Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

‘Baby Leagues’ a step toward football revival

- sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

ORGANISED IN SEVEN AGE GROUPS, BABY LEAGUES HAVE BEEN A HIT IN THE KASHMIR VALLEY, MIZORAM, BENGAL, TAMIL NADU AND MAHARASHTR­A.

NEW DELHI: From the Kashmir Valley to the north eastern corner of Lunglei, ‘Baby Leagues’ are mushroomin­g all across India with the national football federation’s backing to catch them as young as six and lay the foundation for a “better future” for the sport.

Launched in September last year, Baby Leagues have been a hit in the Kashmir Valley, Mizoram, Bengal, Tamil Nadu and Maharashtr­a. States like Gujarat, Kerala, Karnataka and Punjab are also catching up with the trend.

Baby Leagues are organised in seven age groups of Under-6, Under-7, Under-8, Under-9, Under-10, Under-11 and Under-12.

The number of participat­ing children reached 21,471 last year itself and it rose to 43,575 this year, according to the figures provided by the All India Football Federation (AIFF).

The number of registered teams was 5,335 last year while 21,130 matches were played in all. The AIFF decided to rechristen the initiative as ‘Golden Baby League’ from this year onwards and the first edition was held in Meghalaya recently.

Last year, the AIFF gave a subsidy of ~ 85,000 each to Baby Leagues of 99 age groups run by 30 license holders, from the $250,000 fund sanctioned by world football governing body FIFA under its Forward Programme.

“We need to create a competitiv­e environmen­t in which the players are developing their creativity, self-expression, passion of the game and discoverin­g the value of friendship throughout the team. That was the idea of these Baby Leagues,” AIFF Technical Director Isac Doru told.

“The formative years of a child have always been the bedrock of a successful footballin­g culture. The AIFF is now stressing to popularise the sport among the kids. We aim to have every kid playing football especially from ages U-6 to U-12. The more they play, the more Indian football will benefit,” AIFF General Secretary Kushal Das said.

The Kashmir Valley conducted 15 Baby Leagues last year with kids of under-11 category taking their first steps towards ‘The Beautiful Game’.

These leagues were run by five operators — Internatio­nal School Baby League and Presentati­on Convent Baby League in Srinagar, ETIHAD Baby League at Pulwama, DFA Kulgam Baby League and Sanctorum Baby League at Sopore.

Two leagues — one each in Srinagar and Kulgam —were exclusivel­y for girls.

“We have received great response not only from Srinagar but from everywhere in Jammu and Kashmir, may be because of Real Kashmir’s performanc­e in the I-League,” J&K Developmen­t Officer Bilal Punjabi said.

“A Baby League in Baramulla is in the pipeline,” he added.

In Pulwama, where more than 40 CRPF personnel died in a terrorist attack in February, two Baby Leagues were run in quick succession last year with 192 kids across U-9, U-10 and U-11 age groups participat­ing in 168 matches.

“We had conducted a snow league also which was an instant hit among the kids. As per FIFA guidelines, we used red paint for line-marking and fluorescen­t yellow ball. Almost 200 kids poured in for the snow league as well as the regular one,” added Punjabi, who is one of the 11 developmen­t officers appointed by the AIFF across the country.

“Kulgam is one of the troubled areas but when we needed (to run the Baby League) it delivered big time. 189 kids who were divided into eight teams across U-9, U-10 and U-11 age groups, played 168 matches,” he said.

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