All Sports aficionados in India know about the Olympic Games, World Cup (events) and the Commonwealth Games. But how many in India have heard about the Lusofonia Games? Very few indeed!
The Lusofonia Games, like the commonwealth games, are meant
for community of Portuguese Language Countries and
also others where there are significant Portuguese communities or that have a
common past with Portugal. On account of this, Goa(India) being
a former Portuguese colony got affiliation to ACOLOP(Association of
the Portuguese Speaking Olympic Committees) as an associate member and had the honour of hosting the 3rd
edition of the Lusofonia Games from 18th Jan to 29th Jan
2014. It is for this reason that Goa and not India should have participated in
these games. Imagine what would have happened if China had to send their
national players because Macau is now part of China. Except football, all other
games had players from the rest of the country thus defeating the very purpose
of the games. In all, there are only twelve countries participating in the
Lusofonia Games. Out of the twelve, only two countries ie Portugal and Brazil
are sports powerhouses. The moment these two countries decided not to
participate specially in football, the games lost its lustre. The former sports
minister and now vice president of the BJP Shri Wilfred Mesquita called the
Lusofonia Games a big farce just a day after Goa(India) was celebrating the 3-2
victory over Mozambique in the finals. He
could be right to some extent as there were just three teams in men volleyball competition
and all three were assured medals even before they played. But in football it
was the state defeating a country and it is by far, no mean feat.
The Government of Goa burnt midnight oil to raise the
required infrastructure in a record time of just over a year and purely from this point of view, ‘Lusofonia
Games’ could be termed as a huge success and a boon for Goan sportsmen for
generations to come. The postponement of the games gave breathing space to the
government to complete five world class venues for all games like Table tennis,
Basketball, Volleyball, Football etc. Out of the five, two football stadiums
were refurbished and upgraded to international standard in a record time of
little over a year. Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru stadium Fatorda,Margao, built in
1989 in a record time of six months, is Goa’s pride where both Football and
Cricket International matches were played in the past. The other stadium Tilak
Maidan, Vasco is the oldest football stadium in Goa and has been the home
ground for Goa’s two favourite teams: Salgaocar FC and Vasco SC. Goa now have two
floodlight stadiums. A couple of years back the government was struggling to
install floodlights at the the JPN stadium at Fatorda, Margao due to which
teams like Dempo SC and Churchill Bros had to play the AFC matches outside Goa.
For any game to develop, talent and proper infrastructure are
the basic requirements. In football, we have talent in abundance and now ‘Lusofonia
Games’ have given Goa the much required state of the art infrastructure. Flood
light stadiums would make it possible to organize I League matches late in the
evening thus enabling players to perform at their peak and supporters to come
in bigger numbers. Live telecast of late evening matches enable more people to
view matches. These stadiums will also help
Goa to organize some of the matches of the U 17 FIFA World Cup to be held in
India in 2017. As hosts, India will be competing in the U 17 FIFA world cup and
this could be a dream come true. How else could India qualify for this world
event? Japan and S.Korea regularly qualify for the junior world event as ‘grassroots
football’ has been their focus. The grassroots and the underage FIFA world cups(
U17, U 20) should be targeted by India instead spending crores of rupees on the
senior team and dreaming about qualifying for the FIFA World Cup. U-17 FIFA World
Cup should be our dream and we need to take this dream to the youngsters and
give them belief and hope. For this, we need to start from the grassroots.
Thanks to Chief Minister Shri Manohar Parrikar, Goan football is on the right
track. His brainchild, the Goa ‘Football Development Council’ has opened up
several training centres for the U-12 age group and around two thousand boys
and girls are reported to be training at these centres. It’s good to see
hundreds boys and girls being trained at even remote places like Pernem,Sulcorna
and Collem in Goa.
The formation of ‘Goa Football Development Council’ a
government organization and the state of the art ‘Sports Infrastructure’ now in
place, thanks to the ‘Lusofonia Games,2014’, could be the turning point of Goan
and Indian football and sports in general.
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