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Carnel Smith’s 13th Annual Boys Football Camp

Sojourner’s Truth Staff

For 13 years now, Carnel Smith, Ed.D, has conducted an annual boys’ football camp for youngsters in grades three to eight. Each year dozens of inner-city youth – 130 this past year – turn out for a week to hone their classroom and football skills. Each year a host of volunteers turn out to help Smith, principal of Robinson Elementary School, reach out to the community and help impart life lessons to the youngsters.

“Football is just a tool,” says Smith. “There are lessons to be learned in this game of football.”

Among the numerous volunteers who assist Smith is Robert “Pig” Odoms, a retired area football coach whom Smith recruited at the onset, 13 years ago, to help out.

“I can’t run it without you,” Smith told Odoms then. Smith, who attended Scott High School and went to the University of Pittsburgh on a football scholarship before spending time in the NFL, was all too familiar with the football knowledge Odoms could bring to the camp. Odoms, after all, was Smith’s first football coach.

“I’ve been coaching for 35 years, says Odoms who has spent time with virtually every Toledo Public Schools football program. “I love kids and anything I can do to help keep them off the streets, I want to do it.”

“Kids don’t have the mentors like we did when we were coming up,” he says. “As I go around the neighborhoods, I don’t see adult attendants at fields, nothing is open and there are too many negative things for them to do.”
 

Smith has been operating his camp long enough that former attendees are now part of the volunteer corps.

Not all of Smith’s volunteers are football folks however. There are nurses, for example, who serve to safeguard the health of the campers. Dawn King, LPN, a childhood friend of Smith, has been volunteering since the early days also and has brought along others to assist her.

The kids get minor injuries, of course, and they also come to the camp with issues that need monitoring, such as asthma or diabetes.

“I feel like it’s a good opportunity to serve the community, to help out youth and to mentor other nurses,” says King of the many reasons for her long-time involvement. “It’s a good time and a great thing to be involved in.”

Some of Smith’s volunteers spend more than one week a year helping to put the whole thing together. Mona Bills, for example, who has also been involved for the entire 13-year run, and helps get kids registered, works with parents on time issues, gets food delivered, t-shirts arranged and all the administrative duties that such an undertaking demands. Bills also helps out year-round with critical tasks such as fund-raising.

Bills came to the project through her connections – she is Smith’s sister.

“It’s a good cause,” she says of the camp. “There aren’t many programs out here for inner-city young men.”

For Smith, his summer activities – he has also conducted a girls’ basketball camp – are labors of love. “I’m just pleased that I can do it,” he says

For those around Smith, his dedication to the cause has inspired their involvement.

“I’m so proud of him,” says Odoms, who has been astonished at what Smith, whom he has known for so many years, has accomplished in adulthood. “It shows what hard work can do.”

 

   
   


Copyright © 2015 by [The Sojourner's Truth]. All rights reserved.
Revised: 08/16/18 14:12:24 -0700.


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