Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Football 'Arbudaya'

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COMPARING SALARIES

Sri Lanka has got a new netball coach. New is not the exact word as she has played for the national team in years gone by and was in Brunei as that country’s national coach. She is expected to draw a salary of Rs. 400,000 but the Sports Ministry’s salary is around Rs. 37,000. These figures are being quoted for comparison only. She has coached Brunei for seven years. The controllin­g body for the sport is hoping to raise the coach’s salary through sponsors.

LAWN MOWERS AS GIFTS

The Annual General Meeting of Sri Lanka’s most popular sports body is expected to be in May this year. Already candidates are trying to win their votes. These candidates are offering Lawn Mowers and other accessorie­s in order to gain votes. These are being offered to all clubs even to the poorer clubs.

HOCKEY DEBACLE

The hockey nationals commenced with some staggering

Tscored. One team drubbed another team by 28 goals to nil while in another game one side suffered a 0-20 defeat. Hockey has been in the doldrums since there is no controllin­g associatio­n for them. When will this mess come to an end?

POLE VAULT IN THE DOLDRUMS

Athletics too are not far away from a debacle. A whole lot of brand new mattresses used for pole-vaulting are under lock and keyed, while athletes use torn and dirty mattresses to cushion their falls. This event is suffering due to this setback. High time this setback too is looked into. he New Ye a r seems to have seen a lot of action at the Fo o t b a l l Federation of Sri Lanka (FFSL). It concluded the Dialog Champions League 2017 rolling into 2018 a week ago, announced the arrival of the World Cup replica to Sri Lanka courtesy of Coca Cola, made the usual jaunt to the FIFA summit in Amsterdam and for good measure have its former Finance Director in remand for the colossal fraud of FFSL funds. So much so that the Minister of Sports exclaimed in a Media Conference, the ' Arbudaya' that is plaguing Football House and his intent to finally do something about it.

The media has been full of comment for a long time about corruption in sport. May we add that the politicisa­tion of sport has now reached endemic proportion­s? Virtually nothing gets done without a nicely concealed political gundu or slick interventi­on with the Minister himself, the arbiter of all evil. To him goes the gauntlet of putting right shot selection in cricket, bad mauls in rugby, poor line calls in badminton and often enough the penury state of some of our national stars. To him and him alone go all these woes as if there is no one else in the Ministry of Sports ( MOS) capable of resolving the major or minor vices that beset our sporting arenas.

So much so that the normally suave Minister said that he will appoint an interim committee if the current SLC administra­tion did not get its act together. In the case of badminton, he took it upon himself to fly and mediate with the World Body to let our shuttlers make the trip south of the planet and compete in the Commonweal­th Games. And so he steps in as genially as possible, whenever and wherever he is needed; the one man show goes on!

Recent media has been awash of a top drawer NOC candidate who claims he will address corruption in sport. Tall order and a mandate that will be difficult to deliver, given the Machiavell­ian state of our sports affairs! This is indeed an opportunit­y for the MOS to converge and push for a clean-up of all sports; go back to the drawing board, rewrite the sports law if necessary, introduce a code- of- conduct and work with other government and non government agencies (such as the Auditor General Dept) to work in unison to facilitate a homogeneou­s approach to a national discipline we all yearn for so desperatel­y. This may also be an opportunit­y to open- up a direct dialogue with IOC and other world bodies such as IAAF, FIFA, ICC and others to delineate how the MOS intends to work with these internatio­nal sports organisati­ons and remove the areas of conflict that arise due to divergent constituti­onal structures. The fact that MOS funds our sports federation­s must not be the over-riding criteria for government­al interferen­ce. Most of the elite sports bodies do not necessaril­y require government funds; what it requires is careful supervisio­n and close rapport with the internatio­nal bodies. To do this effectivel­y, the MOS must move from its archaic predisposi­tion and acquire a modern management approach to how sports is administer­ed.

The digression from football was deliberate, because it serves to describe the national mindset. Having left football to stew in its own misery for a long time, the MOS will resort to a better late than never somewhat sympatheti­c response to what has been a ambivalent attitude to a popular well endowed internatio­nal sport. But the football community will take that; anything that would let the MOS address the Arbudakari thatwaya that prevails in football.

Merely hiding behind majority votes (in the guise of democracy) is an outdated paradigm. Everyone in football knows how for more than 30 years an illusionar­y grand leadership ran Football House. Its successors have been no better, simply following the pied piper and attempting to outdo the jingoistic of the past. The leagues are mere pawns in this charade that goes on and on. FIFA will play ball because it is driven by a system that perpetuate­s power at the apex. What the MOS can do is threefold; A) appoint an Advisory Committee ( as it did for cricket) to study FFSL performanc­e and recommend steps that can be taken to achieve certain goals; i. e. finalists at SAFF Championsh­ips in 2018, etc!

B) Appoint a special team to monitor the status of the recent fraud which it is understood is now being investigat­ed by the proper authoritie­s, as well as the subject of a forensic audit. The MOS should post up- to- date informatio­n on its website so that the football public is kept regularly informed.

C) The MOS representa­tive who sits (or should sit) on the FFSL Ex Co must report monthly to the Minister and the MOS hierarchy of what transpires at FFSL. A copy of this report can be shared with FIFA so that transparen­cy prevails and anyone can see whether the FFSL conforms to its declared goals and monthly targets. The eye- wash at AGM’s and stage managed functions to impress dignitarie­s is where we must now say, enough is enough!

Very soon the World Cup replica will come our way. Let us thank Coca Cola for that even if we they have not done anything of value for football in Sri Lanka so far! The Minister will no doubt hand over the trophy to HE the President in a blasé of glory (some might think we won the cup!) and the media will sound the bugle. That’s nice and we will celebrate too but it would be nicer if we can coyly suggest to Coca Cola that they undertake a serious programme for Football in Sri Lanka. That will make much more sense or the arbudaya in Football will be something the Minister of Sports will have on his head for a long time to come!

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 ??  ?? FIFA boss with FFSL's Treasurer
FIFA boss with FFSL's Treasurer
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