Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

For India, the World Cup can wait

In a country obsessed with cricket, the first step has to be developing a football culture

- BHAICHUNG BHUTIA ■ Padma Shri Bhaichung Bhutia played a record 104 times for India. The former India captain has been inducted into the Asian Football Hall of Fame The views expressed are personal

The first Football World Cup I remember was 1986. But intertwine­d with memories of the hand and feet of Diego Maradona is that of making my way through a mountain trail in the night to a neighbour’s house to watch games because they had the only television in the village.

Today, everyone in my village has a remote and many follow football through 10 months of the European season. That means, what would be murmured in 1986 gets asked a lot more loudly; the frequency rising in the one month that the World Cup runs: when will India be at show that makes humanity put its life on hold? My answer to that is: we should not even be thinking about it. Surprised that someone who was fortunate to have put on the India shirt and get the captain’s armband say this? Let me explain.

The World Cup is the Mount Everest of internatio­nal football. And since the elevator to the top of the world hasn’t yet been invented, the only way you can get there is by training your body and mind and having a solid support system.

So it is with the World Cup. As a first step, we need to grow the culture of football. It is a challenge in a country where cricket is a religion and other sporting discipline­s are making deeper footprints but it is the culture of football that keeps football alive in South American and African countries which are not blessed with a wealth of resources.

Yes, almost every World Cup has an African team in a public slanging match with its federation over bonuses and yes, stories of corruption and chaos in the football set-up of South American countries make headlines regularly but if every year. Sill, if more and more youngsters from these continents make it to the top leagues of Europe it is because football is a way of life there. ‘Football is the reason we have feet’, an African player told documentar­y filmmaker Hereward Pelling, according to an article by Thilo Thielke in Speigel Online.

So, in every street, neighbourh­ood and village, we need to get the boys and girls to play football. Twenty-five years ago when i joined East Bengal I would see boys do that in Kolkata — I don’t see that often enough now. So, do we have enough youngsters playing the sport? My football schools have over 2,000 children in the age-group of six to 17 spread over 20 cities but I don’t think that is enough. One reason for that is also inadequate space.

That brings me to my next point: let’s leverage the increased interest in football and provide more space for it. That would be a big step in strengthen­ing the base of the pyramid. It would also provide the right environmen­t to have strong local tournament­s for boys and girls, across India. It is said that there are four steps that help you become a footballer — train, learn, enjoy and compete. We really need to firm up the compete bit from the Under-7 to Under-16 levels. That is also how we get the community involved.

If I have a dream, it is not about the World Cup. It is about having such tournament­s competentl­y organised across India every year, 5,000 of them down to every panchayat. This kind of community involvemen­t does exist in the North-east but it is restricted to a few months of the year; we need to have it more often. India’s state and district associatio­ns should be involved in such an initiative. I think there is a major disconnect in what they do and helping football grow.

From the time I started, there have been a lot of positives. I played one tournament — the national championsh­ips — when I was in the Under-16 and these days, our junior national teams go abroad for practise games. India now has Under-16 and Under-18 leagues and national leagues. It is a start but the leagues need to be a lot more broad- based.

India needs to qualify for the Asian Cup regularly and then aim for the knockout stages there. For a perspectiv­e on how difficult that is consider this: it took South Korea five World Cup appearance­s to get their first win. For now, India should aim to be among the top 10 in Asia. The World Cup can wait.

 ?? SAMIR JANA/HT PHOTO ?? A handricksh­aw puller moves past a wall painted with graffiti of Brazilian football players ahead of the World Cup that begins in Russia on Thursday
SAMIR JANA/HT PHOTO A handricksh­aw puller moves past a wall painted with graffiti of Brazilian football players ahead of the World Cup that begins in Russia on Thursday
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