Kerala Football News

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  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29626 Points
    http://www.goal.com/en-in/news/all-you-need-to-know-league-structure-in-kerala-football/1smg39dpbggjb1ojjhpnu8htgy

    All you need to know about the football league structure in Kerala

    The state has two football championships currently but also has started commendable youth football leagues....

    Kerala is one of the few regions in India where football enjoys a monopoly in terms of popularity. The sport is followed almost religiously and the state has contributed many stars like IM Vijayan, VP Sathyan, 'Olympian' Rahman, Jo Paul Anchery etc. 

    It is only natural that the state has a thriving footballing system that helps churn out such stars. The state has had notable clubs do well at the national stage in the past like Kerala Police, FC Kochin, State Bank of Travancore (SBT), in the nineties especially. 

    But there was also a dull period in Kerala football when there were no clubs in the national top-flight for a while before clubs like Viva Kerala came to prominence in the late noughties. However, they would wind up after a while and it took the advent of the Indian Super League (ISL) and Kerala Blasters to rejuvenate the football fans in the state. 

    The upbeat mood regarding the sport also paved way for the emergence of Gokulam Kerala who have done well in the I-League this season. 

    So, how is the domestic football structure in Kerala? What are the changes it has taken on board over the recent years? 


    Kerala Premier League!


    KPL - KBFC

    The Kerala Football Association (KFA) conducts two state-level club competitions. One is the State Club Football Championship, a knockout tournament involving the best clubs from all district leagues.

    The second tournament is the Kerala Premier League (KPL), marketed by KFA as their marquee competition. It came into existence in 2013 and runs as a 10-team competition and features the best teams from the state including Kerala Blasters (Reserves), Gokulam Kerala, FC Kerala etc. 

    Kerala State Electricity Board were the champions in the 2016-17 season but they pulled out along with AG's Office, another departmental team which reduced the competition from 12-team to 10-team affair.

    The KFA see the KPL as the future and are in favour of scrapping the State Club Football Championship for another Cup tournament. Not all teams in the KPL take part in the State Club Football Championship. 

    "We place less importance for the State Club Football Championship and are looking to organise a Super Cup involving best teams from the KPL soon," revealed KFA Secretary Anilkumar to Goal.

    KFA had also started a Women's Kerala Premier League in 2014, featuring eight teams. But it failed to run for more than two seasons, given very few teams participated. "The participation levels of the clubs in the women's league was very less. There was no real player pool as well," said Anilkumar.

    "The teams started to bring in players from other states and we felt the league did not serve its purpose anymore and shut it down. Our motive was to develop the girls in our state but that was not happening.

    "We are looking at grassroots to attract young girls towards the sport now." 


    Format & Venue


    KPL GKFC

    The KPL started as a 12-team affair. However, several pullouts meant that from the 2016-17 season, it features only 10 teams.

    They are divided into two groups and the teams play every group opponent twice in a home and away format. The top two teams from each group qualify for the semifinals which are played on a knockout basis. 

    The league is played across the state, given the home and away format. 


    District Leagues


    It is mandatory for all district football associations under the KFA to conduct their own leagues and in most districts, they do take place.

    Apart from the Super Division which is the top-most tier in district football, there are lower divisions, the number of which can vary.

    The winners of the Super Division have a chance to compete in the State Club Football Championship but with KFA preferring to champion KPL, the future of that competition is under a heavy cloud. 


    Youth Leagues


    Kerala Youth League

    To their credit, the KFA have recently ventured into kick-starting competitive youth league across various age groups in order to encourage more and more kids to take up the sport in the state. 

    Anilkumar claims that the KFA runs the youth leagues in the U10, U12, U14 and U16 age groups in the district and the state level. The U10 and U12 are played as the KFA Children's Football League and the U14 and U16 are labelled as the KFA Youth Football Leagues. 

    "We have a focus towards grassroots development. We conduct leagues all over Kerala in the U10, U12, U14 and U16 age groups. We (Kerala) are one of the very few states in the country who have a competitive youth league structure," expresses Anilkumar. 

    The KFA also claim that over 140 teams participate in these youth leagues which sees over 1000 matches organised in a season, with games being played all over the state. However, there have been criticism aimed at the venture for not providing proper care and assistance for participating teams during the games.

    munna219777Carbon_14indian_gooner
  • goalkeepargoalkeepar Turkish occupied Cyprus29247 Points
    edited May 2018
    FT Sur FC 4-2 Gokulam Kerala 
    Carbon_14SOCCER4klDeb_Banashindiamunna219777
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29626 Points
    http://www.newindianexpress.com/cities/thiruvananthapuram/2018/may/08/chronicling-malabars-tryst-with-the-beautiful-game-1812064.html

    Chronicling Malabar’s tryst with the beautiful game

    Panthu Paranja Malappuram Kissa’, football writer M M Jafar Khan’s book, documents the history of football in the region  

    Some people believe football is a matter of life and death. I am very disappointed with that attitude. I can assure you it is much, much more important than that," said legendary Scottish manager Bill Shankly who transformed Liverpool from a second division side to European champions back in the 1960s and 70s.

    What the Liverpool legend said about English football holds so true for the people of the football-crazy district of Malappuram that one might feel Shankly indeed had them in mind when he said those words in the 1980s. And with 'Panthu Paranja Malappuram Kissa', football writer M M Jafar Khan documents the history of the Beautiful Game in the Malabar region.

    "The people of Malappuram live a fast-paced life and one sport they could relate to culturally and emotionally was football," said Jafar. "It is a very simple but fast game -- you just need a football to play it. Also, the game is a platform for people to come together in large numbers. There are even matches played with more than 20 players on one side," the writer said.

    An ardent football fan, Jafar grew up watching various tournaments across the state but always felt that something was amiss when it comes to the end product. "We have the most talented players, the best fans, some brilliant coaches and tournaments happening all year, but do we have enough to show for it? No, because the system is flawed," he said.

    To highlight this, Jafar has focussed more on unheralded names of the game rather than well-known stars like Anas Edathodika and M P Sakeer. "One of my earliest memories was an all-India sevens final between a star-studded team featuring the likes of IM Vijayan, Jo Paul Ancheri, VP Sathyan and KT Chacko and a side featuring stars from Areekode," said Jafar.

    "The team of international stars were comfortably beaten by the local side, but no one has heard of those players since. Players like Baputty (brother of Sakeer) now sells fish while others have flown to the Middle East looking for jobs. With this book, I have tried to bring players like them to the forefront as well as force a rethink from the side of the football administrators," he said.

    In the book, Jafar recounts the tale from the time the Britishers introduced the sport in the early 20th century to the Indian Super League era. Between those pages are a countless number of unheard-of personalities who enthralled the football fanatics and helped the sport prosper in the region.

    munna219777BrainFallINDIAindian_goonerSOCCER4kl
  • SOCCER4klSOCCER4kl kerala451 Points
    New revamped website of Kerala Football Association
    http://keralafa.com/
    They have a new logo too
    indian_goonersparta
  • indian_goonerindian_gooner 3411 Points
    But why the tagline We Build your career. It sucks and I don't get what they mean.
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29626 Points

    Kerala Premier League 2018: Gokulam Kerala defeat Quartz to be crowned champions

    Gokulam Kerala defeated Quartz 2-0 in the final of the 2018 Kerala Premier League to be crowned champions of the fifth edition of the tournament run by the state football association. 

    Substitutes Brian Umony (69') and Arjun Jayaraj (87') scored in the second-half following a goalless first-half to ensure the win for Gokulam Kerala at the Corporation Stadium ground in Thrissur

    http://www.goal.com/en-tza/news/kerala-premier-league-2018-gokulam-kerala-quartz-champions/1c8js7zwsj6vn186uxjkejoyf4
    munna219777
  • indian_goonerindian_gooner 3411 Points
    Fc kerala is holding selection trials for their senior team on June 24(kerala players) and 25(other states/foreigners) @ corporation stadium thrissur. Reporting time 7:30 am. Born on or before 1999. 
    munna219777sparta
  • indian_goonerindian_gooner 3411 Points
    Well i must say fc kerala is so much invlolin with people even more than kbfc. They are regularly holding trials for their different age level teams right from under 13. 
    Their facebook page page is well maintained with regular updates on these. 
    Wish they had qualified for i league. And I want to see a senior team match between kbfc and fc kerala
    munna219777sparta
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