I-league to start in December, Fedration Cup not axed!

AIFF, All India Football Federation, Soccer, New Delhi

AIFF Executive Committee met at the All India Football Federation Headquarters, Football House in the Capital on May 14, 2014 (Wednesday). Here is all you need to know about the decisions that were arrived upon in the meeting!

  • Mr. Praful Patel in his visit to Zurich has expressed interest to the FIFA Boss Sep Blatter about hosting the FIFA World Club Cup in 2017 and also in 2018. The outcome of these bids will be known in December 2014.
  • Indian Super League, the new franchise league will kick off in September 2014.
  • A special committee to advice the technical structure of 2017 U-17 FIFA World cup to be constituted. Baichung Bhutia, National Captain Sunil Chhetri and the Current coach of Salogaocar club Derrick Periera to be part of the panel.
  • The  Coca-Cola Cup (National Sub-Junior Tournament) will be the main scouting platform for players for the 2017 U-17 World Cup. Boys born on or after January 1, 2000 will be eligible for the Championship.
  • An U-15 league which involves teams from clubs, AIFF regional academies and others was also proposed!
  • 3 crore budget allotted for the preparations for U-23 team for Incheon Asian Games.
  • Unlike earlier speculation in the media, Federation Cup to be hosted in Jammu and Kashmir in May 2015.
  • Appointed an integrity officer to deal with corruption and match-fixing by June 2104 as stipulated by AFC and FIFA.
  • Centralized registration of players to kick-in by July 31, 2014. Further to this, all inter-State transfers to take place through this online system.

On I-league :Airtel I-league, TenAction

  • I-league to kick off in the first week of December.
  • Coaches / Technical Director of I-league teams should be an AFC A-License holder. Even entry to the dressing rooms of a team is barred if you don’t hold AFC A-License!
  • All clubs to sign a marquee player among their foreign recruits. If failed to do so, the entire foreign contingent of players will not be allowed to play.  AIFF’s definition of marquee player to be intimated to the clubs very soon.
  • The I-league licensing committee to meet on May 21 and decide on the future of clubs on the licensing criteria front.

INDIA – Are You Really Interested In Qualifying For a Senior World Cup? Just Look At The Results and You Will Understand Where to Focus!

Guest column by by Yogesh Maurya (Football coach).  

Thanks firstly to my good friend Tom Byer for pointing me in the direction of this whole new way of thinking a few years ago, some of which I am going to present now.

2017, FIFA, U-17, World Cup, India, Football, SoccerIndia is hosting the U17 World Cup in 2017.  And as the host nation, they qualify automatically.  I love the U17 tournament because it is often a big coming out party for future professionals who have not yet signed pro contracts or made their debuts. Countless top players have played in it.  But it is my contention that until India qualifies for U17 World Cup through the AFC U16 competition, we will keep wasting our breath about the senior tournament.

Look, for all those people who think the elite player pool solution is going to bring consistent results that match what we now see Japan delivering, South Korea and even North Korea…the results tell a very different story.  What do I mean?  I did a little research on World Cup qualification.  Simple research.  No algorithms.  No big data mining.  It worked on my envelope and my cocktail napkin, and I deduced a conclusion that is terribly obvious yet I am unsure whether a lot of people get it yet.  My eyes might have missed a few things here and there, but the results are so clearly in one direction, they can only be rounding errors!

So this is what I did:

I looked at all the countries that have qualified for the Senior Men’s FIFA World Cup since 2002 (4 World Cups) and then looked to see if those countries had ever qualified for the FIFA U17 World Cup (excluding qualifying for hosting).  Please note that the U17 WC was 16 teams until 2007, when it was increased to 24 teams.  For the U17 WC, which is held every 2 years I went all the way back to the 2001 tournament.

Amongst the Brazil 2014 countries that have qualified, only five, Bosnia & Herzegovina, Chile, Croatia, Russia, and Greece had not qualified for U17…that is 5 out of 32!  Well, all these countries are also from the two most competitive footballing continents on the planet so really not a big deal.  Every country from the AFC had qualified for U17! But when I saw these countries that had not qualified for U17, I thought, let us look at the U20 World Cup as well.  In the U20 World Cup, many players have already made their professional debut.  All of a sudden the list got even smaller.  Only Bosnia & Herzegovina left.  And we know how competitive football is in that region.  So 1 country out of 32!

Next I looked at Germany 2010:  Only Serbia and Slovenia had not qualified for an U17 or U20.

South Africa 2006:  Only the former Serbia & Montenegro had not qualified for a U17 or U20.

Japan and South Korea 2002:  Only Slovenia and Senegal.  Again, very competitive continents in Europe and Africa in terms of producing top world talent.

We are talking about 4 countries over 4 World Cups spanning the last 12 years!  Note that no AFC country is in the list, and I excluded qualification for hosting!  Many of the countries have qualified for the U17 and U20 consistently as well.  And for those of you who think Burkina Faso’s runner-up finish in the African Cup of Nations and their playoff run in the World Cup qualifiers is surprising, just see their U17 and U20 qualification record.

So what does it mean?  India is highly unlikely to qualify for the World Cup without first qualifying for the U17 or U20, even if they expand the field.  So India should focus on qualifying (not by hosting it) for the U17 by advancing through the AFC U16 Championship.   And by the way, none of the top Asian countries are just resting on their laurels.  They keep pushing the boundary so there is work to do.

Where?  At the youngest ages.  But how?  It is not about starting an academy or putting some investment into grassroots.  Barcelona spends something near 10 million euros a year on La Masia, depending on whose figures are to be used.  They are the example everyone looks at.  They still saw fit to buy Neymar for 100 million.

Are we paying attention to the African nations that are producing players competing in The Champion’s League?  Many of them do not have the wealth and resources India does.  Therefore it is not about infrastructure either.  I digress slightly here.  The greatest American baseball relief pitcher of all-time, Mariano Rivera used old milk cartons for a glove, and fishing nets and worn out baseballs for a ball.  He mastered one pitch and rode that to being the best ever.  And I am not suggesting this is socioeconomic either.  It is not about the socioeconomic background of the player.

There is a whole different paradigm going on here.  Do you understand it?  Do you even see it?

PS/ and a hint though really I have explained it many times:  The Japanese women’s team has already won the World Cup.  The U17 Women’s team just won the U17 title, waxing everyone if I might say…21 goals for, 1 goal against. Beat Spain twice.  If you cannot see it in my posts, you might see it through watching them.

Yogesh Maurya :

Football Yogi- Article 1-edited (1)

Yogesh Maurya played Collegiate soccer for Columbia University in New York and was a United States High School All American, representing New Jersey in the US Olympic development program. In the last 4 years alone, he has spent over 3000 hours on and off the pitch coaching and studying tactics and youth player development.

 

India Submits Bid for hosting 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup

AIFF, India, FIFA, U-17 World Cup, 2017India has officially submitted the bid for hosting the U-17 World Cup in 2017. Read on the note that was published on the ALL India Football Federation’s website.

The All India Football Federation (AIFF) can confirm that India has submitted its bid to host the prestigious 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup 2017.

“We are happy that we could submit all the necessary bid documents before the deadline,” AIFF General Secretary Mr. Kushal Das told www.the-aiff.com.

“I am grateful to our President Mr. (Praful) Patel for the initiative taken in following up with the Government in terms of the guarantees required, and ensuring the all the guarantees were ready and could be submitted in time,” added Mr. Das.

Airtel I-League CEO Mr.Sunando Dhar submitted the bid documents to FIFA’s Director of Competitions Division Mr. Mustapha Fahmy at the FIFA Headquarters in Zurich on Tuesday (November 12, 2013).

“I was at Zurich to submit our bid documents for hosting the FIFA U-17 World Cup in 2017. The bid will be taken up in the FIFA Executive Committee meeting on December 3,” Mr. Dhar confirmed.

“FIFA was very happy to receive the guarantees from the Government and the official bid from AIFF. We are eagerly waiting for the final verdict now,” he added.

Other nations competing for the bid include Uzbekistan, Ireland and the 2010 World Cup host South Africa.

Source : http://www.the-aiff.com/

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