Sportstar

Looking to the future

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Three Indian football icons pay tribute to East Bengal as the club completes a century.

One of the greatest Indian footballer­s of all times, Bhutia rose to his iconic status with East Bengal.

It is my rst club as a profession­al footballer. I am always thankful to East Bengal for giving a 17yearold the opportunit­y with a contract as a profession­al player. I have always enjoyed playing there and I enjoyed a fantastic relationsh­ip with the fans of this great club.

As a player, the memories that rush to you are about winning matches and tournament­s. I still vividly remember the day I scored the rst Kolkata Derby hattrick (in the Federation Cup seminals in 1997) in front of a 130,000 spectators. East Bengal to me is about great memories.

As a player, my loyalty has been largely with East Bengal because I always felt so important there. It is the club that gave me due recognitio­n as a footballer. The East Bengal fans appreciate­d my ability and gave true recognitio­n to my talents. For me, most of the memorable achievemen­ts as a player happened wearing the bright redandgold jersey.

It is a great, old and passionate­ly followed club. It has a rich history and legacy that makes it one of the best football clubs in the country and the continent. I hope it is able to carry forward its great identity in the future and becomes an even bigger profession­al club in the years to come.

It pains me a lot to see the club struggling to nd a sponsor at the threshold of its centenary. It has been facing a lot of challenges in terms of sponsors and investors. When a club endures such kind of hurdles, it denitely becomes unstable. Like a lot of players who love East Bengal, we would love to see the club prosper. We feel East Bengal belongs among the best in the country and should be a part of the ISL (Indian Super League). We are just trying to ensure what it deserves best.

One of the key figures of East Bengal both as a player and as a coach. He was at the helm when East Bengal won the ASEAN Club Championsh­ip and back-to-back National Football League titles.

I have enjoyed my associatio­n with East Bengal both as a player and later as a coach. East Bengal represente­d India when winning ASEAN Club Championsh­ip. I used to keep the national tricolour in the dressing room alongside the East Bengal ag. The ASEAN title and two backtoback NFL titles in the early half of the 2000s is a golden period in East Bengal’s history, but I remember the 200■2009 season more vividly in my associatio­n with the club. That was the time when

East Bengal was totally outplayed by Mohun Bagan. I remember the club losing a number of matches and one evening, when I was holidaying in Shantinike­tan, I got a call from the club president who asked me to take charge of a completely devastated team ahead of the derby (the second meeting of the Ileague, February 22, 2009). I took charge and was astounded to see that the morale of the East Bengal team had touched rock bottom. This is something that is not associated with East Bengal, which has always been a team that was known for its spirit and commitment to the club’s righteous philosophy.

I was really disappoint­ed to see fantastic players like Sunil Chhetri, Surkumar Singh, Yusif Yakubu, Renedy Singh and Rahim Nabi sitting in the dressing room with their chins down. I tried to motivate and bring back life in the team. We went on to win the derby 30 where Nabi scored twice and Chhetri once to make it one of the most satisfying wins for East Bengal. I have always seen East Bengal as a team where the jersey transforms the spirit of the player and they achieve the unthinkabl­e. In the last few years, I nd the spirit missing again and everything is in doldrums. The club has tried dierent Spanish coaches, but I do not nd the team picking up the spirit. I sincerely hope East Bengal is able to address this and march into the century with that same spirit and re that is signied by its aming jersey.

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