The Prince of Wales showed off his “unbelievable arm” playing non-contact American football with youngsters at an NFL event supporting children living in deprived parts of the UK.
Youngsters shouted “what a throw” as acting quarterback William lobbed the ball across the pitch to his teammate on Tuesday morning.
Children from Birmingham, Manchester and London gathered to play NFL flag, the non-contact version of American football, at Kennington Park hockey pitch, south London, in the community event.
William told Phoebe Schecter, GB women’s flag football captain, that he played American football on the beach in summer when he was younger, but shrugged off his sporting ability and said “I try my hand at most (sports)” though “not very well”.
Ms Schecter disagreed, and later told the PA news agency: “Honestly, Prince William was great – his arm strength is unbelievable, when he let that first ball rip I couldn’t believe it.
“Honestly I think if we had better receivers around we would have had multiple touchdowns happening, but his ability to take control of the offence, going into a completely unfamiliar territory really, calling the cadence, receiving the ball, doing a hand-off at one point, making those tactical decisions – it was phenomenal.”
She gave the prince technical tips including “embracing your inner Shakira” by moving the hips.
The children and Ms Schecter cheered and gave him high-fives as an onlooker shouted “that’s good coaching”.
William stood in the crowd and laughed “that’s my NFL career”.
Louis Rees-Zammit, a Welsh rugby star-turned NFL Jacksonville Jaguars player, only scored one.
He later told PA: “I mean (William) can throw the ball, he can throw the ball a lot better than me, so thankfully in my role I just have to run and catch, so I don’t have to throw the ball – I got one in so he definitely beat me”.
William thanked them and said: “Never go home empty handed, that’s a crucial motto. They will love that, we’ll do some practicing at home – see how many windows I can smash.”
NFL flag will make its Olympic debut at the 2028 Los Angeles games.
William said the Olympic flag football games “will be amazing” and “I hope it gets a lot of coverage – that everyone sees”.
As the children continued to play on the pitch, he added: “It’s so good to see all the women getting more involved in it.”
Ms Schecter later said: “When we teach kids who are, say, year four, year five, and upwards, it’s the young girls that really shine because they’ve not been in a football academy their whole lives.
“There’s so many opportunities, where it’s playing for your national team, travelling with clubs, or, you know, LA 28 Olympics – that’s a huge opportunity for everyone, it’s endless.”
NFL Foundation UK is the league’s first international charity organisation and is celebrating its three-year anniversary.
London groups HR Academy, Connect Stars, and Big Kid had teams at Tuesday’s event, as well as Solidarity Community Association in Bolton and Birmingham’s Saathi House.
More than 20 million people play NFL flag across 100 countries and the NFL’s official flag football programme is currently played in more than 650 UK schools, involving more than 60,000 boys and girls.
American football has an increasing presence in the UK with NFL London games taking place at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium.
New England Patriots will face Jacksonville Jaguars at Wembley Stadium on Sunday.