Articles on History of Indian Football

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  • Where ia krishanu dey. He was surely one of thE best
    munna219777
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29624 Points
    An article in Livemint on the beginnings of football in India

    https://www.livemint.com/Leisure/nIlAssLeF8AWGLofJohtuK/How-football-kicked-off-in-India.html

    How football kicked off in India

    As with the English language, when the British transported the sport to India, they didn’t expect the ‘natives’ to beat them at it

    Bikash Panji right playing at the Durand Cup 1983 for Mohun Bagan Photo Hindustan Times

    In 1314, the mayor of London issued a proclamation banning a particularly rowdy sport that had captured the imagination of large numbers of the city’s residents. There was, he announced, “great noise” in town caused by this “hustling over large balls”, and so, “on pain of imprisonment”, the game was outlawed in the name of King Edward II—and of course God. The whole business concerned what we recognize today by the more innocent name of football, but at the time it was considered a monstrous affair, as men kicked about an inflated pig’s bladder from one village to another. No rules existed, and the upper classes sneered at this disorderly pastime of their inferiors, oblivious that centuries down the line, “ffooteball” fever would infect the entire world, birthing an industry so profitable that even God might be forgiven for reconsidering his position.

    As with the English language, when the British transported football to India, they didn’t quite expect the “natives” to match them at it. Records suggest that it was in 1721, in Gujarat, that western traders first began to play cricket, while the earliest extant report of football appears over a century later in an 1854 newspaper. This second sport, however, was inaugurated on India’s eastern flank, in Bengal, when the (white) “Gentlemen of Barrackpore” played against the (white) “Calcutta Club of Civilians”. Football, by now, was acquiring a distinct shape and structure, with formal rules and codes. That these rules varied from place to place did not matter—the Victorians had realized that this was a “masculine” exercise for boys as they grew into men, besides serving as an outlet for dangerous hormonal energies. Controlled aggression in an authorized environment, besides, appeared to impart lessons in discipline, obedience, honourable victories, and dignified defeats. And so, slowly, football became respectable.

    It was another matter, of course, that the British were not particularly dignified in the manner in which the sport was passed on to Indians. They had their exclusive clubs in various cities, besides the teams of army regiments. But even after the 1880s, when Indians formed their own clubs in Bengal—Shobhabazar, Aryans, and so on—the establishment thought little of locals and their sporting capabilities. “By his legs you shall know a Bengali,” declared one journalist in 1899, asserting that the typical Calcutta male’s legs were either hopelessly thin, or else “very fat and globular…with round thighs like a woman’s.” “The Bengali’s leg,” simply put, was “the leg of a slave”. And this at the end of a decade when Bengali clubs had already started to win small victories against British teams, and just before Mahatma Gandhi was inspired to establish in South Africa his “Passive Resisters Soccer Club”.

    What really announced India’s arrival on the football scene, however, was the contest between the Mohun Bagan Athletic Club and the East Yorkshire regiment for the legendary Indian Football Association (IFA) Shield in 1911. The team was representative of emerging middle-class Indian aspirations—one member, writer Ronojoy Sen records, was a clerk, while another was an employee of the public works department. A third was a veterinary inspector, but all of them were products of the English education system, with a growing consciousness of their identity as Indians. They played barefoot, partly because a pair of boots in the early 1900s didn’t cost less than Rs7—an average schoolteacher’s monthly salary. It was no surprise, then, that when Mohun Bagan made it to the finals, against all odds, the football maidan attracted some 100,000 visitors, including from Bihar, Odisha and Assam.

    As it happened, the Indians won both the trophy and much prestige. “May God bless the Immortal Eleven of Mohan Bagan for raising their nation in the estimation of the Western people,” rhapsodized the Amrita Bazar Patrika, noting that this victory demolished the old jibe about Bengalis being “lamentably deficient” in physical prowess. Besides reasserting the Indian male’s masculinity, the victory of a barefoot team against a privileged English set also rang resoundingly of nationalism—as historian Partha Chatterjee notes, the win in 1911 came at a time when Bengal was electrified by armed resistance against the Raj, not to speak of agitation challenging the partition of the province by Lord Curzon six years earlier. If sport had helped discipline Englishmen to conquer the world in the Victorian era, now football shattered imperial arrogance as Indians reclaimed their pride at the close of the Edwardian age.

    Of course, hopes of football sparking a righteous nationalist fire did not pan out quite so romantically. As with cricket in Bombay, where Parsis played against Hindus who played against Muslims, in football too, difference reared its head. In 1911, the Mohammedan Sporting Club enthusiastically celebrated the victory of their “Hindu brethren” against the British, but by the 1930s the mood had chilled. There was this leading “Muslim club” and then there were “Hindu clubs”. Among the Hindus, there emerged an additional problem of regionalism—the East Bengal Club was formed mainly on account of a grievance that west Bengalis looked down on easterners. In other words, where two decades earlier nationalism had electrified the sports arena, football was afflicted now by the poison of communalism.

    It might have spelt wholescale disaster, but, luckily, a change in political winds transformed the horizon. With World War II and the advent of independence, sport for the love of sport—and not as a vehicle of nationalism or communal pride—slowly began to become possible. And in 1947, with those very legs once written off as resembling slaves’, Indians turned around and gave the British a proverbial kick off the field they had for so long tried to dominate. New problems emerged—of poor infrastructure and state indifference. But by then Indians had already embraced football, doing their bit in transforming an old game that once featured a pig’s bladder into an enduring obsession of their own.

    Carbon_14munna219777kartik91indian_goonerarchak
  • munna219777munna219777 28505 Points
    Timeline of three oldest Football Tournaments of India

    Durand Cup  started in 1888

    Rovers Cup started in 1890

    IFA Shield started in 1893



    Carbon_14
  • spartasparta Jamshedpur FC2074 Points
    Someone can compile these gems and post them in the blog under History of Indian Football categories.That way it will reach to bigger audience
    munna219777indian_gooner
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29624 Points
    https://www.sportstarlive.com/football/indian-football/when-india-almost-beat-france-at-football-olympics-1948-world-cup-1950-first-indian-football-team-why-india-does-not-qualify-for-world-cup/article24573413.ece

    When India almost beat France at football

    The question of what might have been the trajectory of Indian football if Sailen Manna and Mahabir Prasad had converted those two penalties against France, will continue to haunt us until the day the first eleven men of Indian football stand on the biggest stage of world football - the World Cup finals.

  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29624 Points
    https://footballchronicle.co/2018/10/01/when-pele-came-to-india/

    WHEN PELE CAME TO INDIA

    Kolkata is a hotbed for Indian football. In a country that loves its cricket, a country that adores its superstars that ply their trade with a bat and ball, Kolkata stands out for its footballing heritage, the sort of culture that’s more popular within the western side of the world. In these parts, India’s more popular sports, whether it be cricket, hockey or badminton, take the back seat to the world’s most popular sport, and its prominence was well-highlighted and enhanced in 1977 when the king had arrived.

    The city was no stranger to hosting high-profile names. From international royalty to A-listers from showbiz, Kolkata loved the big occasion. But in that year when one name was announced to arrive, the inhabitants – authorities included – had gone berserk. Pelé was set to come to the famous Indian city and play his career’s penultimate game against Mohun Bagan, one of India’s most cultured football clubs, but one that was struggling under the shadow of their local rivals, East Bengal. The two have a rivalry that goes way back in time, so this coup was a turning point. For a while, East Bengal had the bragging rights in town, but this one encounter swung the pendulum the other way.

    It was just two years prior that Mohun Bagan had been demolished 5-0 by their fierce rivals and it was clear who was the dominant force in the city. East Bengal had formed a dynasty in Indian football in that time, and Mohun Bagan could do nothing but watch. It wasn’t until the following year when the club took a stand to reclaim their place on the throne, to fight back against the superpower and win back their legacy.

    The revered Dhiren Dey was the club’s Assistant General Secretary in the hope of winning back some momentum in the land. In a time where they were seriously struggling, Dey would prove to be an influential figure for the club and that would be evident through his transfer dealings and unconditional love and support for the famous green-and-maroon stripes of Mohun Bagan.

    Within a year, Dey signed players that had made East Bengal so successful, thus weakening their rivals and adding some winning swagger to his own ranks. Star names such as Subhas Bhomwick, Surajit Sengupta and Shyam Thapa had all dropped the famous red-and-gold to wear the stripes of the enemy and it was only a matter of time before the trophies had arrived. The Calcutta Football League was the first trophy East Bengal gave up, having won it for the previous six years. At this point, it appeared that there was set to be another power shift in the city.

    However, the Calcutta Football League success was just a mere anomaly. In the next year, Mohun Bagan struggled in the Federation Cup – the country’s premier knockout competition – and just a few months after that, they would give up their Calcutta Football League crown after being comprehensively dismantled by the flawless East Bengal. This defeat would bring potentially fatal consequences. The team’s camp was often attacked by disheartened fans and the players’ lives were in danger. India’s most passionate rivalry had been set alight.

    Two years after the investment and promise, Dey’s hands were tied. He had to deliver something, whether it was on the pitch or financially. Having failed to sustain their success for a prolonged period, it could be said that if something hadn’t changed for The Mariners, the next few years would attract serious trouble.

    That was when Dhiren Dey decided to take advantage of a situation that was occurring 13,000 kilometres away. Over in New York, the Cosmos were planning a farewell tour for the great Pelé, arguably the greatest of all time. Having learned about this, Dey was adamant on bringing Pelé to Kolkata as it would be beneficial in more than one way. Not only would the Brazilian legend’s arrival boost Indian football, it would also give Mogun Bagan the international coverage it had been craving – the sort of attention that would have given them a huge boost past their overwhelming local rivals that had the better of them for the best part of the last decade.

    Within weeks, Dey worked closely with the secretary of the Indian Football Association, Ashok Ghosh. He drew up a plan that would be sent over to the New York Cosmos that highlighted the events before, during and after Pelé’s arrival and this audacious proposal would be approved. There was an immediate setback, though. The Cosmos requested a huge sum – some reports claiming it to be around $500,000 – which would be unfeasible for the club. At a time when they were struggling, paying money like that would harm the long-term future of the club, no matter how much benefit or fanfare the short-term brought.

    The initial setback was not taken too strongly, however. With a major coup on the line, Dey was persistent on bringing the world’s greatest footballer to his city and with that motivation, he personally got involved to get his man. Dey sent out another letter to Pelé’s representatives, sharing stories of Mohun Bagan’s role in India’s hunt for independence not so long ago as well as the importance of India and Indian culture to the world and the love the footballer would receive upon his arrival to the country.

    Touched by the personal sentiment of the letter and fascinated by the prospect of playing in a region that was as passionate about the sport as his native Brazil, Pelé agreed to the offer and worked with the Cosmos administration to arrange a match in Kolkata. Although this wasn’t a trophy or an iconic footballing success, the plan of a friendly against a historical side such as the New York Cosmos was a huge achievement for Mohun Bagan and Dhiren Dey. To add to that benefit, it would cost the club much less than the initial sum requested due to Pelé’s own intervention in the situation. Overall, this would prove to be a turning point in Kolkata’s footballing folklore.

    Scheduled for a late September match, Pelé’s arrival provoked a mass hysteria in the region. Schools were shut on the day and a reported 80,000 people were set to attend the elusive fixture as the maestro took the field for the second-last time in his illustrious career. Heavy rainfall greeted the Cosmos to India, but that wasn’t the only welcome they had. Upon their arrival, the airport, and the path leading up to it, was packed as thousands flocked to catch a glimpse of Pelé. Played at the famous Eden Gardens, currently India’s largest cricket ground, the historic venue was fitting for a man of Pelé’s stature.

  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29624 Points
    edited October 2018
    https://footballchronicle.co/2018/10/01/when-pele-came-to-india/

    WHEN PELE CAME TO INDIA

    There are several accounts and conflicting reports of what may have occurred at the fixture. The final score was a 2-2 draw, but there still isn’t sufficient clarity of what happened during the match, or how much Pelé was involved. To this day, there are three different stories of what might have transpired that afternoon.

    One account comes from a chartered accountant who went by the name of Manabendra Majumdar, who claims he was there at Eden Gardens to attend the fixture. He claims that Pelé didn’t play in the game, instead just turning up at half-time and showing the enthusiastic crowd glimpses of his genius by playing around with the ball and displaying some flashy tricks. This view is often discarded, and it would make sense to do so, seeing as the fanfare that the whole event brought out would’ve turned on the organisers and do more bad than good for the club.

    According to Shaymal Majumdar, the current editor of the Business Standard in India, Pelé only played about 30 minutes of the match and Mohun Bagan, who were largely unfancied in the build-up to the game, were strikingly impressive. In the supposed half-hour that Pelé was involved, he only had three shots on goal, two of which were wildly off-target which led many to believe that this wasn’t the actual Brazilian icon, instead, he was being portrayed by a famous Bengali imposter who went by the name of Shanti Gopal.

    The actor had been famous for portraying some giants of history such as Adolf Hitler and Karl Marx, and during the clash there were whispers amongst the jam-packed audience that Gopal had shifted away from political re-enactments and expanded his forte by switching to sports. Disappointed by the lacklustre showing from the three-time world champion, Majumdar claims the crowd were raucous at the end of the clash, bursting off into loud jeers as they believed that the organisers of the event had flattered to deceive.

    The most believable and fanciable account is that Pelé played the whole game, or at least the most part. This view suggests that Pelé was at his usual best for the encounter, starting off by creating the opening goal with a brilliant through-ball to his team-mate, Carlos Alberto Torres. There was also an impressive showing from Gautam Sarkar, a member of the Mohun Bagan back-line who had the prestigious task of man-marking Pelé. According to many reports, Sarkar didn’t allow the Brazilian much space or time to weave his usual magic and kept him quiet for much of the half.

    Mohun Bagan were at their best for the big clash. After going down early in the game, they came back and took the lead. The equaliser came immediately from Shyam Thapa, now a cult figure amongst the Mohun Bagan faithful having joined from East Bengal. And a quarter-of-an-hour later, Mohammed Habib gave the home side the lead going into half-time. For much of the match, goalkeeper Sibaji Banerjee was under constant threat but he kept his composure and pulled off a few outstanding saves – including one from a well-struck free-kick by Pelé – to deny the New York side from getting back into the game.

    That was until the 75th minute when the Mariners’ resistance was finally broken. Defender Sudhir Karmakar committed a rough tackle inside the box and a penalty was awarded without any hesitation. Former Lazio forward Giorgio Chinaglia stepped up and converted the spot-kick and that would be the final significant action of an exciting afternoon. The home side outdid expectations with an excellent performance, while the hysteria of Pelé ensured that all the people at the venue were satisfied on the day.

    To understand the importance of the day and everyone’s desire to get involved, the scenes on the touchline can provide a sufficient example. Late in the game, Manas Bhattacharya, the Indian international, was set to come on for a cameo appearance, but the man he was set to be substituted for, Subhash Bhowmick, refused to have his playing time cut down. That led to Bhattacharya bursting into tears and eventually, having noted that this would be a once-in-a-lifetime chance to come up against the great Pelé, goalscorer Shyam Thapa volunteered to come off and give his team-mate a few unforgettable minutes on the pitch.

    If there was one occasion that set Kolkata apart from the rest of India in footballing terms, it is this. This match, although just a friendly, put Kolkata on the map and gave Mohun Bagan a major boost in the city. Buoyed by the confidence of coming up against a legendary player and outfit, and putting on such an encouraging display, they would begin their own era of dominance in the region, starting with the 1-0 defeat of East Bengal in the IFA Shield just four days after the friendly.

    Since 1977, the likes of Diego Maradona, Lionel Messi, Roger Milla, Diego Forlán and more have come to the city, but the excitement generated by Pelé has been unmatched. In a football city, the arrival of one man changed the fortunes of one club and gave the watching audience two memorable, hysterical hours.

    kartik91
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29624 Points
    https://www.telegraphindia.com/india/a-121-year-old-burnt-down-football-club-and-the-legacy-the-flames-couldnt-touch/cid/1692972

    A 121-year-old burnt-down football club and the legacy the flames couldn’t touch

    The Wari Athletic Club in the past

    The entrance to the Wari Athletic Club (WAC) in central Calcutta’s Maidan area is easy to miss. There is that faded ash and red signage, but the rusty iron lock adorning the grilled gate makes for a more lasting impression. On April 1, the 121-year-old legacy caught fire. “We lost everything,” says Prabir Chakraborty, the general secretary of the club. “There were jerseys, football, hockey and cricket kits. There was a gym inside. There were rare framed photographs, documents... It is all gone,” adds the 58-year-old, who has been associated with this club for more than half his life.

    The WAC gets its name from a district in Bangladesh where it was originally founded. The old club in Bangladesh continues to function. “When you come out of the Dhaka airport, you take a road that goes left, that is Wari,” says Chakraborty. Around the time of Partition, some members shifted base to Calcutta and that is how this sub-branch came to be. According to Chakraborty, “Sometime in the 1950s, footballer Pankaj Gupta spoke to the Indian Football Association and secured permission to host third division football here.” Divisions in football refer to categories. Third division football is for players who are a shade more skilled than amateurs.

    It is not as if the WAC is the only century-old football club of Bengal. The Calcutta Football Club was set up in 1872, though in the initial days it was a rugby club. The Dalhousie Club came up in 1878. In the piece, “Football and Politics in Bengal: Colonialism, Nationalism, Communalism”, Paul Dimeo writes about the Traders Club that drew its members from British employees of jute mills and clubs such as the Naval Volunteers, Police, Customs and the Armenian Club, which were all established around the same time.

    The Wari Athletic Club now On April 1 the 121-year-old legacy caught fire
    The Wari Athletic Club now. On April 1, the 121-year-old legacy caught firePicture by Pradip Sanyal

    The founding of the original WAC towards the end of the 19th century is significant because it gestures at the continuing popularity of football and how it came to mean something beyond a recreational activity exclusive to army men and the colonial elite. “...It had become an arena of competition between the British and the Indians... it soon transcended the recreational boundary to become a cultural weapon in the fight against the British imperialists,” write Boria Majumdar and Kausik Bandyopadhyay in the book, Goalless: The Story Of A Unique Footballing Nation.

    In July 1893 the Indian Football Association was founded. The Calcutta Football League was formed five years later. Dimeo writes, “The first Indian team to play in the league was Mohun Bagan in 1914, which was allowed entry to the second division.” For a long time, there was a rule that Indians could not play first division football.

    Historian and statistician Hari Prasad Chattopadhyay says that the WAC has contributed majorly to the football scene of not only Bengal, but the whole of India. He says, “It had once defeated a very famous football club from Brazil, the Corinthians.”

    Chattopadhyay talks about Tejesh Kumar Shome, better known as Bagha Shome within Bengal’s football fraternity, who was part of this club. He continues, “Bagha Shome was a legendary coach who trained many emerging footballers who went on to become stalwarts. Because he had also come from opaar Bangla [present-day Bangladesh], he had a soul connect with the club... Players such as Bhabani Ray, who represented India in the 1970 Asian Games, started their careers at the WAC. The footballers here would make many clubs in Calcutta sweat with great performances. They brought up the level of Maidan football. If I am right, it was 1978 when East Bengal lost to the WAC in the Calcutta League. There was chaos. East Bengal supporters were throwing bricks and mud, blocking roads.”

    East Bengal footballer Samaresh Chaudhuri was part of the WAC from 1967 to 1969. He says, “During our time, the WAC did not have many players but it was known for certain things, and one such was the rigorous practice sessions.”

    Although the WAC started with football, over the last couple of decades it also nurtured hockey and cricket. Shashank Gupta, the cricket coach here, walks me down the cobbled path that leads to the burnt clubhouse. Inside, it is all dark and the floor is covered with the ash and remains of sports kits — a near-burnt pair of gloves, a cricket bat, some orphaned gym equipment. Gupta says softly, “We played excellent cricket this year, at different levels.”

    The soft rays of the sun peep in curiously through the broken windows as if trying to spy some remnant of the old glory.

    Carbon_14munna219777
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