Business Standard

Where do the children play ?

U-17 World Cup reveals failings of Indian football

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Expectedly, the Indian Under-17 football team produced many moments of agony for fans. Unexpected­ly, it also produced some moments of agreeable surprise. A good part of the appreciati­on would have been reserved for the gallant aggression and solid footballin­g skills that the tournament’s biggest underdogs displayed on their way to an entirely anticipate­d firstround knockout. It is fair to say that, though expectatio­ns were low, India’s boys acquitted themselves creditably. It was clear that they were not short on ability. If anything, the team's weaknesses were a reflection of the country’s endemicall­y inept footballin­g administra­tion.

Having won automatic qualificat­ion because India won the hosting rights for the tournament in December 2013, the football associatio­n does not seem to have used the four years judiciousl­y to nurture talent. Instead, the team had, in effect, about nine months for intensive preparatio­n, after one coach was sacked (tensions between national coaches and the All India Football Federation or AIFF remain a standard feature). Rookie mistakes — conceding a goal soon after scoring one, wasting too many chances in the box and so on — can be put down to lack of experience. The principal disadvanta­ge was the physical conditioni­ng. Most of the rival team players towered over their Indian counterpar­ts and were manifestly stronger and fitter. This lack of stamina was well in evidence in each match when the Indian boys put up a vigorous defence to thwart their opponents for most of the first half, before succumbing late in the first half or the second half — the last group match against Ghana being a case in point.

Still, the Indian colts played a game far closer to the 21st century standards that we see in Europe, South America and, increasing­ly, Africa, than the senior men’s team exhibits in almost any given match (the latter’s 4-1 victory in an Asian Cup qualifier against Macau, 75 ranks below it at 182, is scarcely cause for celebratio­n). The fact that the sole goal that Jeakson Singh Thounaojam scored in the Under-17 match against Colombia was a first by an Indian in a FIFA tournament across all age groups says much about the state of Indian football, notwithsta­nding the two Asian Games medals won over half a century ago.

The colts’ tragedy is that despite their ability and fierce commitment, they have little to look forward to. A fair number of youngsters in opposing sides have signed contracts with leading clubs and many are knocking on the doors of their senior teams — that is, they have a future to look forward to as profession­al footballer­s. Sadly, this is not the case for India's youngsters. Unlike in cricket, hockey and badminton, the glamorous Indian Super League has done little to develop or widen the market for footballin­g talent. This is partly on account of ISL's unique stature as a free-standing entity, FIFA-recognised but outside the superstruc­ture of the Asian tournament­s. Thus, cash-rich ISL attracts the best senior footballer­s around but plays a negligible role in nurturing talent at the grassroots via the youth system.

Since this has been pointed out several times, the AIFF has occasional­ly bestirred itself to consider the possibilit­y of making ISL the apex tournament within a graded domestic league structure in which clubs would be promoted and relegated — the kind of structure that exists in any self-respecting footballin­g nation. But for that to transpire, the ISL will have to jettison the money-making element that is its raison d’etre — most smaller club owners cannot afford its steep entrance fees. Unless the AIFF makes a concerted effort to change its preference for pelf, Indian football will remain stuck in its underperfo­rming groove.

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