Seventy per cent of boys called for an under-14 camp held by the All India Football Federation at
Kalyani in West Bengal were found to be overage with some of them as old as 17 years.
“This has been prevalent for long. The state associations need to
be more serious,” said Colm Joseph Toal, Head Coach, Youth Development
of AIFF, during the five-day coaching seminar in progress at Navi
Mumbai.
“Just look what happened in the camp in Kalyani,” he said, shaking his head.
With a vision to get boys for the four regional academies, the
federation had, since September 2011, scouted over 170 boys from various
age-group tournaments, U-14 fests and open trials conducted across the
length and breadth of the country by AIFF's Technical Director Rob Baan
and Scott O'Donell, TD of the federation's regional and elite academies.
The selected U-14 boys were then kept in a camp in Kalyani for
over a month after which the list was filtered to final 120. But when
medically tested, 84 out of 120 were found overage. The camp was for
U-14 boys but some of them were found to be even over 17, the AIFF said.
“It seems, we just need to conduct tests almost everyday. The
money went waste, the effort and energy went waste, it's so much
frustrating and discouraging for the development of the sport in the
country," Toal lamented.
Baan asked the coaches to find at least one promising young boy of the right age-group.
“All of you need to make me a promise. Promise me, all of you
will come back to me within a month with a kid who you believe has the
potential to play for India in the future,” he told the 65 coaches
attending the seminar.
“You are my scouts. By now, you ought to know as to what kind of player I am looking for. Can You? Promise me,” Baan asked.
“You can even give me more than one boy. We will have a trial for
the kid and if we find him good enough, we will enrol him," Baan added.
The issue of age-fudging has been making the rounds almost every
day during the coaching seminar, leading to the conclusion that the
launching of the AIFF Academies had to be delayed.
“But they stay on track. We have to have them and we will,” O'Donell said.
The second AIFF regional academy is all set to be launched in
Bangalore in September and the next one at Pailan World School in
Kolkata later this year.
“Open trials are not a realistic approach. In Kolkata, we had
over 1,000 boys appearing for the trials. It's hard to handle that much
of a lot," felt O'Donell.
According to AIFF's medical consultant Dr Manabendra
Bhattacharya, who is also attending the seminar, age verification is a
complicated process.
“This is rampant across all age groups and all sports. But how do
you stop it. Of course, we can determine it by tests; tests which
reveal the dental age, secondary sexual characters and the bone age,” he
informed the participants.
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