Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Ex coach Bhatachary­a thought Chhetri will not be able to score

- ■ sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: Sunil Chhetri is already one of the greats of Indian football but when he first appeared for a trial at the iconic Mohun Bagan, its coach Subrata Bhattachar­ya saw only “hints of promise” in the diminutive striker who “would not be able to score goals”.

Just after clearing his class 12 examinatio­n, Chhetri was called for a trial with the top Kolkata club in 2002. He was just 17 then. He had earlier said that he was shocked when he was offered a three-year deal by Mohun Bagan, his first profession­al contract.

“It was a fateful morning some 17 years ago when I walked into the Mohun Bagan ground where a bunch of young players had gathered for club trials. It was a common feature as the club always wanted to Catch ‘em young.”And from a distance when I looked at them, the gathered lot seemed no different from the so many trials that I had attended as a coach,” Bhattachar­yya said.

He did not see anything special in Chhetri back then.

“When you are assessing young footballer­s -- perhaps once in a lifetime, a player would come along to lift your heart. I probably did not feel that way that morning.”But what I did see were two teenagers who showed hints of promise, and loads of desire, and ambition. Those two kids were Sunil Chhetri and Subrata Paul,” Bhattachar­ya wrote on the All India Football Federation website.

The 67-year-old, a towering former India and Mohun Bagan defender, said Chhetri did show traits that could make him a top striker but had reservatio­ns about his goal-scoring abilities.

“He (Chhetri) had good pace, and his shooting was more than decent. What really struck me was the desire he showed. At first sight, from the perspectiv­e of a tall defender like myself, his diminutive figure did not evoke any thoughts that he would be able to get on the goal.

“But he showed an excellent reading of the game. He constantly made runs off the ball, barking at his teammates to pass the ball to him. He was just five-foot-seven, but whenever there was a set-piece, he’d stick himself right into the towering defenders.”

“That really showed the most important thing a coach looks for in a player – hunger,” said Bhattachar­yya, who is now Chhetri’s father-in-law.

The 35-year-old Chhetri, who will complete 15 years in internatio­nal football on June 12, went on to become India’s highest goal-scorer with 72 strikes from 115 matches.He is now the second highest goal-scorer in the world among active players behind Portugal superstar Cristiano Ronaldo and Argentine maestro Lionel Messi.

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