BEAUTIFUL GAME, BUT IN LIMBO IN INDIA

Anjan Roy
As the 2018 World Cup Games were kicked off at the Luzniki Stadium in Moscow, people’s enthusiasm about football is slowly working into a frenzy. For India, there is an irony in all this. It is not playing in the World Cup as it does not even qualify.
Even worse, only a few days before, India’s football captain had to appeal to fellow countrymen to come to see the game played by their national team. Following the appeal, it appears things had improved and there a few more presence in Bombay stadium where the Indian national team was playing against several African teams and, lo and behold, winning.
It was not so earlier. There used to be times when football matches would bring life to a standstill, for a fleeting couple of hours, in central Calcutta when matches used to be played in the maidan. The makeshift football grounds -makeshift because the Army owned the Calcutta maidan and no permanent structures could be built there-of the leading clubs would be spilling over during the match days.
One still remembers the sloshy ground in the football season, which used to be late summer and early monsoon months, when one had to literally wade through puddles and mud to reach the club entry gates. A slip or two on the wet muddy stretches were not uncommon.
And of course there were the inevitable “Mounted Police”. The Calcutta Mounted Police had a job on hand in the football season controlling the crowd around the Club grounds. Some pranksters even created tough situations for the horsemen by pinching and pricking the large horses when they would throw up their legs. Controlling the animals was the better part of the job than the crowds.
In the rainy season, the evening drizzle or sometimes the downpour would make it difficult to see the ball movements. In the club grounds, there were green stands for the general public and special enclosed areas for the club members. For the regular fans, there would be chosen seats or stands which only they would occupy. If by chance a stranger would take these in advance of the arrival of the regulars, there would be polite hints to move over. The seats or stands were taken as charms or flat-bedded magic wands and egging on their sides from those spots should help win the games.
Rains, storms, slush and lack of transport were no deterrent. The fans would arrive in their numbers. In these days when lighting strikes had become all too frequent, recalls these would sometimes claim young lives on Calcutta maidan. On one such occasion, several boys standing at the obelisk to the fallen soldiers at the maidan were struck by lighting and they died. Indira Gandhi was the prime minister and when she came to know about it, she personally condoled their sudden death.
Skirmishes and occasional fights between rival fans were not uncommon. These were however only on the spur of the moment and died out fast. The arch rivalry was however reserved only the two big teams: Mohun Bagan and East Bengal. Their colours were what people were marked by: green and maroon (Mohun Bagan) and yellow and red (East Bengal). These were the great divide between East Bengalis and West Bengal natives. But even families would be divided on lines of the football clubs. East Bengalis would celebrate their victories with hilsa fish when their Club scored over Mohun Bagan; the rivals fans would call their victory with whatever available, excepting the hilsa.
Basically, it was one of local patriotism. It was a local phenomenon and emotions ran high over local patriotism, so to say.
The advent of television had destroyed those local loyalties and along with that possibly football. As the people could watch the big games being played all over Europe and Latin America, their gazes fixed on the small screen. Admittedly, the standard of the games played in those distant football fields were far superior and a pleasure to watch. In this instance, TV showed something far superior and in contrast the local fare was dumped.
The irony was the demonstration effect did not have any impact on improving the local effort. By watching these wonderful matches playing in different arenas across the world, no effort was made to copy them in the forward looking manner. On the contrary, what happened is what our Indian captain regretted. We became totally apathetic to our own football. Was it inevitable?
Surely not. We did not play the same kind of previously in the colonial days. India was not the winning team against England or West Indies or Australia the way we play the game now. The big names among fast bowling were dreaded, excepting a few the batting legends were from mostly these other teams. What changed Indian cricket is possibly money.
As big money entered sponsoring cricket events, interests soared. The remuneration of the players increased astronomically and their devotion went up in step. Facilities increased, training camps proliferated, equipment and their quality changed unrecognisably. Competing internally calls for a certain mentality and confidence. That comes when there is enough support as well. That is, support from the overall environment. Cricket is today drawing all that money and attention. It is proving to be a killer sport for growth of athletics and sports in general in the country.
It is time that our attention spread wider. Russia is longer the football heavyweight that it used to be previously. Yet, Russia has spent $11 billion on putting up the facilities in the country to host the 2018 Game. Small African countries are producing world beating players and teams because, many of their players are playing year round for the rich European clubs.
Sports and games today are not just a matter of only native strength. These are the end products or years of grooming and sports science. It is a hugely organised affair, calling for investment of humongous amount of funds. The talented have to ne caught young and resources would have to be showered on them for years and decades. One can safely predict China to emerge as a big gun in one of these coming Games. Let us beat them at least in this game. (IPA)

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