!['This is for Jane and Finch': Community leaders offering free sports programs to kids who need it](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6606829.1665170066!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/jane-and-finch-youth-basketball-training.jpg)
'This is for Jane and Finch': Community leaders offering free sports programs to kids who need it
CBC
Community leaders in the Jane and Finch area have created free programming aimed at getting more youth involved in sport.
Fees for youth sports can often cost hundreds if not thousands of dollars. That creates a huge barrier for kids in low-income neighbourhoods to participate.
To help address that issue, several Jane and Finch-based organizations like Asante Soccer Academy (ASA) and Elite Basketball Training, where Chris Blackwood coaches, are covering those costs for families.
"I'm not just here with them for an hour and a half or two hours every Wednesday and Friday," Blackwood told CBC Toronto.
"I'm here with these guys for life."
The high-performance basketball training that kids receive under Blackwood's guidance would normally cost $75 per hour. The program, held at a venue called Ballers Union Training Centre, runs for two hours on Wednesdays and Fridays, with 20 to 25 kids in each class. But Blackwood says what his organization is doing is far more important than just flattening fees. He sees it as a chance to get kids engaged and teach them some valuable life lessons.
They play basketball — but they're also exposed to other viable career paths should their dream of playing professional sports never materialize.
Blackwood says priority neighbourhoods like Jane and Finch are known for producing excellent athletes.
Anthony Bennett and Andrew Wiggins, two former No. 1 overall picks in the NBA draft, both have ties to the community. Bennett got his start in basketball at the local Boys and Girls Club. Meanwhile, Wiggins, fresh off winning an NBA championship, has worked with Ryan Smith, the lead trainer for Elite's free basketball program.
But look across the court and you'll see Blackwood spending just as much time with youth who are focused on more than making it to the pros.
One of his pupils, 18-year old Joshua Quiah, is a good basketball player already eyeing a career in plumbing, something he said he can see himself doing "for the rest of my life."
Blackwood's connections helped line that up.
"We thrive in the trades, we thrive in other industries as well," he said.
Blackwood, 40, played university basketball at Montreal's Concordia University from 2003 to 2007. He says he's doing for Quiah and others what older men in the community did for him when he was growing up.