Post by QPR Report on Apr 4, 2010 6:48:01 GMT
Observer
India needs new heroes to open new frontiersThere is more to sport than cricket in the world's second most populous country but also a lack of big names to rival the likes of Sachin Tendulkar
Dileep Premachandran The Observer, Sunday 4 April 2010
It takes a lot to knock the Indian Premier League off the front pages of India's newspapers in April. It's a prime-time obsession that dwarfs even Bollywood, but in the past few days cricket has been pushed temporarily to the fringes, with Sania Mirza, India's brightest tennis hope-turned-wannabe-celebrity, announcing her intention to marry Shoaib Malik, the former Pakistan cricket captain. This is just the latest indicator that there is now more to Indian sport than cricket and Sachin Tendulkar.
The footballers have qualified for their first Asian Cup in a generation, prompting serious talk of a new league to be run along IPL-franchise lines, while the boxers won six golds at the recent Commonwealth Championships. The shooting contingent, led by Beijing gold medallist Abhinav Bindra, are serious threats at every competition, and there are great hopes too of Saina Nehwal, the badminton star.
With Jacques Rogge talking of how the IOC might support an Indian Olympic bid and Bob Houghton, the national football team manager, musing on the possibility of a World Cup football bid – fanciful given that India have not qualified for the premier event since 1950, when a paucity of funds and the need to wear boots resulted in the barefoot team staying home – it's imperative that the Commonwealth Games that New Delhi hosts in October pass off without a hitch.
The facilities should be up to scratch, despite delays and bureaucratic red tape, and if the numbers at the recent hockey World Cup were any guide, the crowds should flock to every venue.
Sportzpower.com reported that the Indian sporting industry could end up being worth as much as one trillion rupees (£1 is approximately 70 rupees). But for that kind of growth to happen, the country needs more icons to rival Tendulkar and MS Dhoni. Boxing has the handsome Vijender Singh, while golf has Jyoti Randhawa and Jeev Milkha Singh, son of India's first athletic hero, Milkha Singh.
With the exception of those exposed to Lionel Messi and others on satellite TV, the fans starved of top-level sport are waiting for heroes. Almost 120,000 turned up to watch Zico and his Japanese team in Kolkata a few years ago, and even I-League football games without recognisable stars attract thousands, with tickets costing as little as 50 rupees. Once the touchpaper is lit, there could well be a gold rush.
www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2010/apr/04/ipl-football-india
India needs new heroes to open new frontiersThere is more to sport than cricket in the world's second most populous country but also a lack of big names to rival the likes of Sachin Tendulkar
Dileep Premachandran The Observer, Sunday 4 April 2010
It takes a lot to knock the Indian Premier League off the front pages of India's newspapers in April. It's a prime-time obsession that dwarfs even Bollywood, but in the past few days cricket has been pushed temporarily to the fringes, with Sania Mirza, India's brightest tennis hope-turned-wannabe-celebrity, announcing her intention to marry Shoaib Malik, the former Pakistan cricket captain. This is just the latest indicator that there is now more to Indian sport than cricket and Sachin Tendulkar.
The footballers have qualified for their first Asian Cup in a generation, prompting serious talk of a new league to be run along IPL-franchise lines, while the boxers won six golds at the recent Commonwealth Championships. The shooting contingent, led by Beijing gold medallist Abhinav Bindra, are serious threats at every competition, and there are great hopes too of Saina Nehwal, the badminton star.
With Jacques Rogge talking of how the IOC might support an Indian Olympic bid and Bob Houghton, the national football team manager, musing on the possibility of a World Cup football bid – fanciful given that India have not qualified for the premier event since 1950, when a paucity of funds and the need to wear boots resulted in the barefoot team staying home – it's imperative that the Commonwealth Games that New Delhi hosts in October pass off without a hitch.
The facilities should be up to scratch, despite delays and bureaucratic red tape, and if the numbers at the recent hockey World Cup were any guide, the crowds should flock to every venue.
Sportzpower.com reported that the Indian sporting industry could end up being worth as much as one trillion rupees (£1 is approximately 70 rupees). But for that kind of growth to happen, the country needs more icons to rival Tendulkar and MS Dhoni. Boxing has the handsome Vijender Singh, while golf has Jyoti Randhawa and Jeev Milkha Singh, son of India's first athletic hero, Milkha Singh.
With the exception of those exposed to Lionel Messi and others on satellite TV, the fans starved of top-level sport are waiting for heroes. Almost 120,000 turned up to watch Zico and his Japanese team in Kolkata a few years ago, and even I-League football games without recognisable stars attract thousands, with tickets costing as little as 50 rupees. Once the touchpaper is lit, there could well be a gold rush.
www.guardian.co.uk/sport/2010/apr/04/ipl-football-india