Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Administra­tors score own goal for National Football

Football Administra­tion reflects the abysmal depths to which this National Sport has descended!

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The feature by 'Korner Kick' in the Sunday Times of Sept.10, makes interestin­g reading, a sympatheti­c account at that! As an old war horse who has served in many FFSL administra­tions of the past, the analytical discourse brings to the surface the fundamenta­l weakness of those at the helm of the sport in the country. Added to that, press reports that are following the trail of the recent fraud, only goes to underline the endemic nature of what actually ails the FFSL.

In the past, Football Administra­tion was an honorary job undertaken by Football enthusiast­s who had played or, had more than a fleeting associatio­n with the sport. They were Footballer­s of repute and took pride in shaping the destinies of the game, selflessly giving of their time and money, for the sake of the sport in this island nation. That noble service appears to be a thing of the past, with the primary interest of present day officials being the spoils of office and the never ending hoopla of foreign travel sponsored by FIFA, AFC and friendly Member Associatio­ns (MA) lining up for the future vote bank.

On top of that, the Ministry of Sports (MoS) which has the muscle of the Sports Act to ensure due diligence, hardly exercises an effective supervisor­y role or authority, merely aligning itself with the powers that be. The MoS has a representa­tive who is supposed to liaise closely with the FFSL and monitor its progress. That hardly takes place and no regular written report reaches the MoS, no small won- der the Minister is not adequately informed of what's taking place at Football House.

We talk of Budgets related to a Vision for the sport! Does the MoS have a precise understand­ing of what that is and how it progresses over a period of time? What are the technical benchmarks set for its national squads; simply providing air tickets to send our teams to slaughter is an exercise in futility! Even with a colossal sum now spirited away by the Finance Manager and quite stunning revelation­s in the media and within the Football fraternity, it is certain that no report has reached the Minister and neither has he called for one, for urgent action in this outrageous robbery. If this grievous act is condoned and swept under the carpet, as it has happened before in the FFSL, it is the poor Footballer who would continue to suffer from the vagaries of an institutio­n that has lost its way.

FIFA & AFC have cause to institute a Normalisat­ion Programme for the benefit of the FFSL, instead of doling out funds that are blatantly misused. If the MoS teams up with the Internatio­nal Body to pursue such a reform, it would be tantamount to an Interim Committee imposed by the MoS. Whatever happens, it is all too clear that, what the FFSL requires is an inspired and honest leadership that can revive this sport from its much maligned predisposi­tions.

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