Sportstar

Dilip Tirkey takes charge

- Amitabha Das Sharma Y. B. Sarangi

It’s a pleasant coincidenc­e that in cricket and hockey, the two most important sports in the country, two Indian captains have assumed responsibi­lity as presidents of their respective national federation­s.

If former India skipper Sourav Ganguly made a successful switch to cricket administra­tion, ex-india captain Dilip Tirkey won the Hockey India (HI) election to step into the scene of hockey administra­tion.

Incidental­ly, All India Football Federation is now headed by former India player Kalyan Chaubey, while the Indian Olympic Committee’s president is former athlete Adille Sumariwall­a.

Dilip will have multiple challenges to tackle while trying to win back hockey’s fans through overall developmen­t of the sport.

His election to the sport’s top post prompts one to look back at his amazing journey from the remote tribal village of Saunamara in Odisha’s Sundargarh district.

Born in a family of hockey players on November 25, 1977, Dilip progressed from being a young student of the B.S. High School to becoming one of the all-time great defenders of Indian hockey. He played 412 internatio­nal matches (the highest by an Indian) in his career spanning from 1995 to 2009 and performed the role of a solid full-back and a utility penalty corner hitter. Dilip combined with his fellow Sundargarh defender and friend Lazarus Barla to form a solid defensive wall for the country in major competitio­ns, including the 1997 Junior World Cup in Milton Keynes, 1998 Asian Games and the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

Dilip served Indian hockey with distinctio­n. He was the second tribal player to captain India in the Olympics after Jaipal Singh Munda in 1928, played in three Olympics (1996 Atlanta, 2000 Sydney and 2004 Athens), three World Cups and three Asian Games apart from Champions Trophy and Asia Cup.

He was part of the Indian team that won the 1998 Asian Games gold and 2007 Asia Cup title. He captained Hyderabad Sultans to title win in the inaugural edition of the first ever hockey league, the Premier Hockey League, in the country in 2005 and then led Orissa Steelers to the champions’ tag in the event in 2007.

After hanging up his stick, Dilip switched to politics and became a Rajya Sabha member on a Biju Janata Dal ticket. He fought elections and took to social service, but kept in touch with hockey.

Later, backed by the state government, Dilip became the chairman of the Odisha Hockey Promotion Council before getting into federation politics through a new body, Hockey Associatio­n of Odisha. As Odisha is all set to host the prestigiou­s men’s Hockey World Cup for a second consecutiv­e time, simultaneo­usly at Bhubaneswa­r and Rourkela, early next year, Dilip’s rise to the HI helm has unfolded as a well-written script.

The hockey fraternity would expect Dilip to lead the sport again, in a different role, on the track of developmen­t.

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