MIFA 2020 – Back to Sport – Phase 3

Dear MIFA Community, 

With the green light of Phase 3 at the beginning of this month, MIFA and the Volunteer Executive have developed a COVID-19 Back to Sport plan that is thoughtful, thorough, inclusive and identifies short and long-term goals for igniting football and fitness in our community while also doing our part in preventing a second wave.

MIFA has been following the advice of the: Government of Ontario, Government of Canada, City of Toronto, Peel Public Health, Peel Regional Police, Town of Oakville, City of Burlington and the City of Mississauga during the pandemic and has taken significant protocols to ensure the safety of participants and the community.

While we hope to bring the same tradition of MIFA programming and events, our programs will have additional measures in place that must be adhered to by all participants. Through our Back to Sport plan, our goal is to return to football to normal or near-normal operations. 

Part of the Back to Sport plan includes and addresses the following items:

  • Restoring football programs while keeping participants and fans safe and following public health directives 
  • Incorporate positive changes and efficiencies for registration and additional processes
  • Screening volunteers, participants and other members when entering facilities and areas of programming with a temperature gun that was invested into by MIFA
  • Cleaning all equipment and items used during programming with a commercial with a specialized anti-COVID-19 cleaner
  • Ensuring all MIFA participants sign a COVID-19 waiver before participating in programming
  • Rescheduling and being adaptable with programming to a future date should be required by public health directives

We have all felt the effects of the pandemic over the last few months and we ask that all participants be patient as we work to adjust to our new normal. Our strengths as a strong Executive and community organization will ensure that any programs that need to be moved to a future date- will be communicated accordingly through the right channels and at a reasonable time. 

During any adjustments, MIFA programs will move as a unit as the Executive plans and assigns new dates and times, with information ready for distribution to participants. As a result, there will be no option for refunds of any kind, as has always been the policy of programs, as the programs require all participation in order to be successful for everyone. Funds will be forwarded to future games and dates. Should COVID-19 require us to shift programs to a significantly later date, MIFA programs will offer a credit of the value of what was paid to be applied to the future season and or program fees. 

Should someone come in a MIFA program have contracted COVID-19, MIFA will consult and communicate with groups and stakeholders immediately and mitigate the issue as quickly as possible. With our screening protocols in place, our goal is to ensure the safety of all participants from the outright. 

MIFA Exec

MIFA 2020

To our dedicated participants and supporters,

Following the advice of City of Toronto, Peel Public Health, Peel Regional Police, Town of Oakville, City of Burlington and the City of Mississauga, some of our programs and events may have been rescheduled or changed for the 2020 year.

As is the case with many small organizations in the GTA, in Ontario, and all over the world, the COVID-19 pandemic has affected us as well. In saying this, all registrants who are currently registered for the 2020 MIFA season will automatically have the registration deferred. Updates would have been provided to the appropriate MIFA channels and communications to those who have committed for programming for this year. Additional updates will be made to those registered for this year.

We promise to bring you the tradition of MIFA programming and events, the experience that you know and love, virtually this year or in an environment accommodating to the situation, in person. We know there are many of you who participate in programming with us every year and we will do our best to bring this world class experience to you this year as we always do with our MIFA community. 

As we are a small organization that has been affected greatly by the pandemic, we would very much appreciate it if you would refrain from requesting a refund. We have made a large financial investment into this year’s programming and development already which makes refunds a challenge, as these costs and expenses are not recoverable. In addition, we have to cover costs already budgeted for programming this year, regardless of the pandemic. 

Please email us at info@mifa.ca if you have any questions. Registration for programming is available at www.mifa.ca

Your love and support is what keeps our organization running every year. For that, we are truly thankful. 

 

MIFA Executive

Mississauga Football Club Appoints New Director

Melissa Stolarz to direct MIFA women’s tackle program

COMMUNITY Apr 26, 2019 Mississauga News

The Mississauga Indoor/International Football/Fitness Association (MIFA) recently announced the new Director for MIFA Allstars women’s tackle football program. Melissa Stolarz was appointed as the Director at the start of April through a unanimous vote from the executive team at MIFA.

“Melissa has connected with this program immensely and has proven to us and made it clear to me that she will do whatever it takes to keep the first ever women’s team in Ontario involved in community and stronger than ever,” said Liston Bates, head coach of the women’s team.

Stolarz has been a volunteer of MIFA for the past three years as a voting member. Now as a director, she will be at the forefront of leading the program to new levels and opportunities.

“I’m excited to take on this role to support women in football. I don’t play or participate on the team, but I believe in this program and in the community oriented values that MIFA is based upon. This year I will work to have new sponsors on board, new opportunities to grow the sport provincially and internationally, and with the dedication of coaches, volunteers and players, to continue to build a strong core to work from,” Stolarz said.

“I look forward to my role and continuing discussions with governing bodies such as the CFL and Football Canada in hopes to have our athletes play for team Canada one day.”

Stolarz hopes to bring her background of community service work to her new role, including her experience volunteering on the Heritage Advisory Committee at the City of Mississauga, her role as chair of marketing for the National Newspaper Association and emceeing at various community events including Carassauga.

In addition, Stolarz has volunteered her time for the Oakville Marathon, Oakville Rangers Hockey Team and recently with the Ontario Women’s Hockey Association.

MIFA Allstars has been noted as the first and only women’s tackle football team in all of Ontario and its unique program has helped women develop skills in learning and playing the sport.

“The startup process has been a fatiguing one for the past three years but we were able to build a core group of loyal players and I’m certain with the resources Melissa brings to the table, there is no doubt we will break even more barriers,” Bates said.

The team travels both provincially and internationally to compete and is continuously striving for more opportunities to grow the sport for women. For more information on MIFA, visit the club’s Instagram page.

MIFA All Stars Canada Women vs. LeXfa Mexico

Snapd South Mississauga

MIFA All Stars Canada Women’s Tackle Football Team is having it’s second game against an international opponent this year. MIFA All Stars Canada versus LeXfa Mexico at the Bronte Athletic Field as part of the International Bowl football games hosted by the Mississauga Indoor/International Football Program. MIFA All Stars Canada is the only tackle football program available for women to play the game in all of Ontario. The team can’t wait for the doors to open for more Provincial and International opponents to compete against.

MIFA at the Etobicoke Lakeshore Santa Claus Parade

Snapd South Mississauga

Join MIFA celebrate football in the community at the Etobicoke Lakeshore Santa Claus Parade. MIFA will showcase the women’s tackle football team, men’s tackle program, youth division as well as the MIFA FIT division promoting Healthy Lifestyle, personal Training and women’s bootcamp.

All MIFA volunteers will be handing out candy canes to the community!

Sudbury Women Tackle Gridiron Game

Sudbury Star, Ben Leeson

A volunteer for the Sudbury Spartans for nine years, Tracy Levesque is a fixture on the sideline for the local Northern Football Conference entry.

But though she hadn’t stepped onto the field itself for nearly a decade and a half, Levesque missed her playing days, first in the Joe Macdonald Youth Football League, then with the Sudbury Secondary School boys team.

“My brother, Trevor Levesque, played the first six years, when Joe Mac first started,” Levesque recalled. “He played for Central City and had five championships in six years. After standing around watching him play for three, four, five years, I decided, hey, I want to have a crack at that. My dad told me I had to put some weight on before he was going to let me play football and apparently I did, so he let me play the next year. My brother and I actually played together on the same team during my first year.”

She was standing near Spartans head coach Junior Labrosse last year when Liston Bates, program co-ordinator for MIFA Football, which oversees the NFC’s Oakville Longhorns, approached the Sudbury staff about sending players to suit up for the MIFA All-Stars in the International Bowl against Team America.

When Bates mentioned MIFA also had a women’s tackle team, she could hardly contain her excitement.

“I poke the person next to me, the trainer or equipment manager for the Longhorns, and I say, ‘Hey, how do you get on the women’s team?’ He elbows Liston and he says, ‘Hey, she wants to be on the women’s team.’ Liston looks at me and he goes, ‘You play football? Alright, here’s my number.’ “

A few weeks later, she stepped in at cornerback for their game against Mexico.

“It was amazing,” she said. “I was nervous, because my last active year in football was 2003, so I hadn’t played in about 14 years, I was really out of shape and I wasn’t expecting to ever play football again, but when the opportunity came, he was like, ‘By the way, we play Mexico in like three weeks.’ “

Levesque thoroughly enjoyed the experience, however, and is disappointed she won’t be able to accompany the team on a trip to Mexico this weekend. She does, however, plan to join the MIFA squad for games in Oakville and Montreal later this year.

She’s one of a handful of Greater Sudburians on the roster, part of a group that includes Kirsi Fahey and Melissa Tardibuono. A few more come from North Bay.

“We get a lot of respect, because we travel down almost every other weekend for practices,” Levesque said. “It’s all at our own expense, we pay for practices if we have to book an indoor field, we pay for our own player fees. Some of the girls have sponsorships and I’m personally going after sponsorships here in town.”

Bates is impressed with the players’ dedication, as well as with their willingness to assist one another with travel expenses and even provide out-of-town players with places to stay.

“We have players coming from all over Ontario,” Bates said. “It’s great that people from all over Ontario are working together and connecting and coming together under one roof.”

In addition to the Longhorns semi-pro team and men’s all stars, MIFA has long-running flag and winter indoor programs. In the youngest divisions, Bates said, registration of females has actually outpaced that of males.

“That’s huge, because we were targeting that,” he said. “That started going up to adult co-ed flag. We started getting the moms of the kids we coached and someone made the comment, hey, imagine if we could get them in pads. I said that was always a vision, but I didn’t see how we could play. So we created an international circuit to play an International Bowl game against one country that is serious about tackle football, which is Mexico. We took a team down there last May and played in Mexico, and it was a huge experience for a lot of women. We lost, but we came back and social media started going nuts with women asking to join and we actually doubled in numbers within a few weeks.”

Levesque is trying to keep that growth going by encouraging other locals to sign up.

“It’s fantastic,” Levesque said. “It’s hard to get the program to grow, because a lot of women don’t think they can do it, but it’s not hard.”

She encourages anyone interested in women’s tackle to give it a try.

“Just give it a shot,” she said. “What’s the worst that’s going to happen? It’s all about teaching, the women are very close with each other, we try to help each other a lot, which is nice, and the more the program grows, the easier it’s going to be on the girls who are a part of the team already.”

Football coach who used to be homeless says game saved his life

Nicole Martin · CBC News · Posted: Oct 08, 2017 7:00 AM ET | Last Updated: October 8, 2017

Program co-ordinator and MIFA head coach Liston Bates runs youth, women’s, and men’s flag and tackle football teams. He says he wants to share his knowledge and passion, and show that anyone can play the game. (Nicole Martin)

Living in a van at 18, Liston Bates still made it to every football practice.

Football has always been a part of Liston Bates’ life, but as a kid he didn’t have the money or support from his family to get onto the gridiron.

Bates says he had a very strained relationship with his father, who didn’t understand his love of the game and pulled him off of the high school football team. At 18-years-old, Bates was homeless and living out of a van.

That didn’t stop him from being involved in the game.

“I used to actually practice with a community team, I used to go out to their practice on a regular basis, but I couldn’t afford to play. Actually Rob Ford funded a team and I travelled to Etobicoke and my football career started from there,” Bates explained.

Some 15 years later, he’s coaching on the same field he used to practice on.

Bates is a program co-ordinator and head coach for the Mississauga Indoor Football Association (MIFA). He runs youth, women’s and men’s flag and tackle football.

Bates said he’s not just sharing his passion for football, but also breaking barriers by showing that the game can, and should, be played by all.

“It’s ridiculous, like there’s women that come here with their kids, and their kids I coach and then I’m turning around an hour later and coaching their mom. I have more young ladies playing flag football every year than I have young men. It’s definitely not a men’s sport, it’s a sport for everyone,” said Bates.

Head coach Liston Bates, centre, says these women are breaking barriers and proving that anyone can play tackle football. (Liston Bates)
Kat Webster is a mother of five who likes to mix it up on the field. All five of her children play the sport and are coached by Bates.

“I have three younger ones, they’re playing flag right now, and my older sons who are now 18, who previously played with him, are volunteering. So we’re all a part of MIFA, and here I am now, finally a women’s football team was created for us, so I am so happy that I finally get to play real football.”

Bates says football saved him from what could have been a darker path and that coaching and sharing his passion gives him purpose.

“They don’t realize they’re my family, too. Sometimes [players] say, ‘Coach, honestly do you have a life outside of here?'”

Kat Webster is a mother of five who plays defensive back for the MIFA Allstars Canada Women. All of her kids play football and were coached by Bates. (Nicole Martin)
His passion for coaching is about more than just sharing his love of football, but about giving back to the community. For the past 10 years on Thanksgiving Monday, Bates holds what he calls the ‘Turkey Bowl.’ Local football families, semi-pro, and former players all come out to play football. Bates asks the participants to donate non-parishable food items for the local church.

“Why I do it is because a couple people stepped up and helped me out and helped me find my passion like Rob Ford and my chaplain at my high school,” Bates told CBC Toronto.

“I’m thankful that I can just express my passion and have other people absorb it. I want them to know that this sport is for everyone.”

MIFA Turkey Bowl benefits St. Martins of Tours

Oct 18, 2016 by Iain Colpitts Mississauga News

The Mississauga Indoor Football Association recently held its annual Turkey Bowl in support of the St. Martins of Tours Parrish food drive. – Supplied photo

The Mississauga Indoor Football Association (MIFA) was able to raise a car full of food for the St. Martins of Tours Parish food drive last Monday through the annual MIFA Turkey Bowl at Mississauga Valleys.

For several years, the Thanksgiving tradition sees the White Knights, led by musical artist and community coach Dennis “Devylle” Green against MIFA program coordinator Liston Bates and his teammates on Liston’s Lyric (Entertainment).

As well, organizers were grateful for contributions from volunteers such as Sheridan College athletic therapist student Scott Teske and commentator Dwayne Drummond.

“(The volunteers) view it as a huge event,” said Bates. “I’ve had volunteers emailing me afterwards saying thanks for letting me be part of it and that’s a big deal.”

The fundraiser was also seen as a precursor and registration session for MIFA’s Friday Night Lights men’s league, which begins Nov. 4. For more information, visit mifafootball.com.