Hindustan Times (East UP)

Asiad medallist and top coach Bhowmick dead

- Dhiman Sarkar dhiman@htlive.com AIFF

KOLKATA: Subhas Bhowmick, the bustling former India rightout who as coach made East Bengal a serial winner in the early 2000s, died here early on Saturday after a heart attack following complicati­ons from Covid-19. Bhowmick was diabetic and, following chronic renal failure, was on dialysis support from last year. He was 71 and is survived by wife, son and daughter. Born on October 2— “I couldn’t have missed being great,” he would say with a belly laugh—Bhowmick’s biggest moment as a player was being part of the team that won the 1970 Asian Games bronze. It was the last time India made the continenta­l podium. In the brief flickering of the national team at the Asian level in 1970 and 1971, Bhowmick was a key forward; his never-say-die spirit, his refusal to take a step back even when injured, playing an important part.

As coach, he won the 2003 ASEAN Cup with East Bengal and it remains one of Indian club football’s finest moments. At a time when domestic football had slipped out of the national consciousn­ess and India often struggled against teams from south Asia, that 3-1 triumph over Thailand’s BEC Tero Sasana in Jakarta with goals from Mike Okoro, Bhaichung Bhutia and Alvito d’Cunha, created a stir across the country. The Singapore Airlines flight that brought East Bengal home had the pilot and crew congratula­ting the team which was met by thousands lining up the roads from the Kolkata airport.

If there was one person who believed East Bengal had a chance in the competitio­n with featured BEC, a club that had already qualified for the Asian Champions League final, it was Bhowmick. He convinced a sceptical club management to hire South African physical trainer Kevin Jackson, got the players to stay at a five-star property near Kolkata’s Salt Lake stadium for a month and fought to change flight bookings so that players would get adequate rest. East Bengal lost the opener to BEC but beat Philippine Army 6-0; Indonesian clubs Persita Tangerang in the quarter-final and Petrokemia Putra in the semi-final. For scoring nine goals in the competitio­n, Bhutia went on loan to Malaysian club Perak, making him the first player East Bengal were paid a fee for.

Never one to mince words, Bhowmick, still at East Bengal, hit out at the club management one year after that July triumph, saying it had learnt nothing and was not keen on trying to make a mark in Asia. Between 2002-04, Bhowmick’s East Bengal ruled India winning successive editions of the National Football League (2002-03; 2003-04) and staying in the title race till the last day in 2004-05. East Bengal also won the IFA Shield, Durand Cup, Independen­ce Day Cup and the San Miguel Cup in Kathmandu in that time. It was reminiscen­t of how East Bengal dominated in 1973 when Bhowmick played for them. Between 1973 and 1975, East Bengal won the Calcutta League and IFA Shield three times, a local double that included the 5-0 defeat of Mohun Bagan in the IFA Shield final. In imperious form that season, Bhowmick scored two goals in the 1973 IFA Shield final against Pyongyang City, East Bengal winning 3-1. East Bengal were then coached by the legendary PK Banerjee.

Refusal to get badges—Bhowmick would say he had proved enough as a player and coach and was too old to seek certificat­es from anyone—cut short coaching career that promised much. But clubs would still make him technical director, for which no badges were needed, and appoint a coach who had a licence.

Bhowmick played with distinctio­n for Mohun Bagan — he scored more goals for them , 84 to 82, than at East Bengal and that is where he started his club coaching career— but never forgot the lifeline East Bengal gave him as a player in the 1973 after Mohun Bagan had turned him away because he had a knee injury. He was cut up with East Bengal for not holding on to the players who had ruled India between 2002-05 but returned as technical adviser in 2018. In that role he had also mastermind­ed Churchill Brothers’ I-League title in 2012-13. He was also India coach for a tournament in Bangladesh in 1989.

Bhowmick first played for Rajasthan Club in 1968 moving to East Bengal one year later. His India debut happened in the Merdeka Cup in 1970. He played 24 games for India scoring nine goals but two of them came in the 1970 Asian Games where he, Habib, Shyam Thapa, Inder Singh, Magan Singh and Amar Bahadur comprised the attacking players in the side.

Having finished third in the Merdeka Cup where India blew a 2-0 lead against South Korea, the goals coming from Bhowmick and Habib, India began poorly at the Asian Games and were trailing 1-2 at half-time against Thailand. The first half led to India’s chef-de-mission calling the team cowards, journalist Jaydeep Basu has written in ‘Stories From Indian Football’. Bhowmick inspired the turnaround getting the equaliser and narrowly missing a hat-trick.

 ?? ?? Subhas Bhowmick passed away in Kolkata on Saturday.
Subhas Bhowmick passed away in Kolkata on Saturday.

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