CHRISTIAN FEDERATION OF POLICE OFFICERS POLICE ATHLETIC LEAGUE
unique approach — an athletics organization with the objective of preventing crime before it’s conceived.
The Christian Federation of Police Officers Police departments are tasked with reducing crime in their jurisdictions. Central Texas police departments help achieve this with a Police Athletic League was founded in the 1990s by three police officers and operates four sports in both the spring and fall for children aged 12 years and younger.
Director of Operations Frank Calabrese is one of those three founding police officers and has seen it grow from the four football teams it started with to the dozens that play today. With the unique blend of Christian values, athletic opportunities and the association with authority figures, Calabrese focuses the efforts of the CFPO-PAL to help develop the young athletes of Central Texas.
“These kids that leave here, I always like to think they’re better people than when they started,” Calabrese said.
The organization has seen over 30,000 young athletes participate in its nearly-four decades of operation and has even seen a handful of its members go on to play professional football.
For football, the organization’s primary focus, there are dozens of teams across Central Texas and the Interstate-35 corridor. Games are played in San Marcos at CFPO- PAL’s complex on Reimer Avenue. Age groups are divided into four different levels, with cutoffs at 6U, 8U, 10U and 12U.
One team, coached and coordinated by Johnny Ramos, is the Kyle Outlaws, a CFPO-PAL’s 12U senior team. Ramos has worked with CFPO-PAL for over two decades and is focused on teaching football fundamentals to athletes and keeping them out of trouble as they prepare for junior high sports.
“This day and age, it’s who you hang around with that really gets you in trouble,” Ramos said. “Our main objective is to try to help everybody. I know you can’t help everybody, but you know you have to.”
The Outlaws took the field against the Bears, another team that competes in CFPO-PAL, in a senior 12U matchup recently.
James Rodriguez, father of quarterback James V. Rodriguez Jr., was in attendance as his son led the Outlaw offense.
“It’s more like a family than it is a team,” Rodriguez said. “To come here every day and watch the kids grow is pretty amazing.”
Rodriguez Jr. is in his fourth year with CFPO- PAL. He has grown as a player from where he started but has matured as a person as well. In his early childhood, he was thought to not be able to play physical sports at all due to medical complications. Through his time in the CFPO-PAL, though, he has learned the game of football and how to overcome the adversities that oppose him in life.
“When my son first started, he couldn’t even tackle. Now he’s out there making a 10- yard shot,” Rodriguez said. “It grows him not just out there on the field, it grows him physically and mentally.”
The Outlaws defeated the Bears 32-0 in that outing, led by Rodriguez Jr. at quarterback. As a member of the 12U Senior division in CFPO- PAL, his next stop in football is in junior high interscholastic play. Whether football is his future or not, the lessons he learned playing youth sports will follow him well beyond the football field.
“The competition is awesome out here, it’s great for kids,” Rodriguez said. “More youth organizations are needed to keep these kids, especially in this day and age with what’s going on in the world, you need to keep them busy.”
For more information CFPO-PAL, visit the website cfpo-paly outhsports.com.