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United KingdomSports4 days ago

India: Why a country of 1.4 billion is not in the football World Cup

India has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup, despite being home to millions of football fans. The article discusses the frustration among Indian football supporters and highlights the contrast between the country's passion for the sport and its lack of success on the international stage. It notes that Indian journalists are still covering the World Cup extensively, even though India does not participate. The piece also mentions that neighboring China has similarly failed to qualify.

17 hours ago

Gautam Bhattacharyya Sports Writer

NurPhoto via Getty Images

A scooter rider passes giant cutouts of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in Kerala

Will India ever play at the Fifa World Cup?

The familiar lament that Indian football fans have learnt to live with is back after the "greatest show on earth" kicked off last week .

For those tracking the fortunes of the Blue Tigers - as the Indian men's national football team is called - over the years, the question is one of the biggest clichés as the country has never progressed beyond the preliminary rounds of Asian zone qualifiers.

The irony, however, lies in the manner in which the World Cup is celebrated in a number of football-crazy Indian states such as West Bengal, Kerala and Goa - or in the growing number of accredited Indian journalists covering the event on the ground despite the country having no stakes in the competition.

"We have faced frequent questions in the press box as to whether India plays football. Most of them know us as a cricket-playing nation," joked a senior Indian football writer who has covered four World Cups.

It's not just India - neighbour China, the world's second-most populous country, has also not qualified for the World Cup again. Fifa, however, is well aware of the importance of these markets, prompting it to dispatch a high-powered media rights team to India to secure a last-minute broadcasting deal for live coverage of the matches.

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India's Rahul Bheke vies for the ball with Singapore's Ilhan Fandi during an AFC Asian Cup qualifier in Singapore in 2025

So will a place in the World Cup continue to be a bridge too far for India?

Baichung Bhutia, former national team captain and arguably one of the biggest names in Indian football, thinks it's not impossible - though there are no shortcuts.

"Yes, India can definitely play [in the World Cup] as nothing is impossible. The quota of Asian teams have gone up to eight [along with a ninth team in Iraq which came through from confederation play-offs this time] in the bigger 48-team format, where teams like Uzbekistan and Jordan are playing. However, it will require a lot of hard work," he said.

Bhutia added that there was no dearth of talent in a big country like India.

"What is lacking is the right ecosystem as we don't have a serious grassroots programme with a long-term vision. It's the most popular team sport in the world and we will need time for the results to show,'' said Bhutia.

Shyam Thapa, 78, who helped India win bronze at the 1970 Asian Games - the country's last major continental success - also emphasised the need for a sustained grassroots programme, saying the key was to bring more children into the game.

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A woman in Kolkata passes by a large hoarding of Lionel Messi ahead of the World Cup

The trace of irritation in his voice was unmistakable. Thapa, a canny striker famed for his bicycle-kick goals, lamented that middle-class and upper-middle-class parents were increasingly steering their children away from football and towards cricket.

''I have run a youth academy myself for years and can vouch for the fact that the more young children take to the game, the more the chances of finding brighter talents. However, what has the All India Football Federation (AIFF) done to set such a system in motion?''

He added that many Indian parents were taking their children to cricket coaching camps, hoping they would get a "lucrative Indian Premier League (IPL cricket tournament) contract".

"They need to understand that there can be good money if they can make a career in football too,'' he said.

A closer look at the nine teams from the Asian continent which made the cut for the World Cup this year shows the enormity of the task that lies ahead of India.

They are Australia, Iran, Japan, Jordan, South Korea, Uzbekistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Iraq (via inter-confederation play-offs) - with Jordan and Uzbekistan making their long-awaited debut.

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East Bengal FC and Mohammedan Sporting Club battle it out in an ISL match in Kolkata in March

Both debutants are, incidentally, ranked well above India in the current Fifa standings.

Uzbekistan are 52nd in the world and Jordan 63rd, while India have slipped to 136th after a sharp decline over the past 18 months.

The rankings underscore the scale of the challenge facing Indian football. As Kalyan Chaubey, the first former footballer to become AIFF president, said after taking office in 2022: "I will not sell dreams like India will play in the World Cup in eight years. Instead, I will say we will take Indian football forward from its current condition."

Nearly four years on, the question is whether his administration has succeeded in that.

Far from fast-tracking Indian football, many believe the past three years have turned the AIFF into an object of ridicule.

In 2014, the federation had launched a domestic club-based tournament, the Indian…

Read the full article at BBC News (World)
Source document: FIFA

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BBC News (World)State / PublicCenter4 days ago
India: Why a country of 1.4 billion is not in the football World Cup

India has never qualified for the FIFA World Cup, despite being home to millions of football fans. The article discusses the frustration among Indian football supporters and highlights the contrast between the country's passion for the sport and its lack of success on the international stage. It notes that Indian journalists are still covering the World Cup extensively, even though India does not participate. The piece also mentions that neighboring China has similarly failed to qualify.

Bias read (Center): The article presents facts about India's football performance without overtly favoring any political or ideological perspective. It focuses on sports outcomes and fan culture rather than making political judgments or taking a stance on related issues.

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