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What's On In Goa:
* Oct 16-27: Vipasana meditation, Alto Porvorim
* Oct 24: Antonio Pereira Puraskar (Award) ceremony, Porvorim
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The Rediff Interview / Baichung Bhutia

'India now has its best side in a long time'

Between cricket and football, Indians, quite unambiguously, choose the gentleman's 
game. But 
soccer remains the sport that most Indians love to watch, so long as India is not 
playing. However, 
one man, who hit the Indian soccer scene about a decade ago, is changing the queer 
indifference 
with which the game is viewed in the country. He has himself attained star status and 
is taking 
football to new heights of popularity. 

Meet Bhaichung 'The Scorpion' Bhutia, the face of modern Indian football. 

Bhutia, who hails from a remote village in Sikkim, stormed the football scene as a 
diminutive 16-
year-old, emerging the 'Best Player' in the 1992 Subroto Cup. His scintillating 
performance three 
years later in the Nehru Cup cemented his place in Indian football. Having seen all 
that had to be 
seen in Indian soccer, he then looked West-ward, and two summers ago became the first 
Asian-
born player to score a goal in an English professional league while playing for Bury 
FC. Before 
joining Bury, the nimble-footed striker unsuccessfully tried his luck with Fulham FC, 
Aston Villa and 
West Bromwich Albion. 

Bhutia spoke to M. Chhaya about his extraordinary journey from a sleepy Sikkimese 
village to the 
glamour world of English Premier League and much more: 

Q: Indians pay to watch world soccer, but not Indian football. Why?

Of course, we have a lot of catching up to do to compare with global soccer 
powerhouses, but to 
say that Indian football attracts no attention in India would be wrong. The game has 
not been 
marketed the way, say, cricket has been. It's about marketing a brand; football as a 
brand. That 
has not happened. But I feel things are changing and so is the Indian attitude to 
Indian football. 

Q: Where does Indian football stand vis-�-vis the global standard of the game?

I must say we have improved during the past few years. We have talent, but lack in 
proper 
guidance and a scientific training regimen towards attaining international standards 
of physical 
strength, mental toughness and skills. We can do a lot better if we have a proper 
grassroots training 
system and facilities. In the international arena, the training programme is much more 
scientific. The 
stress should also be on quality coaching and international exposure that will throw 
open the Indian 
players to aggression.

Q: Talking of coaching, how do you rate present national coach Stephen Constantine?

I have said it before that he is a very good coach, and has a very good rapport with 
the boys. His 
methods of illustration are novel. The team's performance under him has gone up, and 
we 
performed very well in LG Cup in Vietnam. I think India has its best side in a long 
time. 

Q: You have trained under some good coaches. How will you rate them?

I started off under Manas Chakraborty in Tshasi National Academy. Later, I came under 
Syed 
Nayemuddin, P K Banerjee, Sukhvinder Singh, Rustam Akramov, Manoranjan Bhattacharjee, 
and 
the coaches at Bury FC. All of them are good in their own ways, but the foreign 
coaches are 
technically better equipped. 

Q: You have played most of your football in India with East Bengal. Any special 
reasons?

Well, I also did play for JCT, Phagwara, for sometime. But, yes East Bengal got close 
to my heart 
and I enjoyed playing for the club. But look, now back in India, I'm playing with 
Mohun Bagan this 
season, and I'm enjoying it too. 

Q: How was the Bury FC experience?

I planned to move on to the international scene because I wanted my game to grow after 
having 
played at the highest level in India. I started looking for openings in the English 
Premier League, 
and Bury happened. I was given a three-year contract, and the coach worked a lot on my 
fitness 
and strength. It was playing in Bury that I was actually exposed to the toughness of 
European 
soccer. 

Q: Any favourite game?

Yes, the one against Manchester United. I was given a chance to play in about 40 
matches. 

Q: How does it feel to be back playing for a Kolkata club?

Good. I want to use the experience and skills that I have picked up during the Bury 
stint, both for 
my country and my club. Our immediate aim is do beat Valencia in their home game (in 
Maldives, in 
the Asian Football Confederation Champions League) on Tuesday. [The first leg meeting 
between 
the teams in Kolkata ended in a 2-2 draw] 

Q: What do you think about the clash between club interest and national duty?

It is the greatest honour to play for the country. It is a problem that exists in 
almost all soccer-playing 
countries. (The All-India Football Federation has recently announced that it would 
prepare a 
calendar next season so as to accommodate both national and club engagements without 
any 
clash of dates.) 

Q: What are your future plans?

I'll be happy if I'm able to do something for Indian football even after I retire from 
the game. I have 
ideas and plans that I want to implement to the benefit of the game in the country. 

(Bhutia has offers to play in the North American major league, Singapore, Malaysia, 
Japan and 
even Belgium).  

Taken from: http://www.rediff.com/sports/2002/oct/18inter.htm


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