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Community Impact

Coach Charles Chua says “We’re All Good Enough”

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Charles Chua, Special Olympics Singapore Floorball Coach

This post first appeared in Human Race from Special Olympics Asia Pacific .

Don’t be a lone hero. Attack and defend as a team. Play for the love of the game, for the friendships that you build; not just to get a gold medal. When every member of the team has an equal chance to score, everyone wins.

That’s my personal mantra, and the advice I have been giving the floorball team that I coach at Special Olympics Singapore . It is common in our training sessions to hear shouts of “just pass the ball!” because I believe no single player should hog the limelight. Everyone should have a chance to shine.

As a floorball coach for students from mainstream schools, I used to train players to gun for gold. Since volunteering with Special Olympics and working with athletes with intellectual disabilities over the past five years, my coaching style has changed dramatically and I believe I have become a more nurturing coach and a better person.

When I first started, I realized that some of the athletes struggled to follow my instructions. I had to break down what I needed them to do into simple steps, guide them through a certain action slowly, and repeat the motion. It was often necessary to also pay special attention to individual players to help them master a certain floorball move. It took some creativity to incorporate games into the training to make it easy and fun for them to learn.

Patience is necessary, but it is more than worthwhile when you reap the results. Watching the players develop, both on and off the sports field, has been my greatest reward.

I have personally witnessed the growth of two players on the team, Syahir and Ramadhan. They are diligent players who have not missed a single training session, rain or shine. The reason they push themselves so hard is because they feel they are not good enough.

Special Olympics Singapore 2017 floorball team
Special Olympics Singapore 2017 floorball team.

They were part of the team that won the silver medal for Singapore at the 2017 Special Olympics World Winter Games in Austria . Despite winning a medal, they felt inferior to the other teams they met at the Games. Since then, they have been training rigorously and have made huge progress in their game. In fact, I’m so proud and inspired to watch them develop as leaders and mentors to the younger players. It’s heartening to see how their confidence has grown. They’ve become more chatty and jovial.

Sport is a universal language that transcends all barriers. When you watch the team play, it’s impossible to tell whether a player has an intellectual disability. Everyone has the chance and ability to score a goal and be a hero. When society as a whole becomes more inclusive, and provides a chance for people of all abilities to show us what they can do and to feel that they are good enough, we all win.

About the Special Olympics Coaching Program

Join over 9,000 other coaches around the world in becoming a qualified Special Olympics coach using the Special Olympics Online Learning Portal . Gain your official certification by completing the online modules and progress up the coach education ladder to improve your knowledge and improve the quality of sport for your athletes.
Courses include Level 1 Sport Assistant, Level 2 Coach Assistant, Unified Sports Coaching, Young Athletes Coaching, World Games Preparation, and additional fitness, Protective Behaviors, and concussion awareness training.

Courses are available in multiple languages including English, Spanish, French, Russian, Arabic and Chinese along with Japanese, Greek, Portuguese, Korean and Hindi. For assistance in registering for the Learning Portal follow this step-by-step guide .

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