Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Ministry removes pay cap for Indian coaches, move welcomed

- Avishek Roy avishek.roy@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The central government decided on Saturday to remove a salary cap of ~2 lakh for Indian coaches training elite athletes and also offer four-year contracts.

It is a bid to narrow the salary gap with foreign trainers, a contentiou­s issue for years, and attract top Indian athletes to take up high-performanc­e coaching jobs post retirement.

“Several Indian coaches are showing very good results and need to be rewarded for their hard work. The government is also keen to attract the best coaching talent from across the country to train our elite athletes and we do not want the cap on compensati­on to be a deterrent for good coaches to join,” said Sports Minister Kiren Rijiju.

There are 45 foreign experts— coaches, high performanc­e directors and support staff—on contract with Sports Authority of India (SAI) and drawing salaries between $4,000-$15,000 (approx. ~2.98 lakh-~11.2 lakh). There are 1,200 Indian coaches on Sports Authority of India (SAI) roster with scope to hire 300 more.

“The remunerati­on will be decided on t he basis of t he ex-elite athlete’s performanc­e as an athlete as well as his or her success as a coach,” SAI said a statement.

MOVE WELCOMED

Many former internatio­nals run academies in various sports and a higher salary will be an incentive to join national camps.

“If the remunerati­on is good then many Indian athletes will consider taking up coaching after retirement. The obsession (of federation­s) with foreign coaches has to go. There are many top internatio­nal athletes in India who have played at the highest level and can be as good a coach,” said former badminton internatio­nal Arvind Bhat, who runs an academy in Bengaluru.

Chief national badminton coach, Pullela Gopichand, has be e n a s ki ng f o r domestic coaches being given a bigger role. He said the salary boost has been a long-pending request.

“It will give a great boost to the sporting ecosystem by attracting many talented coaches and eminent ex-athletes to join the profession,” he said.

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