10 YEARS OF LAUREUS JANUARY 2010 TEN YEARS OF LAUREUS 2000-2010 HOW IT ALL BEGAN HIGHLIGHTS FROM GLOBAL PROJECT VISITS BREAKING THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE NEW LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR Laureus Academy members visit Brazil, Cambodia, Kenya, Morocco, PR China, Sri Lanka and the USA David Cameron joins Laureus Academy members to raise awareness of sports solutions against gun and knife crime in the UK Interview with surfing legend Layne Beachley on her first Laureus project visit to the Indigenous Sports Programme in Australia 02 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS MESSAGES FROM THE LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS ACADEMY EDWIN MOSES CHAIRMAN Ten years ago, I was privileged to be asked to become Chairman of the Laureus World Sports Academy. At the time this felt like being made captain of the greatest sports team ever put together. Of course there was a more serious purpose to our endeavours: through the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation we hoped to be able to use the power of sport to affect positive social change in communities around the world. I am very proud with what has been achieved. From small beginnings, the Foundation, with the encouragement of its Global Partners: Mercedes-Benz, IWC Schaffhausen and Vodafone, now supports over 70 humanitarian projects worldwide that have helped to improve the lives of more than one million children. Ten years on, nothing has changed my belief that sport is one of the great hopes for the future. Sport can build bridges and bring people together in a way that nothing else can. With children and teenagers more at risk today from “controllable environmental factors” such as diabetes, obesity and an alarming lack of physical activity, our mission remains as crucial as it has ever been. It’s now the time to get busy and help solve these problems. I hope you enjoy this special issue of the Laureus magazine which I believe gives a flavour of what we have achieved in our first decade, but for us this is just the start. We still have a long race ahead of us, and hurdles to clear, but hopefully we will keep up the pace and the real winners will be thousands of young underprivileged people around the world. CONTENTS 03 CONTENTS 04 TEN YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS 04 04 Executive Chairman Richemont 05 06 10 12 The German Foundation was created in 2001 and it is a source of great pride to me that I was asked to be its Chairman, and even more rewarding to know that we now have seven community projects in Germany and have plans for many more. We have also enjoyed the backing of many great sportsmen and women like my fellow Academy members Franz Beckenbauer and Katarina Witt, and Laureus Friends & Ambassadors including boxing’s Kltischko brothers. This is a scenario that has been seen in many countries around the world over the first ten years and will be repeated even more often as Laureus grows into its second decade. Message from Dr Dieter Zetsche Laureus Academy meet Nelson Mandela Highlights from Global Project Visits 05 Breaking the Cycle of Violence, UK Seenigamma Sports Programme, Sri Lanka Special Olympics, Shanghai Mathare Youth Sports Association, Kenya Fight for Peace, Brazil Spirit of Soccer, Bosnia & Cambodia Courir Pour la Vie, Morocco Fight Back, USA VICE-CHAIRPERSON In the ten years that I have been a Laureus Academy member, the Laureus Family has grown enormously both in size and in geographical spread, and the Netherlands is now the ninth country which has established its own local Laureus Foundation, along with Argentina, France, Germany, Italy, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland and the United States. How it all began CEO Daimler BORIS BECKER It was with great pleasure in September 2009 that I visited Amsterdam to join Ruud Gullit, Pieter van den Hoogenband and Esther Vergeer at a celebration to officially launch the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation in the Netherlands. Celebrating 10 Years of Laureus Message from Johann Rupert 28 30 32 Project Reflections Looking Ahead Laureus Map 12 34 GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS 34 35 36 Mercedes-Benz IWC Schaffhausen Vodafone 37 NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS TANNI GREY-THOMPSON VICE-CHAIRPERSON The first decade of the 21st century has not been easy for planet Earth, with major wars in Afghanistan, Iraq and Somalia, and natural disasters like the 2004 Tsunami, the Kashmir Earthquake and Hurricane Katrina. The tragic side of humanity was brought powerfully home to me in April 2009 when I visited the genocide memorial in Rwanda, East Africa, built on the site of mass graves of up to 250,000 victims. I was there on behalf of Laureus to support the work of the Rwanda National Paralympic Committee - there are many thousands of amputees in the country after years of war and civil unrest. It was moving to meet so many young people who have suffered so much and I tried to do what I could to help the Rwanda NPC, who are expanding sports opportunities in the country for the disabled, until now very much a forgotten group. For ten years now, projects such as the one in Rwanda have been the heartbeat of Laureus, and you can read about many more in this special edition of the Laureus magazine. I know I came back from Rwanda absolutely drained emotionally, but also refreshed for the challenge of the next ten years. 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 Argentina France Germany Italy South Africa Spain Switzerland The Netherlands USA 18 46 FRIENDS & AMBASSADORS 46 47 Layne Beachley Interview Membership Scheme 26 ACADEMY MEMBERS GIACOMO AGOSTINI, MARCUS ALLEN, SEVERIANO BALLESTEROS, FRANZ BECKENBAUER, BORIS BECKER (VICE-CHAIRPERSON), PETER BLAKE (IN FOND MEMORY), IAN BOTHAM, SERGEY BUBKA, BOBBY CHARLTON, SEBASTIAN COE, NADIA COMANECI, MARCEL DESAILLY, YAPING DENG, KAPIL DEV, DAVID DOUILLET, EMERSON FITTIPALDI, SEAN FITZPATRICK, DAWN FRASER, CATHY FREEMAN, TANNI GREY-THOMPSON (VICE-CHAIRPERSON), MARVELOUS MARVIN HAGLER, MIKA HÄKKINEN, TONY HAWK, MIKE HORN, MIGUEL INDURAIN, MICHAEL JOHNSON, KIP KEINO, FRANZ KLAMMER, DAN MARINO, JOHN MCENROE, EDWIN MOSES (CHAIRPERSON), NAWAL EL MOUTAWAKEL, ROBBY NAISH, ILIE NASTASE, MARTINA NAVRATILOVA, ALEXEY NEMOV, JACK NICKLAUS, GARY PLAYER, MORNÉ DU PLESSIS, HUGO PORTA, VIVIAN RICHARDS, BILL SHOEMAKER (IN FOND MEMORY), MONICA SELES, MARK SPITZ, DALEY THOMPSON, ALBERTO TOMBA, STEVE WAUGH, KATARINA WITT. www.laureus.com FRONT COVER: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARCEL DESAILLY AT THE LAUREUS SUPPORTED PROJECT, ORPHANAID, GHANA 39 www.laureus.com 04 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS HOW IT ALL BEGAN 05 MESSAGE FROM JOHANN RUPERT 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS Some 30 years ago, whilst living in New York City, I had a black friend who was a true sports superstar. He was constantly mobbed for autographs. I noticed that he took extra care giving signed posters to white kids. I asked him about the apparent favouritism. His answer: “Johann, if a white kid has my poster in his bedroom, he can hardly discriminate against the black kid in his class”. How true. The year 2000 dawned with a mixture of hope and expectation as the world prepared for the new Millennium. Ever since then we have strived to create and promote cross-cultural heroes. In South Africa we helped start Institutes and sports academies to promote sporting excellence. As a South African I have also witnessed first hand the profound role that sport can play in nation-building and reconciliation. When democratic South Africa was accepted into international sport over a decade ago many believed it would take years for us to be integrated. Since then we have confounded the critics, won major championships and hosted others. It is this same belief that led me to propose that Richemont help found Laureus and the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. The Laureus Sport for Good Foundation believes that sport can change the way people look at the world. The true values of sport can bring together families, friends, nations – and on occasions, the whole world – in a way that no other human activity can. “ Laureus’ passion is based on a simple truth: whoever you are, wherever you live, whatever your background, sport can give you the chance to be a better person tomorrow than you are today. ” In a world of increasing tension between cultures and religions, we believe that sporting heroes can bridge the gap that other leaders of society are either unable or unwilling to do. Sport represents the best of humanity - determination, fellowship, teamwork and the pursuit of excellence. This is a powerful message – one which I hope I can count on for your support, playing your part to help change the world. JOHANN RUPERT Executive Chairman Compagnie Financiere Richemont SA www.laureus.com The United Nations declared it to be the International Year for the Culture of Peace, and global warming was something most people were hardly aware of. Indeed Al Gore was a US Presidential candidate that year, and had yet to move on to become the maker of the award-winning ecological wake-up film ‘An Inconvenient Truth’. As ever, sport was full of promise. The Millennium Olympic Games were just around the corner in Sydney, and indeed proved to be one of the most successful ever. And something else significant was stirring: an idea which was to prove radical and innovative, and, once it became reality, a beacon of hope for disadvantaged young people. The seed of the idea that grew to become Laureus was first planted several years before the Millennium by Johann Rupert, Executive Chairman of luxury goods company Richemont. A noted sports enthusiast, Rupert was at a dinner with friends one evening and mused over the fact that there was no Nobel Prize or Oscars-style awards for sport. Rupert’s views on the power of sport were fundamentally influenced by the crucial role that the 1995 Rugby World Cup played in the reconciliation of the different communities in South Africa, and in 1998 he found a kindred spirit in Dieter Zetsche, Chairman of German automotive giant Daimler, like Richemont, another blue chip company with a long commitment to sport. Two years later, the Laureus World Sports Academy was created, with 30 of the greatest living sports legends named as founder members. On May 25, 2000, the majority of the Academy members gathered in Monaco for the very first Laureus World Sports Awards. It was an impressive collection of sporting legends, but it is fair to say that the biggest name was a huge surprise all round, as the door to the Academy meeting room opened and in walked President Nelson Mandela. IN 10 YEARS LAUREUS HAS SUPPORTED OVER 70 PROJECTS WORLDWIDE “ Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language they understand. Sport can create hope, where once there was only despair. ” NELSON MANDELA, PATRON, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, MONACO 2000 It is more powerful than governments in breaking down racial barriers. It laughs in the face of all types of discrimination. The heroes standing with me are exemplars of this power. They are valiant not only on the playing field, but also in the community, both local and international. They are champions and they deserve the world’s recognition. Together they represent an active, vigorous Hall of Fame…a Hall of Fame that goes out into the world spreading help, inspiration and hope. Their legacy will be an international community where the rules of the game are the same for everyone, and behaviour is guided by fair play and good sportsmanship. I ask you now to rise and join me in commending the original inductees into the Laureus World Sports Academy Hall of Fame.” It was in Monaco that President Mandela, who was to become the Patron of Laureus, made the visionary speech which has become the philosophy of Laureus and the driving force which has shaped its work for ten years. His speech has become the dictum not only for Laureus, but for the whole Sport for Good movement. He said: “Thank you. I am happy to be with you tonight at the first Laureus World Sports Awards. www.laureus.com 06 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS HOW IT ALL BEGAN 07 RIGHT: YELENA ISINBAYEVA, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTSWOMAN OF THE YEAR 2007 & 2009 FAR RIGHT: DAVID BECKHAM, MANCHESTER UNITED, LAUREUS WORLD TEAM OF THE YEAR 2000 BELOW: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER SIR BOBBY CHARLTON INSPIRING THE YOUTH AT THE MATHARE YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCIATION BACKGROUND: USAIN BOLT, LAUREUS SPORTSMAN OF THE YEAR 2009 OPPOSITE: NELSON MANDELA, PATRON, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, MONACO 2000 MESSAGE FROM DR DIETER ZETSCHE 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS WE BELIEVE IN SPORT FOR GOOD. As President Mandela urged, in its ten years Laureus has become an athlete-driven organisation using its power and its influence for the betterment of society. To achieve the goals laid down by its Patron, Laureus has become much more than a red carpet event saluting the greatest sportsmen and women each year, it has become a year-round charity dedicated to effecting social change through sport, focusing on helping young people overcome challenging social issues including homelessness, social exclusion, gun and gang violence, discrimination, drug abuse and HIV/AIDS. Sport can bring out the best in us. It fosters open competition. It builds team spirit. It motivates people to excel. And it inspires millions of supporters around the world to cheer on their favourite athletes and teams. Last, but certainly not least, it has a unique potential to unite people who would otherwise be separated by language, religion, ideology, or social differences. For all these reasons, Mercedes-Benz initiated and supports the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. “ Over the past ten years, this commitment has developed into an important and exciting example of what we mean by corporate social responsibility. Through Sport for Good, we help enable social progress by placing a priority on children and youth and focusing our efforts in parts of the world where meaningful change is most needed. ” 2010 is a milestone year. With the eleventh annual Laureus World Sports Awards and the worldwide growth of the Sport for Good Foundation, we are taking a significant step toward building Laureus Sport for Good into one of the biggest global children and youth foundations. In pursuing our goals we are supported by a select group of world-class athletes and highly accomplished men and women. We are most grateful for the participation of the 46 Laureus Academy members and more than 100 Laureus Friends & Ambassadors worldwide. Working together through Sport for Good, we can all contribute to a richer dialogue and better understanding between cultures. And that’s how we – and every young person we reach – can all come out winners! DR DIETER ZETSCHE Chairman of Daimler AG and Head of Mercedes-Benz Cars If President Mandela supplied the philosophy and impetus to galvanize Laureus, it is the Academy members who have provided the energy and determination to create the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. Sebastian Coe, one of the Academy members present in Monaco in 2000, now head of the London 2012 Olympic Games organising committee, recalls: “All of us were accustomed to meeting fairly important people, but seeing Nelson Mandela arrive unexpectedly to tell us how much he supported what we were trying to achieve was impressive to say the least. I am not sure how we had been kept unaware that he was coming to Monaco, but it had the desired effect. We all believed in the concept of Sport for Good but having perhaps the most admired man in the world at that time there to urge us on was exhilarating.” Daimler’s Dieter Zetsche, who sat with Johann Rupert in that original Academy meeting, says: “Sport can bring out the best in us. It has a unique potential to unite people who would otherwise be separated by language, religion, ideology, or social differences. Over the past ten years, this commitment has developed into an important and exciting example of what we mean by corporate social responsibility.” For ten years the Laureus Awards Ceremony has been punctuated with a cavalcade of the biggest names in world sport, including Lance Armstrong, David Beckham, Usain Bolt, Roger Federer, Ronaldo, Michael Schumacher, Serena Williams and Tiger Woods, while the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation, with the encouragement of its Patrons: Daimler and Richemont, and its Global Partners: Mercedes-Benz, IWC Schaffhausen and Vodafone, has quietly, but indelibly impacted on the lives of more than one million children around the world. There have been memorable milestones along the way. That inaugural year of 2000, when Tiger Woods received the Laureus World Sportsman of the Year Award and Lance Armstrong was receiving the Laureus Comeback Award following his emotional victory in the Tour de France after recovering from cancer, also saw Laureus select its first humanitarian project to support. The Mathare Youth Sports Association based in one of the largest and poorest slums in Africa, where poverty is widespread and AIDS is a serious problem, pioneered the use of football as a tool to encourage co-operation and raise self-esteem in the young people of the community. Thousands of Kenyan youngsters now play in leagues, where success is measured not just by the goals scored in matches, but by the work the young people do in cleaning up the slums, going to school and improving the social community. The Mathare Youth Sports Association has twice been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Also present in Monaco that first year was Eunice Kennedy Shriver, founder of the Special Olympics, who received the very first Laureus Sport for Good Award. The success of the Special Olympics provided an early inspirational model for the work of the Laureus Foundation, which over ten years has actively collaborated with many organisations in the sport development community to help it succeed in its mission. “ Within 12 months, Sport for Good support had reached every continent with the induction of the Indigenous Sports Programme in Australia into the Laureus family. ” It proved a timely addition as one of the stars of the 2001 Awards Ceremony was Australia’s Cathy Freeman who received the Laureus Sportswoman of the Year Award following her victory in the 400 metres in Sydney, one of the most indelible moments in Olympic history. Her triumph on the track made a stirring visual image around the world as she raced to victory in her yellow and green hooded running suit. Freeman, who is an Aboriginal Australian, is regarded as a role model for her people, and, by many in the nonAboriginal community, as a symbol of national reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. Some years later, after her retirement, she became a Laureus Academy member, thus closing the circle. That year also saw the creation in Germany of the first autonomous local Laureus Foundation. It was to prove to be the first of many. By 2009, there were to be local organisations in eight other countries - Argentina, France, Netherlands, Italy, South Africa, Spain, Switzerland and the United States – to supplement the work of the global Laureus Foundation. www.laureus.com The Laureus World Sports Awards Ceremony has seen many emotional moments, none more so, perhaps, than in 2002 when Sean Connery presented a posthumous Lifetime Achievement Award and Laureus Sport for Good Award to Peter Blake, New Zealand's America's Cup yachting legend, who had been murdered by pirates in the Amazon. Speaking on behalf of the Laureus Academy members, Connery said: "I am here to explain what is their sad yet beautiful gesture of honouring one man with two prestigious Laureus Awards." And he finished by quoting John Masefield's atmospheric verse: "I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky, and all I ask is a tall ship and a star to steer her by." Brazil’s victory in the FIFA World Cup in Japan and Korea saw Ronaldo on stage twice in Monaco in 2003 to collect the Team of the Year Award for his country and the Comeback of the Year Award for his own contribution, and yet it was a relatively unknown disabled skier, Michael Milton, who brought the audience to its feet. Milton, from Canberra, had lost a leg at the age of nine after cancer but had become the first athlete in his amputee class to win all four Paralympic Alpine gold medals. "Who would have thought it - a snow skier from Australia?” said an emotional Milton on stage to rapturous applause. “I think tonight is my Everest. Thank you." www.laureus.com 08 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS HOW IT ALL BEGAN 09 THE FOUNDATION HAS CHANGED THE LIVES OF OVER ONE MILLION YOUNG PEOPLE SINCE ITS INCEPTION FAR LEFT: PRESIDENT OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION, VLADIMIR PUTIN, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, ST. PETERSBURG 2008 “ Over the decade great stories of human triumph against the odds such as Michael Milton’s have become a feature of the Laureus World Sports Awards, fitting in seamlessly with the stirring tales of derring-do of Olympic heroes and world champions. MIDDLE: HIS SERENE HIGHNESS PRINCE ALBERT OF MONACO, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, MONACO 2000 RIGHT: HIS MAJESTY THE KING OF SPAIN, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, BARCELONA 2007 ” BACKGROUND: ROGER FEDERER, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTSMAN OF THE YEAR 2005, 2006, 2007 & 2008 The year 2004 powerfully demonstrated the contribution sport can make in trying to ease tensions caused by apparently intractable problems when the Laureus Sport for Good Award was presented jointly to the Indian and Pakistani cricket teams. Little more than a year earlier, India and Pakistan faced fears of a nuclear war after repeated clashes in the dispute over Kashmir. But past troubles seemed forgotten as both Indian and Pakistani supporters draped themselves in each other's flags and came together through their love of cricket in a way that had never been seen before. The following year proved something of a watershed as the Laureus World Sports Academy showed itself to be outward-looking and energetic in its response to both natural as well as man-made disasters. Edwin Moses and Daley Thompson joined Hollywood action hero and Laureus Ambassador Jackie Chan on a four-day visit to Banda Aceh in South East Asia in the aftermath of the 2004 Tsunami Disaster to see what help Laureus could give in the reconstruction of the region. England cricket legend Sir Ian Botham visited Sri Lanka, where the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation identified a suitable project in the village of Seenigama, near Galle, which focused on cricket, volleyball, football, swimming and badminton as the means to rebuild community spirit. Edwin Moses also accompanied Jackie Chan to Northern Cambodia, one of the most dangerous places on Earth after almost three decades of war where intensive aerial bombing, together with widespread use of landmines has had a devastating impact on the country. 98% of mine casualties are civilian, 6,000 villages are affected and over five million people are at risk. “ As a result of the visit, a landmines awareness project, using football as the means to engage young people, was launched. ” On the sporting stage, 2005 proved to be the first of the Federer years. Swiss tennis phenomenon Roger Federer won the first of his four straight Laureus World Sportsman of the Year Awards after becoming the first man since 1988 to capture three out of four Grand Slam events in the same calendar year, winning the Australian Open, Wimbledon and US Open. In the audience at the Awards Ceremony in Estoril, Portugal were members of the Laureus World Sports Academy and guests, including His Majesty the King of Spain, Hollywood stars Jackie Chan, Teri Hatcher and Morgan Freeman, and England football captain David Beckham. Roger Federer told the audience: "It's a big honour for me to stand here. It's a dream come true. I've received many awards over the years, but this one is the one I really wish for. When you look at the other nominees, they are all great athletes, and I look up to them as well. This Award means the most to athletes because it is the Academy members voting for you, and you know I have many people who are my idols there like Boris Becker and Martina Navratilova.” That year the courage of Alessandro Zanardi was also recognised with the Comeback of the Year Award following the Italian’s return to motor racing after losing both legs in a horrific crash. "I want to thank Laureus, and all the Academy members for voting for me. If I look down in my soul, the sense of pride is immense," said Zanardi. In 2007, in a year when tennis dominated with winners Federer, Amelie Mauresmo and Serena Williams, there was special recognition for the ground-breaking achievements of Barcelona football club in spurning commercial shirt sponsorship worth millions a year in favour of carrying the UNICEF logo on their shirts to promote the work of the humanitarian organisation. To acknowledge this remarkable gesture in a very commercial sport, the Laureus Academy gave Barcelona a special Laureus Spirit of Sport Award. The spectacular backdrop of St. Petersburg with its palaces of the tsars, its museums and its spectacular waterways, provided a memorable location for the ninth Laureus World Sports Awards. Guest of honour Russian President Vladimir Putin said: “The giving of the Laureus World Sports Awards is an outstanding and important event in the world of sports. I would love to express my appreciation to the founders of the Laureus Sports Awards for the noble initiative, for the support of outstanding representatives of the world sports movement and for the promotion of the idea of uniting and bringing together people around the value of sport.” St.Petersburg is now a thriving city in the new Russia, but has known its share of suffering, being badly affected by war, civil disruption and famine. The work of the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation today focuses on many of these problems which now affect other parts of the world. One of the most emotional visits of that year came in October to a part of the world sadly familiar with war and violence, the Middle East. Edwin Moses and Vice Chairperson Tanni Grey-Thompson took part in a three-day trip to the West Bank. In Ramallah, they met girls at the PeacePlayers International project which uses basketball to teach leadership and life skills to refugees and Palestinian children. Moses said: “Sport is one of the few things that can bridge the divide between the communities, which is why Laureus recognises projects like these.” For ten years Laureus has celebrated the universal power of sport to bring people together as a force for good, whether through the Laureus World Sports Awards or in hundreds of cities and villages around the world that have benefited from the philanthropic work of the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. The Awards Ceremony has become a publicity engine for the Foundation which in turn has become a magnet for current athletes seeking to devote their time to Sport for Good because they want to give something back to society. Laureus now supports over 70 humanitarian projects around the world and since its inception has raised more than €20 million for projects which have helped to improve the lives of over one million young people. The tenth anniversary of Laureus is a time to celebrate that success, but also a chance to look forward to a new decade of opportunity. Double Olympic 400 metres hurdles champion Edwin Moses, who has been Chairman of the Laureus World Sports Academy since it began, says: “We have been growing fast, but as long as there are people on the ground who are prepared to give up their time to set up these projects, you’ll find us there to support them. The future is incredibly exciting. Wherever you look you see Laureus Academy members striving to establish new ventures. These are men and women who achieved what they did in sport because they never gave up. That energy and drive is now going into Laureus, and the beneficiaries are young people who are having to face social challenges we all wish they didn’t have to contend with. “ Anything we can do to help we will. We cannot change the world overnight, but we believe we are making a difference. One playing field at a time is progress. If you can change just one child’s life for the better, you know it’s worth all the effort. ” During the visit, the two Laureus Academy members also attended the tenth anniversary celebrations for the Peres Center for Peace in Tel Aviv - another project in the region supported by Laureus - where they joined FIFA president Sepp Blatter on a sports panel discussing the topic ‘Overcoming hurdles through sport'. ABOVE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARCEL DESAILLY AT ORPHAN AID, GHANA: HIS COUNTRY OF BIRTH www.laureus.com www.laureus.com 10 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS HOW IT ALL BEGAN 11 LAUREUS ACADEMY MEET NELSON MANDELA “ For me personally it gave me the chance to be in the same room with my sporting heroes but the icing on the cake was definitely to have Nelson Mandela be part of Laureus and make this incredible opening speech about how sport has the power to change the world. ” BORIS BECKER “ Life is not a matter of chance, but rather of choice. I am so grateful that Nelson Mandela made that choice to support Laureus. ” MARK SPITZ “ All of us were accustomed to meeting fairly important people, but seeing Nelson Mandela arrive unexpectedly to tell us how much he supported what we were trying to achieve was impressive to say the least. I am not sure how we had been kept unaware that he was coming to Monaco, but it had the desired effect. We all believed in the concept of Sport for Good but having perhaps the most admired man in the world at that time there to urge us on was exhilarating. ” LORD COE “ Being in the room with most of my sporting heroes was and is one of the biggest thrills of my life. ” Ps. I hear Nelson Mandela was there too! DALEY THOMPSON FOUNDING MEMBERS OF THE LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS ACADEMY WITH NELSON MANDELA FROM LEFT: PETER BLAKE, EDWIN MOSES, KATARINA WITT, MIGUEL INDURAIN, EMERSON FITTIPALDI, VIVIAN RICHARDS, NAWAL EL MOUTAWAKEL, ILIE NASTASE, IAN BOTHAM, ALBERTO TOMBA, NELSON MANDELA, BORIS BECKER, NADIA COMANECI, DALEY THOMPSON, GREG LEMOND, GIACOMO AGOSTINI, MORNÉ DU PLESSIS, SEAN FITZPATRICK, DAN MARINO, DAWN FRASER, HUGO PORTA, SEBASTIAN COE, FRANZ KLAMMER & MARK SPITZ “ At this occasion Nelson Mandela said: "Sport has the power to change the world". These words made a great impression coming from someone who inspired so many people with his courage. His constant fight for a great humanitarian cause and all that he endured for his beliefs give us all great hope. If this one person can make such a strong statement in support of sport, then you must believe and be grateful that you can actually change things for the greater good with your contributions to the great world of sport. FRANZ KLAMMER ” “ To have Nelson Mandela as the Patron of Laureus is a very special and emotional relationship. It has such a powerful effect on what we are all about. SEAN FITZPATRICK ” “ Meeting President Mandela is a special moment in anyone’s life, and to do so with members of the Laureus Academy, and his special interaction with us, will be a memory that will always remain with me. ” MORNÉ DU PLESSIS “ It was the second meeting of Laureus Academy members and we were excited about the visit of Nelson Mandela. Everybody in the room was talking, shaking hands, exchange opinion on Foundation activities. Then the door was open and Mr Mandela entered into the room. He was like sunshine. He was smiling, after so much pain, he was luminous, after so much darkness, he was an example for all mankind. Hope, in one world. I will never forget that moment in which Mr Mandela came in, and the time stopped, and I feel so thankful. ALBERTO TOMBA www.laureus.com ” “ We, the members of the Laureus World Sports Academy could have received no greater gift than the presence of President Nelson Mandela as our Patron at the 1st annual Laureus World Sports Awards. President Mandela and his often quoted speech describing the ability to use sport as a tool for social change will go down in history as the most important thesis in the history of sport. We as Academy members can only hope to live up to Mandela's standard. EDWIN MOSES CHAIRMAN ” Nelson Mandelas speech has become our mission statement. It perfectly embodies what Laureus is all about when it was founded, now and its future. The following speech was delivered at the very first Laureus Sports Awards, in Monaco 2000. SPORT HAS THE POWER TO CHANGE THE WORLD. IT HAS THE POWER TO INSPIRE. IT HAS THE POWER TO UNITE PEOPLE IN A WAY THAT LITTLE ELSE DOES. IT SPEAKS TO YOUTH IN A LANGUAGE THEY UNDERSTAND. SPORT CAN CREATE HOPE, WHERE ONCE THERE WAS ONLY DESPAIR. “ NELSON MANDELA, PATRON, LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS AWARDS, MONACO 2000 ” www.laureus.com 12 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS The temptation was just too great for David Cameron, Britain’s Leader of the Opposition in the House of Commons. He had been riding alongside Laureus World Sports Academy member Daley Thompson on the last day of the 367-mile Laureus ‘Breaking the Cycle of Violence’ bike ride from Manchester to London, which raised awareness of sports solutions to the problems of gun and knife crime in the United Kingdom. But, with the finishing line in sight – the gates of the Lillian Bayliss School in Kennington Mr Cameron put in a sprint finish worthy of the Tour de France and swept into the school playground ahead of double Olympic decathlon gold medallist Daley. BREAKING THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE 13 As he dismounted from his bike he told the cheering youngsters with great gusto: “ It’s not every day you get the chance to beat an Olympic legend, I couldn’t resist it. ” Mr Cameron had joined Daley and fellow Laureus Academy members Boris Becker, Gary Player, Hugo Porta and Steve Waugh to mark the conclusion of the marathon sevenday ride which had routed through Stoke-onTrent, Coventry, Milton Keynes, Oxford, Newbury and Brent, visiting community projects along the way. The London Active Communities Urban Stars project at Lillian Bayliss School uses sport as the means to keep young people off the streets and away from the risk of gangs and gun and knife crime. SPORT IS AN EFFECTIVE MECHANISM FOR OVERCOMING YOUTH CRIME & GANG VIOLENCE OPPOSITE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS HUGO PORTA & DALEY THOMPSON CYCLE PAST BIG BEN WITH DAVID CAMERON TOP: DAVID CAMERON JOINS IN THE ACTION AT LILLIAN BAYLISS SCHOOL ABOVE: BREAKING THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE REPORT* BEING PRESENTED TO PRIME MINSTER GORDON BROWN AND TESSA JOWELL MP BY LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS HUGO PORTA, STEVE WAUGH, BORIS BECKER, DALEY THOMPSON AND GARY PLAYER WITH RICHARD TAYLOR While at Lillian Bayliss, Mr Cameron met the youngsters, played basketball and football with them and watched them boxing. He said: “I am delighted to support Laureus in this initiative. The number of young people entering the criminal justice system has gone up by a fifth in just five years. What many young people like them need is a positive outlet for their energies and social needs. Sport - especially team sport - offers exactly that, so we have to do whatever we can to make sure sport is more accessible to them.” After the visit, Daley Thompson led the Academy members on the short ride across Westminster Bridge to the front door of No.10 Downing Street where they were met by British Prime Minister Gordon Brown to whom they presented a report*, specially commissioned by the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation, on the role which sport can play in fighting the evils of gang violence and gun and knife crime. The report* – ‘Breaking the Cycle of Violence’ – calls on politicians, community clubs and sports fans to recognise and invest in sport as an effective mechanism for overcoming the growing problem of youth crime and gang violence. 2009 BREAKING THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE MANCHESTER - LONDON DALEY THOMPSON CYCLE RIDE www.laureus.com Mr Brown said: “I am pleased to congratulate the team on their epic cycle ride. I’m sure many people have cheered them on their journey and I applaud them for their admirable efforts. While we are making real progress with the ‘Tackling Knives Action Programme’, it is vital that we continue to do our utmost to combat violent crime which has such a devastating effect on peoples’ lives.” www.laureus.com 14 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS BREAKING THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE 15 Also present to receive the report* were Olympics Minister Tessa Jowell and Richard Taylor, father of Damilola Taylor, from South London, who was brutally murdered, while just a young boy, in tragic circumstances in 2000. He is now the Government’s special advisor on youth violence and knife crime. A large number of concerned sporting and show business celebrities, campaigners and supporters had joined Daley Thompson and Hugo Porta, who like Daley also cycled every mile of the route, on various stages of the ride. Academy members included Sebastian Coe and Sean Fitzpatrick, Olympic rower Matthew Pinsent, South African rugby star Butch James, former Liverpool footballer Graeme Souness and British actors Michael Le Vell, Lee Boardman and Tim Healy. Daley Thompson, whose idea it was to stage the bike ride, said: “ It was an amazing event. I was overwhelmed by the support Hugo and I received from people who rode with us, and from the people who cheered us on the way. I was especially delighted that Gordon Brown and David Cameron wanted to support what we were trying to do. “The report* really struck a chord with me. A gang is actually not that different from a sports team, both provide you with a sense of belonging, status and excitement. But, while sport also helps you develop control over your emotions and learn to respect certain boundaries, being in a gang can be destructive.” Daley Thompson remains a very selfeffacing man despite his fame and he clearly derived as much satisfaction from his visits to the community projects as he did being welcomed at 10 Downing Street. LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS, SEAN FITZPATRICK, HUGO PORTA, DALEY THOMPSON & LORD COE ACCOMPANIED BY MATTHEW PINSENT At one such project, Streetgames in Stokeon-Trent, 1,600 young people from parts of the city with the poorest records for antisocial behaviour take part in sports activities in schools and sports halls around the city. The project is a resounding success involving the community, police and volunteers and has succeeded in keeping youngsters off the streets and out of trouble. Daley and Hugo presented prizes to youngsters who participated in a cycle challenge and then congratulated the local council and the project managers for their foresight in setting up the programme. Former Argentinian rugby legend Hugo Porta added: “It was a great experience and the ride was excellent team work over the seven days. I was there to support Daley, my friend and Laureus Academy colleague, and also to see what I could take back to Argentina from the projects we visited on the way. We have a successful and growing National Foundation in Argentina, and it was invaluable to see the work the projects were doing in the UK.” Daley added: "It was heart-warming to see the leaders of Britain’s principal political parties coming together on this issue. I know these are the people who can make the biggest difference, but I was also impressed with all the volunteers in the projects, in every town we visited. They are out there on the front line, making it happen. They are the real heroes. This is exactly what we at Laureus are all about, sustainable programmes that involve all parts of the community.” *The report can be downloaded at www.laureus.com/breakingthecycleofviolence ” What is happening to too many of our young people is a tragedy and we must find a new way to fight this evil. I hope I have been able to show how sport can make an impact. BELOW: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER DALEY THOMPSON AT THE MATHISEN YOUTH CENTRE IN MILTON KEYNES www.laureus.com www.laureus.com 16 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS SPECIAL OLYMPICS UNIFIED SPORTSTM PROGRAMME 17 SEENIGAMA SPORTS PROGRAMME LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS EDWIN MOSES AND NADIA COMANECI 2005 2003 SEENIGAMA SPORTS PROGRAMME SPECIAL OLYMPICS UNIFIED SPORTS PROGRAMME TM LU JIA ZUI SCHOOL PUDONG GALLE, SRI LANKA BY NADIA COMANECI BY SIR IAN BOTHAM In March 2003, Laureus Academy Chairman Edwin Moses led no fewer than nine Academy Members on a visit to a school in Shanghai for children with special needs: Sebastian Coe, Nadia Comaneci, Kapil Dev, Michael Johnson, Franz Klammer, Robby Naish, Daley Thompson and Yaping Deng. For Olympic gymnastic legend Nadia Comaneci, it was one of her most memorable Laureus visits. “You get used to crowds in China, but I don’t think the Lu Jia Zui School in Pudong had ever seen anything like it. Nor for that matter had we. “ The school had been established by Special Olympics, the world's largest sports organisation for children and adults with mental disabilities, and with support from Laureus was taking a leading role in the Unified Sports Programme in China. ” LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER SIR IAN BOTHAM SURVEYS THE DEVASTATION IN GALLE The Tsunami Disaster of December 26, 2004 left areas of Sri Lanka and Indonesia devastated. In the months after the disaster, the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation organised a three-day visit to Galle in Sri Lanka led by cricket legend and Laureus World Sports Academy member Sir Ian Botham, to explore the long-term potential of sport in healing the wounds of the devastated community. “Like everyone else, I had seen the images of the Tsunami Disaster on television, but nothing prepared me for what I saw when I was there. What made it even more horrifying was that I had been to these places before. In 2003 when I was covering cricket for Sky TV, I stayed at a house just along the beach from Galle – it wasn’t there any more! The fishermen, the market stalls along the road, the other houses on the coast, they had all gone. The cricket ground looked like the surface of the moon. I can still recall the clock on the old Test ground in Galle frozen at ‘9.25am’ on December 26. I saw the rust-coloured railway carriage that became a symbol of the disaster. Some of the carriages had been swept 200 yards away, such was the power of the tsunami. After the first smaller wave, many villagers sought refuge on the train. Then the second wave hit and people died. That image will stay with me forever: can you imagine the horror of being caught inside there? But I also recall the resilience of the people. Such personal suffering, such loss, yet such determination to see it through. I knew rebuilding homes, feeding the evacuees and caring for orphaned children came first. But once that phase was over, it was clear to me that sport could play an important part in giving people a sense of hope. So what could we do? We eventually settled on the village of Peraliya, just outside Galle. Rehousing was going well, the main aid agencies were doing a good job, but I wanted to help rebuild community spirit. They were all cricket mad and sport as we know can foster togetherness and team spirit. At my suggestion, Laureus decided to fund a sports coordinator for five villages around Peraliya and Seenigama to channel the energies of the children into competition. The Seenigama Sports project now involves boys and girls, aged from six upwards, taking part in inter-village sports leagues with matches and training sessions. “ Five years on, I am delighted to say the spirit of the people is astounding. They have picked themselves up, they are rebuilding their lives and it is clear that sport is helping people, particularly the younger ones, to finally put this devastating event behind them - and have fun again. ” Sir Ian Botham returned to Sri Lanka on 2 December 2009 to mark the 5th anniversary of the Tsunami Disaster. For a full report please visit www.laureus.com www.laureus.com LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS MICHAEL JOHNSON, NADIA COMANECI, EDWIN MOSES AND KAPIL DEV RUNNING WITH STUDENTS FROM LU JIA ZUI SPECIAL SCHOOL, A LOCAL SCHOOL IN PARTNERSHIP WITH “SPECIAL OLYMPICS SHANGHAI” The word had obviously gone around that we were coming and I think most of the neighbourhood turned up to join in the fun. There were balloons and kites flying in the wind, and the children were making a terrific noise with their drums and cymbals. It was chaotic and very emotional. There was also an impromptu sprint race in the school yard between Michael Johnson and Edwin Moses and about 50 of the children. I’m not sure the children really appreciated who we all were, but the parents, teachers and volunteers certainly did. The school had been established by Special Olympics, the world's largest sports organisation for children and adults with mental disabilities, and with support from Laureus was taking a leading role in the Unified Sports Programme in China, which sees children with and without mental disabilities playing on the same teams to break down barriers and promote integration. Laureus has supported two Unified Sports Porgrammes for 9 Years. I found myself with Sebastian Coe in an inside games room, where we joined dozens of youngsters playing with a giant tub full of plastic balls. Somehow we ended up diving into the balls to excited shrieks all round from the children. It was great. I remember China's Olympic gold medal winner Yaping Deng, the greatest female table tennis player in history, who as you can imagine is a gigantic celebrity in China, giving coaching to the youngsters. The parents and teachers told us how inspiring it was for them that we were there to support the work of the school, but believe me it was just as uplifting for us. A visit I will remember for ever.” www.laureus.com 18 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS MYSA AFRICA 19 THERE ARE OVER 20,000 PLAYERS IN 1,300 TEAMS LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARCEL DESAILLY I moved to France from Ghana when I was very young, but I still feel very strong ties with Africa, and I now have a house in Accra, so I am delighted that Laureus supports such a successful project as Mathare in Kenya. In fact Laureus is helping to replicate projects like Mathare in other countries on the continent.” Michael Johnson recalls: “ I found it very emotional to be at Mathare with Marcel and to see for myself the work that is being done to help children who live there. 2006 MATHARE YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCIATION KENYA, AFRICA BY MARCEL DESAILLY & MICHAEL JOHNSON It started small, but now it has grown to become a beacon of excellence for hundreds of similar communities around the world. LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS MARCEL DESAILLY & MICHAEL JOHNSON ON A PROJECT VISIT TO MATHARE YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCATION The first community project supported by Laureus was the Mathare Youth Sports Association (MYSA) in Kenya, which pioneered the use of football as the means to raise the selfesteem of young people in the Nairobi slum. In October 2006, in a memorable visit, former French football captain Marcel Desailly teamed up with five-time Olympic track gold medallist Michael Johnson. Marcel Desailly recalls: “As a footballer myself, I was overwhelmed by what I saw. This is one of the largest and poorest slums in Nairobi with many people suffering from AIDS and other illnesses. www.laureus.com ” “Mathare was the first ever project which the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation supported and we can be very proud of what has been achieved. It gave me so much pleasure to be able to kick a ball around with some of the girls and boys from the project. There are over 20,000 players in 1,300 teams. The teams get extra points by cleaning up the areas where they live. That helps to fight disease. This is a classic example of how sport can make a big difference to the lives of so many young people.There are now Mathare players in every senior football team in Kenya, and Dennis Oliech, who had a trial at Manchester United, has played for Al-Arabi in Qatar, Nantes and Auxerre. The project is owned and run by the Mathare youth. Every member of its executive is under 21, which is impressive. And it’s far from being just about producing footballers. Because of the extra help that has been given, many of the children have had the opportunity to go to college and some have become doctors and teachers and come back to Mathare to help the next generation.” “ I particularly liked the Mathare mantra: ‘If you do something, MYSA does something; but if you do nothing, MYSA does nothing. ” www.laureus.com 20 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS FIGHT FOR PEACE 21 WHEN ‘FIGHT FOR PEACE’ OPENED ITS DOORS, IT CHANNELLED THIS AGGRESSION INTO BOXING. 2005 FIGHT FOR PEACE LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER EMERSON FITTIPALDI & CLODOALDO SILVA TALK WITH YOUNGSTERS WHO HAVE BENEFITTED FROM THE INITIATIVE RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL BY EMERSON FITTIPALDI The Fight for Peace project is based in Complexo da Maré, a slum district in Rio de Janeiro, where there has been more than a decade of territorial drug wars. Armed children patrol the streets to ‘defend’ the community from rival factions or police raids. Here Formula One legend and Laureus Academy member Emerson Fittipaldi recalls a memorable visit to the project in May 2005 with Paralympic swimming hero Clodoaldo Silva. “The bodyguards in the car looked around nervously as we drove into the favela of Complexo da Maré. It was May, in Rio, in my home country of Brazil, somewhere you should be able to relax, but kidnapping in this part of the world is common and no one wanted to take a chance. Nothing sharpens the mind more than a young teenager in shorts and flipflops who should be at play, instead standing with a semi automatic machine gun. “ Around here, children as young as ten are used as armed soldiers and drug pushers. The firearms mortality rate for teenagers aged 15-17 is only matched in a war zone. ” www.laureus.com When Fight for Peace opened its doors, it channelled this aggression into boxing. In a community like Complexo da Maré where macho behaviour is important for young people, boxing has a built-in appeal. The idea is that young people taking part will not feel they need to have a gun to get respect. Supported by Laureus, the project has become a safe haven in the middle of a nightmare of drug trafficking and violence. On the visit, I listened to the story of one young man who told me his father was in prison for armed robbery and he had lost his mother. He ended up living on the streets and getting into trouble. He told the awful story of two aunts who were pregnant at the same time. One of them was murdered for violating a drug code, but they shot the wrong one, so they went back and murdered the other. This was the awful world he lived in. Then suddenly he discovered the boxing club and it changed everything for him. They had set up a competition for us to watch and I had to present a prize to a young girl called Manuela Lopes Silva. She told me: “ My life has changed completely after boxing. Before sport, I lived on the streets making mischief. Today, I dream of being a boxer and a lawyer. ” I went away with those words echoing in my mind. A perfect testament, I thought, to the work of Laureus.” I was delighted to have Clodoaldo Silva with me. He has suffered from cerebral palsy since he was a child and won six gold medals and one silver in the 2004 Athens Paralympics for Brazil. He was a nominee for the 2005 Laureus Sportsperson of the Year with a Disability Award and all the young people there were amazed at what he had achieved through sport. OPPOSITE: PROJECT PARTICIPANTS EMBRACE AT THE FINAL BELL RIGHT: EMERSON FITTIPALDI WITH YOUNGSTERS FROM THE PROJECT www.laureus.com 22 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS SPIRIT OF SOCCER LANDMINE AWARENESS 23 First in Bosnia and now in Cambodia, the Spirit of Soccer project puts on coaching sessions on a pitch that has been cleared of mines, and at the end of it the children are taught what to look for and what to do in an emergency, if they ever come across a landmine. What the volunteers are doing with the kids there is great, but when someone told me that it’s going to take around 200 years to clear up all the mines, I thought ‘this is ridiculous.’ 2005 SPIRIT OF SOCCER LANDMINE AWARENESS When I returned to the UK from Cambodia, I discovered that a Cheshire company Rapiscan was expert in the technology of x-ray security screening systems. I thought if they can do that, then they can detect mines as well. We have now talked to academics from Manchester and Lancaster Universities to find a better way of detecting mines and some of the responses that we are getting at the moment are heart-warming. I hope we can make real progress. BOSNIA & CAMBODIA BY SIR BOBBY CHARLTON In February 2009, I made a presentation to British Members of Parliament at the House of Commons in London, because eventually I think we will have to go to governments. We might even have to go to the United Nations. In the last few years, England football legend and Laureus Academy member Sir Bobby Charlton has visited two Spirit of Soccer landmines awareness projects - in Bosnia in 2005 and Cambodia in 2007. He was horrified by what he saw, and has begun a personal crusade to fight the evil of landmines around the world. “The immensity of the problem was hard to take in. There were literally thousands upon thousands of mines, probably millions, scattered everywhere, and children were losing their legs, sometimes their lives. www.laureus.com “ They were told not to go into certain areas, but often that was the best place to play football and they were prepared to take the risk because they loved their football. ” ABOVE: SIR BOBBY CHARLTON INSPECTS PROGRESS IN CAMBODIA TOP RIGHT: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER SIR BOBBY CHARLTON COACHES CHILDREN FROM THE SPIRIT OF SOCCER PROJECT BOTTOM RIGHT: MANCHESTER UNITED PLAYER, WAYNE ROONEY JOINS THE LANDMINE AWARENESS CAMPAIGN IN CAMBODIA I am delighted that the players at my club, Manchester United, and our manager Alex Ferguson, have been very supportive of what I have been trying to do. If you’re a footballer one of the worst things that can ever happen is losing your leg. This is happening to these little kids without them even having the chance to be a footballer. We must do something to help.” www.laureus.com 24 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS Moroccan Olympic legend Nawal El Moutawakel founded the highly successful Courir Pour Le Plaisir fun run for women in Casablanca, and was also the inspiration behind the Courir pour la Vie (Run for Life) project, supported by Laureus, which uses sport to help teenage girls in rural areas to increase their confidence and fight against gender inequality. In May 2007, fellow Laureus Academy members Marvelous Marvin Hagler and Daley Thompson joined Nawal on a memorable and colourful visit to Morocco COURIR POUR LA VIE 25 “The look on the faces of Marvin Hagler and Daley Thompson said everything. They were watching 25,000 women streaming past them, waving, at the start of the Courir Pour Le Plaisir (Run For Fun) Women’s Race in Casablanca – which is one of the biggest female sporting events in the world. Marvin and Daley spent 48 hours with me in Morocco visiting the Courir pour la Vie project in the small village of Ben Abid, before going to the race. By the end of the their visit, I think they were overwhelmed by what they saw, and I know they were impressed. To get to the project at the Imam Muslim School we had to drive for almost an hour down a dusty track. This really is rural Morocco, but the news of our arrival had been broadcast around and as we walked into the school buildings there was Moroccan music being played and children singing and dancing – they were so happy to see their visitors. Everywhere we went, the children followed us giggling and laughing. www.laureus.com Fun is an important element at Courir pour la Vie, but there is a much more serious purpose behind the project. Although in many ways Morocco is a modern 21st century country, there are still rural areas where there is a very traditional attitude to the role of women. They still have less opportunity to go to school than boys. The objective of the project is to increase the confidence and independence of the girls through sporting activities and workshops so that they have the resources to continue their education rather than following the traditional pattern of leaving school early. Several of the girls from the project took part in Courir Pour Le Plaisir, so Marvin and Daley took it upon themselves to give them some coaching before the race, and helped them with their warm up. I think Daley was profoundly impressed by what he saw and what the girls from the project told him. As he left Morocco he said to me: “ This was a fantastic experience. I can see how the power of a race like this really can make things change for the better. ” It truly was an unforgettable 48 hours in Casablanca.” THERE ARE STILL RURAL AREAS WHERE THERE IS A VERY TRADITIONAL ATTITUDE TO THE ROLE OF WOMEN. 2007 COURIR POUR LAVIE The sporting highlight of the visit was a tug of war with former World Middleweight Champion Marvin on one team and Olympic decathlon gold medalist Daley on the other. I was somewhere in the middle, just hanging on. The school grounds filled up with hundreds of people watching the fun. CASABLANCA, MOROCCO BY NAWAL EL MOUTAWAKEL LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER, NAWAL EL MOUTAWAKEL, RUNNING WITH STUDENTS OF THE COURIR POUR LA VIE PROJECT IN MOROCCO www.laureus.com 26 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS FIGHT BACK USA 27 OPPOSITE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARTINA NAVRATILOVA, FIGHT BACK, NEW YORK BELOW: CHILDREN FROM FIGHT BACK PROJECT PRACTISING JIU-JITSU 2006 FIGHT BACK NEW YORK, USA BY MARTINA NAVRATILOVA In July 2006, just days after she announced her impending retirement from tennis after winning 58 Grand Slam titles, Laureus Academy member Martina Navratilova visited the Fight Back project in South Bronx, New York, which aims to help women at risk of abuse by teaching them jiu-jitsu for selfdefence “The visit to South Bronx came at a significant moment in my life. After so many years playing tennis, to say you are going to stop is quite an upheaval. I could probably have played on for another five years if I had wanted to, but I didn’t. It was time to move on to my next life and an important part of that is my work for Laureus. So I was pleased to be able to take part straight away in a visit to a project - though I didn’t realise it would get me involved in a full-blown jiu-jitsu session. “ Fight Back helps women at risk of abuse. They are usually AfricanAmerican or Hispanic, sometimes unemployed, and always poor. ” They need the confidence and skills that self defence classes teach. The jiu-jitsu plays an important part in building selfrespect, which is vital if they are going to improve their lives. The project also uses jiu-jitsu to keep kids out of gangs and offers them positive sporting alternatives. In a community like the South Bronx where toughness and macho behaviour is important for young people, the martial arts have a natural appeal.The aim is to make the youngsters realise that it is not necessary to fight in the street or pick up a knife or a gun to get respect.” www.laureus.com THERE WAS SO MUCH POSITIVE ENERGY AROUND THE PLACE. I FOUND THE WHOLE VISIT A SERIOUSLY UPLIFTING EXPERIENCE. www.laureus.com 28 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS PROJECT REFLECTIONS 29 2000-2010 PROJECT REFLECTIONS At the end of a relentless decade of growth, the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation now supports more than 70 community sports projects around the world. Those projects have helped to improve the lives of over one million young people. MATHARE YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCIATION DAVID THIRU - ACADEMY DIRECTOR Mathare Youth Sports Association (MYSA) in Nairobi, Kenya, has been a beneficiary of Laureus support for the last ten years. We are proud that we were the very first community sports project to become part of the Laureus Family back in 2000. Over the years we have been privileged to have had many Laureus Academy members come to visit us at Mathare. The first two were Edwin Moses, the Chairman of Laureus, and Sir Bobby Charlton. And we have also had Michael Johnson, Marcel Desailly and Martina Navratilova. These visits serve to raise our profile in our country and internationally and energise the youth to do even better. The Laureus Sport for Good Foundation has helped MYSA in many ways, for example helping to pay school fees for our top leaders and volunteers through our leadership award programme that identifies the most needy children who have shown leadership qualities. These leaders are rewarded by having their school fees paid for them to keep them at school. Laureus has also helped the Mathare community libraries to stay open. I would say this has given as many as 10,000 of our young people access to proper facilities to read. We have many examples of individual success stories thanks to those libraries. MAGIC BUS MATTHEW SPACEY - FOUNDER & CEO It has been nearly six years since we began our relationship with the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. At the time we were just ten staff operating from a tiny office in Mumbai, with about 1,000 children on the programme. At that stage, while we knew what we were doing really worked, the concept of development through sports was nascent in India with limited support. I remember the first visit by a Laureus Academy member when Edwin Moses turned up to one of our sessions and immediately mucked in and played a match with the children – it must have been 45 degrees that day. It was inspiring to the children, but with Edwin pictured at the Magic Bus project all across the front page of the Times of India, it made an instantaneous impact on our credibility. Time and time again, whether it’s been Boris Becker, Kapil Dev or Ian Botham, the focus on visits has always been to meet the children and play – and it’s always been competitive. Laureus has given us funds to help us improve the quality of the playing fields at Mathare, most of which were not level and needed to be improved to reduce the risk of injury, and of course Laureus helps us to organise our league. We have now grown to over 1,500 teams from slightly over 1,000 ten years ago. See pages 18 & 19 for Marcel Desailly and Michael Johnson’s project visit to MYSA. FIGHT FOR PEACE LUKE DOWNDEY - FOUNDER & DIRECTOR Like the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation, Fight for Peace was born in 2000. Unlike the first Laureus World Sports Awards which involved some of the biggest sporting legends the world has ever known, Fight for Peace began in a small room with 15 kids in the favela community of Complexo da Maré, Rio de Janeiro. From the beginning, Fight for Peace's aim has been to use boxing and martial arts as a tool to access and work with young people in communities adversely affected by crime, gangs and violence. CENTRE: SEAN TUOHEY CO-FOUNDER PEACEPLAYERS INTERNATIONAL The success of the projects depends on the passionate young men and women who work on the front line in every continent – the leaders, the coaches and the volunteers – who are committed to making a difference. Here the prime movers behind four of Laureus’ most longstanding and successful projects explain what it means to them to be part of the Laureus Family. PEACEPLAYERS INTERNATIONAL BRENDAN TUOHEY CO-FOUNDER & EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR In 2002, PeacePlayers International (PPI) was just a small group of individuals determined to make a difference in South Africa and confident that basketball was the right tool to do it. We didn’t have much experience, we didn’t have a business plan, and – what seemed most important at the time – we didn’t have much money. Our initial funds, raised from friends and family, were dwindling. We were living hand-to-mouth, and I remember thinking that PeacePlayers International might not make it, even though we knew our programme was working. Luckily, the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation had enough faith in our organisation to be our first institutional funder, awarding PeacePlayers International a three year grant. www.laureus.com We are proud that seven years on we are now a Laureus partner in three different locations - Israel and the West Bank, South Africa and Cyprus. Without the Foundation’s confidence and support, PeacePlayers International would not be where it is today. No question about it. Years of partnership have created many memories: Laureus Chairman Edwin Moses and Tanni Grey-Thompson coaching PPI’s Palestinian girls’ teams in Ramallah; Boris Becker and Morné du Plessis participating in PPI’s Citywide Basketball Tournament with 2,000 children in Durban; and my brother and I being part of the Laureus World Sports Awards in St. Petersburg, Russia are just a few of the highlights. Laureus first supported Fight for Peace in 2003, taking a risk on a small project with big aspirations. Since that small room in Maré, Fight for Peace has grown into an independent organisation, now directly supporting over 1,600 children and young people per year. LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS KAPIL DEV AND IAN BOTHAM ON A PROJECT VISIT TO MAGIC BUS, INDIA CHILDREN OF THE MAGIC BUS PROJECT Laureus believed in our potential at an early stage, and has shown consistent and unwavering support which has helped us to grow from Rio to London and develop a model which we believe can be replicated internationally to help other young people in need elsewhere. Visits to Fight for Peace by Laureus Academy members, such as Emerson Fittipaldi, and Laureus Ambassadors, such as Barry McGuigan and Wladimir Klitschko, have undoubtedly been beneficial to the organisation's profile. Yet more importantly, they have demonstrated to young people so often ignored and downtrodden, that even World champions care about them. Equally important, though, has been the relationships and learning that have come through Laureus’ network of Sport for Good organisations. This network represents the best work being done across the globe in this fast growing field. These visits have been inspirational for both our young people and our staff, and in all cases have lead to on-going individual involvement by these Academy members and Ambassadors well outside the media's gaze. Back in 2002, the Foundation helped us make the leap from a group of idealistic kids to a sustainable organisation. Today it is still helping us enhance our programmes, broaden our impact, and use our shared learnings to assist other organisations in regions of conflict to develop and scale up their own initiatives. This undoubtedly demonstrates their genuine commitment to the ideals which Laureus upholds. For the future I can only hope that Laureus will continue to be one of our most valued partners, and keep working with us so that we in turn can support more and more young people in disadvantaged communities around the world. Brendan Tuohey and his brother Sean, Co-Founder of PeacePlayers International were joint winners of the Laureus Sport for Good Award, 2008. See pages 20 & 21 for Emerson Fittipaldi’s project visit to Fight for Peace, Brazil. In these six years, Laureus and Magic Bus have stood side by side and learnt together and today we recognise Laureus as a crucial partner in our growth which has seen us expand to 200 staff and 150,000 children. The relationship has grown deeper and while Academy visits are crucial for both the children, staff and an ever hungry media, the content of the relationship has changed as our needs have evolved. The legacy we are both trying to create here in the subcontinent is to become financially self-sustainable and reach 600,000 children every week by 2012 - an exciting vision. I am really looking forward to sharing that journey with Laureus. Well done on a fantastic start to the journey. www.laureus.com 30 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS LOOKING AHEAD 31 The Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Trust South Africa was the first Laureus National Foundation and now supports 12 projects in South Africa, the most in any country. GREEN POINT STADIUM, SPECIALLY BUILT FOR THE 2010 FIFA FOOTBALL WORLD CUP. PHOTOGRAPHER: BRUCE SUTHERLAND, CITY OF CAPE TOWN FROM LEFT: WALK THE TALK PARTICIPANTS: LUCAS RADEBE, HUGO PORTA, DESHUN DEYSEL, SYDNEY MAREE, BABY JAKE MATLALA (FRONT), FRANK FREDERICKS, MORNÉ DU PLESSIS AND BERTRAND SCHOLLER. That was the day that we met President Mandela, and we had all these great sports stars shaking in their boots. President Mandela looked up at Edwin Moses and said ‘did you vote for George Bush?’ and Edwin didn’t know what to say. I’ll never forget it. “ My late Dad had a saying that no journey is made in vain, and every Academy visit to a project has a special moment. If you can change just one child’s day, you know it’s worthwhile. Laureus Academy member and former rugby legend Morné du Plessis is the Chairman of the Laureus National Foundation in South Africa. As the country awaits an exciting World Cup summer, he was interviewed by former rugby player and star broadcaster John Robbie, from Radio 702, himself a member of the Laureus Friends & Ambassadors programme. JOHN ROBBIE: Morné, this is the tenth year of Laureus, you are the Chairman of the Laureus National Foundation in South Africa, but as a person, a human being what does Laureus mean to you? MORNÉ DU PLESSIS: John, it’s been a great opportunity at this stage of my life to be involved with Laureus. For me, it’s been a chance to give something back in a small way. I have met many incredible people around the world in my life, many through sport, but through Laureus I have now met some who are definitely not famous, but to me are probably more important. I mean the people I have met in places like India, and obviously in South Africa, who run our projects. These are the heroes who do the work on the ground, and just meeting them and talking to them makes me feel enriched. Every time I am in contact with people like this, it really makes me look at my own values. JOHN: I know just how you feel. When I go on a visit to one of the Laureus projects in South Africa, I come away full of admiration for the officials, the coaches and volunteers. We have some amazing community projects here, why do you think the South African Foundation has grown so much and been such a success? MORNÉ: Well I think there’s a few reasons for that. One, we have a fantastic support base through our Country Patron Discovery. You can have the best energy in the world, but you just need that financial kick-start. They are in their second term of funding, so you cannot overstate how important that has been. Secondly, I think there is definitely a South African theme that runs through Laureus in terms of the founders, the people who started it, and of course our Patron is President Mandela. And then there is the good old South African fighting spirit. There’s a lot of work to be done in terms of social awareness and social activity in South Africa and we’re sports mad. So put all those together and I think that’s the reason. JOHN: I love the spectacular ones that we do. Here at Radio 702 we’ve got the Walk The Talk sponsored walks where England’s former cricket captain Michael Vaughan came out. Last year we had Laureus Academy members Daley Thompson and Steve Waugh joining 50,000 people on the walk. What are the Laureus moments that have captured your imagination, Morné? MORNÉ: I can remember many years ago when we visited a street sport programme in Cape Town and Daley Thompson was there. He was asked by the Press “ you famous guys, you come in and out, I suppose we’ll never see you again?’ And Daley turned to me, then to the Press man and said ‘don’t you worry, you’re going to see me again. ” And I can promise you that he was true to his word. I think he’s been out four or five times. And I think of Hugo Porta and the sort of passion he shows when he comes out. At the rugby project in Soweto, for example, he gave his total self. And then of course, I remember the Academy Forum meeting we had in Cape Town with Edwin Moses, Monica Seles, Martina Navratilova, Ilie Nastase and Kip Keino. 2009 LOOKING AHEAD SOUTH AFRICA WORLD CUP 2010 MORNÉ DU PLESSIS & JOHN ROBBIE www.laureus.com ” JOHN: Those are amazing memories. But how do you measure progress in terms of the children that Laureus works to help? MORNÉ: Maybe we’ll only know in 30 years time what it actually meant to them. Because we’ve been going for ten years, we are now trying to establish where the money is best spent. JOHN: Morné, you played a major part in South Africa’s win in the 1995 Rugby World Cup as manager. We know what staging that tournament did for this country. Now we have the 2010 Soccer World Cup on the horizon which is going to dwarf everything else. How important do you think that is going to be for South Africa, and for Laureus? MORNÉ: I’m involved with the Cape Town Stadium on the operational side. Our company, together with a French company, has the management contract for the stadium and so we are at the rock face of the construction site and seeing the plans coming together and just the magnitude of this thing is impressive. The Rugby World Cup, as you know, was an emotional awakening for South Africans in terms of sport and how sport can be used to pull them together. This one will be total immersion. This is as big as it will ever get here and you know it touches so many people’s lives. Where ’95 might have indirectly affected many of the people in this country, this one I think is going to be more direct at you. I just think of the pride of the guys working on the construction of the stadium. Can you imagine what they will feel when they see Germany running out to play England and know that they built that stadium, it’s just amazing, and it’s being beamed around the world. There are so many aspects, like the volunteer aspect. Everybody that’s going to greet somebody from overseas will play a role, so I think we can say that this is going to be as big as it can get in our lifetimes in this country in terms of sport. JOHN: Finally Morné, as you were the manager of the South African team that won the 1995 Rugby World Cup, if you had to give some advice - I know you don’t like giving advice - but if you were asked to give advice to Bafana Bafana, the South African soccer team, in terms of getting out the maximum performance for the World Cup, what would it be? MORNÉ: I’d say to them that they have to draw from the power of the support that they’re going to get - and they will, it will almost be impossible not to. They must accept that support on the one hand, but on the other hand they have to focus on the task at hand because their job is to go out and play. So really draw on the support of South Africans, but don’t get too carried away. FROM LEFT: NDUMI MARMAN, A COACH FROM LITTLE CHAMPS WITH ACADEMY MEMBERS DALEY THOMPSON AND MORNÉ DU PLESSIS AND FRIEND & AMBASSADOR, BABY JAKE MATLALA www.laureus.com 32 10 YEARS OF PROJECT VISITS LAUREUS SPORT FOR GOOD FOUNDATION WORLDWIDE PROJECTS WORLDWIDE PROJECTS 33 HOST CITIES LISBON, BARCELONA, MONACO, ST PETERSBURG & ABU DHABI AUSTRALIA 34. INDIGENOUS SPORTS PROGRAMME - AUSTRALIA EUROPE PROJECTS FUNDED BY THE LAUREUS SPORT FOR GOOD FOUNDATION AFRICA 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. COURIR POUR LA VIE - MOROCCO BUFFALO CITY SOCCER SCHOOL - SOUTH AFRICA COACHING FOR HOPE - MALI COMMUNITY BASED AIDS PROGRAMME - UGANDA DEVELOPMENT OF SPORTS AND RIGHTS FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES - RWANDA FIGHT WITH INSIGHT - SOUTH AFRICA FREE THE YOUTH - SOUTH AFRICA FUTURE CHAMPS - SOUTH AFRICA GRASSROOT SOCCER - AFRICA GRUPO DESPORTIVO DE MANICA - MOZAMBIQUE INDIGO YOUTH MOVEMENT - SOUTH AFRICA JOHANNESBURG CUBS - SOUTH AFRICA KICK4LIFE - LESOTHO LITTLE CHAMPS - SOUTH AFRICA LUNGISANI INDLELA - SOUTH AFRICA MAKOMBA-NDLELA YOUTH MOVEMENT - SOUTH AFRICA MATHARE YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCIATION (MYSA) - KENYA MOVING THE GOALPOSTS - KENYA ORPHANAID AFRICA - GHANA PEACEPLAYERS INTERNATIONAL - SOUTH AFRICA RUMBEK YOUTH SPORTS ASSOCIATION (RYSA) - SUDAN SOWETO SCHOOLS RUGBY PROGRAMME - SOUTH AFRICA SPORT FOR ALL - SOUTH AFRICA ASIA 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. IMAGE – INDIA MAGIC BUS SPORTS PROGRAMME - INDIA OPERATION BREAKTHROUGH - HONG KONG PEACEPLAYERS INTERNATIONAL - MIDDLE EAST PERES CENTER FOR PEACE TWINNED BASKETBALL SCHOOLS - ISRAEL / PALESTINE SEENIGAMA SPORT FOR LIFE PROJECT - SRI LANKA SPECIAL OLYMPICS UNIFIED SPORTS™ PROGRAMME SOUTH EAST ASIA SPIRIT OF SOCCER - CAMBODIA SPIRIT OF SOCCER - IRAQ SPORT SANS FRONTIÈRES - AFGHANISTAN www.laureus.com 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. ATHLETES DU MONDE - FRANCE BLINDSPOT - SWITZERLAND BUNTKICKTGUT - SWITZERLAND BAS VAN DE GOOR ZOMERKAMPEN - THE NETHERLANDS FIGHT FOR PEACE - UK GOLF EDUCATIF - FRANCE IT’S A GOAL! - UK KICK IM BOXRING - GERMANY KICK ON ICE - GERMANY KICK THE ROPES - GERMANY KICKFORMORE - GERMANY KIDSWING - GERMANY LA PALLA STORTA - ITALY LAUREUS CAVALLO - SWITZERLAND LAUREUS KICKING GIRLS - GERMANY LAUREUS MARITIME CHALLENGE - THE NETHERLANDS LAUREUS MOTORV8 - UK LEER - AVONDCOMPETITIE VOETBAL VOOR JEUGD IN DEN HAAG - THE NETHERLANDS MAISON DE LA MER - FRANCE MIDNIGHT BASKETBALL LEAGUE - UK MIDNIGHT PROJEKTE SCHWEIZ - SWITZERLAND MOVE&DO - GERMANY NEW LAUREUS PROJECT - SWITZERLAND PEACEPLAYERS INTERNATIONAL - CYPRUS PROGETTO POLISPORTIVA I - ITALY PROGETTO POLISPORTIVA II - ITALY PROYECTO GRUMET EXIT - SPAIN SPECIAL OLYMPICS - SPAIN SPORT DANS LA VILLE - FRANCE STREET LEAGUE - UK URBAN STARS - UK URBAN STARS WEST MIDLANDS - UK USP FUNDACION ALEX - SPAIN SOUTH AMERICA 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. CIUDAD OESTE (WEST CITY) - ARGENTINA CLUB ATLETICO PLATENSE - ARGENTINA CLUB DEPORTIVO BARRACAS - ARGENTINA EL DESAFIO - ARGENTINA LA LIGA LIMAKIDS - PERU LUTA PELA PAZ - BRAZIL SPORTS IN UNDERDEVELOPED AREAS - URUGUAY UNIÓN Y AMISTAD DE SAN ISIDRO - ARGENTINA VIRREYES HOCKEY - ARGENTINA NORTH AMERICA 77. 78. 79. 80. FIGHT BACK - USA I CHALLENGE MYSELF - USA MIDNIGHT BASKETBALL LEAGUE - USA WORLD CLASS BOXING GYM - USA www.laureus.com 34 GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS 35 GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS The dedicated commitment of Mercedes-Benz throughout 2009 helped the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation to significantly increase its activity in the United Kingdom. Laureus' Global Partner IWC Schaffhausen sends two teams to compete in the Tortour cycling race whose Charity Partner is Laureus Foundation Switzerland. The ground-breaking Laureus MotorV8 programme, which uses motor sport and mechanical instruction classes to engage at risk young people in the Oxfordshire area, is now more than a year old and is receiving invaluable funding and volunteer support from Mercedes-Benz UK. OPPOSITE: IWC CEO GEORGES KERN AND URS LEHMANN, FORMER DOWNHILL SKIING WORLD CHAMPION AND PRESIDENT OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF LAUREUS FOUNDATION SWITZERLAND, AT TORTOUR Every six weeks participants in the project visit Mercedes-Benz UK headquarters in Milton Keynes. After a day’s karting at a local track, the young people are shown round the MercedesBenz facilities and presented with course-completion certificates and prizes for the day’s karting. Finland’s double Formula One World Champion and Laureus World Sports Academy member Mika Häkkinen, who has visited the project, says: “Motor sport is immensely popular in the UK and Oxford is a big motor city, so this is the perfect project in the perfect location. LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBERS HUGO PORTA AND DALEY THOMPSON WITH MIKE BELK, MANAGING DIRECTOR CUSTOMER SERVICES, MERCEDES-BENZ UK. When the group arrived at Mercedes-Benz UK’s head office in Milton Keynes, cheering crowds of employees lined up to welcome them. Daley and Hugo took part in a Question & Answer session with Mercedes-Benz staff and media did interviews for local TV, radio and newspapers. Mercedes-Benz UK also organised two karting events to raise funds for Laureus, with 150 staff attending each, and two successful golf days. In September three Mercedes-Benz UK employees took part in the Laureus London-to-Paris fundraising bike ride, which involved Daley Thompson and fivetimes Tour de France winner and Laureus Academy member Miguel Indurain. LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MIKA HÄKKINEN WITH PARTICIPANTS FROM THE LAUREUS MOTORV8 PROJECT. This programme has very good elements because it encourages young people to interact, work as a team and gives them practical experience. For me being part of a team was one of the most important aspects during my F1 career and it is great to see how it is being used to motivate these young people.” During the year, Mercedes-Benz also provided support for a range of Laureus’ activities as part of its corporate social responsibility programme, most notably the logistical support it gave to the ‘Breaking the Cycle of Violence’ bike ride in July from Manchester to London, led by Laureus Academy members Daley Thompson and Hugo Porta, which aimed to raise awareness of the growing problems of gun and knife crime in the United Kingdom (See pages 12 to 15). Nine support vehicles were loaned including smart, Vianos and an Atego truck. Not only did these vehicles assist with the logistics but they also played a key role in ensuring the safety of the riders. Over two days of the ride five Mercedes-Benz UK employees cycled with Daley and Hugo from Coventry to Milton Keynes and on to Oxford. Wilfried Steffen, President & CEO of Mercedes-Benz UK, said: “ This has been a significant year for us in our relationship with Laureus. Not only have we taken a direct role in the excellent Laureus MotorV8 project, but we are delighted to have been able to contribute to a variety of Laureus’ initiatives over the year. ” We believe very much in the power of sport to effect social change and this is an important part of our corporate social responsibility initiative. We look forward to playing an even bigger part in Laureus’ activities in 2010.” Mercedes-Benz Germany continued its very successful Laureus Sport for Good campaign in high profile German print magazines. Under the claim "We are Laureus" the ads feature Laureus Academy members and German Friends & Ambassadors together with project participants. Katarina Witt, Wladimir Klitschko, Martin Braxenthaler and Axel Schulz took part in a special shooting for this successful initiative. The main objective of the campaign was to raise the awareness of the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Germany. For further details please visit www.laureus.de www.laureus.com PRESIDENT OF THE LAUREUS FOUNDATION SWITZERLAND, URS LEHMAN, LOOKS AHEAD AT THE NEXT DIFFICULT STAGE OF TORTOUR IWC Schaffhausen has twice acted as main sponsor of a Schaffhausen based team in the world's toughest cycling race, the Race Across America. In 2009 it went one step further and entered two teams in Tortour - the first multi-day non-stop cycling race around Switzerland - for which Laureus Foundation Switzerland was a Charity Partner. Twelve sports-mad members of IWC staff, with CEO Georges Kern leading the way, caught the Tortour bug: “Our team's preparations were time-consuming as we didn’t want to leave anything to chance and we selected our equipment very carefully and planned the logistics down to the last detail,” he said. “Some members of staff were kind enough to make themselves available to give support to the athletes during the race by providing supplies along the route and driving the escort vehicles. PARTICIPANTS OF THE TORTOUR Such a strength-sapping race cannot be mastered without so many helpers providing support. Tackling challenges of this magnitude together is a great team building exercise,” comments Georges Kern, as he looks back on all the trials the teams overcame. “ It’s not enough to just show mental strength. You have to be able to rely on each other as well, even when everybody is at their limit ” None of the participants will ever forget the fantastic scenery along the Swiss borders, the challenging night stages, the sleep deprivation, and also the tremendous teamspirit and the pride to have accomplished something extraordinary together. The team from the Laureus Foundation Switzerland ended up being victorious in the six-person team category. The President of the Foundation, Urs Lehmann, said: “We are very happy with our achievement as a team and consider ourselves lucky that the Laureus Foundation Switzerland, as a Charity Partner of the Tortour, is provided with such a platform to help us attract more attention. I’m convinced that this race has great potential, which ultimately will benefit us as well, and I am looking forward to the sequel with excitement.” Registration for the 2010 Tortour is now well under way, and the IWC teams have already stated that they will definitely be back next year. For details on registration please visit www.tortour.ch or email [email protected] www.laureus.com 36 GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS 37 GLOBAL PARTNER NEWS Vodafone, as a long-standing supporter of sport, greatly values its relationship with Laureus. It encourages Vodafone local offices around the world to become engaged with Laureus activity in their own market. One of the highlights of a busy year came in September when Vodafone Ghana participated in a Laureus Sport for Good Foundation visit to Accra. The visit involved Laureus Chairman Edwin Moses and his fellow Academy member Marcel Desailly together with Vodafone staff and invited customers. The Laureus team met the local community elders and project volunteers before taking part in football and basketball sessions with the young people. Vodafone, together with Laureus, also created a 'coaching masterclass' for aspiring young football players from Accra. Working with the Greater Accra Regional Football Association, 22 young, talented players were selected to benefit from the insight and expertise of Marcel Desailly and Edwin Moses to help motivate and inspire them. Our primary objectives are to improve positive brand opinion in Accra and Ghana, associate Vodafone with supporting good causes, involve staff and consumers in the Laureus experience and enable the Accra community to benefit from the Vodafone Laureus Partnership. I must say it was also terrific fun as well. We all felt we were doing something that was really making a difference to the young people we met. I don't think we can say thank you enough to Marcel and Edwin and the entire Laureus team." NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS ARGENTINA FUNDACIÓN LAUREUS ARGENTINA ANA LIA SANTARELLI [email protected] www.fundacionlaureus.org.ar THE POWER OF CLUB PLATENSE What little Maria enjoys more than anything else is to play football. It has become her life. Now nine-years-old, her love affair with football began when she was just three when she used to kick a ball around with her four elder brothers at Club Platense, a project supported by the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation in Argentina. Based in Laprida, near Buenos Aires, the club has played an indispensable part in giving Maria some focus and meaning to her young life. For many boys and girls like Maria, who come from difficult family backgrounds in a deprived area, Club Platense is providing opportunity and hope. Maria started off training with the infants and then graduated to playing with the youngest team that represented the club in the local league. She became a regular and proudly wore the No 4 shirt. Over the years she has played with passion and commitment and has become known and respected in the league. TOP LEFT & MAIN PICTURE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARCEL DESAILLY PRESENTS MEDALS TO YOUNG FOOTBALLERS WHO TOOK PART AT A COACHING CLINIC AT THE NATIONAL STADIUM HOSTED BY VODAFONE BOTTOM LEFT: LAURUES ACADEMY MEMBERS MARCEL DESAILLY & EDWIN MOSES ORPHANAID AFRICA IS A NON-PROFIT ORGANISATION DEDICATED TO HELPING ORPHANS AND VULNERABLE CHILDREN IN GHANA French World Cup winner and former national football captain Desailly was born in Ghana and has now returned to live there. He has been an enthusiastic supporter of the OrphanAid Africa project for some time and Laureus has supported the project since 2007. OrphanAid Africa is a non-profit organisation dedicated to helping orphans and vulnerable children in Ghana to grow up in a safe, permanent and loving family setting with care and protection. Like Laureus, OrphanAid believes that sport can help at risk children and provides a variety of sports activities, led by trained coaches, for the inhabitants of Ayeniah community, just 45 minutes from Accra, and the foster children in the surrounding area. www.laureus.com The activity included a sprint coaching session from Edwin and football skills coaching by Marcel, followed by an 11-a-side game played at the National Stadium in Accra. Football is hugely popular in Ghana and with the recent success of the Ghana Under 20 World Cup win, many of the young players who benefited from this Laureus experience may well go on to achieve great things. Ruth Maafo, Vodafone Ghana sponsorship manager, said: “ The activity was an invaluable experience. The interaction opportunity provided was a huge plus for Vodafone ” Laureus Academy member Marcel Desailly said: "Three years ago I met Lisa LovattSmith who runs the OrphanAid project. She persuaded me to go and see it and when I did I knew immediately I wanted to get involved. I decided to raise money for food and medicine for the children, but I also realised the need for a sport element at the project, as I saw good potential in the children. Then one day Maria’s world suddenly collapsed. The club received an official letter stating that Maria could no longer play with the boys in the league. Everyone was puzzled and dismayed. This was discrimination because of her sex and Club Platense asked the league to reconsider. Soon it became a big story in Laprida. The support for her was widespread and many spokespeople from the town came forward to back her. But time was passing and Maria could not do what she wanted - play football. So Club Platense decided to make a statement of principle by hiring a female coach to train female football groups. The response was amazing. In the very first week, 50 girls and young women turned up to join the course, and out of prejudice and discrimination had come a marvelous new opportunity. All kids deserve a chance to be able to play sport. Sport gave me so much in my life, so this is all about what I can give back to these children. I am delighted that Laureus has become involved and I would especially like to thank Vodafone for their support. It added enormously to the success of the visit.". TOP LEFT AND MAIN PICTURE: MARIA ARIAS AT CLUB PLATENSE TOP RIGHT AND BOTTOM LEFT: PARTICIPANTS AT CLUB PLANTENSE THE RESPONSE WAS AMAZING IN THE FIRST WEEK 50 GIRLS TURNED UP TO JOIN THE COURSE Club Platense continues to work with children from disadvantaged backgrounds, encouraging team spirit and a sense of community through the provision of football, rollerblading, chess and educational workshops. It has also become an important part of social life in Laprida which was amply demonstrated at the project’s Children’s Day when more than 1,000 people, adults and children, came to the club. There were organised games for the whole family and two plays put on in a makeshift theatre. There was a raffle with 80 prizes, including four bicycles, and every child left with a small gift bag of sweets - including Maria. But for Maria, the club has provided much more than sweets. She is happy once again and able to enjoy playing football with girls of her own age. And her team-mates are thankful to her since her problems have created the opportunity for many of them to be able to play football which they could not do before and to give them, in turn, a focus in their life. www.laureus.com 38 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS FRANCE NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS 39 ASSOCIATION LAUREUS FRANCE LAURENT GUTSMUTH [email protected] NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS GERMANY LAUREUS SPORT FOR GOOD FOUNDATION GERMANY STEFANIE MOELLENKAMP [email protected] www.laureus.de CHARITY FOOTBALL MATCH URBAN GOLF For Abou and Brahim, the Laureus-supported Golf Educatif project has proved to be a life-changing experience. They are both from an inner city area of France and three years ago golf would have been the last thing on their minds. But now Golf Educatif offers French school children and young adults, like Abou and Brahim, an alternative to urban crime and violence. Based in the poorer neighbourhoods of cities, the project gives children a sense of responsibility, respect for other people and personal motivation - qualities that help them to integrate much better into society. THE PROJECT GIVES CHILDREN A SENSE OF RESPONSIBILTY, RESPECT FOR OTHER PEOPLE AND PERSONAL MOTIVATION PARTICIPANTS FROM GOLF EDUCATIF Boris Becker v Wladimir Klitschko might seem to be something of a mismatch on a tennis court or in a boxing ring, but bring along a few famous friends, a football and an enthusiastic crowd and you have the perfect recipe for a thrilling night of sporting action which produced significant funds for the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Germany. Numerous World and European champions, Olympic medallists and show stars came together for the first charity footballl match Klitschko & Friends meets Becker & Friends at the Carl-Benz Stadium in Mannheim. The spectators saw an entertaining game that Team Becker won 6-4, and both 'managers' - Laureus Academy Member Boris Becker and Laureus Friend & Ambassador Wladimir Klitschko - expressed their gratitude to the players who took part and the spectators who turned up to watch. Stars of the Becker team were: Nadine Angerer, Birgit Prinz (Women's World and European soccer champions), Jürgen Kohler, Jens Nowottny, Steffen Freund, Mario Basler, Thomas Hässler (former German Bundesliga players, World, European and national champions), Stefan Kretzschmar (handball legend), Bruno Spengler and Bernd Schneider (Mercedes-Benz DTM drivers). KICK START Sergey Bubka, Edwin Moses and Nawal El Moutawakel, three great legends of track and field, took time out from the World Athletics Championships in Berlin in August to visit young people at KICK im Boxring, a project supported by the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Germany. The three Laureus World Sports Academy members met the young Berliners at the project in Treptow and coached them as they took part in a mini-athletics competition, involving running, hurdling, shot putt and long jump. KICK im Boxring aims to give young people a legitimate outlet for their aggression, as well as offering opportunities for social learning. The project began in Treptow in 2007, and has now expanded to the Marzahn, Kreuzberg and Tiergarten districts of Berlin too. World Heavyweight Champion Wladimir Klitschko said: "I am very grateful to the public who supported our match. My team lost by two goals, but in reality we saw only winners today." And Boris Becker added: "It was a magnificent day for Laureus. I am very grateful to the many athletes and show stars that supported us.” After just a few hours practice, Abou showed a natural ability for the sport. Now, three years later, he has become a promising golfer and is so determined to succeed that it has changed his whole attitude to life. He is more positive and optimistic about his future. Brahim, who is older than Abou, originally played football in the district of Les Bosquets, a suburb of Paris, but after a few sessions at Golf Educatif he became hooked. “ Now he has passed his teaching diploma to become a golf coach, and his enhanced self-esteem has enabled him to find a job. ” Supported by the Laureus National Foundation in France, today there are 16 Golf Educatif courses where 7,000 young people play each week. They use golf balls with 35% of the weight of standard ones, which fly a third of the distance, yet with a similar trajectory to that of a real golf ball. It means that a three-hole Golf Educatif course can fit into an area the size of a football field, and courses can be of varied length, of three, six or nine holes. This makes the sport affordable and accessible for young people like Abou and Brahim, who might not otherwise get the chance to play and benefit from the lessons it can teach. The game was initiated by the TV channel Deutsches Sport Fernsehen (DSF) and broadcast live. A cheque for 100,000 euros was handed over to the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation. Stars of the Klitschko team were: Silke Rottenberg, Renate Lingor (Women's World and European soccer champions), Fredi Bobic, Guido Buchwald, Thomas Helmer, Maurizio Gaudino (former German Bundesliga players, World, European and national champions), Jonas Reckermann and Julius Brink (current World beach volleyball champions), Felix Sturm (current WBA World middleweight boxing champion) and Laureus ambassador Axel Schulz. Laureus Chairman Edwin Moses said: "KICK im Boxring is a great concept and I am delighted that Laureus can support it. It takes care of young people at an age when it is really important to get them off the streets and prevent them from getting involved in crime and drugs." The visit of the Laureus Academy members and the general excitement in Berlin for the World Athletics Championships encouraged the young people at the project to leave the boxing ring and put on a small track and field championship amongst themselves. CLIMBING THE ROPES Laureus World Sports Academy Members Boris Becker and Mika Häkkinen found themselves all tied up as they tried out the rope garden during their visit to the Laureussupported ‘move&do' project in Stuttgart. They joined the youngsters, aged 10-12, in some challenging action. After a race on wooden skis, Boris climbed up to a height of seven metres with 11-year-old girl Shabnam, while double Formula One World Champion Mika and the rest of the group secured the ropes. "You have to be in good shape to make the rope course. It is really tough even if it does not look like it from the ground," said Boris and Mika congratulated the boys and girls: "It has been a great day for all of us. You have shown great team work. We are proud of you. Keep up the good work." The whole group provided proof of its team spirit and how working together can overcome difficulties. ‘move&do' is a mobile unit that travels from school to school in Stuttgart, Germany. Project leader Marcus Weber explains: "Team spirit, discipline and trusting each other are the key skills they have to prove in order to fulfil the objectives - if you don't cooperate the whole team can't win. Thus a lot of kids that think they are leaders in the school class must admit that others, maybe more quiet ones, have more skills and better ideas. That makes the youngsters think about themselves and leads to more tolerance and less aggression from them.” LEFT: LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR, WLADIMIR KLITSCHKO AND ACADEMY MEMBER BORIS BECKER HOLDING A CHEQUE FOR THE LAUREUS SPORT FOR GOOD FOUNDATION GERMANY MIDDLE: EDWIN MOSES TRAINING WITH THE PARTICIPANTS RIGHT: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER BORIS BECKER AT THE MOVE&DO PROJECT www.laureus.com www.laureus.com 40 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS ITALY NEW SPORTS HALL IS OPENED In September 2009, children from the Rozzano region of Milan, an area well known for its mix of immigrant communities characterised by the inevitable issues associated with low investment, high crime, and poor education and health, came together to celebrate the opening of the new Laureus 2 Sports Hall, with some very special guests present. NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS 41 THE ITALIAN FOUNDATION HAS ADDRESSED ISSUES, SUCH AS SOCIAL INTEGRATION, FAMILY BREAKDOWN AND DRUG ABUSE NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS SOUTH AFRICA PIONEERING WORK IN SOUTH AFRICA Since its inception, the South African Foundation has grown steadily in strength and numbers and 2009 saw the foundation supporting two new projects bringing the total to 12. Laureus World Sports Academy member Morné du Plessis, Chairman of the South African Foundation, has continued his pioneering efforts to direct the Sport for Good movement in South Africa with the assistance of an active board of trustees, engaged funding partners in Country Patron Discovery Health as well as local businesses of Laureus Global Partners Mercedes Benz, IWC Schaffhausen and Vodafone, committed Friends & Ambassadors and a diverse portfolio of projects that embody the spirit of Laureus and the power of sport for social change. LAUREUS SPORT FOR GOOD FOUNDATION TRUST SOUTH AFRICA PRUDENCE FESTER [email protected] WE AIM TO GROW AND IMPACT ON EVEN MORE YOUNG PEOPLE’S LIVES IN THE NEXT FEW YEARS. ABOVE: CHILDREN PRACTICE UNDER THE WATCHFUL EYE OF FORMER ENGLAND CRICKET CAPTAIN AND LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR, MICHAEL VAUGHAN It was a busy year for Laureus South Africa. Among the many highlights, in June the Johannesburg Cubs project, a joint venture with the Gauteng Cricket Board, was launched with a large supporting cast of Laureus Friends & Ambassadors, including Deshun Deysel, Baby Jake Matlala, Lucas Radebe, John Robbie and Cynthia Tshaka. In addition former England cricket captain Michael Vaughan joined to lend his support. ABOVE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER TONY HAWK AT THE INDIGO YOUTH MOVEMENT PROJECT In addition to Laureus World Sports Academy members Giacomo Agostini and Marvelous Marvin Hagler, the event was awash with living legends of the Italian sporting world including rugby union player Alessandro Troncon, New York Nicks basketball star Danilo Gallinari and Italian rally driver Miki Biasion. The Fondazione Laureus Italia established the programme, in partnership with Fondazione Umana Mente, at the behest of social services in the area. The children, who come from outlying or problem schools, take part in sporting and educational activities which promote integration, respect for the rules and confidence. Children on the project who best exemplify the characteristics of determination, discipline and team spirit, during their sporting and educational development, have the opportunity to win scholarships that allow them to participate in level one coaching courses operated by the prestigious Centro Sportivo Italiano. FONDAZIONE LAUREUS ITALIA ONLUS SILVANA DE GIOVANNI [email protected] www.laureus.it www.laureus.com Topping off a great year for the South African Foundation was the visit by Academy member and former world skateboarding champion Tony Hawk to the Indigo Youth Movement project in August. The project is nestled in the Valley of a Thousand Hills, Kwazulu Natal, where the super modern skateboard ramp sticks out incongruously against the background of traditional Zulu housing, mountains and grazing livestock. The new project on the outskirts of Durban is a development of a programme that started eight years ago to help young people in rural communities develop life skills and confidence through skateboarding. ABOVE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER MARVELOUS MARVIN HAGLER JOINS THIAGO SILVA, NADEGE DUBOSPERTUS & MAURIZIO MARGAGLIO AT THE OPENING OF THE LAUREUS 2 SPORTS HALL “ Participants can see that, with determination, it is possible to change their future and go from being a course participant to being a teacher or from being a player to being a coach ” said Silvana De Giovanni, Director of the Fondazione Laureus Italia. Chairman Ruggero Magnoni added: “The Laureus intervention scheme, using coaches, teachers and psychologists, devised with the Sacro Cuore Catholic University, guarantees a scientifically based intervention. We believe that it is essential to invest in quality and to continually measure the scheme’s effectiveness.” Since its inception in 2005, the Italian Foundation, through the use of sport, has addressed issues, such as social integration, high school drop out rates, family breakdown and drug abuse. ABOVE: MICHAEL VAUGHAN AT THE JOHANNESBURG CLUBS PROJECT The following day Michael joined Lucas, Baby Jake, Deshun and Ntambi Ravele for an 8km walk in the annual Discovery 702 Walk the Talk event. They were accompanied by 60 children and coaches from the Sport for All, Soweto Schools Rugby Program, Fight With Insight and Little Champs Projects. Laureus Academy member and environmental adventurer explorer Mike Horn, who is currently circumnavigating the globe in his remarkable sailing vessel Pangaea, visited South Africa in March and called in at the Foundation supported Little Champs project in Gugulethu which teaches children basic sporting skills and at the same time improves their learning abilities. Since 2000, more than 5,000 children in Alexandra and Duduza have benefited from the programme. Later, children from the Future Champs project based in Khayelitsha, on the outskirts of Cape Town, were able to visit Pangaea at the Cape Town waterfront. Amongst the most significant moments of the year took place in May when project leaders from two South African projects - Free the Youth and Sport for All – met up with the successful Mathare Youth Sports Association project from Kenya for an exchange of ideas. The meeting was also highly successful for sharing expertise on how projects work on the ground. Free the Youth and Sport for All then passed that information on to the rest of the Johannesburg-based projects and it is hoped there will be a significant dividend in the future. 2009 has once again been a tremendous year for Laureus in South Africa. Never an organisation to sit back and relax, these achievements simply spur the team on to continue to build on 2009’s successes, learning and growing with our partners to impact on even more young people’s lives across the country. See pages 30 & 31 for a cross chat between Morné du Plessis and Laureus Friend & Ambassador, John Robbie. www.laureus.com 42 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS 43 NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS SPAIN NEW FRIENDS & AMBASSADORS The Fundación Laureus España was honoured to be able to announce former tennis great Arancha Sánchez Vicario and the highly respected sports broadcaster Matías Prats as the newest members of the Laureus Friends & Ambassadors programme in 2009. THE THREE KEY ISSUE AREAS ARE HEALTH, EDUCATION & SOCIAL INTEGRATION Having recently become a mother herself, and all too aware of the blessings that sport has given her, she is keen to ensure that all children are given the opportunities which sporting programmes can bring. NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS SWITZERLAND LAUREUS FOUNDATION SWITZERLAND EVELYN FANKHAUSER [email protected] www.laureus.ch TOP RIGHT: IRISH ROCK STAR, RONAN KEATING BOTTOM RIGHT: THE CHARITY NIGHT RAISED 236,600 SWISS FRANCS FOR THE LAUREUS FOUNDATION SWITZERLAND NIGHT MOVES The Montreux Jazz Festival held each July is one of the most notable music events of the summer, and this year, thanks to the Laureus Foundation Switzerland, it was jazz with a difference, as the first ever Midnight Basketball community sports programme was taking place simultaneously in Montreux Market Hall. Midnight Basketball aims to take young people off the streets and out of trouble on Saturday nights by offering regular open sporting events as an alternative. This session certainly proved to be highly popular with youngsters from the Lausanne, Montreux and Villeneuve areas who had filled the hall by late afternoon to play basketball, football, table football, volleyball and other sports. The teams were formed from among those who arrived and matches were played without referees. Former tennis star Marc Rosset and freestyle world snowboard champion Manuela Pesko, both Laureus Friends & Ambassadors, came along to see for themselves what was going on and to join in the activity. Marc Rosset said; “ I have always known that sport and movement can have a positive effect, but it is much nicer to experience closeup how integration works in real life. ” The event was made possible by the Laureus Foundation Switzerland, which is now helping the Midnight Basketball organisation to develop their project activities in other areas of the French speaking part of Switzerland. LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR ARANCHA SÁNCHEZ VICARIO SHARES A MOMENT OF GLORY AND HAPPINESS WITH A SPECIAL OLYMPIC TENNIS PLAYER Chair of the Fundación, Juan Antonio Samaranch Salisachs said: “ I am delighted at the support that two bastions of the sporting world like Arancha and Matias are able to provide. ” The announcement came as the pair visited the Laureus supported Special Olympics programme, at the Chamartin Tennis Club in Madrid, which aims to promote the personal development and integration of individuals with mental disabilities through a diverse range of sporting activities. On this particular occasion the participants had the opportunity to play with the three time Roland Garros winner Sánchez Vicario, a moment few of them are likely to forget. Sánchez Vicario was chosen thanks to her outstanding achievements on the tennis court including no less than 14 Grand Slam titles: four singles, six women's doubles and four mixed, which makes her one of the greatest female tennis players Spain has ever produced. The three key issue areas for the Fundación Laureus España are health, education and social integration, promoted through projects such as Special Olympics and USP Fundación Alex, which also works with mentally handicapped children, helping them to integrate into society through sport. During the coming year it is looking to tackle the rising problems associated with an over sedentary lifestyle, by offering programmes that promote sports and healthy lifestyles. ARANCHA SÁNCHEZ VICARIO AND MATIAS PRATS WITH THE PRESIDENT OF SPECIAL OLYMPICS MR. GAIZKA ORTUZAR AT THE PRESS CONFERENCE Laureus Switzerland also supports the Laureus Cavallo equestrian based project in Winterthur; Blindspot, which aims to bring children with and without disabilities together to play sport; and Buntkicktgut street football league. In a busy 2009, there were many successful fundraising events including a Laureus Golf Day and the Laureus Charity Night in Zurich which raised 236,600 Swiss francs and included a performance by Irish rock star Ronan Keating. MIDNIGHT BASKETBALL AIMS TO TAKE YOUNG PEOPLE OFF THE STREETS AND OUT OF TROUBLE ON SATURDAY NIGHTS BY OFFERING REGULAR OPEN SPORTING EVENTS AS AN ALTERNATIVE. THE COOLTOUR CAMP OF BLINDSPOT WHERE DISABLED AND NON-DISABLED YOUTH EXPERIENCE SPORTING ACTIVITIES TOGETHER FUNDACIÓN LAUREUS ESPAÑA PABLO OPAZO [email protected] www.laureus.es www.laureus.com www.laureus.com 44 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS THE NETHERLANDS LAUREUS FOUNDATION THE NETHERLANDS OLAV BEKKER [email protected] www.laureus.nl NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS 45 THE NETHERLANDS HAS ALREADY BEGUN ITS SPORT FOR GOOD WORK BY INITIATING SUPPORT FOR 3 PROJECTS IN 2010 NEW FOUNDATION IS LAUNCHED Tuesday, 22 September dawned bright with hope in Amsterdam as some of Holland’s greatest sports stars came together to launch the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation the Netherlands. ABOVE: LAUREUS ACADEMY MEMBER ROBBY NAISH AT THE MARITIME CHALLENGE YOUTH PROJECT They included triple Olympic swimming gold medallist Pieter van den Hoogenband, Esther Vergeer, the greatest wheelchair tennis player of all time who has won two Laureus Disability Awards, and speed-skater Yvonne van Gennip, who won three gold medals in the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary. www.laureus.com MEETING AT THE WHITE HOUSE One of the stated aims of the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation globally is to promote as well as fund the use of sport as a tool for social change. Following the success of the ‘Breaking the Cycle of Violence’ campaign, which saw Academy members presenting Laureus research to UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown in October, it was the turn of Academy member Monica Seles to visit the White House to discuss the value of youth based sport development programmes across the United States. Her visit to the White House and subsequent presentation at the Up2Us National Conference was aimed at highlighting to policy makers the risks the country faces in cutting an estimated US$2 billion from youth based sport development programming in schools and a gradual move towards ‘pay to play’ mechanisms where families must pay to access even the very basic sports education and facilities. Monica highlighted the findings of the most recent report by Laureus partner Up2Us which draws the link between massive cuts in spending on youth sports and the increased levels of youth obesity, diabetes, crime and particularly gang activity, school truancy and many other social ills afflicting young inner city communities across the United States. As the three were inducted into the Laureus Friends & Ambassadors programme, the applause was led by German tennis legend Boris Becker, the Vice Chairman of the Laureus World Sports Academy, and Prince Pieter-Christiaan van Oranje, the Chairman of the emerging new Netherlands Foundation. Although just months old, under the leadership of Prince PieterChristiaan, the Laureus Foundation the Netherlands has already begun its Sport for Good work by initiating support for three projects in 2010 - De Laureus Maritime Challenge, De Zomerkampen van de Bas van de Goor Foundation and an evening football competition for young people from disadvantaged families in the Hague. NATIONAL FOUNDATION NEWS USA The conference after the meeting brought together representatives from over 150 development projects from across the country to debate and discuss best practice in youth sport, projects, monitoring and evaluation and the sectors response to the financial crisis. ABOVE: PIETER VAN DEN HOOGENBAND, BORIS BECKER, YVONNE VAN GENNIP, PRINCE PIETER-CHRISTIAAN VAN ORANJE, AND ESTHER VERGEER AT THE LAUNCH OF THE LAUREUS FOUNDATION NETHERLANDS LAUREUS FOUNDATION USA LUCIANA PORTA ABOVE: FORMER KNICKS STAR AND LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR JOHN STARKS AT THE 'I CHALLENGE MYSELF' PROJECT VISIT BELOW: JOHN STARKS AND MONICA SELES WITH THE CHEQUE FOR ‘I CHALLENGE MYSELF’ During the conference the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation hosted a presentation - ‘Sports-based Youth Development around the World’ with representatives of six of Laureus’ international programmes also visiting Washington. The meeting at the White House and the conference were highlights in a year that also saw on-going support for programmes in the United States and visits of Academy members, Friends & Ambassadors and other dignitaries to supported Laureus activities. Our thanks go to all our supporters, national and international and in particular to our network of friends from US sport who visit the kids in projects on a regular and unsung basis but who bring so much inspiration and enthusiasm to otherwise marginalised and at-risk young people. THE MEETING AT THE WHITE HOUSE WAS ONE OF THE HIGHLIGHTS OF THE YEAR [email protected] www.laureus.com 46 10 YEAR HISTORY OF LAUREUS MEMBERSHIP SCHEME 47 NEW FRIEND & AMBASSADOR MEMBERSHIP SCHEME LAYNE BEACHLEY JOINS LAUREUS In 2009 the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Membership Scheme was launched. The scheme is an opportunity for members of the public to show support for the work of the Foundation by making regular or one-off donations. The three levels of membership offered (Gold, Silver and Bronze) give the chance to donate different amounts and all members receive Laureus merchandise as part of their membership. If you would like to join the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation Membership Scheme please visit our website: laureus.com/foundation/membership FRIENDS & AMBASSADORS Paul ACCOLA Alpine Skiing Kurt AESCHBACHER TV Personality Natasha BADMANN Triathlete Mansour BAHRAMI Tennis Robert BAKER Golf BASCHI Pop Singer Layne BEACHLEY Surfing Marco BERTOLAMI Rugby Miki BIASION Motor Racing Denise BIELMANN Figure Skating Stefan BLOECHER Hockey Annabelle BOND Adventurer Bronwyn BOCK JONATHON Netball Martin BRAXENTHALER Skiing Adolfo CAMBIASO Polo Fabian CANCELLARA Cycling Maria CECILIA ROGNONI Hockey Jackie CHAN Movie/ Kung Fu Sabine CHRISTIANSEN TV Personality David DE ROTHSCHILD Eco Adventurer DECO Football Deshun DEYSEL Climbing Natalie DU TOIT Paralympic Swimming Frank FREDERICKS Athletics Barbara FUSAR POLI Ice Skating Alejandra GARCIA FLOOD Pole Vault Danillo GALLINARI Basketball Lara GUT Alpine Skiing ABOVE: LAUREUS FRIEND & AMBASSADOR, LAYNE BEACHLEY Layne Beachley, the greatest female surfer of all time, became a member of the Laureus Friends & Ambassadors programme in February 2009, at a Laureus supported project in the surf of Jan Juc beach in Australia. Australian sporting legend Beachley won the World Surfing Championship a record seven times and set the pace for women in a previously male dominated sport. She received the Laureus World Alternative Sportsperson of the Year Award in 2004. Layne said: “I was delighted that I was able to get down to work straight away as a Laureus Friend & Ambassador at such an inspiring project. It was even more pleasurable for me that it was based on surfing. I hope to be able to work with Laureus to set up more projects in this country and use sport as the means to help disadvantaged young Australians.” The announcement was made by Laureus World Sports Academy members Cathy Freeman, Robby Naish, Daley Thompson and Steve Waugh, who were attending the Indigenous Sports Programme surfing project at Jan Juc, near Geelong, in Victoria. Run by Surfing Australia, the project promotes healthy lifestyles and provides the local community with the opportunity to experience surfing in a fun, safe and supervised environment and gives individuals the opportunity to become coaches and officials. www.laureus.com Ruud GULLIT Football Bryan HABANA Rugby Eduardo HEGUY Polo Edith HUNKELER Wheelchair Racing Kelly HOLMES Athletics Butch JAMES Rugby Heinz KARRER Business Personality Jacques KALLIS Cricket Oliver KAHN Football Conny KISSLING Free Skiing Taig KHRIS Inline Skating Vitali KLITSCHKO Boxing Wladimir KLITSCHKO Boxing Janica KOSTELIC Skiing Christoph LANGEN Bobsleigh Dr Thomas LADNER Business Personality Henri LECONTE Tennis Jens LEHMANN Football Baby Jake MATLALA Boxing Fabrizio MACCHI Cycling Filippo MAGNINI Swimming Herman MAIER Skiing Maurizio MARGAGLIO Ice Skating Rainer MARIA SALZGEBER TV Personality Barry MCGUIGAN Boxing John MOETI Football Thomas MUSTER Tennis Alexander PEREIRA Cultural Personality Manuela PESKO Snowboarding Umberto PELLIZARI Free Diving Santiago PHELAN Rugby Birgit PRINZ Football Bertrand PICCARD Adventurer Matías PRATS Broadcaster Lucas RADEBE Football Antonio ROSSI Canoeing John ROBBIE Rugby Marc ROSSET Tennis Arantxa SÁNCHEZ VICARIO Tennis Axel SCHULZ Boxing Matthias SCHWEIGHOFER Actor Jochen SCHÜMANN Sailing Gian SIMMEN Snowboarding Alain SUTTER Football Michael TEUBER Paralympic Cycling Alessandro TRONCON Rugby Cynthia TSHAKA TV Presenter Franzika VAN ALMSICK Swimming Pieter VAN DEN HOOGENBAND Swimming Edwin VAN DER SAR Football Ernst VAN DYK Wheelchair Racing Leontien VAN MOORSEL Cycling Michael VAUGHAN Cricket Esther VERGEER Tennis Filippo VOLANDRI Tennis Yvonne VON GENNIP Figure Skating Beachley and windsurfer Naish, who won over 30 World titles between them, gave a surfing demonstration for the young people. Cathy Freeman, 400 metres gold medallist in the 2000 Sydney Olympics, said: “ We welcome Layne warmly into the Laureus family and I am personally delighted that she was with us at Jan Juc. This project is something very close to my heart. ” All photographs provided by Getty Images / Laureus unless specified otherwise below: P. 22 Image of Wayne Rooney, Spirit of Soccer project P. 28 Image of Sean Tuohey, PeacePlayers International P. 31 Main image by Bruce Sutherland City of Cape Town P. 34 Tortour images, IWC Schaffhausen P. 37 Fundación Laureus Argentina P. 38 Main image, Association Laureus France P. 39 Laureus Foundation Germany P. 40 Fondazione Laureus Italia Onlus P. 42 Fundación Laureus España P. 43 Laureus Foundation Switzerland. www.laureus.com THE LAUREUS WORLD SPORTS ACADEMY WISHES TO THANK THE MANY INDIVIDUALS AND ORGANISATIONS THAT OVER TEN YEARS HAVE HELPED LAUREUS TO FULFIL ITS GOALS. In particular, the Laureus Academy pays tribute to its Patrons Daimler and Richemont, who founded Laureus, and to its Global Partners Mercedes-Benz, IWC Schaffhausen and Vodafone who provide such unwavering and invaluable support. Donations to the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation can be made via our website www.laureus.com or cheques can be made out and posted to: Laureus Sport for Good Foundation, 460 Fulham Road, London SW6 1BZ. For general enquiries please e-mail: [email protected] This is the official magazine of the Laureus Sport for Good Foundation which is supported by its Global Partners Mercedes-Benz, IWC Schaffhausen and Vodafone. The Foundation is a global initiative of Daimler and Richemont. Registered in England and Wales No. 05083331. Registered Charity No. 1111364 Magazine Editorial Director: Emma Chesworth Published by Ratcliffe Fowler Design +44 (0)116 2420200
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