Every school should have a
Start with improving basic facilities to develop sports culture in India, plan straightaway for Tokyo 2020
for training immediately. Four years will pass quickly and now is the time to start.The procedure for grants and such is too long and bureaucratic. I played in the 2010 CWG and was supposed to receive travel grants and per diems. The amount of paperwork I had to complete was mind-boggling. Still, I never received any reimbursement.
Whether these amounts were approved or not we will never know due to incompetent officials who either don’t care to inform or must have used the money themselves. Such is the state of affairs in most federations. So, please sir, you need to set up a system so that the money reaches athletes directly.
LONG TERM
Please appoint a think tank of former athletes who are passionate and assign them to bring about a sporting revolution. They need to be equipped with financial and decision-making authority, maybe even above the ministry.
Infrastructure: Forget top of the line velodromes or Olympiclevel swimming pools, we first need to make sure every school at least has a playground. Funds allocated for sports need to be properly channeled and facilities made available for public.
School involvement: The sports ministry should bring in a curriculum for physical education teachers across the country. Basic knowledge of all sports should be mandatory. Every school must have two weeks each of an Olympic sport that they have to learn throughout the year. In the USA, children have mandatory three days of PE a week.
Feed-in system: The PE teachers need to identify talent from school and have a feed-in system into local associations, who should then start formally training these kids. Based on talent, the state associations should then take charge and move them to a national training facility.
Sports quota: These need to be established on a bigger scale for state and national level athletes even in schools for parents to be able to encourage children to take up sports. Parent support groups, including seminars, are needed to get them to understand the system and their role.
Rural and genetic talent spotting: In the early 1980s, my father wrote to then sports minister, Mrs. Margaret Alva, to identify talent based on genetics. He suggested we train the children of fishing communities for sailing and swimming, milkmen for cycling etc. as these activities are already their way of life. He got a response from the minister saying his points are noted!
David Rudisha, 800m gold medallist at Rio, belongs to the Maasai tribe in Kenya. Its tribesmen hunt lions to prove their worth. Running his way to a gold medal was way simpler.
I hope we can take these Games as an eye-opener and strive for a better medal count in Tokyo. Please intervene and help us start preparing now for 2020. Indian sportsmen and women need you now.
Jai Hind!