CVFA Football
CVFA Football. Sports fans, more particularly football
enthusiasts, must now get used to hearing this new term. From Cebu Football, it
will now be called CVFA Football with the rise of the regional football
association under the umbrella of the Philippine Football Federation: the
Central Visayas Football Association. The CVFA was set up in the first quarter
of the year and is gung ho on giving the region football activities all-year
round. The CVFA is led by its president Engr. Rodney Orale, civil engineer and
contractor by profession.
Did you say busy? Ever since the new set of officers took
over, they’ve been busy preparing the year ahead. A gold medal for Central
Visayas in Elementary Football at the Palarong Pambansa greeted / highlighted
the summer. Region 7 also won the silver medal in Secondary Football at the Palaro
in Davao. Following this feat was the holding of the Allianz National Youth
Futsal tournament Cebu leg for the Boys and Girls Under 14 and 16 age groups.
The four champion teams qualified for the Visayas Regional Finals in Bacolod,
and the Visayas champions travelled to Manila for the national finals. A
welcome side activity to this was a futsal workshop with legendary futsal coach
Victor Hermans who serves as a consultant to the Allianz Futsal tournament.
One of the biggest and newest developments in Philippine
football is the staging of the Philippine Football Federation (PFF) U-15 Boys
National Championship. It’s nationwide in scope for all the regional football
associations across the country. Each FA will put up an Under 15 team from
among its best players in the region and play against each other in a
home-and-away format. The Visayas group is composed of Eastern Visayas, Negros
Occidental Football Association (NOFA), Negros Oriental Siquijor Regional
Football Association (NOSIRFA), Panay/Iloilo and the CVFA. It’s practically a
group of death with NOFA and Panay/Iloilo considered as favorites. CVFA kicks
off its campaign by hosting NOFA on June 29 here in Cebu. The unique format
will have the teams playing each other at home and at the other team’s home
pitch. For Cebu, the CVFA is looking at the football pitches of the Cebu City
Sports Center, Sacred Heart School-Ateneo de Cebu and Don Bosco Technical
College for its home games. The winner of the group moves to the national
finals that will be held later in the third quarter of the year. This is really
exciting as this brings back memories of the Coke Goal for Goal tournament an
Under 16 tournament that was also nationwide in scope.
The rest of the year is going to be one heavy schedule of
football festivals and 11-aside tournaments. The 4th SHS-Ateneo de
Cebu Championship will be played over two weekends of July, featuring a
seven-a-side football festival for the youth age groups July 13-14 and an
eleven-a-side tournament for the born 2003 age group July 20-21. Games will be
played at the Fr. Julian Hernando SJ Athletic Field in the SHS-Ateneo de Cebu
campus in Canduman.
The 21st Aboitiz Football Cup, the CVFA’s biggest
tournament, gets going around the end of July and will run until December, with
different age group games played at different times to maximize playing time
for all. Meanwhile, the CESAFI football tournament will be played between
September and October.
Among the football festivals also calendared include the San
Roque Festival in August, Engineer’s Cup and the Sun Star Festival in October.
The DepEd series of City Olympics or division meets will be held in November.
Other football and futsal weekend festivals are also expected to hosted by
different clubs and LGUs in a calendar that will be packed every weekend. For
“something new” this year, I’d like to see the Bohol tournaments also
sanctioned and supervised by the CVFA
Since the bar has been set for CVFA Football, its leaders
will have to set its sights on winning the gold medal at the Palarong Pambansa
for both elementary and high divisions and girls futsal. We should also target going
all the way to the national finals of the inaugural PFF Under 15 national
tournament. This is easier said than done though as this will require a united
front for the CVFA. While the tournaments will see the traditional powerhouses
clash against each other, this will also be a perfect opportunity to make each
other more competitive. If all teams can put on this mindset of playing its
best to make everyone level up vis-à-vis seeing the opponent as a foe or enemy
that one has to “beat,” the CVFA will go a long way. The tougher competition,
the better for CVFA Football. And we’ve seen this in display at the recent
Palaro where both elementary and high school football teams reached out to
bring in players from other teams for reinforcement.
Excited for CVFA Football I am. It’s kick-off time.
Raring to play on Cebu's fist FIFA-size foottall pitch (in my dreams). |
The CVFA Board poses with Ugur Tasci of Dynamic Herb Sports Complex.
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