Eagles make finals of sports-charity contest

September 30, 2010|By Christopher K. Hepp, Inquirer Staff Writer
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  • In the Eagles Eye Mobile, Kyiona Chavous-Hall, 13, a student at Pepper Middle School, gets her vision checked. "We offer first-class care to a population that doesn't often get first-class care," optometrist Carter Liotta said.
  • In the Eagles Eye Mobile, Kyiona Chavous-Hall, 13, a student at Pepper Middle School, gets her vision checked. "We offer first-class care to a population that doesn't often get first-class care," optometrist Carter Liotta said.
  • A student boards the Eagles Eye Mobile, which visits city schools. It was started with a $100,000 gift from Eagle Jermane Mayberry.
  • Polly DiCocco, a paraoptometric and project manager of the Eagles Eye Mobile, uses an autorefractor to check Shydeem Tart, 15, an eighth grader at George W. Pepper Middle School.

The Philadelphia Eagles take on Manchester United and the Tel Aviv Red Devils on Thursday.

Quarterbacking for the Birds will be Sarah Martinez-Helfman, who's proven she can execute a winning strategy even if her throwing arm might seem suspect.

On the line: the world championship - of sports-related charities, that is.

As the Eagles set off on another season's quest for a thus-far elusive Super Bowl win, coach Andy Reid and his crew might take inspiration from Eagles Youth Partnership (EYP), the team's nonprofit affiliate launched 15 years ago to improve the lives of underprivileged children.

Without the fanfare accorded their helmeted colleagues, EYP's team, led by Martinez-Helfman, has been providing eye exams and glasses, books, and after-school programs for tens of thousands of area children.

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Those efforts have now earned some impressive recognition from Beyond Sport, a London-based group that encourages the use of sports worldwide to promote social change.

Its yearly awards ceremony is in Chicago on Thursday, and the Eagles, because of EYP, are finalists vying for the title of sports team of the year.

The others in the running are Manchester United and Hapoel Tel Aviv Football Club (a.k.a. the Red Devils), both soccer teams. Manchester's nonprofit fights obesity, while Hapoel's works to bridge the cultural gaps between Israelis and Palestinians.

"We had 400 entries from 120 countries for nine awards categories," said Nick Keller, founder of Beyond Sport. "So simply to make the short list is an outstanding achievement."

Eagles general manager Joe Banner agrees.

"I feel like we already won, just getting this far, to be among three teams selected from around the world," Banner said.

Such recognition was hardly the point in 1994 when Banner and Jeffrey Lurie were kicking around ideas for a team-related nonprofit even as Lurie was buying the Eagles.

"Eagles Youth Partnership came from the belief that we are stewards of a franchise that is connected culturally to this region in a way that goes far beyond the time we are here," Banner said. "Like any organization that is an important part of the community, we believe we have an obligation to try and make the world around us a little better."

Funding for the group comes from the Eagles, corporate sponsors, individuals, fund-raising events, and grants. Its programs reach about 50,000 children annually.

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