Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

United by football & B’wood, Iraq’s U-17 players dream big in India

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@htlive.com n

KOLKATA:The thing about generalisa­tions is that they are, at best, half-truths.

So it was during the 2014 World Cup when an attendant at a restaurant in Belo Horizonte asked Hindustan Times whether rape was India’s biggest problem.

Ditto on Friday evening. When Iraq’s skipper Saif Khalid and top striker Mohammed Dawood stepped up to speak to the media, expectatio­ns were the conversati­on would be about how important football was in a country where sectarian and religious strife became the new normal after a tyrant was overthrown. What they got was two confident young men speaking about football and Bollywood in equal measure and the awareness that in India cricket rules.

Saif Ali Khan, Aishwarya Rai, Shah Rukh Khan, Amitabh Bachchan were names Khalid reeled off with as much ease he would talking about his teammates that won the Asian under-16 championsh­ips in Goa last year. Asked to name the last film he saw, Khalid said ‘Raees’.

Perhaps aware that his interviewe­rs were somewhat surprised, Khalid, speaking through an interprete­r, said there is a television channel in Iraq that shows Hindi films. Beyond Bollywood, Khalid said that despite everything, football remains the No. 1 sport in Iraq and they are aware of how the country’s hopes are riding on them.

“Football has unified the people of Iraq and we want to do that again through our performanc­e. We will do our best to spread joy to our people back home where the situation is improving,” he said, one day after reports that the last Islamic State stronghold has been regained.

Khalid is the heart of this team, pulling strings in the midfield. And like Dawood, he draws inspiratio­n from the Iraq senior national team that stunned Asia by winning the Asian Cup.

Dawood is on The Guardian’s

Football has unified the people of Iraq and we want to do that again through our performanc­e. We will do our best to spread joy to our people back home SAIF KHALID, football team skipper

list of top footballer­s to watch out for. “It is flattering to be talked about in such terms,” said the player whose six goals last year in Goa helped Iraq become the best under-16 team in Asia.

“But if I have scored those goals, it was because of the help I got from the coaching staff and my teammates,” he said.

Giving another example of life beyond strife, Dawood said the team held a preparator­y camp in Iraq for 45 days. The team that won the Asian Cup was based in Jordan.

“Our coaching staff have done their best to prepare us mentally and technicall­y for this tournament,” said Dawood, whose hero is Younis Mahmoud, the man who scored the matchwinne­r in the 2007 Asian Cup final against Saudi Arabia.

Iraq open against former champions Mexico but Dawood said “we will take the field as equals.” Having played in India last year, they might even adjust better to the humidity.

 ?? FIFA VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Abdulabbas Ayad (left) and Saif Khalif at a training session ahead of the FIFA U17 World Cup, in Kolkata.
FIFA VIA GETTY IMAGES Abdulabbas Ayad (left) and Saif Khalif at a training session ahead of the FIFA U17 World Cup, in Kolkata.

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