The move was to mark the beginning of a life-changing opportunity for these five pupils; Michael-Owen Dyson, Bevan Solomons, Faiez Basardien, Ashley Jacobs and Schalk Damons, to compete in the Cape Town Cycle Tour in 2015 and other top sports events.
Ashley too was inspired by the encounter with Branson. He says, his mother uses the picture of him with Branson as her Whatsapp profile picture.
The team is led by Wesley Noble who heads up Business as a Force for Good at Virgin Active. He is their mentor and trains a full day every weekend with the team. Initially, the students only ambition was to find any set of wheels to achieve their goal of a five-hour cycle tour.
But Virgin Active and Noble had other plans.
On January 15, the team weree handed fully equipped Scott Speedster professional road bikes for the Cycle Tour along with cycling gear. But the news was even better for them. They were ecstatic to discover that the bikes belonged to them. It meant transport from home to school, a way to get to their friends without using buses and taxis and cycling to part time jobs. In short: Wheels meant freedom. They were also given Premier memberships for the year which allows access to any Virgin Active club in the Western Cape.
Team spirit binds the team as they prepare for the gruelling race. They all say even though they started off as relative strangers, they are ‘like brothers now, family, they care and look out for each other', the team spirit is great as is their pride at being selected.
He has become a role model and a friend to each one of the team members. The out rides have become more than practice sessions for the big race. It is here on the road and with access to someone who listens with empathy, that their real stories emerge.
There has also been positive spin off in their lives.
“For some of the cyclists, school was not a priority,” says Wesley. “I immediately noticed what impact their regular training had on more than physical fitness. I have seen a shift in their values where they now realise that if they would like to ultimately work for a business such as Virgin Active, they need to focus on their studies.”
All the boys spoke of their hardships at home and how this opportunity has given them the chance to prove themselves. They also spoke of cycling as a way of “getting away from their circumstances and just being able to focus only on the road ahead.” .
Through the training programme slowly their personalities and strengths have emerged.