SPORTS CAMP & YOUTH LEADERSHIP

A Four-Day Sports Camp That Builds Athletic Skills, Community Confidence, and Future Health Leaders in Rural Tanzania


Watch: Sportsmanship

THE NUMBERS BEHIND THE CAMP

Students trained in 2025
Days of structured coaching
Lbs of equipment donated
Pairs of shoes and cleats delivered
WHY THIS PROGRAM EXISTS

Rural Tanzanian Students Have the Talent. They Have Never Had the Infrastructure.

Ask any student at Maruku Secondary School if they want to play basketball. The answer is immediate. The problem has never been interest; it was access.
Before AHEAD arrived, there was no outdoor basketball court in the Bukoba District. Not one. Soccer happened on whatever open ground was available, with no coaching structure, no organized leagues, and no equipment beyond whatever a family could afford. The confidence that comes from learning a new skill, the discipline of showing up to practice, the teamwork required to play together? Those developmental outcomes were simply unavailable.
Research consistently shows that youth who participate in organized athletics perform better academically, show stronger peer leadership, and are more likely to stay enrolled. A four-day sports camp does more than teach a jump shot. It gives students a reason to show up.

WHAT THE SPORTS CAMP DELIVERS

Four Days of Coaching, Equipment, and the Foundation for Year-Round Leadership

The AHEAD-Maruku Sports Camp launched in July 2025 as a four-day intensive program at Maruku Secondary School. It was the school’s first-ever organized sports camp, and it was designed to be more than athletics from day one.

Basketball Program and the First Court in the District

Soccer Program With a Focus on Girls’ Participation

Equipment That Changes What Is Possible

A STORY FROM THE COURT

Carl Mayfield Has Volunteered With AHEAD Since 1992. In 2025, He Brought His Son.

Carl Mayfield first came to Tanzania with AHEAD over three decades ago. He has returned multiple times since, serving as a volunteer and former board member. In 2025, he came back to Maruku for the inaugural basketball camp. This time, he brought his 15-year-old son, Cam.

The two of them coached alongside the PAZI Basketball professionals, working with students who had never held a regulation basketball before. Carl ran drills. Cam demonstrated shooting form to kids roughly his own age. The image of a father and son, side by side on a court that did not exist a year earlier, coaching students who had never seen a structured practice, captures something essential about how AHEAD operates.

AHEAD’s volunteers are not temporary visitors. They are long-term partners. Carl’s 33-year relationship with the organization is not unusual. It is the model. And now that model is generational, with Cam learning at 15 what his father learned decades ago: that showing up consistently, year after year, is how communities change.

Good health requires good nutrition. Good nutrition requires good agriculture. And education is the vehicle that provides sustainability.

Dr. Irving C. Williams, MD, Founder of AHEAD Inc.

The Sports Camp is education in its most physical form. It teaches discipline through drills, leadership through teamwork, and resilience through competition. And in 2026, it becomes the direct entry point for the Health Ambassadors Program, where the same students who learn to lead on the court begin leading health conversations in their own households.

WHAT COMES NEXT

The 2026 Camp Expands the Model and Connects Sports to Health Leadership

The 2025 camp proved the concept. The 2026 camp scales it. Here is what is planned for the fourth annual AHEAD mission trip, July 9 through 24, 2026.

Sports Camp as the Launchpad for Health Ambassadors

Beginning in 2026, the Sports Camp becomes the selection and training ground for AHEAD’s Health Ambassadors Program. Students who demonstrate engagement and leadership will be invited to join the cohort, receiving year-round mentorship in nutrition, hygiene, and community health education.

The front door to AHEAD’s most ambitious initiative

Expanded Coaching and More Students

AHEAD is recruiting additional volunteer coaches for basketball, soccer, and volleyball. The target is to train more students across a broader range of sports, with continued emphasis on girls’ participation. Local coaches are being integrated into the year-round programming.

Continued Equipment Pipeline

AHEAD’s volunteer network and corporate supporters will continue sourcing shoes, jerseys, balls, and training equipment. Every pair of cleats donated in 2025 is still in use at Maruku. The equipment lasts. The impact lasts longer.

FUND THE SPORTS CAMP

Your Donation Builds Confidence, Discipline, and Leadership in a Student Who Has Never Been Coached

AHEAD operates lean. Every dollar reaches the student. Here is exactly where your donation goes.

$25
Provides a pair of athletic shoes or cleats for one student, often their first pair ever
$50
Covers meals and transportation for one student during the four-day camp
$100
Equips one student with full athletic gear: shoes, jersey, shorts, and training equipment
$250
Sponsors one student’s complete Sports Camp experience and entry into the Health Ambassadors pipeline
$1,000
Funds a full coaching team for one sport discipline: travel, lodging, and training materials for the 2026 camp
$5,000
Covers total camp operations for one sport: coaching, equipment, student meals, and facility preparation

Secure donation. 100% goes to students and program delivery.

QUESTIONS ABOUT THE SPORTS CAMP

What Donors and Volunteers Ask Most Often

When and where does the Sports Camp take place?

The camp runs during AHEAD’s annual July mission trip at Maruku Secondary School in Bukoba Rural District, Kagera Region, Tanzania. The 2026 mission trip is scheduled for July 9 through 24, with the Sports Camp running as a four-day intensive within that window.

Can I volunteer as a coach at the Sports Camp?

Yes. AHEAD recruits volunteer coaches for basketball, soccer, volleyball, and other sports. All volunteers self-finance their participation, including travel and accommodations. The 2026 mission trip fee is $4,850, which covers in-country logistics, lodging, and meals. Contact info@aheadinc.org or visit the Volunteer page to apply.

Why does the program emphasize girls’ participation?

In rural Bukoba, girls are disproportionately excluded from extracurricular activities and face higher dropout rates. Structured sports programming creates a protected space for participation, builds confidence, and has been shown to improve school retention. AHEAD’s soccer program is specifically designed to ensure girls have equal access to coaching, equipment, and competitive play.

What happens between annual camps?

The basketball and volleyball courts at Maruku Secondary School are available for student use year-round. Local coaches are being integrated into ongoing programming, and beginning in 2026, students selected as Health Ambassadors will receive year-round mentorship and structured meetings throughout the school year. The camp launches the relationship. The follow-through sustains it.

How is the Sports Camp connected to the Health Ambassadors Program?

Starting in 2026, the Sports Camp is the direct entry point for the Health Ambassadors Program. Students who demonstrate leadership and engagement during the four-day camp are selected as Health Ambassadors and trained as peer health educators. Sports build discipline and confidence. The Health Ambassadors Program channels those qualities into community health impact.

RELATED PROGRAMS

How the Sports Camp Connects to AHEAD’s Broader Education and Health Work

Health Ambassadors Program

The year-round peer health education initiative begins with selection at the Sports Camp. 100 students trained as community health leaders, carrying nutrition and hygiene knowledge into 200+ households.

Technology & Computer Lab

Over 61 computers in active use at Maruku Secondary School, with a third lab under construction. The digital access program builds technical skills that complement the confidence and discipline the Sports Camp develops.

Community Health Fair

Every July, volunteer physicians, surgeons, dentists, and nurses treat 700 patients over three days at Maruku Health Center. The Sports Camp and the Health Fair run concurrently during the annual mission trip, reinforcing the connection between health and education.