India still far behind: Sunil Chhetri
Still going strong at 34, Chhetri said he would like to be remembered as a footballer who gave his best for the country.
New Delhi: Indian football superstar Sunil Chhetri feels the country has made progress in the past 10 years but still remains far behind other Asian powers in fields such as grassrootS development and talent scouting.
Chhetri said the country still needs to do a lot of work to narrow the gap with the Asian powers and reach the top 10 in the continent.
“Not only the grassroot but also the overall development of Indian football has been good. The hard part is reaching the top 10 in Asia is still far. No matter how fast we improve, the improvement seems small as compared to other Asian powers. Where we want to reach is still far but we are heading in the right direction,” the Indian football team captain said.
“We are not good enough in identifying talent, infrastructure, making sure that young players get nourished food etc. We are not there yet. We are far better than we were in the last 10 years but the road is still very far. It is not the time for congratulating ourselves and being satisfied. We have to keep working hard,” he added.
Asked about talent, he said, “It is better now but it is not great. Identification of talent is the first criteria of scouting and you have to identify talent at the right time.
“When a kid is 11 and when he is 14, there is a hell lot of a difference. Catching him when he is at 11 and putting him in a programme is going to be different from when he is 14. That is where we lacked. We have 1.3 billion people and it is impossible we don't have talent. We have to improve as a country (in this aspect),” he added.
Youth development is headed in the right direction, he said, and to support his point, Chhetri gave the example of youngsters like Indian U-17 World Cup team captain Amarjit Singh and Narinder Gahlot breaking into the senior national team.
“Young players like Amarjit Singh and Narendra Gahlot coming in the senior team, this gives us hope. It is not everyday that two young kids from U-17 break into the senior team. It is a promising thing and I just think things like these should happen for Indian football to progress further,” said Chhetri who recently visited the Hindustan Zinc-run Zinc Football Academy in Udaipur.
Still going strong at 34, Chhetri said he would like to be remembered as a footballer who gave his best for the country.
“(Would want to be remembered as) Somebody who tried his best. I have a life which is so blessed and I have achieved much more than what I have dreamt of. When I have achieved this much, my moral responsibility is to do my best,” said Chhetri who has played 111 matches for India and scored 71 goals.
“When I go to the pitch, eat, sleep and think, I stay positive to give my best. That is the least I can do. I have to honest to my sport and give my best. So, whenever I am done, in 6 years, eight years or 10 years down the line whenever, I hope I am remembered by people as somebody who gave his best,” Chhetri added.