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Look local for talent

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SEASONED boxer Akhil Kumar recently questioned India’s obsession with foreign coaches, a sentiment which was echoed by 2002 Commonweal­th Games gold-winning trap shooter, Moraad Ali Khan, at a function organised to send out good wishes to the contingent for the 2018 Commonweal­th Games, starting today.

The 37-year-old Kumar made it clear that he was not against hiring foreign coaches but what worried him was the inferior treatment meted out to domestic coaches.

“In India, we have a tendency to run after foreign coaches, without even knowing how qualified or well-informed they are about India’s sporting culture. We instantly get impressed with their style and language but did we ever ask the athletes about their difficulti­es in communicat­ing with such coaches,” the outspoken 2006 Melbourne CWG gold medallist said at the launch of the Rang De Tiranga campaign, by the Games’ official broadcaste­r, Sony TV.

“I am not against hiring foreign coaches but it should not be at the expense of talent, which is your own and which is as good. I have always failed to understand the obsession with white skin. Is it to do with our colonial past?” he asked.

Kumar went on to ask why can’t foreign coaches be employed at a grassroots level.

“If the foreign coaches are so good, then why are they not employed at the sub-junior level? If they are so good, let them shape youngsters.

“If I come into the national camp after winning a national title, am I not an almost finished product given to them?” he asked.

Kumar also stressed the need to employ young coaches.

“Retired coaches, who are past their prime, are still working on the young athletes. We should encourage young coaches in India. They are the ones who know the system and realities of sport inside out. We shouldn’t allow foreign experts to dictate to us,” he said.

On being asked about the decision to leave the men’s chief coach SR Singh and his women’s team counterpar­t Shiv Singh out of the CWG contingent, Kumar saw nothing wrong in that.

While the men’s team will have High Performanc­e Director Santiago Nieva and assistant coaches Dharmender Yadav and Jai Singh Patil, the women’s team will have High Performanc­e Director Rafaelle Bergamasco and MC Mary Kom’s personal coach, Chhote Lal Yadav, due to the cap put on the contingent size by the sports ministry.

Kumar’s views on foreign coaches were echoed by ace shooter Moraad Ali Khan, who is part of the team overseeing Indian shooting’s junior programme right now.

“I was asked before the 2010 CWG to coach Indian shooters ‘I said I would do it, if there is no racist attitude’,” Khan recalled.

“Why should a foreign coach be paid more than an Indian coach of the same calibre? Why this discrimina­tion? There is no sound logic for it,” he added.

The event, organised in collaborat­ion with the Delhi Sports Journalist Associatio­n (DSJA), was also attended by 2010 CWG gold medallist discus thrower, Krishna Poonia and former India hockey skipper Zafar Iqbal.

 ?? PICTURE: ZEE NEWS ?? Akhil Kumar made it clear that he was not against hiring foreign coaches, but what worried him was the inferior treatment meted out to domestic coaches.
PICTURE: ZEE NEWS Akhil Kumar made it clear that he was not against hiring foreign coaches, but what worried him was the inferior treatment meted out to domestic coaches.

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