1 / 32

SASCOC Mandate National Sport and Recreation Act, 1998 ( Act No.110 of 1998, as amended )

South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee Tubby Reddy, CEO Ezera Tshabangu, Gen.Man HPD. SASCOC Mandate National Sport and Recreation Act, 1998 ( Act No.110 of 1998, as amended ) Promote and develop high performance sport

elias
Télécharger la présentation

SASCOC Mandate National Sport and Recreation Act, 1998 ( Act No.110 of 1998, as amended )

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. South African Sports Confederation and Olympic CommitteeTubby Reddy, CEOEzera Tshabangu, Gen.Man HPD

  2. SASCOC Mandate National Sport and Recreation Act, 1998 (Act No.110 of 1998, as amended) • Promote and develop high performance sport • Act as a controlling body for the preparation and delivery of Team South Africa to multi-coded international games, including but not limited to Olympics, Paralympics, World Games, Commonwealth Games, All Africa Games.

  3. Pre London Games • Focus on the 2009 –2012 quadrennial was: • SASCOC Structure • Opening up Communication • Co-ordination of all resources • Athlete identification and preparation

  4. Pre -London Games • Key Milestones Achieved • Financial support for elite athletes 3 years prior to the next Olympics and Paralympics (additional funds required). • Co-ordinated with the identified NF’s 3.5 years in advance in preparation for Olympic/ Paralympic Games. • Secured, 3 years in advance Pre-Games Training Camp venues for 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. • Appointed Chefs de Missions for all the Games till 2012.

  5. Pre -London Games • Key Milestones Achieved • Launched the South African Coaching Framework • Obtained Lead Partner Status with the International Council for Coaching Excellence • Introduced the sport-specific Long Term Participant Development Models

  6. London 2012 Games • Final Team Size – Olympics • 125 athletes • 46 Coaches/Managers • 9 General Team Management • 12 Medical Team • 17 sports codes

  7. London 2012 Games • Final Team Size – Paralympics • 62 athletes • 29 Coaches/Managers • 6 General Team Management • 10 Medical Team • 7 sports codes

  8. Performances at the London 2012 Games – Olympics Medal return • 6 medals • These Games were the most successful for the Olympic Team since readmission to international sport in 1992. • RSA ranked 23rdon the medal table with 3 Gold medals, number 1 in Africa.

  9. Performances at the London 2012 Games – Paralympics • Only 3 sports (athletics, cycling, swimming) brought back medals • 19 athletes won the 29 medals • 12 athletes finished in the top 8; 3 World Records; 2 Paralympic Records • The team finished 17th on the medal table.

  10. Road to Rio 2016 • IOC/IFs, and NOC Qualification Standards • General Selection & Eligibility Criteria • Analysis of IF sport-specific selection policies • Meetings with NFs • Finalising of Sport-Specific Selection Policies • “Negotiation/Appeals” Period • Board Ratification • Signing • Publication of selection policy on SASCOC Website

  11. SASCOC Mandate as contained in the NSRP: • Talent Identification and development • Athletes and Coaches Support Programmes • Recognition system (national colours) • Academy system • Team Preparation and Delivery • Geopolitical boundaries • Coaches Development • Clubs • Sports Confederations • Setting up of Athletes, Coaches, Technical Officials and Administrators Commissions

  12. Partnerships • SASCOC signed an agreement with Gemona del Friuli, Italy in 26 November 2013. • This was coupled with a short training camp for 5 sports: athletics, boxing, canoeing, judo, swimming • The following athletes attended the camp and signing ceremony:

  13. Gemona Agreement Main agreement include exchange programmes on the following: • Training bases/ training camps • Athlete Support • Coaches Support • Medical and scientific support

  14. National Training Centre • The NFs will access the Centre’s training facilities at no cost • The NFs will receive scientific and medical support services from qualified and experienced support staff • The support staff will work closely with the NFs’ technical and coaching teams to develop and enhance the performance of athletes • The Centre will function under the guidance of the High Performance Advisory Committee

  15. Network of Partners • SASCOC will continue working/ forge new alliances with the following partners: • SANDF • Universities • FETs • Academies • Schools

  16. Operation Excellence • OPEX commenced in June 2009 in the previous quadrennial; • 93 athletes supported through OPEX between June 2009 – Aug 2012; • 47 athletes supported between Oct 2012 – March 2013, with only 15 being new on the programme; • Of the 51 Olympic athletes supported, 24 did not qualify; • Of the 24 that did not qualify, 6 retired and 3 were ruled out due to injury; • 52% qualified for the Olympic Games;

  17. Eligibility The athlete shall, over and above the below stipulated tiered criteria: • Be a South African Citizen, with a valid RSA passport; • Be a registered member of a recognized club affiliated to a National Federation, recognized and affiliated to SASCOC; • Be eligible for qualification for Rio 2016 in line with IF rules; • Observe the SASCOC’s Articles of Association and Policies; • Enter into an OPEX Agreement with SASCOC and his/her National Federation which will govern his/her participation in the support programme; • Observe and abide by the Rules and Regulations of his/her National Federation, and International Federation, including participation at the National Federation’s National Championships.

  18. Support Services The support services offered to athletes through the programme: • Living expenses • Medical aid • Transport for training sessions • Access to training facilities • International camps and competitions • Local camps and competitions • Coaching Fees • Scientific and medical support services • Technological services • Sport specific Equipment

  19. Operation Excellence Olympics • 6 medals (23rd position – 204 countries) 50% from target • All 6 medals won by athletes on OPEX programme (100% OPEX) Paralympics • 29 medals (18th position – 164 countries) • 28 medals won by athletes on OPEX (97% OPEX) • Various athletes on OPEX did well in 2013

  20. Operation Excellence (Coaches Support) • Coaches monthly fees • Contract with Swim SA and Rowing SA for Head Coaches • Coaches travel with athletes to training camps and competitions • Support to attend Technical Courses for Coaches – through Olympic Solidarity

  21. Capacity Developer Programme • Busy with: • Recognition of Prior Learning • Capacity Developer Programme • Long Term Participant Development • Long Term Coaches Development • Provincial Coaching Commissions in place in all 9 provinces

  22. Current Bursary Recipients • Mr Katlego Sotsaka Rowing • Mr Akani Simbine Athletics • Ms Maite Makola Football • Ms Kristen Matthews Fencing • Ms Suzaan Broodryk Athletics • Mr Jacque Joubert Athletics • Ms Justine Palframan Athletics • Ms Nthabiseng Matshaba Football • Mr Johannes Lodewicus Pretorius Athletics • Mr Landelani Welani Ngubane Basketball

  23. Key Games delivery for 2014 • Commonwealth Games • Qualification Top 5 in the Commonwealth, individual and Team • Queens Baton Relay • 10 – 13 February 2014 • Team Contingent – 253 • 17 sporting codes • Objective – retain top 5 position in the CG

  24. Key Games delivery for 2014 • 2nd African Youth Games • 22 to 31 May 2014, Gaborone, Botswana • 21 sporting codes • RSA Team Contingent – 192 • 14 to 18 year olds • RSA won 93 medals and was second overall out of 51 African countries

  25. Key Games delivery for 2014 • 2nd Youth Olympic Games • 16 to 28 August2014, Nanjing, China • 28 sporting codes • 14 to 18 year olds • 4 NFs indicated non participation (archery, basketball, rugby, volleyball) • 80 possible team contingent • Young Ambassadors Programme – Reabetswe Mpete

  26. Key Games delivery for 2014 • African Union Sport Council, Region 5 U/20 Games, Bulawayo, Zimbabwe • 05 – 14 December 2014 • 8 sporting codes • 304 possible team contingent • Objective – retain first position in the region

  27. Communication Strategies • Website • Social media • Quarterly Magazine • Road shows • Press Conferences • Presentations

  28. Budget

  29. Admin 16%

  30. THANK YOU

More Related