‘We dream of reviving the glory days of Indian Football,’ says Kalyan
Chaubey at launch of 'Vision 2047'

AIFF Media Team

NEW DELHI: The All India Football Federation unveiled its strategic roadmap
with ‘Vision 2047’ in the presence of various members of the media in New
Delhi on Saturday, January 7, 2023. The long due roadmap, ‘Vision 2047’,
hopes that in the country’s centenary year of independence, India will also
emerge as a new powerhouse of Asian football.

Developed in conjunction with all stakeholders within Indian Football, the
roadmap has also sought and incorporated inputs from the Asian Football
Confederation (AFC) and FIFA. The salient ambitions of the roadmap are to
see India among the top four footballing nations in Asia, host one of the
top leagues in Asia, and create a vibrant footballing ecosystem.

‘Vision 2047’ has been broken down, for diligent implementation, into six
four-year strategic plans. The first of these will look to cover the period
till 2026. “Vision 2047 paints a picture of where we want to position
Indian Football at the outset of a hundred years of our nation’s
independence,” AIFF President Mr Kalyan Chaubey said at the event.

“At a time when India’s role is becoming increasingly prominent on the
world stage, we embark on a journey as ambitious as our nation itself.
However, this is not a journey for the Federation alone, but one that will
be traversed together by every entity that is connected to Indian Football.

“With a shared vision and by sharing responsibility, we can implement
targeted programmes to address key areas identified in this roadmap and
help build capacity for the football ecosystem,” Mr Chaubey said. “I dream
of reviving the glory days of Indian Football as it was in the 1950s and
60s and becoming a powerhouse of Asian football once again. It is our right
to dream and our duty to do everything it takes to fulfil that dream.
Together, we can aspire to take Indian Football to peaks never scaled
before.”

One of the key aspects of the roadmap is to ensure increased access to
competition and games for players plying their trade in the country. By
2047, the Federation wants to ensure players will be able to play at least
55 matches across different competitions every season.

“Transformation will begin at home through a reform of the organisational
culture,” Secretary General Dr Shaji Prabhakaran said, referring to a need
for better governance of the game across the country. “A restructuring
exercise will be carried out to streamline current operations and develop a
team which adopts the industry’s best practices and is transparent in its
dealings.”

"By 2036, the centenary of the Federation," Dr Prabhakaran said, "India
will be among the top seven countries in Asia, and a strong contender to
qualify for the World Cup on merit."

The Federation recognises that growth in modern sport requires a business
outlook. The Federation will dedicate an entire division — Business and
marketing — to develop, cultivate and invite investment and partnerships in
Indian Football.

In lieu of the same, the Federation will support Member Associations with
capacity building and help them rise in the Football Pyramid by providing
highly relevant ‘Support Solutions’. This support will enable them to be
self-sufficient by 2027 and in turn help the ecosystem thrive.

The Federation observed that at the grassroots, the beautiful game,
currently, has low participation relative to its size and population. There
is a huge gender disparity in participation, and a lack of facilities and
playfields in urban areas where children can come out and play. A lack of
cohesion and focus between different stakeholders has led to significant
gaps in funding.

The AIFF’s 2026 target is to reach 35 million children through grassroots
programmes and implement village grassroot programmes across 100 villages
throughout India. The flagship grassroots project will also aim to register
1 million registered players and provide football education to 25 million
children through Football for Schools.

The Federation recognised that while women’s football has been growing
rapidly across the world, it has previously received very little attention
in India. The weak ecosystem needs specific solutions to help increase
participation and competency across the pyramid. Some of the proposed
solutions include better adoption of women’s football by clubs across
different levels, incentivising the role of coaches, referees and match
commissioners for women, as well as providing a minimum salary to women’s
players.

By 2026 — the period of the first strategic plan — the Federation will
ensure the creation of a four-level league table pyramid, the top of which
will be occupied by the Indian Women’s League (featuring 10 teams),
followed by the 2nd Division (8 teams). In addition, there will be five
zonal leagues with eight teams each. In addition, a new women’s youth
league structure has been proposed, which will see players across different
age groups play a minimum of 14 matches. The Federation will ensure that a
minimum of 20 states implement the new women’s youth structures by 2027.

On the men’s side, the current strategic plan will ensure the creation of a
three-tier national league pyramid with 40 teams. The Hero Indian Super
League and Hero I-League will boast of 14 teams each while the Hero
I-League 2nd Division will consist of 12 teams. A state championship
structure will see city and district leagues feed into the state
championships. A revamped men’s youth league structure will see the local
state youth league and elite youth leagues will run simultaneously. Clubs
and academies will participate in both with the winners of the state youth
leagues qualifying for the Elite youth league.

One of the cornerstones of the roadmap is the creation of a national
playing philosophy, which will be developed over time after consultation,
observation and exploration. Subsequently, the ‘Coach Education Program’
structure will be developed in line with our ‘Indian National Football
Philosophy’. The improvement of footballing quality at all levels of the
ecosystem demands better coaching and with that in mind, the roadmap
targets creating 50,000 active coaches — almost 4,500 with a minimum AIFF C
License — across the country.

The Federation observed that the talent development ecosystem is currently
informal, with clubs and Federation bodies all largely working in silos
without a systematic or uniform approach. The AIFF proposes to change this
by creating a data driven scouting structure from the Elite Youth League
System for its National Teams. Clubs will drive talent identification at
grassroots unto the Elite Youth structure.

An increased focus will be put on utilising the FIFA windows across age
groups to provide exposure to players in the national teams, with mega
camps (two or more age groups) scheduled at least twice a year.
Qualification for the FIFA U17 World Cups for Both Men and Women on merit
is a key part of the agenda.

Infrastructure is key to achieving many long-term goals. The Federation has
observed that there has, over the past decades, been a reduction in
playgrounds in urban areas. Many top professional clubs do not yet own
football infrastructure. The Federation plans to conduct a pan-India
infrastructure census by 2025.

Subsequently, it will put in place policy interventions that will
incentivise government authorities, football clubs, corporates, and private
investors to invest in infrastructure. A grading and licensing criteria
will be in place by 2024, and a mega football park will be formalised by
2026. The AIFF National Centre of Excellence will be fully functional by
2026.

A key focus of the Strategic Roadmap, Dr Prabhakaran said, is on
“increasing the commercial viability by creating economic value for all our
stakeholders, especially players.” The Federation will create
effective feedback
mechanisms that will ensure it is among the best government sports
organisations in the country. The roadmap also lists creation of new assets
in football, futsal and beach soccer to engage sponsors and diversify
target audiences to broaden the reach of Indian Football.

*Read:*
https://www.the-aiff.com/article/we-dream-of-reviving-the-glory-days-of-indian-football-says-kalyan-chaubey-at-launch-of-vision-2047

*Strategic Roadmap of Indian Football: *
https://www.the-aiff.com/media/uploads/2023/01/Vision-2047-The-Indian-Football-Strategic-Roadmap-2023-2047.pdf

-- 
Soumo Ghosh,
Assistant Manager, Media, All India Football Federation,
Mobile: +91-9051857227
Alternate Mail: soumoghosh...@gmail.com

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