Syracuse, N.Y. – The Syracuse Toffees meet up every year to watch the Everton football club compete in the English Premier League.
When the club’s supporters aren’t watching the games, the Toffees host food banks and other charitable events. Now, the Toffees are getting the opportunity of a lifetime.
The Toffees and local youth soccer club Ball On Center Alliance FC will collaborate with Everton to host a soccer clinic this summer. Children ages 5-14 can participate in a clinic Aug. 4-8 at Nottingham High School taught by coaches traveling overseas from Everton’s development system in the United Kingdom.
Everton is offering three different packages for the camps. Children aged 5-7 will pay $150 while those aged 7-14 can choose between a daily three-hour camp for $235 or a six-hour camp for $405 via the Everton FC website.
Everton was once the home for American soccer legends like Landon Donovan and Tim Howard. The club was recently purchased by the Friedkin Group, an ownership group out of Houston. Now, the club is furthering its presence in the United States.
The Toffees are led by president Andy Woodring, an Everton fan from Rochester, New York, who fell in love with the club while his parents were living in England in the early 2000s.
Woodring has been involved with the Toffees for nearly a decade. He is directly connected to the team and said he had been asked for years if there was interest in holding a camp in Syracuse.
Once he found a partner in Boca FC, Woodring said he couldn’t resist the chance to assist in Everton’s stateside efforts. Players don’t need to be a member of BOCA FC to participate in the camp.
“They’re about building humans first,” Woodring said of Everton’s youth academies. “Building people who happen to be good soccer players. And that’s kind of the idea they want to build over here.”
The United States will host the Club World Cup and the senior World Cups for both the men and women in the 2020s, and Everton wants to be the team that profits the most from that. The club will be playing games in Chicago, Atlanta and New Jersey.
Everton knows that hosting events in major American cities will only get the club so far, which is why it emphasizes grassroots efforts in cities such as Syracuse. When the club evaluated the fandom of the Syracuse Toffees and the sincerity of Woodring, it decided Central New York was a place to be.
“Clubs that host our programs need to have an understanding of what they’re getting,” said Roy Collins, Everton’s development director for soccer schools.
“A lot of it comes from people coming out and saying, ‘Hey, I’ve run a club with so many kids in it, we love the English Premier League, we like Everton and we’d like to consider being offered a chance to host a program.’ ”
Everton has hosted camps in 22 states and has 30 kids enrolled in the Syracuse camp, Collins said.
Everton is the only club that sends its actual coaches to develop children in the Syracuse area and has run a camp in Clifton Park, near Albany.
The camps provide Everton the opportunity to teach kids the proper way to play the game and teach the coaches of the host clubs better schemes and ways to practice.
The camps are mutually beneficial. If the club finds players they like, they can sign the children to their youth academies, where they get paid to develop and could ultimately find themselves on the senior team in the Premier League.
“We want to use the U.S. market to help brand our club,” Collins said. “We know, historically, it’s an iconic club. … If you compare what our camps cost to what other camps similar to our camp costs, we are on the lower end because we could charge a lot more for it, but the club didn’t want to do that. The club would rather make it affordable and get as many kids to go as possible.”