Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Where hockey means better future

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@hindustant­imes.com

CATCH ‘EM YOUNG With help from Dutch great Bovelander, Jharkhand children are learning playing skills and more

cluster of hockey sticks, one of them made of wood, lean against rows of books in the airy room of Pratap Chandra Kumar, teacher-in-charge of Gamhariya’s Government Upgraded Middle School. “Now their interest is not just in academics; hockey is also taking up a lot of their time,” said Kumar, referring to his 139 students where girls are a majority.

Some 20km away, near the community centre of Gutuhatu village, boys and girls in school uniform play separately on a mud patch. Dust eddies around bare feet, no shin guards offer protection from the hockey ball and training ground cones serve as goalposts but it is evident they are having fun. These supervised sessions are held twice weekly for children in the 10-14 age-group in 65 schools in Jharkhand’s Khunti district through a collaborat­ion of Collective­s for Integrated Livelihood Initiative­s (CInI), an associate organisati­on of Tata Trusts, and the hockey academy run by former Dutch great Floris Jan Bovelander.

Some 50km from Jharkhand’s capital Ranchi, hockey internatio­nals Pushpa Pradhan, Nikki Pradhan, Manohar Topno, Sylvanus Dung Dung, and Sumrai Tete matter as much if not more than cricket icon MS Dhoni here. Better livelihood and improved education through other CInI initiative­s have led to focus on quality of life and for that, hockey provides an appropriat­e trigger in this region.

“Hamare bachche mey se Nikki Pradhan banana hai, (we must get another Nikki Pradhan from one of our kids),” said hockey trainer Jasmani Turu, a former Bihar sub-junior captain and a University of Ranchi blue. Nikki Pradhan is the first from Jharkhand to have played in the Olympics’ women’s hockey competitio­n. With smiles brighter than the Palash flaming through central India now, the children say when they are not playing hockey, they prefer football.

“I think the enthusiasm for hockey is the same among these children as in my country,” said Bovelander on Skype.

It is this enthusiasm the initiative seeks to tap into. Bovelander spoke of getting players from this project into the Jharkhand team in four years. Former India captain Sandeep Singh, who is a consultant, said he hopes players from this programme would be in the 2020 Junior World Cup squad.

Plans to that end include not only organising an inter-school league and a hockey festival but also setting up a regional developmen­t centre in Khunti and a residentia­l academy in Jamshedpur. At every level, technical inputs from Bovelander’s company would be sought.

Since the partnershi­p began, the Dutch coaches come every six weeks to train Indians, mostly state level players from this region. Called Master Trainers and paid R 8000 per month, they train the school children. Among the Dutch present this week was Merel de Blaeij, 30, who was part of the 2012 Olympic gold medal winning team.

“The Dutch coaches help us teach the children right,” said Turu. “It also means unlike us, they are introduced to the European style from an early age,” said Singh.

At best, only a few will become hockey players from this programme. The initiative’s success thus hinges as much on how hockey teaches children life skills, boosts self-confidence and treat triumph and disaster the same. “From my first batch, only three played for India. But hockey helped all of them get a life,” said Singh.

 ?? TATA TRUSTS ?? Merel de Blaeij, Dutch Olympic gold medallist in 2012 (in front), exIndia skipper Sandeep Singh (left) training coaches in Ranchi.
TATA TRUSTS Merel de Blaeij, Dutch Olympic gold medallist in 2012 (in front), exIndia skipper Sandeep Singh (left) training coaches in Ranchi.
 ?? ANIL DAYAL/HT ?? Kalinga Lancers players celebrate their victory over Punjab Warriors in Chandigarh on Saturday.
ANIL DAYAL/HT Kalinga Lancers players celebrate their victory over Punjab Warriors in Chandigarh on Saturday.

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