The Asian Age

Hosting U- 17 Cup was India’s greatest legacy

- Novy Kapadia

The abiding memories of 2017 in domestic and internatio­nal football, will remain India making its tryst with destiny by successful­ly staging the U- 17 World Cup at six venues from October 6 to 28, and the Azzurri joining Holland as Europe’s most notable qualifying failures for the 2018 World Cup. Both of them were eliminated by Sweden.

There was also no Group of Death in the World Cup draw at Kremlin, Moscow, in December 2017. Also the Indian senior team remained unbeaten in internatio­nal football throughout the year, an achievemen­t.

India shattered the record for largest attendance at the U- 17 World Cup, with 13,47,143 spectators attending the event. This was Indian football’s greatest legacy as it was achieved without any razzmatazz of Bollywood songs or celebritie­s attending matches. As expected the most passionate fans were from Kolkata. The Brazil vs England semi- final was shifted from Guwahati to Kolkata, barely 48 hours before the match was to commence. Yet the stadium was almost sold out and close to 66,000 fans attended. unpreceden­ted

The most remarkable spectator statistic was that 45,000 spectators attended an inconseque­ntial Group E league match between Japan and debutants New Caledonia at the Vivekanada Yuva Bharati Krirangan near Kolkata. Local Organising Committee tournament director Javier Ceppi said that such passion for football is unpreceden­ted as even if Japan had hosted the game so many spectators would not have turned up.

India played gallantly in Group A but lost all three matches to superior opposition. Still, the players got ample media exposure and massive adulation from the fans. They became household names.

There was no Group of Death in the 2018 World Cup finals draw held on December 1 Moscow’s at State Kremlin Palace concert hall. The 32 countries were seeded based on the October 2017 Fifa world rankings. Hosts Russia, favourites Germany, Brazil, Spain, France and Argentina all got relatively easy groups and should sail through to the knock out Round of 16.

Of the eight groups, only Group B seems comparativ­ely tough with Spain, 2016 European champions Portugal, Iran unbeaten in the Asian qualifiers and Morocco. Debutants Iceland, the smallest nation to ever qualify for the World Cup finals, kick off against Argentina in Group D. The other debutants Panama start against in- form Belgium in Group G.

Italy’s loss in the European playoffs to Sweden shocked their passionate fans. A local newspaper described it as an apocalypse. The eliminatio­n is a sharp reminder that talented players are not emerging from Serie A. In both matches, Italy dominated possession with 23 shots at goal, away and 20 at home but failed to score. Their current striker Ciro Immobile is not a patch on the greats of the past like Paolo Rossi, Toto Schillaci and Alessaandr­o del Piero. Ace goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon ( 175 caps) announced his retirement after the eliminatio­n.

The national team coached by Stephen Constantin­e played nine matches in 2017, won seven and drew two, scoring 18 goals and conceding just seven and qualified for the Asian Cup final rounds in 2019.

The Asian Football Confederat­ion recognised the Indian Super League and there was surge in the prices of Indian players in the auction held in July. The ILeague and ISL are being held simultaneo­usly and a merger is expected next year.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India