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National League from today
By Our Special Correspondent
NEW DELHI, DEC. 13. At last, the fifth edition of the National
Football League (NFL) is set to roll. After all the
uncertainties, the start, through a match between defending
champion Mohun Bagan, and JCT, Phagwara at the Ambedkar Stadium
here on Thursday, along with a match each in Goa and Bangalore,
should be a huge relief for all concerned.
It is another matter that a sponsor is yet to step in and the
League itself will have to go through a fragmented course this
year, thanks to its delayed start as well as the need to prepare
the best team for the one-off Millennium Cup. The first phase
will, in fact, last just a week, hardly sufficient for the tempo
to pick up.
Yet, the show must go on, if only to sustain an effort that had
taken off so splendidly four years ago but had stuttered since
then due to a variety of reasons, not least of all poor
television coverage. The deal that the All India Football
Federation (AIFF) struck with Doodarshan did bring in a hefty
rights fee, but the coverage remained woefully short of
expectations. ``The foreign network had done a far better job''
was the general refrain.
Wider television coverage plus a better revenue- sharing formula
were the main planks on which the newly-formed Indian Premier
Football Association (IPFA) mounted its assault against the AIFF,
roping in nine of the 12 NFL participants. At one stage, it
looked as though there would be two leagues, with the AIFF even
prepared to bring in stand-by teams in case the leading clubs
withdrew.
Mercifully, a truce had been reached between the AIFF and the
IPFA, the parent body conceding a majority of the demands of the
clubs, but not recognising the IPFA or signing a memorandum of
understanding with it. On the face of it, the revenue-sharing
formula, 80:20 in the clubs' favour from next edition, sounds
mouth-watering, but it is to be seen how much of surplus the NFL
can generate.
To talk of generating Rs. 15 crores is easy but to actually bring
that kind of money into the kitty is going to be a real tough
task.
Has the NFL helped improve the standard of Indian football?
Initially, it did look that there was an improvement the way the
team fared in the Nehru Cup, pointed out the Salgaocar veteran
Bruno Coutinho during a recent discussion. But after that there
had been stagnation all over again. More and more dependence on
foreign players will make it that much tougher on the home-bred
youngsters to come through the ranks, though it has to be
admitted that the `imports' have added to the lustre of the NFL.
Take the case of Mohun Bagan, which should be starting on
Thursday on a confident note after its Durand Cup victory at the
very same ground a little over a month ago. The key players for
the Calcutta team up front are its Brazilian recruits, Joao Dos
Santos and Jose Barretto, the latter adjudged the `best player'
in the Durand.
This is not to suggest that the Indian players have failed to
catch the eye. Some of them have performed up to expectations.
But another Baichung Bhutia or an I.M. Vijayan is yet to emerge
on the distant horizon, with or without the NFL.
On its part, JCT has not gone in so far for the foreign recruits.
It might do so after the first set of two matches. ``We are
better prepared than we were in the Durand,'' said coach
Sukhwinder Singh, his optimism stemming from the adequate period
of training his team had since the Durand. He said the team had
thought of adding a forward and a defender to the list after the
Durand, but considering the gap that should follow the first
phase ending December 20, it was decided to hold back for the
time being.
JCT is likely to be without two of its defenders, Kuldip Singh
and Prabhjot Singh, both in the injured list, for Thursday's
match. Sukwinder is planning to field an absolute newcomer in
Pawan Kumar in the defence. And the JCT coach has high hopes on
the youngster. Mohun Bagan will miss its No. 1 goalkeeper Rajat
Ghosh Dastidar, also because of an injury.
The kick-off is at 2.30 p.m.
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