Friday, April 22, 2011

American Tackle Football being played in Ghana

































Eliasu Musah has been practicing on Sundays in Accra, Ghana
With the hopes that American Football will be organized in Ghana. Dominick Muller
has been giving American Football instructions to about 35 athletes in Ghana since he arrived. Eliasu Musah explained that
He first fell in love with American Football after watching a Video clip and has since been very interested since.
He explained that it is not easy getting people together because we have so many soccer and Rugby players, but he has
stated that the majority of the players interested in American Football are Rugby players. Getting money for equipment is
the main issue for they only have the equipment because it was donated to them by their instructor. One of the people in the photo’s is a women and she is very



Interested in American Football also. Eliasu has a real beat for the sport and has reached out to TUSAAFSS to try to get support for American Football in Ghana,
as of right now they are the only team playing American Tackle Football. Eliasu states that he would love for Ghana to not only concentrate on Soccer because
He is well aware of the many Ghanaian athletes that play in the NFL to include 2 Super Bowl winning players Charlie Peprah and Joseph Addia. It will be one of
TUSAAFSS Goals to help raise awareness about the team the Black Bison’s and try to gain support for American Tackle Football in Ghana. 





The Bison’s are going to need help with Equipment especially since they only have limited equipment but only enough to fit a handful of players.
Just like in baseball if you build it they will come. TUSAAFSS at present is working to help this team in Ghana be a model of American Football in Ghana and will be reaching

















Out to as many different organizations who are willing to take the first steps with the growth of American Tackle Football in Ghana     

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

American Football in Africa
















Are you ready to make history? Inbox your contact info, hgt & wgt. Spread the word!!! Tryouts for the team that will be representing South Africa against Ghana, Nigeria, and Team USA Stars & Stripes Adult teams (19+) coming in the VERY NEAR future to J-Bay, P.E., Humansdorp. Other sites will soon follow...
TUSAAFSS

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

TUSAAFSS Staff member Theo Waters is in South Africa




























Theo Waters, the TUSAAFSS South African American Football Liaison
 is presently in South Africa working on projects that will help
 bring back sustainable American Football Programs to South Africa.
We need help from all who care to help with our efforts in Africa.



Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Donald Igwebuike to kick start Kicking camps in the USA










Donald Igwebuike will start clinics spring 2011.
Donald was one of the Last African
Place kickers (Nigeria) in the NFL.
Donald has a deep rooted Soccer background
and once played for the Nigerian national Soccer team. 



NFL Career:                       
Kicker - Tampa Bay Buccaneers 1985-89
First Kicker ever drafted in Tampa Bay Buccaneer history               
Rookie of the year 1985
Donald Igwebuike was the first Buccaneer to score 400 points. As a rookie, he immediately broke the team’s single-season scoring record, posting 96 points on 22-32 field goal kicking and 30-32 PAT work. Many of his attempts as a rookie came from long range – led NFL with an average attempt length of 39.9 yards. Donald was even called on to try two 62-yard attempts as a rookie. That would be a running theme in Igwebuike’s Buccaneer career, as 60 of his 127 attempts would come from 40 yards or further. He was nearly automatic from closer in, making 63 of 67 tries from 39 yards or closer for a career percentage of 94.9%. Among his longer shots was a 55-yarder at Minnesota on November 30, 1986 that was a team record at the time and is still tied for the second-longest in franchise history. After a 1988 season in which he connected on 19 of 25 field goals and, for the first time, 100% of his extra point tries (21-21), Donald had his finest NFL season in 1989. Breaking his own single-season scoring record, he recorded 99 points by nailing 22 of 28 field goals. He is the third-leading scorer in Tampa Bay Buccaneers team history. Donald also hit five game-winning field goals either in the last 20 seconds of the game or in overtime, including three in 1988 alone.
He never missed a field goal inside the 35 yards during his six years career in NFL








College Career
Clemson University 1981-1984
All-American 1984
All ACC 1984
Iggy was the only Clemson Tiger to kick at least one 50-yard field goal in four straight seasons. He also had five career field goals of 50 or more yards to set a Clemson record. In his last three seasons he was 107-180 on non-returnable kickoffs. Third-team AP All-American who booted the longest field goal in the ACC in each of his last three seasons. He led the nation and the ACC in field goal percentage with a .941 senior season mark. Iggy came to Clemson to play soccer, a starter in two NCAA tournaments, 1980 and 1981. A perfect 43-43 on PATs in his career and made 32-43 field goals.



Iggy Kicking Academy
“Kick to the next Level”







                 
                                         ABOUT  US     
Iggy Kicking Academy is a Football Academy that provides Kicking andPunting lessons to young athletes that want to improve on their
fundamentals and techniques through individualized coaching.
Our services are tailored to each individual athlete based on their
 unique kicking style and experience. Iggy Kicking Academy is open
to all ability levels, from beginners to professional kickers and Punters.
No kicker or punter is the same and each student deserves private
instruction that is tailored toward their individual needs, objectives,and goals.
We focus on teaching our students the technical, physical, mental and fundamental skills needed to Kick or Punt in football. Every kicker and punter is unique and some kicking or punting elements that may workout well for one individual, may not work as well for another.
Our goal is to help each individual find what works well for them,
explore  those not-so-good areas of the Kickers and Punters techniques and improve in those areas.
We offer kicking camps, group kicking clinics and private kicking
lessons.
                                  
                                            MISSION     
Our mission is to unlock every player's potential by assessment, analysis, adjustment, demonstration and follow-up. I will translate my kicking  experience into teaching the player's, giving them the opportunity to develop to their full potential.


http://iggykickingacademy.com/

Thursday, February 17, 2011

Ghanaian Athletes

GHANA

The Republic of Ghana is located in West Africa between Burkina Fasso, Ivory Coast and Togo.  The name of the country was given  due to its history and the timing of its independence.  The word Ghana actually means “Warrior King”.  Ghana  achieved independence from the British in 1973, becoming the first sub-Saharan African nation to do so.  Ghana is a country that many Americans travel to because the history of the slave trade and its origins on the Gold Coast.  Ghana’s main natural resource is cocoa and it is the 2nd largest producer of it in the world.  Another astounding fact about Ghana is that it is the home of the largest artificial Lake in the World, Lake Volta.

PLAYERS

NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS BENEFITING GHANA

SOURCES


African Ballerz

http://www.africanballerz.com/

African Athletes in the National Football League

“Football” in the United States means American football, and though it is the most popular sport in the United States, it does not get much traction outside the country. While passion for American football remains almost exclusively rooted in North America, the players increasingly are from diverse backgrounds, and more and more of them are from Africa. The number of first- or second-generation American athletes from Africa has multiplied over the past few decades.
African athletes already have established a solid presence within the U.S. National Football League (NFL). In fact, an outstanding University of Nebraska athlete whose mother is from Jamaica and father from Cameroon — Ndamukong Suh — is a top professional prospect in the United States.
One of the first African-born players to stand out in the NFL wasChristian Okoye of Enugu, Nigeria, the Kansas City Chiefs running back from 1987 to 1992. Nicknamed “the Nigerian Nightmare,” Okoye still is very popular, and is remembered for his surprising speed and ability to break free from tackles.
Some 20 years later, the NFL boasts dozens of athletes who are recent immigrants from Africa. Nearly every team has at least one such player, and both the Chicago Bears and the St. Louis Rams have four each. Immigration trends have something to do with this: more sub-Saharan Africans have immigrated to the United States over the past few decades than at any other time in history. The 2000 U.S. Census revealed that the influx of Nigerians, Ethiopians and Ghanaians (the three largest groups of African immigrants to the United States) had increased by 370 percent, 220 percent and 235 percent, respectively, in 10 years.
Despite these gains, the sub-Saharan African-American community remains small, representing only 3.7 percent of the U.S. population, larger only than the community of immigrants from Oceania.  But it is the presence in the NFL of athletes of African and Polynesian descent that has increased most dramatically in recent years.
Football requires speed, strength and size. The African football players have these traits, and they have something more: the drive and discipline to succeed on and off the field. These athletes have been shaped by challenges they faced as immigrants, and by a will to succeed instilled by parents who came to the United States to offer them a better life.
SUCCESS IN THE CLASSROOM, POWERHOUSES ON THE FIELD
Nearly all American professional football players join the NFL after going to university and playing college football, which has slightly different rules from the professional version. Though American schools offer both athletic and academic scholarships, most students obtain only one, and the competition to attain either is intense. But many of these African-American athletes in the NFL have managed to do both.  For example, for several Nigerian-American athletes currently playing for the Houston Texans, achieving academic excellence is just as important as displaying physical prowess on the field.
Xavier Adibi, the Texans’  linebacker, is the son of an immigrant who came to Oklahoma State University to play soccer and eventually earn a doctorate in biochemistry. Along with his brother Nathaniel, Xavier attended Virginia Polytechnic Institute after graduating from high school as a Virginia state champion. Throughout his high school, college and professional careers, Adibi has been praised for being smart as well as fast.
Frank Okam, a defensive tackle, earned his degree in sports management from the University of Texas in three and a half years. Despite the class load, Okam was a five-time member of the university’s Athletic Director’s Honor Roll and a member of a national championship team.
Amobi Okoye, also a defensive tackle, is considered by some to be one of football’s most remarkable prodigies. Born in Anambra, Nigeria, he moved to Huntsville, Alabama, at age 12. After spending two weeks in middle school, he was promoted to high school freshman. As a sophomore, he took up football and quickly mastered the sport as both a defensive and an offensive lineman. At 16, he entered the University of Louisville and became the youngest player in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Also graduating a semester early, Okoye became the youngest player to be drafted in the first round of the draft by the NFL at age 19. He plans to continue his education at Harvard University, where he was accepted in 2005, after he retires from professional football.
LIVES TRANSFORMED, CAREERS SHAPED BY HARDSHIP
Born in Indianapolis, Indiana, Mathias Kagimu Kiwanuka, a defensive end for the New York Giants, is also a proud son of Uganda. While studying at Boston College, Kiwanuka kept a Ugandan flag on display in his dorm room in remembrance of his grandfather Benedicto Kiwanuka, who was elected the first prime minister of Uganda in 1961 and assassinated by Idi Amin supporters in 1972. Shortly after fleeing the political turmoil that left thousands dead during Amin’s dictatorship, his parents divorced. His mother began a housecleaning business to provide for her three children.
Minnesota Vikings tight end Visanthe Shiancoe was born in Birmingham, England, shortly after his mother escaped Liberia as civil war broke out in 1980. Fearing that her sons’ lives might be endangered by the conflict that ravaged the country for nearly two decades, she left a comfortable lifestyle and eventually sacrificed her marriage to secure a safe environment in Washington for her children. Working two jobs and sewing her own clothes, she has provided Shiancoe with a lifelong role model, and he credits his ability to bounce back on the field to his African mother’s unwavering resilience.
AFRICAN AND AMERICAN CHAMPIONS, LOCAL AND GLOBAL ROLE MODELS
Akinola “Akin” Ayodele, a Nigerian-American linebacker for the Miami Dolphins, is famous for his strong faith and commitment to giving back. Having already won several awards for his advocacy on behalf of the poor and the sick, he recently founded Akin’s PATH, a charitable organization that partners with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Greater Miami to mentor underprivileged youth. The foundation also calls on all Dolphins fans to volunteer as mentors.
Cincinnati Bengals safety Chinedum Ndukwe belongs to a prominent Nigerian-American family. His older brothers include Ikechuku Ndukwe, an offensive lineman for the Kansas City Chiefs, and Kelechi, an Iraq war veteran who currently serves as the U.S. Navy liaison to the U.S. Senate. After attending Harvard Business School during the offseason, Chinedum began a trust fund with his brother Ikechuku, with the intention of launching a charitable organization that would enable them to give back to both their hometown and their homeland. The now-operational Ndukwe Foundation promotes well-being and healthy lifestyles in local communities and across the Atlantic. In addition to financing an entire football season for a youth team in one of the most underprivileged neighborhoods in Columbus, Ohio, Chinedum visited Nigeria with Ikechuku to start a football camp where their parents were born and raised.
New York Jets safety James Ihedigbo’s parents, Rose and Apollos, left Nigeria in the 1970s and settled in Amherst, Massachusetts, where they raised four children and both earned doctorates from the University of Massachusetts. After playing basketball, lacrosse and track in high school, James also went on to study at the University of Massachusetts, majoring in sociology. His combined passions for athletics, education and social issues have led him to reach out to youth in both the United States and Africa. He frequently visits schools to engage students in discussions about the importance of hard work and faith. He also advocates for, and spends time with, children suffering from sickle cell anemia, a disease affecting about one in every 500 African Americans. Following his parents, who returned to Nigeria to establish the Nigerian Agricultural Technical Community College, James recently founded the Hope Africa Foundation, a charitable organization that provides young Nigerians with scholarships to ensure the completion of their education.
Ashton Youboty, a Liberian-American cornerback for the Buffalo Bills, told the cable sports network ESPN in 2006 that “good athletes come from all over. I’m sure there are a lot of world-class athletes in Africa right now, people whose skills would allow them to play in the NFL if they just got the right break. I was lucky. … How many other African kids do you think there are who could do the same thing if they learned the game? The truth is, a lot, I’m sure.”
By Gabrielle M.M. Brock