Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Africa’s problem: Talent is falling in wrong hands

- Rajesh Pansare

GHANA, WHICH HAS A HUGE TALENT POOL, IS ONE SUCH COUNTRY STRUGGLING TO HOLD ON TO ITS YOUNGSTERS.

MUMBAI: Football scouts are travelling to the nook and corner of the world in their quest to unearth the future Messis, Ronaldos and Neymars.

They have fanned out to almost all African countries as well, where football is the top sport and youngsters playing ball is ever-increasing. While there’s abundance of talent, not everyone falls in the right hands.

Ghana, which has a huge talent pool, is one such country struggling to hold on to its youngsters. Scouts take them away at a young age, but if their FIFA U-17 World Cup coach Samuel Fabin is to be believed, thing are not as rosy as they appear.

“We’ve an abundance of talent in Ghana, like most of Africa. But the problem is most of them leave the country. Not everyone makes it big though. It’s important to get the right club, (but) not many get that and soon fizzle out,” said Fabin after his wards booked a place in the quarterfin­als of the FIFA U-17 World Cup with a 2-0 win over Niger here on Wednesday.

Can’t that be stopped? “No,” says Fabin.

“In our country football is a way out of poverty. If parents think their ward has a chance to progress in football, they support him to play.”

Not every move follows a legal path. Some youngsters and their families are conned by the scouts and when they land in Europe, there is no trial waiting for them.

Sportswrit­er Ed Hawkins’ investigat­ive book – The Lost Boys: Inside Football’s Slave Trade – published in 2015 uncovers the dark underbelly of the football scouting network.

According to his book, boys from around the world are sold a vision of becoming the next big thing but soon discover they have been exploited. Only a few even make it to the academies, it adds.

To get his investigat­ion going, Hawkins, with the help of Oxford United, set up a fake company to find out how football traffickin­g worked.

The book also reveals how scouts, agents and clubs disregard FIFA’S Article 19 that prohibits internatio­nal transfers for those under-18.

Top clubs like Real Madrid and Barcelona have faced FIFA wrath for flouting that rule. While implementa­tion is being tightened up, illegal trade is still rampant.

But Fabin and his African counterpar­ts remain helpless. There has been a lot of talk about revenge ahead of the quarterfin­al between Brazil and Germany. The context has been Brazil’s 2014 World Cup loss. We Brazilians are not moved by vengeance. Brazil won the 2002 World Cup against them and Germany won in 2014, no big deal. What moves Brazil players is the passion for the game and enjoyment in playing football. We don’t have rivalry with Germany, they are a very good team to play against, that’s it.

I am very happy to see how well the boys are doing. I hope they keep doing their best and continue playing with the same passion. The next match will be tough. I think we will watch a wonderful and balanced game. It would certainly be a treat for the fans at Salt Lake Stadium and across India watching on TV.

BRAZIL WOULD FEEL THE GAP CREATED BY VINICIUS JUNIOR’S ABSENCE, BUT I SEE MANY SKILFUL PLAYERS TO FILL HIS ABSENCE.

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