Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Inside Kerala’s goal mine

- Dipanjan Sinha letters@hindustant­imes.com

There are priests, long scooter rides, and golden beaches in Kerala’s newest football documentar­y,

Maitanam (Malayalam for playground). It’s maker, Misha Kumar, 43, admits he isn’t one of the state’s many football maniacs. Perhaps because of that, the 40-minute film offers engaging stories for the fan and non-fan alike.

A few minutes in, for instance, celebrated commentato­r Shaiju Damodaran talks about a friend who routinely travels 200km from Palakkad to Kochi on a scooter to watch local teams play. He tells the tale with a sense of wonder; even he can’t seem to wrap his head around that kind of passion.

Maitanam is Kumar’s first film; he’d previously worked as a producer with TV sports channels. When he was approached by sports, lifestyle and entertainm­ent company, Rise Worldwide, he decided to explore the craze and the people that drive it, rather than revisit legends of the top teams, scores and players. After all, this is a craze so intense that the Kerala state government’s sports department observed two days of mourning when the Argentinia­n legend Diego Maradona died in 2020. “I wanted to tell human stories of how this sport has influenced lives,” Kumar said.

The film, shot in December 2021, does this through six stories. It takes viewers to Pozhiyoor, a fishing village near Thiruvanan­thapuram that has produced more than 25 Santosh Trophy players since 2009 and is now known as Santosh Trophy Village.

We meet the fast-rising women’s football team Gokulam Kerala, launched in 2018 and two-time national champions already. “Football wasn’t really considered a women’s game earlier... Now, during selections, the whole family comes along with their daughter,” Ashok Kumar, CEO of Gokulam Kerala, says in the film.

We are introduced to priests who are using the game to try and curb dropout rates. The Little Flower Football Academy (LiFFA), started by the Latin Archdioces­e of Thiruvanan­thapuram in 2015, is India’s first church-funded football training institute.

The film offers glimpses from Sevens games, a no-holds-barred format with seven players on each side that draws huge crowds and some of the best players in the state. And we meet Rufus D’Souza, 89, who has been training footballer­s for 50 years.

The energy of the game becomes a tool in Kumar’s narrative. There’s the unadultera­ted joy of young boys practising on the beach; the near-gladiatori­al atmosphere of Sevens; roaring audiences enraged by a loss.

But perhaps the most evocative parts of the documentar­y are those featuring Rufus D’Souza. He’s seen many of his students play at the state and national levels. He still coaches; and he still won’t sit during practice, to set an example. “The energy of the man was an experience to encounter,” said Kumar.

In the film, D’Souza says he wants to die on the parade ground, still training. “This,” Kumar said, “is the kind of passion that has spread across the state.”

Maitanam is now streaming on Fifa+.

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 ?? ?? The energy of the game becomes a tool in the film by Misha Kumar (below). There’s the joy of young boys practising on the beach; the gladiatori­al atmosphere of Sevens; roaring fans enraged by a loss.
The energy of the game becomes a tool in the film by Misha Kumar (below). There’s the joy of young boys practising on the beach; the gladiatori­al atmosphere of Sevens; roaring fans enraged by a loss.

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