Character and coaching collide as Spirit Foundation launches football academyCharacter and coaching collide as Spirit Foundation launches football academyCharacter and coaching collide as Spirit Foundation launches football academyCharacter and coaching collide as Spirit Foundation launches football academy
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Character and coaching collide as Spirit Foundation launches football academy

Published by Spirit News at May 7, 2025

The Spirit Foundation has officially launched the Spirit International Football Academy (SIFA), continuing the organisation’s commitment to youth development. SIFA blends elite, excellent football training and development with education through community upliftment. For the young players entering this programme, SIFA aims to be more than an academy by providing opportunities to unlock the football talent, giving young aspiring players a future of purpose, leadership, and opportunity.

As a project born from the Spirit Education and Community Foundations, SIFA embodies the foundation’s core ethos: creating meaningful change that lasts a lifetime. With Cape Town as its base and ambition that extends across the country, SIFA has already started building something extraordinary, bringing together game legends, young players hungry for growth, and communities ready to rise.

“SIFA brings together two vitally fundamental pillars of the Spirit Foundation – promoting education and providing a platform for growth,” says Ian Kilbride, founder of the Spirit Foundation.

The strategic partnership with the Cape Academy of Maths, Science, and Technology (CAMST) in Constantia is a key differentiator. Integrating and establishing SIFA at a school ensures that young athletes remain mindful that education is as critical as developing and honing their football skills.

What sets SIFA apart is its intentionality. The programme has been designed to develop winning players and shape young leaders into individuals who understand discipline, humility, and service.

“We’re not just building footballers,” says Dr Armand Bam, Director of Football at SIFA. “We are building leaders who will carry our values into every corner of society. That’s the Spirit way.”

Ian Taylor, one of Cape Town’s most respected and decorated football mentors, spearheads SIFA’s coaching strategy. As head of talent development, Taylor brings decades of experience at Ajax Cape Town and Ajax Amsterdam. His coaching style is one of creativity, technical mastery, and a player-first approach.

“My coaching philosophy is shaped by the belief that the game is the best teacher,” Taylor says. “We focus on creating dominant, fearless players by developing their technical qualities, building their understanding of the game, and helping them identify their unique footballing weapons.”

An elite coaching team, including football development stalwarts Noel Cousins and Harper “Grompies” Mapila, reinforces Taylor’s leadership.

Joining Taylor in this pioneering effort is football veteran Noel Cousins, a former professional who played for Arcadia Shepherds and Moroka Swallows during the 1980s and early 1990s. Since transitioning into youth coaching, Cousins has spent decades helping young players unlock their potential. His approach is deliberate, focused on the technical aspects of the game, but also profoundly human.

“The most challenging aspect of coaching is changing a young player’s thinking,” says Cousins. “But the reward is when they see the results of their effort and start believing in themselves. That’s what keeps me going.”

Cousin has coached players who have gone on to play for clubs like Sundowns and SuperSport United. However, he is quick to point out that success is not just about producing professionals; it is also about instilling discipline, self-awareness, and a love for the game.

Another crucial figure in the academy’s coaching line-up is Harper “Grompies” Mapila, a long-standing youth development coach whose football roots go back to the streets of Langa. Inspired by his father, Grompies began organising and captaining teams in school, unknowingly laying the foundation for his coaching career. Before transitioning to Ajax Cape Town, he became a talent scout for Seven Stars, where he developed players who would eventually shine in Europe and the Premier Soccer League (PSL).

“The rewards of coaching can’t be measured in trophies,” Grompies explains. “It’s in seeing a player grow into a good human being. Football is the tool, but transformation is the goal.”

Known for his work with players like Luke Le Roux and Jaden Adams, Grompies brings skill and heart to SIFA. His approach is to practice patience, mainly when collaborating with younger players. A teacher by profession has given Grompies insight into connecting with kids and building trust.

“Youth development is key. If you build the right foundation, players can go all the way. And if they don’t become professionals, they’ve still gained skills that last a lifetime.”

General Manager Bryce Lenders, a former professional player, oversees the academy’s operations. Lenders turned to coaching to make a deeper impact. Raised in Woodstock and coached and mentored by both Cousins and Taylor during his playing career, Lenders has firsthand experience of what it requires to go from player to coach. His leadership philosophy mirrors the academy’s holistic focus.

“I didn’t go into coaching just for football, I did it to help change lives,” says Lenders. “Football may be the tool, but it’s about character, integrity, and possibility. We want to make youth and parents believe that it is possible.”

Lenders brings a wealth of practical experience, having played for clubs like Cape Umoya United and Western Cape Fleetwood. He has witnessed the highs and lows of development football and is determined to build a structure that supports players on and off the field.

“What we’re doing at SIFA is about more than winning games,” he continues. “It’s about walking alongside each player and helping them grow through education, discipline, and mentorship.”

The emphasis on mentorship and a comprehensive approach is as essential as developing football skills, and it sets SIFA apart, a professional setup with development at the forefront of mind. Every coach on the team has lived through the systems they now help design, shape, form, and maintain. That empathy informs how they train and lead. Players are not just athletes at SIFA; they are learners, future professionals, and, more importantly, potential community leaders.

Taylor, Cousins, Grompies, and Lenders agree that talent alone is insufficient. A young player needs the right environment with structure, the right amount of encouragement, ambitious standards, accountability, and a network that believes in them.

“Good coaching, vision, and facilities are the main ingredients,” Taylor says. “Cape Town has some of the best diverse talent in the world. We’re here to nurture that.”

With the inaugural group of players already enrolled and training underway, the atmosphere at SIFA is electric. Every session is a chance to shape a career. Every lesson is an opportunity to build character. And every young person who walks through the academy’s doors is treated not as a number, but as a future leader.

“We’re here to make football a bridge to something greater,” says Dr Armand Bam, Managing Director of the Spirit Foundation. “That might be a professional career, but it might also be a university scholarship, a leadership role, or a mentor-in-the-making. That’s the beauty of this model. It doesn’t just close gaps – it opens doors.”

Spirit News
Spirit News

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