Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

League in shambles, legacy lost

- Sandip Sikdar sandip.sikdar@htlive.com

LACKLUSTRE Dearth of vision and enterprise has killed Delhi’s urge for excellence in football

NEW DELHI: The Delhi Soccer Associatio­n has failed to perform its primary duty -- running football in the state properly.

The DSA did not hold the senior men’s league in 2016, effectivel­y ruining the aspiration­s of budding footballer­s in the national capital region to make it big in a sport that has a fairly strong commercial interest.

When officials continue to hold on to their positions for long periods and manipulate affiliated units, they become like dead wood. Effectivel­y, lack of initiative and the desire to excel on the pitch take a back seat.

DSA, of course, has enough excuses.

“It is not easy to run football these days. Earlier, there were so many grounds available in Delhi but now there are very few.

“Also, the fee for renting a ground like Ambedkar Stadium was ~ 500. Now it is ~10,000. It is difficult,” DSA vice-president NK Bhatia told Hindustan Times.

Hiring playing fields might be an expensive propositio­n, but isn’t that the pledge every sport official takes before joining a federation? Delhi has hardly been a force at the national level and barring a couple of clubs following their passion, DSA’s lack of enterprise has hurt the game’s developmen­t at every strata.

Generating funds to run football is primarily what is expected of an associatio­n and DSA has failed on that count. The appalling sense of planning has robbed the desire to play the game and exploit the opportunit­ies available. As a result, football in Delhi is more of a pastime for office-goers.

With scant respect for programmin­g, historical teams like Simla Youngs have been left to suffer. Establishe­d in 1936, Simla Youngs complain that the league does not Tomorrow:

Are Delhi’s women footballer­s in safe hands? take place during the scheduled time.

“The leagues haven’t happened on time since 2005 when Simla Youngs won. Since then it has never happened when they say it will happen. They always delay it. The scheduled time is from May to September after which the teams have to play the national leagues and tournament­s which happen in the winter,” Simla Youngs chief executive officer Tushar Dev told HT.

“If the league does not happen on schedule, then half the teams proceed to play in the I-League second division while others play institutio­nal competitio­ns for their employers,” said Dev.

Delay in conducting the league also means the clubs have to hold on to the players longer and hence bear extra costs.

Dilip Bose of Hindustan FC raises more pertinent issues. Bose’s club has managed to raise funds to play in the I-League second division. It only reinforces the belief that if DSA had indeed tried,

It is not easy to run football these days. Earlier, there were so many grounds available in Delhi but now there are very few

NK BHATIA, DSA vice-president

funds would not have been in shortage.

Bose points out that the DSA organises the inter-institutio­nal league in the peak of summer. “When players above 40 years play 90 minutes of football in 45 degrees, what do you expect? Does it speak well about good planning?” asks Bose.

Football in Delhi is clearly suffering.

With little vision for developmen­t, the DSA’s inability to exploit some of the best facilities in the country, thanks to two Asian Games and the 2010 Commonweal­th Games, has killed football.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? DSA’s lack of enterprise has hurt football’s developmen­t at every strata.
HT PHOTO DSA’s lack of enterprise has hurt football’s developmen­t at every strata.
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