Apply Now for 2011 Summer Cadet Academy

PAL is recruiting for this summer’s PAL Summer Cadet Academy. The Academy is an intensive four-week program that runs from June 13 to July 8, 2011. Successful graduates will be eligible for a 10-hour per month internship at a SFPD police station or bureau, and meet year-round at the Academy for continuing training.

The PAL Summer Cadet Academy gives participants a glimpse of life as a San Francisco police officer.  Academy instructors teach cadets many police procedures, including traffic stops, radio codes, and ethical conduct.

“My goal for them, if they want to be police offices, is to really grasp what we do,” said Officer Amanda Kabanuck, who has been working with the cadets since last summer and is supervising internships at the Ingleside station.

Service is a big component of the PAL Cadet program.  Cadets help out at events such as the Bayview Magic Backpack Giveaway, community safety events, and even the World Series ticker tape parade!

Applicants must be:

  • At least 14 years old (and no older than 19 as of 6/13/2011)
  • Have completed their first year of high school
  • Have and maintain a 2.0 grade point average
  • Reside in or attend school in San Francisco

The PAL Summer Cadet Academy application can be found at www.sfpal.org/cadets or email Lorraine Woodruff-Long or call 401-4669 for more information.  Applications and recommendations must be received by April 22, 2011.

PAL Teams Up with Ragnar to Host Napa Valley Relay Race

PAL has joined forces with Ragnar Relay Series to host a 187-mile relay race from San Francisco to Napa Valley on September 16-17, 2011. PAL was chosen as the official charity for the two-day event. This means PAL will provide volunteers, promotional help and race support. In turn, Ragnar will donate $300 to PAL whenever teams register using the promo code NV11PAL.

Teams are already forming, including one headed by PAL President Rick Bruce. The deadline to register your team is August 24, 2011.

Teams of racers will journey through the wine country of Northern California, beginning in San Francisco and ending in Calistoga. Runners start at the Marina Green on the San Francisco Bay, cross the Golden Gate Bridge, wind their way through Marin toward Petaluma, then cross to Sonoma, Napa, and finally the finish line in Calistoga.

“San Francisco PAL is incredibly grateful to have the support of Ragnar,” said Lorraine Woodruff-Long, executive director of PAL. “Our partnership with Ragnar Relay Napa Valley will not only generate significant fundraising dollars, but also further our mission of providing healthy recreation and leadership activities for San Francisco youth.”

Carly Raska, Napa Valley race director for Ragnar Relay, said the selection of PAL reflects the organization’s emphasis on health and fitness, as well as its love of youth sports. “We enjoy opening up our Ragnar community to great organizations like SF PAL that make a difference in the lives of youth,” Raska said.

Each Ragnar team requires 12 runners (or six runners for an “Ultra” team), two support vehicles (vans), and three volunteers.

There are six runners per van. The first van drops off the first runner and drives ahead to the first exchange point. Teams repeat this pattern six times until they hand off to their second van. This leapfrogging pattern continues day and night all the way to the much-anticipated finish line.

You don’t have to be a pro! Each leg of a Ragnar race varies in difficulty so elite and novice runners can run together in teams. The average team pace is 11 minutes per mile.

All local teams must provide three volunteers to help along the race course (van drivers do not count as volunteers). Teams are considered local if they have one or more team members within 100 miles of any point on the course.

PAL supporters who would like to organize a team for the Napa Valley race can register online at the Ragnar website or email Carla Raska for more information. Make sure to use the PAL promo code NV11PAL. When you do, you help raise money for PAL.

Ragnar Events, LLC was co-founded in 2004 by Dan Hill and Tanner Bell to fulfill the lifelong dream of Hill’s father, who envisioned a relay race across the Utah mountains. Hill and Bell organized a 188-mile relay from Logan to Park City, Utah, in 2004. Since then, the company has grown from sponsoring a single relay in Utah to hosting 14 races, including the largest overnight relay series in the nation.

PAL Seahawks starting Tight End at Harvard/Yale Game

PAL Seahawks alumni Chris Blohm will be the starting Tight End for Yale at this weekend’s Harvard-Yale game in Boston.  The game will be broadcast on Versus at 9:00 AM Saturday.  Look out for #89!!

PAL needs more soccer refs to get in the game

PAL referee Bob Pizzi says being a Zen Buddhist helps him stay alert and clear on the field.

Bob Pizzi hasn’t scored a goal all year, won’t do a header, and backs off whenever the ball comes near — but he holds the most important position on the soccer field.

Pizzi is one of a small group of longtime, seasoned referees, and his role on the soccer field is indispensable. Unfortunately, despite their importance to the game, soccer referees are greatly underappreciated and in short supply.

“There’s never enough,” says Joanna Doyle of PAL. Currently there are 119 referees on file. Doyle says that number should be closer to 150 if PAL is to make it through the spring season without a hitch.

What’s more, there’s an acute shortage of older, more experienced referees. Currently, some 75 percent of refs are 18 and under. Among the young referees, particularly those under 16, turnover is especially high.

“Reffing is not for everyone,” says Rich Fern, Referee Coordinator for District 1, which encompasses San Francisco. “You have to have some free time and really love the game of soccer.”

Fern would like to see more young people sign up as referees. For kids, it can be challenging but also rewarding. It also can help therm improve their own soccer game and give them some extra spending money to boot.

SOCCER TRAINING

So what does it take to become a soccer referee in San Francisco?

The job requires a referee license — either a Grade 9 or Grade 8 license to start. PAL offers Grade 9 referee clinics, usually just before the spring season, in February or March. These are open to everyone from age 12 up. The cost is $50.

The easier Grade 9 license involves six hours of classroom training, a written test of 50 questions, and on-the-field training. Referees with a Grade 9 license can only ref at recreational soccer.

The Grade 8 license involves 18 hours of classroom training, a written test of 100 questions (you have to score 75 percent or above), and on-the-field training.

Pay for referees has gone up a little in recent years. Refs today get paid between $15 and $30 per game. Fern think the shaky California economy may spur more people to sign up.

THE BUDDHIST REFEREE

Pizzi, 62, never played soccer himself as a kid. But after coaching his daughter Nikki’s middle-school soccer team, he took the next logical step and became a referee.

He went for his referee license as a way of helping his daughter’s team nab a spot at competitive tournaments. He had heard that teams that can provide referees gain a bit of an edge for those coveted tournament spots. (The referees in question would not ref their sponsoring team’s games.)

He started with a Grade 9 license and later upgraded to Grade 8.

Pizzi says was fascinated by the referee’s role, and quickly found the job to be fun and challenging.

Today his daughter is 20 and no longer playing soccer with her club team. But Pizzi is still on the soccer field most weekends in the fall and spring — and winter, when the Catholic high schools play. He also refs at a few summer tournaments.

“I really love it,” he says. “There’s not a downside at all to it. It’s really good for character building.”

He says he usually refs three to four games a week, including some mid-week high school games, working around his UCSF job where he manages the university computer system.

Pizzi is unusual in that he is a practicing Zen Buddhist. He says being a Buddhist helps him to be a better referee.

“It makes you be mindful and attentive,” he says. “You have to assess and see things clearly.”

A referee “needs to bring sanity to the chaos …You have to take a stand and you have to administer justice,” he adds. “If you don’t administer justice, they (the kids) won’t administer justice.”

Referees who routinely make bad calls create a situation where players are impatient and upset. The play may get out of balance, or kids may retaliate against rough opponents.

“Kids will only take it for so long,” he says. Sooner or later, consciously or unconsciously, they signal to the referee that he or she needs to starting making better calls.

ROWDY CROWDS

A big problem in youth soccer these days is the behavior of spectators on the sidelines. Every ref has had to deal with parents who are loud and abusive. While Pizzi says he can handle most rowdy crowds, not all referees are so thick-skinned. Parent criticism is almost always out of line.

“Most parents don’t know anything about the game and they act as if they do,” Pizzi says. “Unless you’re standing on my shoulder you don’t have any right to say anything …

He says spectators don’t always appreciate how complex the job of soccer referee is.

“When you’ve got to look at the whole field, and at both teams at the same, a lot of stuff is happening.”

Bob Pizzi’s suggestions for beginner referees:

•   Don’t start out issuing yellow or red cards; give kids a warning first. Otherwise, you have no place to go if the play gets really rough. A yellow or red card should be reserved for repeated and/or flagrant abuses on the field.

•   Explain to the coaches and players how tough you are likely to be on the field. If you are going to be lax and not call a lot of fouls, let them know ahead of time.

•   Be clear with players. They should know what your call is, and have no doubt what happened to warrant that call.

•   Go over the law book every season to stay fresh.

•   Don’t be afraid to make a judgment. That’s your job.

•   Be polite to parents, but if you need to rein them in, the proper procedure is to talk to the coach.

Bob Pizzi’s suggestions for parents:

•   Treat every game day like Silent Saturday. It’s OK to cheer, but not OK to be loud and abusive. Remember, kids are easily embarrassed by screaming parents on the sidelines.

•   Unless you’re standing on the ref’s shoulder and see exactly what he or she sees, it’s wrong to second-guess a ref’s calls. Assume the ref saw something you didn’t, and let it go.

•   Sometimes a call goes your way, sometimes it doesn’t. Things  have a way of evening out over time. Don’t gripe about one bad call; the next one could be to your advantage.

•   Be especially kind to young referees. They are sensitive to criticism, and many quit because of repeated abuse. Everyone makes mistakes. Young refs need encouragement, not attacks.

•   There’s a proper way to voice a complaint about a referee. Let  your coach or team manager handle the complaint. It’s their job to report any complaints to the governing soccer league.

The next PAL referee training is expected to be scheduled for March. Check back on the PAL Soccer program page to find out more.

Back to the PAL November 2010 newsletter.

Seahawks Football and Cheer seasons in full swing on beautiful new Kimbell turf field

Three Seahawks Girls

Dance/Cheer Team

On August 2, the PAL Seahawks returned to the newly renovated Kimbell Field for their 51st season. Even though our kids have been playing on the new field for two months, the official grand opening was Sunday, September 19, 2010. The Junior Midgets and their coach, Quincy Collins, were on-hand for the official ribbon-cutting (while the other teams were playing our regularly scheduled games at Kezar Stadium).

The Kimbell Field renovation is the result of a partnership between City Fields Foundation and San Francisco Rec & Park. Kimbell is the sixth field that has been renovated, and the first football field. PAL soccer and baseball players have benefitted from other field renovations over the past few years—Crocker-Amazon, Franklin, Garfield, Silver Terrace, and South Sunset. Like the PAL, City Fields Foundation believes in the power of sports to change lives and effect positive change in the community. San Francisco has a limited number of fields, and no space to build more. Each time a grass field is replaced with turf, the amount of available playtime is tripled (no rain-outs or fallow seasons). Already we have seen the increase.

Says Head Coach Coach Greg Isom about the Kimbell renovation, “The new field has re-energized the neighborhood. More kids are showing up to the field, and they’re excited. They enjoy playing on it.  Even when we’re not practicing there are more kids at the park playing pick-up games.”

All Seahawks football and cheer teams are advancing to Golden Gate Regional Conference playoffs.  Winners will advance to Western Region Conference championships and possibly Pop Warner Nationals in Orlando!

Back to PAL November 2010 newsletter.

PAL/SFRP basketball season is off and running

It’s halftime in PAL/SFRP basketball. After three weeks of rugged basketball, some 64 teams, ranging from third through eighth grade, are getting ready to burst back on the court and sink some more baskets.

The league includes 44 PAL teams and 19 SF Park and Rec teams. They play each other in two divisions: a younger division (third through sixth grade), and a middle-school division (seventh and eighth grade, with a few sixth grade teams).

The PAL/SFRP basketball season is a relatively short one — six weeks — from October 4 to November 19. Playoffs take place right before Thankgiving.

The PAL/SFRP basketball program comes at an unusual time — the fall, before most school basketball seasons get started. But this gives our league a special appeal. Many basketball coaches like the PAL/SFRP season because it gives kids a chance to warm up and practice before their school season kicks in.

For more information, visit  the PAL basketball website page.

Back to PAL November 2010 newsletter.

Donor profile: Helen Gibbons, one of PAL’s loyal donors

PAL donor Helen Gibbons

Helen Gibbons: faithful PAL donor

Eugene Gibbons

SWING THAT BAT: Eugene Gibbons (right) was captain of the SFPD baseball team and a PAL baseball coach in the 1950s and '60s. He is pictured here with the captain (left) of the SFFD baseball team.

First in a series on PAL donors. Who are they? What motivates them?

Helen Gibbons has been eagerly watching the Giants playoff games, although she calls herself something of a fair-weather Giants fan. But when it comes to PAL, she is anything but fair-weather. She’s one of the tried-and-true, through-thick-and-thin, never-say-die fans.

The 90-year-old resident of San Francisco’s Sunset district says her association with PAL dates back to the late 1950s. That’s when her son Tom was a PAL kid and her husband Officer Eugene Gibbons a PAL coach.

Eugene passed away in 2006. He was a San Francisco police officer for 30 years, working for most of his career in the juvenile bureau. He had a great love for baseball, and managed the baseball team for the SFPD, in addition to his PAL coaching. Her son Tom is now 63. He recently retired from a career spanning 37 years as corporate treasurer at Del Monte Foods.

It was around 1959, the year of PAL’s founding, that Officer Gibbons hooked up with PAL by doing what many parents do — signing up to coach his son’s baseball team. He coached the team for two years.

That brief, early association made a lasting impression on Helen, who now counts herself among PAL’s loyal donor base. In fact, her generation has always supported PAL, even when their own children no longer played PAL sports and long after they themselves had left the ranks of coaches and referees. Their devotion runs deep.

Gibbons says she gives less than $100 two to four times a year. Until last year, her donations were matched by former employer Bank of America, where she worked for 30 years, retiring as assistant vice president. She laments that the matching program was discontinued for BofA retirees, presumably to save money in a tough economic time.

“I think I donated a little more because of the matching gift,” she admits. “I know it should be the other way around … It sounded like a plus.”

Small donors like Gibbons are the bread-and-butter of PAL’s funding. Gibbons thinks more people would support PAL if they knew more about the great work that PAL does, even if they don’t have children in sports.

“It’s such a worthwhile program,” she says. “I just think that the whole idea of PAL, to get kids interested in sports, keeps them off street and helps them develop their areas of interest.”

She also believes it’s important for kids to be exposed to police in a safe setting, such as the soccer or football field. She would like to see the bond between PAL and the police strengthened.

“I just feel that if kids start young, they have a different feeling toward the police than if they get a ticket because they parked in the wrong place.”

These days, Gibbons spends her time with her three children, eight grandchildren and 11 great-grandchildren, one of whom is currently a PAL kid. She also likes to go out for lunch with fellow BofA retirees or fellow police widows, admitting that, at her age, the thought of cooking lunch does not excite her. The Giants winning the World Series … now, that’s a different story!

Back to PAL November 2010 newsletter.

Newly renovated Kimbell Field to add 3,580 hours of play

Kimbell Field

The newly renovated Kimbell Field was officially unveiled at a ceremony on September 19.

Kimbell, located at Steiner and O’Farrell streets, is the only public turf field on the city’s north side, which makes it a coveted field for schools and teams north of Market Street. The field is also used by PAL’s popular Seahawks football and cheer/dance programs.

City Fields Foundation, which in 2006 began renovating many of city’s fields to turf, estimates that Kimbell’s renovation will translate into an additional 3,580 hours of sports play. Turf fields are year-round; they do not have to be closed due to rain or to give the fields a rest.

The renovation, which took almost a year to complete, added new bleachers, benches, bathrooms, and state-of-the-art lights. In addition, Kimbell now boasts San Francisco’s first and only batting cage in a public park.

Mayor Gavin Newsom, who was present at the kickoff ceremony, called Kimbell “hands down one of the best sports fields in the city, if not the Bay Area.”

The Kimbell project is the latest in a series of field renovations designed to boost the number of playing fields available to youth in San Francisco. An assessment in 2004 found that San Francisco needed an additional 60 athletic fields to meet current demand. The project was done in cooperation with San Francisco’s Park and Rec Department.

Altogether, the City Fields Foundation will have donated a total of $25 million toward upgrading a total of seven city fields throughout the city, including the Crocker-Amazon fields in the southern part of the city. The fields are estimated to have added 66,000 hours of sports play for the city’s youth.

Visit the City Fields Facebook page for more photos of the reopening festivities.

Back to PAL November 2010 newsletter.

Coaches Find Soccer Unites Kids, Families, Communities

Above (L to R): Cameron and Carlos, players on the Starr King Gophers United, keep the ball away from Eleanor, a player on the Starr King Storm.

On a pockmarked soccer field in Cole Valley, the Gophers United and the Storm are waging a momentous battle.

A cluster of 7- and 8-year-old girls and boys scramble after the ball. Some wear black PAL jerseys, others are decked out in orange. Nearby, two dozen attentive parents watch from the sidelines, cheering and clapping at each tiny triumph — a robust kick, a fast tackle, a clever steal, a daring breakaway.

On the other side of the field, several dads pace up and down, their eyes riveted to the action. They are the coaches — parents who give a few hours a week to shepherd the kids to success on the soccer field, which at this tender age means nothing more than loving the game.

“Good job, Sienna!” one coach calls out. “David, go get it! Mackenzie, go get it! Get in there. Kick it out.”

In a sudden burst of energy, David and Mackenzie race toward the ball.

“Kick it out! Kick it out!”

Mackenzie is inches from the ball when a black jersey pushes in front of her and boots the ball toward the goal. Amid a mad scramble, the goalkeeper lunges and snatches the ball off the ground. Saved!

So goes the sport of PAL youth soccer. Moments later, Mackenzie is beckoned from the field, and the coach gently pushes another kid onto the field.

The coach in this case is Mackenzie’s father, Terrence Jones, head coach of the orange team, the Starr King Gophers United. The rival head coach is his close friend Marcelo Rodriguez, who coaches the black team, the Starr King Storm. Marcelo’s daughter Elena plays on the Storm.

SK Gophers United Coach Terrence Jones

Terrence Jones, coach of the SK Gophers United
and the dad who started it all at Starr King Elementary.

Coach Marcelo Rodriguez with SK Storm kids (L to R):
Elena, Ben, Skylar, Maxine, Henry and Cameron.

The Gophers and the Storm chase after the ball.

The two men each played soccer as kids (“Of course! I’m from Argentina,” says Rodriguez) but their adventures in youth coaching are new, prompted by what they saw as a need for organized physical activity at their daughters’ school.

Mackenzie and Elena are good friends and soon-to-be third-graders at the Starr King Elementary School. Located in Potrero Hill, Starr King is a public school that caters to four groups of kids: general education kids, many of whom are from low-income households; Mandarin-immersion kids; Spanish bilingual kids; and special-education kids.

As rich as it is in educational mission, Starr King lacks in one crucial area — physical education. It has no PE program. To compensate, Jones set out to find something that would fill that need, not just for Elena, but for every second-grader.

“We just needed something,” Jones says. “I grew up playing soccer. You don’t need much — just a ball and a field.”

Jones recruited Rodriguez, and the two men turned to PAL for help in setting up the soccer teams. They canvassed the entire second grade for players, and came up with 24 kids — enough for two teams. It made sense to put their daughters on opposing teams, so each of the men could coach his own daughter. But soon four more parents were lining up to help with the coaching.

The outpouring of enthusiasm and support was unexpected — and heartwarming.

“This has been fantastic for a school that is young and developing,” Rodriguez says. “The unity that’s been created in the school because of these teams is unbelievable.”

He explains that, while the school is a wonderfully diverse community, families at Starr King sometimes have had difficulty overcoming the socio-economic obstacles amplified by so many different programs serving so many different needs.

The soccer program, on the other hand, has been a great unifier.

“PAL soccer created a lot of friendships, both between kids and parents,” Rodriguez says. Family socials often followed soccer practices and games. Parents and kids in programs with little overlap were suddenly talking and laughing together.

The two teams practice together once a week. This year, the teams have been coed. Next year, they will divide by gender — the Gophers will be boys and the Storm will be girls.

Meanwhile, the coaching staff has multiplied. Jones and Rodriguez and two other parents will coach the girls next year, while, astonishingly, six parents are now on board to coach the boys.

“Yes, that is right,” Rodriguez says, pleased that the interest is off-the-charts high. “A total of 10 third-grade parents will have taken the day-and-a-half training for their license to coach kids.”

For Rodriguez and Jones, coaching takes roughly 4-5 hours a week during the 10-week spring season. Because they help with each other’s team, the two men probably spend more time on the soccer field than most PAL coaches. Rodriguez notes that collecting the initial paperwork can be a bit daunting, but once the forms are in, administratively there is little to do except make sure parents know the dates, times, and fields for each game.

For the two men, it’s been a labor of love.

The referee blows the whistle, signaling the end of the game. Each team scored several goals, but as the kids rush off the field, no one quite cares who won or lost. They are thinking about the luscious snacks that beckon to them from a picnic blanket on the sidelines, to where they swarm like happy bees.

For more information about becoming a SFPAL coach, call our office at (415) 401-4666 or visit our volunteer page.

Robert Fernandez Goes the Distance to Revitalize SFPAL Boxing

Robert Fernandez and four of his young boxers

PULLING NO PUNCHES — Robert Fernandez with four of his young boxers. From L to R: Darrin Gaines, 12, Mario Lopez, 9, Cameron Smith, 8, and Albert Lopez, 8.

Robert Fernandez is on a mission.

In a small boxing ring two flights up in the Bayview YMCA, Fernandez watches four young boys, ages 8 to 12. The boys circle about, making hissing sounds as they jab and punch the air. They pivot and weave. They lunge. They hold their fists clenched, wrapped in tape, close to their chins. Every so often, a boy steals a glance at Fernandez. He is their coach and mentor — the man they look up to, the man who can turn them into boxing champs — and they want to make sure he sees them.

Fernandez watches, and calls out to each boy, one by one.

“Keep your balance! I want you to bend those legs!

“Look where your hands are! You’re going to get hurt that way. You’ve got to keep your hands up, close to your face. That’s it!”

In another day, these boys will compete in a boxing tournament, and Fernandez has to get them ready. As head of SFPAL boxing, the 40-year-old electrician isn’t content to teach the kids a few moves and send them home. He wants nothing less than to restore SFPAL boxing to its former glory.

“My goal is to make this program one of the best in Northern California,” he says. “I want these kids to compete at a high level. I’m an intense coach and I’m a tough coach. I tell these kids it’s not Romper Room here.”

Boxing has a long, storied history at SFPAL. Started in 1959, the year of SFPAL’s founding, the boxing program was run for 25 years by the great Earl Gonsolin, a much-loved San Francisco cop who passed away last year. Gonsolin developed many boxing champions, including Paul Sherry, a three-time Golden Gloves winner and the 1975 national champion.

Gonsolin also coached Fernandez’s father, Albert, a retired lieutenant with the San Francisco Fire Department who competed in three Golden Gloves tournaments.

Though Robert Fernandez never took boxing lessons, as a youngster he would tag along with his father to the SFPAL gym at the old Armory at 14th and Mission, and “hit the bags.”  He soon developed a passion for the sport.

Gonsolin’s retirement from the program in 1984 coincided with a general petering out of interest in the sport. By the mid-1990s, boxing hit a low point in San Francisco. It vanished from the SFPAL roster.

In 2008, three San Francisco police officers stepped up to revive the sport. The three officers — Tom McGuire, Rain Doherty and Michelle Henderson — launched the new program at the Bayview YMCA. The program faltered, however, when the Y was closed for renovation

Boxing was reignited under Fernandez this past January. Fernandez ran a program for kids at the Ring of Fire Boxing Club and brought some of his kids over to SFPAL, along with his passion for the sport.

Despite his lack of experience as a competitor, it turns out that Fernandez is a very talented coach. “I have a knack for coaching,” he says. “I’m a student of boxing. I love boxing. I am constantly picking up tips to use in my coaching.”

Mario, 9, works on keeping his face covered.

Mario Lopez, 9, works on keeping his face covered.

Cameron, 8, spars with the punching bag.

Cameron Smith, 8, spars with the punching bag.

Robert Fernandez helps Darrin Gaines, 12, with glove

Robert Fernandez helps Darrin Gaines, 12, with glove

He is in good company with some of the best boxing coaches. He mentions Muhammed Ali’s coach Angelo Dundee, who started out as a “cornerman” for boxers but never got in the ring himself.

Fernandez calls boxing a “thinking man’s game — a chess game.” He thinks it’s unfortunate that boxing has gained a bad reputation because, in his view, it’s a great teacher of discipline, respect, hard work, friendship — and quick thinking.

“You really have to think in this game. If you don’t, you’ll lose,” he says. “You have to have some kind of game plan. The moves aren’t planned ahead of time. You may have to think a step or two ahead. But you have to be able to make adustments along the way. You have to think, how can I beat this guy, using his strengths against him?’

As an example, Darrin was in a fight last year where his opponent was winning because he was bigger and stronger. So Fernandez helped Darrin devise a strategy to win by outwitting his opponent. Fernandez won’t divulge the strategy — Darrin’s got many more boxing matches in his future, after all — but the 12-year-old was able to mount a comeback and win the match.

Boxing also teaches kids to be gracious losers. If they lose, he says, they need to dust themselves off and go back into the ring another day.

Today there are 10 kids in the SFPAL program, ranging from 8 to 17, and Fernandez says he can handle up to 20. He’s in the process of recruiting two assistant coaches. In the long run, he would like to expand the program even more.

He also trains his son, Michael, 20, who has 50 fights under his belt and is shooting for the 2012 Olympic trials, and after that, the ranks of the pros.

Fernandez is a tough taskmaster. But he also wants the kids to have fun. They work out five days a week and sometimes on Saturday. Sessions run two and a half hours.

He calls himself a “stickler for fundamentals.”

“I work constantly on basics every day,” he says. “A lot of kids aren’t really taught the basics of boxing. I want my kids to have that. If a kid doesn’t have that, he’ll look sloppy. He’ll look like he’s in a street fight. He’ll run out of gas. He’ll hit with unnecessary punches. Kids shouldn’t be put in the ring that way.”

The outcome of the tournament was a success for Fernandez and his boys. Both Cameron and Darrin won best boxer in their divisions. Darrin will compete in the regionals in May.

The 12-year-old Darrin says he has tried lots of sports but likes boxing the best. “I can’t stay away from it,” he says. “Boxing is the hardest sport you can do. It’s the only sport I want to do.”

SFPAL boxing registration is ongoing and the season is year-round. Training sessions are held at the Bayview YMCA at 601 Lane Street, M-Th from 4:45 to 7:00 p.m. The fee is $80 and includes registration in the United States Amateur Boxing Association. For more information, visit our website at www.sfpal.org/boxing/ or call the SFPAL office at (415) 401-4668 or Coach Robert Fernandez at (415) 595-4200.