“Our vision centers on the sport’s development through junior and youth participation,” Heywood said. “We see lacrosse to be a powerful mechanism for engaging and inspiring young people to improve their leadership and other life skills, and our efforts to facilitate the sport through education groups is of upmost importance to us.”
That’s what struck DeMarco the most. The QLA’s approach differed from most countries’ methods, which typically target university-level students.
“I listened – and then I watched,” DeMarco said. “Sure enough, every phase of what they were talking about, they accomplished. I think Qatar lacrosse is here for the long run. It’s a great model for other countries to build from the youth level up.”
David Heywood, left, and Gibran Jamal Nasser S. Al-Bader lead the Qatar Lacrosse Association with a focus on developing youth players first.
As of May 30, 120 students at the GEMS American Academy have played lacrosse. Stephen Kellet, the elementary school principal, told the Gulf Times that he appreciates how the sport brings their students together through teamwork. Mark Lentz, head of the school, added that lacrosse provides an opportunity to break down social barriers.
It is that bond that sports provide, regardless of age, gender, or physical ability, Heywood said, that allows its participants to be on an “equal footing.”
“The nice thing is it’s lacrosse,” DeMarco said. “The people that are involved, they really are not concerned who’s playing, but that they’re playing. It’s great that you have countries in that area now playing, whether it’s Israel (which will host the 2018 FIL men’s world championship), Qatar or United Arab Emirates (which recently expressed interest to the FIL). Our main concern is the growth of the game, so it supersedes everything else.”
With the FIL’s quest to become recognized by the IOC as an Olympic sport in the near future, Heywood understands the QLA’s potential impact. Before Qatar, Greece, the birthplace of the Olympics, had been named the FIL’s 57th member.
“Sport is far more than medals won and records broken. It is far more than those who compete as athletes. Rather, it stands for a language that everyone understands,” said Heywood, who described the Olympics as a peace symbol first and a sporting event second. “Both Qatar and Greece stand as prominent symbols of what the Olympic Games set out to achieve. … Whether it is building bridges or bringing people together, the real potential of sport isn’t just about going higher, faster and further. It’s also about enabling humanitarian development and peace-building efforts through its own language, and although sport and politics simply cannot escape each other, they remain as interlinked as the Olympic rings themselves.”
It is “not a matter of if, but when” lacrosse will be featured in the Olympics once again, Heywood added.
While it may be unlikely that Qatar will field teams in upcoming FIL events, as its natives continue to learn the sport and advance through the QLA’s designed performance pathways, it has been a worthwhile experience for Heywood to witness barriers crumbling during times of turmoil.
“It is not an easy project to undertake, yet it is very rewarding all the same,” Heywood said. “We look forward to having a meaningful impact on the sport's global development going forward.”