Players get head start on football season
by Bob Brownne/Tracy Press
Jul 05, 2012 | 1904 views | 1 1 comments | 10 10 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Kaleb Robbins (front) and Enrique Walton, both players for the Tracy Cougars, run a resistance sprint across the field at Tracy Ball Park during their Sunday, July 1, session of The Football University.
Bob Brownne/Tracy Press
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Tracy Cougars coach David Luera wanted to give his youth football team some needed preseason conditioning. Three years later, he’s busy every Sunday morning with 2.5-hour sessions he hopes will give players the advantage when coaches set their starting rosters.

He and Tracy High graduate Tim Celestine, now a senior wide receiver at Lindenwood University in St. Charles, Mo., started a series of informal sessions for youth players. That grew into a regular workout, The Football University, that draws as many as 50 players each weekend to Tracy Ball Park on Bessie Avenue.

Participants play for local youth teams, including the Cougars, Junior Bulldogs and Panther Youth Football, and high school teams, including Kimball, West, Tracy and St. Mary’s of Stockton.

Luera, Celestine and other volunteer coaches run kids through drills designed to build speed and strength and, most of all, give them an understanding of the game that they hope will impress coaches.

“Every kid wants to run the ball, hold the ball and catch the ball,” Luera said. “At that level they’re not getting it, and the parents are paying $400 to $500, and their kids aren’t playing. I think that’s unfair.”

Luera, 35, is a Tracy High graduate who did not play high school football because of grades. He overcame dyslexia after high school while in the Army and never lost his love for the game. Celestine, a 2008 graduate of Tracy High, was unable to attend the most recent Sunday session because of a commitment to another camp.

While coaching for the Cougars, Luera worried that kids would get discouraged if they never got to play in the skilled positions.

“I teach them how to be a running back, fullback, receiver, linebacker, all the skilled positions,” he said. “You may not be the best athlete, or may not have the best body type, or he’s not the prototypical running back or quarterback, but this kid knows how to throw and knows how to read the offense.

“They go in there and they excel.”

Corey Norwood, whose son Alonzo plays for the Cougars, is one of the volunteer coaches.

“It’s something I had to do. This is where it starts, with the youth,” he said, adding that when youth football practices start in mid-July, his son will be a step ahead of other kids on the team. “That’s what it’s all about, getting these kids conditioned.”

As The Football University grew, Luera turned it into a business, officially named TFBU Sports. A fee of $40 per player per month is goes back into equipment, and he still relies on volunteer coaches.

“Everybody out here is a volunteer,” Luera said. “You either love it or you don’t.”

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Duckfan3
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July 06, 2012
David has done so much for these kids. He helps them understand the importance of staying in shape of both mind and body. He always stresses to these kids that grades and nutrition are paramount in getting what they want out of football and life. This is not just about football with these coaches it’s about life lessons and getting these boys and girls to think about their goals and how to execute both mind and body to achieve. The amount of success is not about how strong or how fast or how big or if you’re a Cougar, Bulldog, Panther, Buccaneer, Jaguar but it’s what in your heart and in your mind to be all that you can be (110%). David and these volunteers at TFBU are a tremendous God send to these youngsters…. Thanks David and Coach’s you have made a difference!!!



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