The basic Principles of the Fair Competition Program / The need for the Fair Competition Program for Grassroots
We at the FCSF believe Sport Competition is the most important definition in sport.
Indeed, we see Sport Competition as the essential system that gives life to the sports industry, and the social aggregator that meshes and intertwines the billions of sport community participants, professionals, collegiates, or even more significant, the grassroots, which is an immense and important human sector of our society that needs further understanding and support.
However, most of the documentation and resources related to the understanding of sport overlook the important issues of defining the critical process in modern sports and its relevance to society.
To fill this gap, FCSF founder, Juan José (Cheché) Vidal Noya, developed the Fair Competition Program, a theoretical, and even more importantly, practical framework to help with the understanding of the modern sport industry from its foundational core -- the sport competition -- and to assist sporting communities to improve sport management and value practices in sports.
The FCSF was created with the Fair Competition Program as its philosophy and as its framework. To enforce our mission, we work to foster further research and understanding of Sport Competition, with the goal of improving the process and management of sports, and assist in inspiring a "movement" to promote the positive transformational power of competitions in sports and society. To find out more about the basic principles of the Fair Competition Program click here.
The rights of the Fair Competition Program belong to author, Juan José (Cheché) Vidal Noya, who is currently finishing the first edition of the Fair Competition book in Spanish. The FCSF owns all commercial rights for its sales and implementation in the U.S. and worldwide. Fundacolim, our sister foundation in Venezuela, owns the commercial rights in that country. We are currently negotiating similar agreements in several countries around the world.
Although our effort is intended for the sport industry as a whole, we believe that is has critical importance for Grassroots sports. To find out more about the rationalization behind the need of the Fair Competition Program for Grassroots click here.
Indeed, we see Sport Competition as the essential system that gives life to the sports industry, and the social aggregator that meshes and intertwines the billions of sport community participants, professionals, collegiates, or even more significant, the grassroots, which is an immense and important human sector of our society that needs further understanding and support.
However, most of the documentation and resources related to the understanding of sport overlook the important issues of defining the critical process in modern sports and its relevance to society.
To fill this gap, FCSF founder, Juan José (Cheché) Vidal Noya, developed the Fair Competition Program, a theoretical, and even more importantly, practical framework to help with the understanding of the modern sport industry from its foundational core -- the sport competition -- and to assist sporting communities to improve sport management and value practices in sports.
The FCSF was created with the Fair Competition Program as its philosophy and as its framework. To enforce our mission, we work to foster further research and understanding of Sport Competition, with the goal of improving the process and management of sports, and assist in inspiring a "movement" to promote the positive transformational power of competitions in sports and society. To find out more about the basic principles of the Fair Competition Program click here.
The rights of the Fair Competition Program belong to author, Juan José (Cheché) Vidal Noya, who is currently finishing the first edition of the Fair Competition book in Spanish. The FCSF owns all commercial rights for its sales and implementation in the U.S. and worldwide. Fundacolim, our sister foundation in Venezuela, owns the commercial rights in that country. We are currently negotiating similar agreements in several countries around the world.
Although our effort is intended for the sport industry as a whole, we believe that is has critical importance for Grassroots sports. To find out more about the rationalization behind the need of the Fair Competition Program for Grassroots click here.