Goa is known the world over as the
land of Sun and Sea. Goa is also famous
for its fish curry rice, Caju feni (Goan liquor of cashew juice), music and
football. Goa has produced musicians and footballers of great repute. Chris
Perry, Remo Fernandes(musicians) and Fortunato Franco, Brahmanand Shankwalkar,
Bruno Coutinho(footballers) are some of the big names in their respective
fields. Goa being very small in territory, the influx of migrants into Goa has become
a threat and could end up changing the very face of Goan culture. If necessary
steps are not taken in time, very soon Goans may find themselves in a minority
in their own land. To make things worse, many Goans have preferred to migrate abroad
for better prospects.
In the game of football, Goans
consider themselves second to none in India. This is because three football
clubs viz Dempo SC, Salgacar FC and Churchill Bros had kept the prestigious
football I League title among themselves for six consecutive years from 2007 to
2013. This year Bengaluru FC ended the
reign of Goan supremacy and with that it’s time for Goa to introspect about its
claim of ‘numero uno’ in Indian
football. It may not be Goa or Bengal anymore as the performance of new clubs
like Bengaluru FC, Shlliong Lajong and Rangdajeed FC, Pune FC in the I League have thrown the competition
wide open. Nagaland winning the Santosh Trophy recently makes one wonder
whether North-East is going to be the new hub of Indian football.
In Goa, the Dempos, Salgacars, Sesa
Goa and individuals like Churchill Alemao and Sporting Clube de Goa’s Peter Vaz
have contributed immensely to the game of football, till now. All of them have
contributed their might to the game just for the love of it. But the moot
question to be asked now is this: for
how long? Except Sesa Goa, none of the four I league clubs have their own
residential academies. Goa Football Association and Goa Football Development
Council have introduced several centres for grassroots development which is
good but not enough. All the players coming out of the regional centres must
find themselves in residential academies preferably owned by the I league
professional clubs. This will give the hopefuls some sense of security and a
dream to be a professional footballer. Those
aspiring to be engineers will enroll themselves in Engineering Colleges. So
also those eying to be professional footballers must join ‘Residential Football
Academies’.
It is important that Goans
footballers form the core of a club, if they expect the crowds to support them.
Unfortunately the presence of the Pereiras,D’Souzas,Fernandes,Naiks,Lotlikars
etc have diminished year by year in the Goan I League Clubs. Except in Sporting
Clube de Goa, Goans were a minority in all the other three Goan Clubs in the I League.
Sporting Clube de Goa had the best figures of 66% Goans(20/30 players),
followed by Dempo SC: . 41%(17/41 players),Churchill Bros: 37%(13/35
players)and Salgaocar FC: 36%(16/44 players). In order to change this equation,
it’s important that the clubs undertake community service by way of training at
the grassroots and open up residential football academies to give opportunities
for the locals. The Goa(India) team that played in the Lusofonia Games 2013 in
Goa with a squad of all Goan players, is a fine indication as to what draws the
crowds to the stadiums. The stadiums were jam packed for all the football
matches played in ‘Lusofonia Games’.
Clubs could be economically more
viable when they produce more players locally and recruit less number of
players from outside. At all levels, rules must be framed to compensate clubs whenever a player is
transferred from one club to the other. This could be food for thought not only
for Goan clubs but for all football clubs in India.
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