Rene Adad

Rene Zayco Adad[1] was a Filipino sports and business executive. He served as president of the Philippine Football Federation and was known for the Coke Go For Goal youth football program in the Philippines. He is also the first Filipino branch manager of the Coca-Cola Company in the Philippines.

Rene Adad
President of the Philippine Football Federation
In office
1996–2004
Preceded byRicardo Tan
Succeeded byJohnny Romualdez
Personal details
Born
Rene Zayco Adad
Died(2015-04-24)April 24, 2015 (aged 86)
Bacolod, Philippines
NationalityFilipino
Spouse(s)Carmiña Adad
Children3 (inc. Ana Roces)
OccupationSports executive
ProfessionLawyer
Known forCoke Go For Goal program in the Philippines

Business career

Adad was the first Filipino manager of the Coca-Cola Company in the Philippines. He was also the chairman of the Coca-Cola Foundation in the Philippines. He worked with the company for 42 years.[1]

Involvement in football

Philippine Football Federation

After his retirement from Coca-Cola, Adad served two terms as president of the Philippine Football Federation.[1] On October 1996, Rene Adad was installed as PFF president after a snap election which ousted his predecessor, Ricardo Tan.[2]

He was most known as a major proponent of the Coke Go For Goal program in the Philippines which started in 1983.[3] The Coke Go For Goal was introduced by FIFA in Asia four years earlier in Hong Kong, and its iteration in the Philippines followed the West German government's football development program which prematurely ended in 1981. As part of the program, under-16 boys teams competed against each other in a nationwide tournament.[4] Several future Philippine national team players credited the program for giving them their first competitive football experience including Yanti Bersales, Roel Gener, Eduard Sacapaño, Kim Relucio, and Emelio Caligdong.[5]

The second iteration of the Kasibulan was also started under Adad. The program also known as "Kasibulan 6-12" was oriented on the development of football players aged 6 to 12 years old and also included the conduct of seminars, courses, clinics, and camps for instructors. Adad initiated the program in cooperation of Bernd Fischer, a consultant from the German Football Association and had government support from the then-Department of Education, Culture and Sports as a working partner. The second Kasibulan program ran from 1998 to 2003.[5]

In 2002, the PFF under Adad inaugurated its first regional center in Barotac Nuevo, Iloilo.[6]

Adad ended his tenure as president in 2004. In the same year the Coke Go For Goal program in the Philippines ended which saw the participation of 300 teams across the Philippines in the elimination phase of the last edition of its tournament.[4] The program was like its predecessors were marred with allegations of age cheating by some participating schools. Coca-Cola Philippines had a change of policy deciding to focus on supporting basketball with the company fielding a team in the Philippine Basketball Association from 2002 to 2012.[5]

Asian Football Confederation and FIFA

Adad was also involved in the affairs of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) as a member of the Executive Committee and Executive Council of the AFC. Also a lawyer, Adad also served as deputy chairman of the continental football body. He was also a member of FIFA's women's committee.[1]

Death

Adad died on April 24, 2015 while confined at a hospital in Bacolod at age 86 due to a lingering illness.[7]

Personal life

Rene Adad was married to Carmiña Adad with whom he had a daughter and two sons. His daughter was Ana Roces, who is an actress.[1]

gollark: But that would be annoying in various areas.
gollark: Maybe if I used tiny_http with its 75kloc of dependencies instead of warp with its 300kloc or so it would compile faster.
gollark: And Rust generally requires more dependencies to do anything.
gollark: I mean, it's probably also a function of dependencies, but my Rust project took about 30 seconds to compile and the Nim one about 5.
gollark: Also, the compiler is really slow.

References

  1. Harland, Robert (20 May 2015). "Rene Adad, 'Mr. Football,' 86". Sun Star. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  2. Atencio, Peter (8 October 1986). "Things perking up for local football". Manila Standard. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  3. Tupas, Cedelf (27 April 2015). "Adad, big football fan; 86". Philippine Daily Inquirer. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
  4. Dee, Ignacio (24 April 2015). "Adad, who kept football alive, dies at 86". Rappler. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
  5. Ramirez, Bert (2016). "Looking Back (chapter author)". Philippine Football: Its Past, Its Future. By Villegas, Bernardo. University of Asia and the Pacific. pp. 59–60. ISBN 978-621-8002-29-6.
  6. Henson, Joaquin (11 July 2002). "Soccer a Sleeping Giant in RP". Manila: Philippine Star.
  7. "PFF Mourns Passing Of Its Former President Rene Adad". Philippine Football Federation. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.