senior Showcase match for District high school soccer players.

The first-ever D.C. showcase of the top District high school boys soccer talents is set for Saturday, January 10th, making the George Washington University’s soccer field the place to be from 1-3 p.m. EST.

More than 30 of Washington, D.C.’s best high school soccer players will square off in an all-star match pitting the District public schools’ best players against some of the Washington-metro region’s top private and suburban public school players.

With most of these players still uncommitted to colleges, the D.C. Senior Showcase is the best chance for area college coaches to see some of the Washington area’s most promising undiscovered talents in action before the 2009 college soccer season rolls around.

The George Washington University soccer field is located at the GW-Mt. Vernon Athletic Complex at 2100 Foxhall Road, NW in Washington, D.C. Directions to the facility are available at: http://gwsports.cstv.com/student-ath-ctr/gewa-vernon-facility-directions.html

For more information about the D.C. Senior Showcase, please contact Dan Driscoll (202-277-8513 // dbdriscoll@gmail.com) or Roy Kelly (202-277-0612 // roynessk@comcast.net).

City Football Club (“City F.C.”), a program of DC Stoddert Soccer, was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a curriculum combining excellent soccer coaching and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

D.C. United helps City F.C. buy pro-level gear

Monday, December 15th, 2008

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) is the fortunate recipient of more than a dozen Major League Soccer match balls, goalkeeping gear, 50 pairs of soccer socks, and more soccer equipment from D.C. United.

City F.C. and other students at the School Without Walls attended the MLS Cup at RFK Stadium in 2007.

City F.C. and other students at the School Without Walls attended the MLS Cup at RFK Stadium in 2007.

D.C. United’s equipment manager David Brauzer arranged for the program to purchase the heavily-discounted equipment ahead of D.C. United’s annual “Holiday Equipment Sale,” with all proceeds from City F.C.’s purchase going to benefit D.C. United’s charitable arm, United for D.C. – the same beneficiary of the funds raised by the Holiday Equipment Sale.

“Dave Brauzer and United for D.C.’s Sara Peterson have consistently been great friends of our program,” says City F.C. Executive Director Dan Driscoll. “They have helped us procure the best equipment for our kids at significant discounts, and with the proceeds going to United for D.C. programs like Kicks for Kids, we are happy to support initiatives that are directly benefiting local outreach efforts in like City F.C.”

Kicks for Kids has provided City F.C. with free tickets to D.C. United professional matches, as well as the 2007 MLS Cup, Major League Soccer’s championship game, which was played at RFK Stadium, the home of D.C. United.

Brauzer took time out of his schedule to set aside the equipment for City F.C. in advance of the team’s holiday sale, ensuring that Driscoll and fellow City F.C. co-founder Roy would be able to provide their expanding program with the best equipment on the market. They were also able to purchase black uniform shorts for the School Without Walls, where Driscoll and Kelly coach the boys’ varsity team.

““DCU has consistently been a good friend of our young program,” says Kelly, a Howard Law student who has coached City F.C. since founding with Driscoll in 2007. “This most-recent gesture, like all of the others, will definitely help our players reach their performance goals. Our kids will be playing with same balls as the professionals, which boosts their self-esteem and encourages them focus and take the sport seriously.”

Driscoll agrees.

“Time and time again, when we seek the support of D.C. United, the club and its wonderful staff have been more than happy to help our kids,” he adds. “There are very few professional sports franchises in the world that take such an interest in their communities as D.C. United does. When our kids and volunteers put on a D.C. United shirt or cheer for the team at a game, there’s an extra level of pride knowing that we are supporting a club that supports our program and our city as well.”

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

Maret’s Brody counsels City’s college applicants

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

On Saturday, Dec. 6, the 11th and 12th graders of City Football Club (“City F.C.”) were the privileged recipients of a special college application workshop conducted at the Maret Schoolat the Maret School in Washington by Maret’s college guidance counselor, Shelley Brody.

Ms. Brody chats with City F.C. senior Amit Singh about his college applications and undergraduate goals.

The Maret School's college counselor Shelley Brody (right) chats with City F.C. senior Amit Singh (left) about his college applications and undergraduate goals.

With City F.C.’s attendees facing a variety of challenges in the college application process – from applying for admission by U.S. colleges and seeking financial aid to navigating the obstacles of applying as a foreign student to an American college – Ms. Brody’s offer to help was a welcome gift.

Ms. Brody met with each student-athlete one-on-one to discuss their academic performance, thoughts on college, their passion for soccer, and different interests they would like to pursue. After assessing each student’s academic strengths and weaknesses, Ms. Brody offered insights into different universities that may fit well with their interests and advised City F.C.’s students on ways to continue to improve their academic performance.

She also notified them of special academic opportunities, such as the ethnic-specific scholarships of which the students would not have otherwise been aware.

City F.C.’s  students found their meetings with Ms. Brody both helpful and motivational.  Although the college application process can be intimidating and stressful for some, these students felt ready to take on these challenges after their sessions with Ms. Brody.

“It was definitely helpful,” says Mrinal Widge, a City F.C. junior who attends Wilson HS. “Ms. Brody asked me about my interests and talked with me about schools I should look at. I left with a list of colleges that she said I should be interested in.”

Widge’s teammate, Amit Singh — a City F.C. captain and senior at School Without Walls — was able to discuss the different colleges and universities in which he was interested. Reviewing his college application essay with Ms.Brody, Amit learned that his essay was a great start, but that he needed to shorten its length in order to capture the attention of college admissions readers.

City F.C. juniors Mrinal Widge and Alem Woretaw prepare for their conversations with Maret School college counselor Shelley Brody.

City F.C. juniors Mrinal Widge (right) and Alem Woretaw (left) prepare for their conversations with Ms. Brody.

“Ms. Brody’s offer to help our kids was extremely generous, and our attendees all said that the feedback they received was both honest and helpful,” says City F.C. co-founder and Executive Director Dan Driscoll. “The college application process is extremely confusing, and City F.C. is committed to ensuring that the likes of Ms. Brody are there to help unlock its mysteries.”

The workshop was conceived and organized by City F.C.’s Academic Program Directors, Terrill Keiner – a graduate of Maret and also the University of Southern California – and Rena Pacheco-Theard.

“Terrill and Rena are two of the most talented and put-together individuals I know,” adds Driscoll. “Our kids owe them a great thanks for setting up opportunities like the workshop at Maret. Their efforts are critical to City F.C.’s success as a provider of programs intended to support our students’ successes in higher education and beyond.”

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

City F.C. offering free SAT tutoring

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

It’s no secret that the SAT is a test that can be ‘learned’ – familiarity with the test and regular practice of the skills it requires being crucial to success – and City Football Club (“City F.C.”) is committed to ensuring that its players get every opportunity to score well on the critical college admissions test.

City F.C. player Kemda "Eto'o" Gilbert Boli works on his homework while unofficial mascot Mason LeChat tutors him

City F.C.'s Kemda "Eto'o" Gilbert Boli works on his homework while unofficial mascot Mason LeChat tutors him

“When I had to take the SAT, I discovered that diligent studying and practice habits could really boost one’s score,” recalls City F.C. co-founder and coach Dan Driscoll. “The test prep books and courses helped a good bit, but I also discovered some tricks of my own that I think really gave me an edge.”

Now, Driscoll is teaming up with City F.C.’s volunteer coordinator, Dylan Butler, to provide City F.C.’s students with free SAT tutoring in advance of the January 2009 test date. The pair are committed to the idea that the rising costs of SAT prep courses should not keep deserving kids from the opportunity to earn top marks.

“Dylan is going to teach the kids the math sections, and I’m going to work with them on the verbal and writing components,” says Driscoll, who now earns his living in journalism. “These strategies are really simple and, if a kid cares enough to put in the time, they really work.”

Butler and Driscoll will each work with City F.C.’s students once a week starting Dec. 13. Driscoll will cover the verbal and writing portions of the test on Wednesdays after school, while Butler will teach the math sections on Sundays at 2 p.m.

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

For more information, visit CityFC.org or contact the club directly by emailing CityFCDC@gmail.org.

City F.C. kicks off winter training programs

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

As the Fall 2008 soccer season comes to a close, City Football Club (“City F.C.”) is revving up for an exciting winter of academic and athletic opportunities for D.C. high school students.

Last year's "open gym" futsal gatherings at Turkey Thicket laid the foundation for the boys travel soccer team.

Last year's "open gym" futsal at Turkey Thicket laid the foundation for City F.C.'s travel soccer team, and this year a girls-only session will be offered though DPR to form a girls' team in the spring.

“We’re kicking off several important programs this winter, from free SAT tutoring and college application support to our annual indoor futsal program and a revival of our weight-training program,” says City F.C. co-founder and coach Dan Driscoll. “We just marked our one-year anniversary this November, and I’m thrilled to see the progress of our program and the kids participating in it.”

With a new City F.C. girls soccer team set to launch in the spring for D.C. high school players, Driscoll and fellow co-founder and coach Roy Kelly have worked with District Parks and Recreation (DPR) to guarantee a girls-only “open gym” futsal session sponsored by DPR at Sherwood Recreation Center, which is set to begin Dec. 20. The girls futsal program will mirror City F.C.’s boys program, and was made possible by DPR Soccer Coordinator Abudullah Tunis and the staff at Sherwood Recreation Center.

“Sherwood is a good location near a metro station, and we are very pleased to be able to work with DPR to provide these kinds of playing opportunities to kids in Our City,” Driscoll notes. “Roy Kelly deserves so much credit for setting this up. He and Tunis have been really committed to building futsal in D.C. and ensuring that these open-gym opportunities exist for kids. City F.C. is committed to providing free soccer opportunities to District youth, and Roy and Tunis and everyone at DPR have gone the extra mile to make this possible.”

The winter futsal “open gym” sessions are open to District high school students. A two-hour slot for high school-age girls begins Dec. 20 and will run through March 2009 on Saturdays – 10 a.m. to noon – at Sherwood Recreation Center.

Beginning Dec. 13, a three-hour session for high school-age boys will also take place on Saturdays from 1 to 4 p.m. at Turkey Thicket Recreation Center, site of the original futsal clinics. Kelly and Driscoll are set to return and have recruited several qualified volunteers with strong playing and coaching backgrounds to help out.

In addition, members of City F.C. are meeting with Driscoll twice a week for informal weightlifting sessions at Sport & Health Clubs’ Northwest branch. Driscoll admits that he needs the workouts as much as the kids do.

“Weight training is a critical part of developing teens’ physical structures, and we really believe in informing them of proper training and dietary habits to ensure they stay fit and healthy.”

Halk-jokingly, Driscoll adds: “Of course, I need to hit the gym myself, so this forces me to get over there and work out!”

City F.C. provides players with a workout manual, and they learn how to conduct their workouts independently, providing them with insights that the coaches hope will prove useful to the players after they graduate high school and begin their college careers.

“We’re all about providing kids with the tools to succeed, both in the classroom and on the pitch,” says Driscoll. “It’s up to them what they do with the help we offer, but they seem eager to make the most of their opportunities, and even more, to pass what they learn from us on to their friends.”

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer a

nd first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

For more information, visit CityFC.org or contact the club directly by emailing CityFCDC@gmail.org.

City F.C. featured in The Current Newspapers

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Readers of the District’s Current Newspapers were treated to a well-written, multi-page article this week about City Football Club (City F.C.) by Current correspondent Boris Tsalyuk.

City F.C. is featured in the Nov. 26, 2008 issue of The Current Newspapers

City F.C. is featured in the Nov. 26, 2008 issue of The Current Newspapers.

Tsalyuk’s “City F.C. helps D.C. students excel in soccer” was featured in The Current’s Nov. 26 issue on page 11 in the sports section, introducing readers of the historic newspaper to City F.C. and its efforts to serve D.C. high school students.

“The D.C. Interscholastic Athletic Association soccer season is over, but City F.C., a free, volunteer-run program that bridges soccer and academics, is back for its second year, with clinics starting in December,” the article announced, adding: “Off the field, the program has helped players build relationships that they hope will be long-lasting.”

To read the story, which features quotes from City F.C. players and coaches, click HERE and scroll to page 11.

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

For more information, visit CityFC.org or contact the club directly by emailing CityFCDC@gmail.org.

City F.C. finishes runner-up in Employees’ Cup

Wednesday, November 19th, 2008

The boys of City Football Club (“City F.C.”) took home their first-ever trophy as the runners-up of the boys “City Championship” game at the District Parks and Recreation (DPR) Employees’ Cup on Saturday, Nov. 15.

City F.C.'s unofficial mascot Mason LeChat poses with his favorite new chin-rubbing accessory.

City F.C.'s unofficial mascot Mason LeChat poses with his favorite new chin-rubbing accessory.

With the game’s outcome uncertain until the final moments, City F.C. lost 9-8 to a team sponsored the Office of Latino Affairs (OLA) in a futsal contest at the Riggs-LaSalle gymnasium in northeast Washington, D.C. The event was organized by DPR Soccer Coordinator Abdullah Tunis.

Futsal is a five-on-five version of soccer played on a gymnasium floor. Unlike “traditional” indoor soccer, futsal incorporates out-of-bounds rules and uses a smaller, heavier ball to encourage creativity and skill in the tight playing space.

City F.C. was born from weekly open gym futsal gatherings for the District’s high school-aged boys organized in the winter of 2007-08 by City F.C. co-founders Roy Kelly and Dan Driscoll and DPR’s Tunis. However, the Employees’ Cup provided City F.C.’s boys with their first futsal experience with a goalkeeper, as last winter’s gatherings used miniature goals and did not incorporate a netminder.

“It was a really great event,” said Kelly, who coached the team in the Cup final. “The OLA kids were really impressive, and our guys really got into. I think this sets us up well for our winter plans.”

The winter futsal “open gym” sessions are scheduled to return this winter, with DPR’s Tunis having arranged for a two-hour slot for high school-age girls on Saturdays – 10 a.m. to noon – at Sherwood Recreation Center and a three-hour session for high school-age boys later that day – 1 to 4 p.m. – at Turkey Thicket Recreation Center, site of the original futsal clinics. Kelly and Driscoll are set to return and have recruited several other qualified volunteers to help out.

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

For more information, visit CityFC.org or contact the club directly by emailing CityFCDC@gmail.org.

City F.C. claims third place with win

Wednesday, November 12th, 2008

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) closed out its fall season in impressive fashion, thumping the North Potomac Predators 4-1 on Nov. 9 in the teams’ “position” match for third-place bragging rights.

On a brisk November afternoon at Gaithersburg’s Centerway Park, City F.C. central midfielder Amit Singh, a senior at the School Without Walls, tallied the first hat-trick of his City F.C. career and his midfield partner Oliver Samuel-Jakubos – also a senior at School Without Walls – headed home an insurance goal. Goalkeeper David Stein, a senior at Wilson H.S., kept things tight in the back with four clutch saves, including a penalty kick stop in the first half.

“I thought the boys played very well on Saturday afternoon, showed great fight, displayed some impressive skill close to the goal, and got revenge for a difficult loss earlier in the season,” said City F.C. co-coach Benny Hammond. “It was a pleasure to watch the game.”

The victory gave City F.C. claim to third place in the MSI “Classic” high school boys’ Division 1 standings, a rewarding an outcome given the 7-0 defeat a shorthanded City F.C. suffered against North Potomac in the teams’ regular-season duel. City F.C. finishes its season with five wins and three losses.

“It’s a great win for the boys,” said City F.C. co-coach Dan Driscoll. “We’ve come a very long way since we started this program a year ago, and words cannot express how good it feels to see the skill and character development that has been taking place in our ranks. Guys who were brand new to soccer 18 months back are displaying incredible poise on the pitch, and showing themselves to be mature young men as well.”

Driscoll said these qualities owe largely to the boys’ strong desire to work hard and push themselves, as well as their parents consistent efforts to support them.

“We have great parents on this team,” he said. “They come out to the games, they work out carpools so every kid has a ride to the field, and they just clearly are doing a great job at home, because when our guys show up, they show up ready to focus and learn.”

Co-coach Roy Kelly agreed.

“The results speak for themselves,” he said. “This team has improved leaps and bounds from when the boys started playing together last season. Not only are our traditionally-strong players becoming more instinctively refined and more consistent in their performances, but our less-experienced players have really begun to show their true potential.

“Specifically, Elijah Umek, “EK” Umez-Eronini and Avery O’Brien, who had nothing short of breakout seasons, demonstrated that they have matured as players and are all potential game-changers.  Other raw talents include Jaafer Mohamed — playing just his second season playing organized soccer after moving the United States from Baghdad — newcomer David Brescia-Weiler, and converted American football linebacker Mrinal Widge. The coaching staff is particularly eager to work with all of these players in the offseason to continue developing their skills and understanding of the game, as well as to get them physically-fit.”

“It was great to close out our fall season with a convincing win,” added fellow coach Michael Lingenfelter. “Amit was spectacular with his hat-trick.  He is continuing to improve and a pleasure to watch. I am confident he can play in any Division III college program and many Division I programs as well. Oli’s header for our fourth goal was also a good one, and I am glad that he was able to close out his campaign with a goal. I look forward to off-season training and indoor futsal….You better believe I’m lacing up my boots too!”

As Lingenfelter’s comments indicate, while the MSI season has wrapped, City F.C.’s efforts are hardly done. City F.C. will commence its free winter indoor futsal clinics in early December. SAT, subject and college application tutoring is ongoing, with several academic workshops planned for coming months. As always, these programs are provided at no charge to participants.

Most significantly, City F.C. is launching a girls program for the first time. A weekly girls-only futsal clinic will be offered this winter, and from the pool of players who attend these clinics, City F.C. expects to identify players to form its first-ever girls team, which is expected to begin playing in the MSI “Classic” high school girls league in Spring 2009.

City Football Club (“City F.C.”) was established in 2007 to provide District youth with a program combining competitive soccer and first-rate mentorship and college preparation. City F.C. is organized exclusively for charitable purposes as an educational non-profit. Its objective is to bring together the City’s youth for educational and recreational opportunities, including but not limited to soccer.

For more information, visit CityFC.org or contact the club directly by emailing CityFCDC@gmail.org.