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‘I’d drive 5km between my apartment and the academy - it was just littered with homeless kids’
Updated at 10.33
A LITTLE OVER two years ago, Ray Power was relaxing at home with his wife when he received a Twitter message that would ultimately spark a dramatic change in his life.
At the time, Power was settled in Nottingham aged 32, with a wife and kids.
Passionate about football since childhood, the Waterford native had qualified as a schoolteacher while working on his coaching badges.
He taught History and Geography in Blackrock College while undertaking the Higher Diploma in Further Education.
From there, he spent two years teaching in Switzerland, but it didn’t take long before he decided to totally devote himself to his first love, football. Nonetheless, Power believes there are significant parallels between the two tasks, while the likes of Louis van Gaal, Gérard Houllier and José Mourinho (all former teachers) would probably agree.
“You don’t have to be a teacher to be a coach (or vice versa), but the experience of both has helped me greatly.”
Power’s coaching career has included a stint with a community football programme in Lincolnshire, time spent working in the underage set-up at lower-league English side Boston United, as well as more recently taking a job at Central College Nottingham.
“We won the U19 Youth Conference in the midlands, which included teams like Boston, Peterborough, Kidderminster Harriers, big non-league and lower-league teams. So that was what got me on the pitch. That was the thing that got me working with players day in day out, when I had a feel for the pro game, in that it was daily.”
In 2012, Power completed his Uefa A licence, and for all the useful information this experience provided him with, there are certain aspects of football coaching that such coursework cannot prepare anyone for.
“You feel you’re ready, but there’s nothing like time on the grass and actually working with players as much as possible.
“But that just comes with experience — you can’t put on a coaching course and everyone walks out an expert. Even the top coaches and managers in the game would admit to that.”
Around the height of his coaching success in Nottingham, Power received the aforementioned Twitter message offering the potential chance of a unique opportunity.
It was an ex-colleague who knew an agent that was helping with recruitment for a job as a football coach in Tanzania.
Power had all the necessary qualifications required for the role and before he knew it, he was planning for a journey to a deeply unfamiliar location that would be like nothing he had ever experienced before.
“The project is very different to anything we’d have here (in Ireland). Sunderland were involved and it was financially supported by a US power company based in Tanzania.
It was not an easy decision to move, however. Power’s wife and children remained in Britain, though he would return home “every four or five months” for Christmas and other events.
The arduous 24-hour journey made in July 2015 took him to a place where he learned plenty of “life lessons” as well as footballing ones.
“From a footballing point of view, there were some really outstanding players. Maybe if they were European, they would possibly play in the Premier League — certainly one or two come to mind. But that’s a long journey for them over there.
“But it was completely worthwhile, I made a lot of good friends, good connections.”
Power’s role was effectively that of an academy manager. In his first year, he worked with 42 players between the ages of 13 and 16.
“It was one of those jobs where you just did what you needed to do. Whether that’s putting together an elite footballing curriculum and working with the national team coaches to get these boys involved, down to going and buying water for kids who couldn’t have access to that.
“The blueprint that an academy would use in the UK was what I was grounded in, but taking that there was a little bit irrelevant. If you’re lecturing them about nutrition, they ‘should eat 60% carbs and x amount of proteins,’ this sort of stuff goes out the window when you’re just happy enough if they’re there and they’re fed. So it’s a massive learning curve.
“And I maintain to anyone that if you can manage in Africa in an environment like that, that’s so changeable so often, you can manage anywhere.”
Communicating with the young footballers was another challenge. The Irish coach admits his grasp of Swahili, the main language there, was limited at best.
“With the players, rather than waffle on, you had to say what was needed to be said and move on. We’d use a lot of visual aids, demonstrations and things like that to build a bridge between that communication barrier.”
Yet aside from all the invaluable experience he picked up as a coach, life out in Tanzania gave Power renewed appreciation for the privileges he and most Irish people tend to take for granted growing up.
“It was just what you’d expect in the Third World. Everyone was ducking and diving, trying to make a living.
“You learn to cope with that. When you get into work, you try to be professional in the job and more organised, that’s probably where the biggest barriers are — that organisation, that clear communication. Education isn’t top of too many people’s lists.
“You’ll have young people who won’t be in school, because they’ve got to beg, or they’ve got to do some work, or they’ve got to do something to live.”
Power was somewhat removed from the more impoverished areas of Tanzania, and while there were a couple of “sticky situations,” the 34-year-old coach never felt in serious danger during his time there.
“I made some really good friends among local guys as well. If you didn’t know where you were going, you’d always have guys who were willing to help you out, or take you there.
“Obviously, you think: ‘I don’t want my car mirrors to be stolen.’ But this guy will probably sell them for less than a euro, so he can go get a meal somewhere. There were a couple of times you would squirm a little bit, but nothing overly dangerous.
Having become familiar with a world that most Irish people are only made faintly aware of via brief news footage, after a life-changing two years, Power opted to leave Tanzania last March.
“Nothing is easy when you work in that environment. And I won’t elaborate too much, but there was a house we were (arranging to live in) in Waterford, so it was a case of it being the right time to leave.
“A couple of weeks before I left, we had 17 of those 42 players (originally coached by Power and his fellow academy staff) that were involved in the national team.
Power returned to his family in Britain, and they subsequently re-located to the house where he grew up in Waterford. He has a couple of footballing workshops he’ll be hosting in Dublin, Drogheda and South Africa to keep him ticking over in the coming weeks, but is keen land a new coaching job in the longer term.
Moreover, while impressed by some of the work that the FAI have performed in recent times, particularly in relation to the introduction of the underage national leagues, Power believes there is room for improvement overall in terms of underage coaching in Ireland.
“You have to work pretty hard in those circumstances, you’re back to being the underdog and there are players with a lot going on in their lives from other sports and school to work — some of the better players in the League of Ireland are part-time.
“The U13 stage is massive, because that’s the age where they’re really starting to (develop). I’m not sure whether Ireland could ever look abroad for a model. It has to be their model, which gets as many players into the system and playing as possible. And the more time you have with them in that system, the better.”
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Ray Power is an Irish UEFA A Licence coach, and author of five-star best-selling coaching books, Making the Ball Roll and the Deliberate Soccer Practice series. Ray has worked as a Technical Director and Academy Manager in England and Tanzania, before returning to Ireland.
With a teaching and coach education background with the FA, Ray now runs his own coach education company. Ray offers clubs in Ireland and Internationally bespoke coach education through his Club Coach Development Programme and is also running a one-day Deliberate Practice workshop in Drogheda on September 23rd. Tickets, including 40% off Early Bird ones, are available here.
You can also find info on the coaching books he has published here.
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Feature Interview Poverty Premier League Ray Power Ireland Republic Sunderland Tanzania Waterford