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Tim Worton is
emblamatic of what the Joe McDonald Youth Football League is all
about. A former player at both the high school and university levels
(back when football still existed at Laurentian in the late 1960s and
early 1970s), Warton confesses an unending passion to the sport.
“I’ve always loved the
game – and always loved the tyke level”, he says. “They are all so
eager – it’s just interesting to try and create a team that actually
does stuff by the end of the year.”
Once again this fall,
his team of choice has been the Lockerby Colts, a collection of
youngsters ranging in ages from about nine to twelve, with most
receiving their first introduction to the game.
“It does something to
me to see them actually developing from organized chaos to an actual
team”, Worton laughs. “I don’t even care about winning or losing – it
has to be fun.”
It’s a mantra that
carries through the JMYFL from the top right on down. And while league
officials will admit that there is the occasional need to reign in a
coach or two, they can sleep easy knowing that this 14-year veteran of
the Joe Mac Football coaching ranks won’t be among those needing a
“talking to”.
“I think that it’s
just such a fantastic league philosophy”, acknowledges Worton. Like
most who have played football at some point in time, Worton feels a
bond that is unique on the gridiron, somehow not quite the same as
other team sports in which he played.
“There is a
camaraderie on the football field that is different than other
sports”, he says. While there is a natural tendancy for parents to
characterize their child’s likelihood of involvement in football based
solely on their size, Worton doesn’t see it that way at all.
“That’s one of the
neat things – watching kids who start to think: “I may be small, but I
can actually tackle someone who is bigger than me”” states Worton,
pointing out a couple of examples on his 2008 Colts’ roster.
Like most
well-respected coaches, Tim Worton understands how to keep sport in
perspective. “I’ve always said that it should be
family-school-football in that order. Hopefully, football makes these
kids feel good about themselves.”
Over the span of the
past two decades, Worton has worked with far too many fellow coaches
and athletes to note everyone. Still, he has enjoyed the pleasure of
standing along side coaches Brian Serafini, Steve Junkin, Scott
Kirkwood, enjoyed the opportunity to watch the development of a young
and very skilled Kyle Kirkwood, who went on to an outstanding career
at the University of Ottawa.
Just talking about his
memories of the sport is easily enough to draw the obvious excitement
that Worton possesses. Perhaps he summarizes it best of all: “This is
where we plant the seed…the seed of enthusiasm for the game of
football.” It’s a seed that continues to grow, year by year, within
Tim Worton.
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