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Peter Harris of Indianapolis Selected by USA Football to Attend 2010 NFL/USA Football Youth Summit in Canton, Ohio

Author: By Steve Alic

Published: March 8, 2010, revised March 8, 2010

USA Football Tabs Indianapolis Youth Football Leader to Partake in National Forum


USA Football, the sport's national governing body on youth and amateur levels, recently selected PETER HARRIS of Indianapolis to attend the 2010 NFL/USA Football Youth Football Summit in Canton, Ohio, this July. Harris is the athletic director of Lions Home School Football. The football club is comprised of 70 youth players residing in Indianapolis and other cities north of the state capital including Avon, Brownsburg, Carmel, Cicero, Fishers, Fortville, Greenwood, New Palestine, Noblesville, Wanamaker, Westfield and Zionsville.

Harris and youth football leaders from throughout the region attended USA Football's Indiana State Leadership Forum hosted by the Indianapolis Colts at the Indiana Farm Bureau Football Center on Feb. 20. Harris was selected at the event to represent the area at the NFL/USA Football Youth Football Summit in Canton. USA Football's Indiana State Leadership Forum is one of dozens of meetings that the non-profit is holding across the country in 2010 to share best practices within the youth football community.

USA Football is the official youth football development partner of the Colts as well as the NFL, its other 31 teams and the NFL Players Association.

USA Football's 2010 State Leadership Forum schedule will reach hundreds of league commissioners nationwide to impact approximately 20,000 coaches and 500,000 youngsters.

"Meeting and talking with so many leaders who have 'been there' is going to help us immensely as we take our program to the next level," Harris said of the Summit. "As the first home school football program in Indiana, we have seven years of experience in running a high school and junior high program; but as we are expanding into the world of running a youth league, we know that we have a lot to learn."

"Since 2006, dedicated volunteers who power youth football leagues have continued to enjoy sharing their knowledge and ideas at our state forums," USA Football Executive Director SCOTT HALLENBECK said. "We're pleased to have Peter contribute to this discussion on a national level at this summer's youth football summit in Canton, thanks to the support of the NFL and the NFL Players Association."

The NFL/USA Football Youth Summit, funded by the NFL and NFL Players Association, assembles nearly 200 youth and high school coaches from all 50 states and Washington, D.C., along with grassroots football leaders, including former NFL players now coaching at the high school level.

Among the topics discussed at the NFL/USA Football Youth Summit in Canton, Ohio, this July:

*  Inspiring youngsters to reach their potential as people and athletes;
*  USA Football's CDC-approved concussion awareness and management information;
*  The NFL's ATLAS & ATHENA Anti-Steroid Education Program; and
*  Role-playing demonstrations regarding coach-player-parent relationships

The NFL and the NFL Players Association have made a major commitment to invest in football's future with the establishment of the NFL Youth Football Fund (YFF) and other programs.

Established in 1998 by the NFL and the NFL Players Association, the NFL YFF seeks to use football as a catalyst to promote positive youth development, support youth and high school football needs nationwide and also ensure the health of grassroots football in future generations. Through the YFF's youth football initiatives and support programs, youngsters are provided with opportunities to learn the game of football, get physically fit and stay involved in productive after-school activities with adult mentors.

About USA Football
USA Football, the sport's national governing body on youth and amateur levels, hosts more than 80 football training events annually offering education for coaches and game officials, skill development for players and resources for youth football league commissioners. The independent non-profit is the official youth football development partner of the NFL, its 32 teams and the NFL Players Association. USA Football manages U.S. national teams within the sport for international competitions and provides more than $1 million annually in equipment grants and youth league volunteer background check subsidies. Endowed by the NFL and NFLPA in 2002 through the NFL Youth Football Fund, USA Football (www.usafootball.com) is chaired by former NFL team executive Carl Peterson.