Skip to main content

Can faded stars stimulate Indian football?

By Harmeet Shah Singh and Chris Murphy, CNN
January 30, 2012 -- Updated 1812 GMT (0212 HKT)
Robert Pires had a distinguished 18-year career but is best remembered at club level for his six-year stint with English Premier League club Arsenal. He was part of the France squad that won the 1998 World Cup and 2000 European Championships. Pires has described the Indian Premier League Soccer proposal as a "new adventure."
Robert Pires had a distinguished 18-year career but is best remembered at club level for his six-year stint with English Premier League club Arsenal. He was part of the France squad that won the 1998 World Cup and 2000 European Championships. Pires has described the Indian Premier League Soccer proposal as a "new adventure."
HIDE CAPTION
Robert Pires
Fabio Cannavaro
Jay-Jay Okocha
Fernando Morientes
Robbie Fowler
Hernan Crespo
<<
<
1
2
3
4
5
6
>
>>
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Indian Premier League Soccer announces it will launch in late February
  • The tournament has echoes of India's successful IPL cricket competition
  • Former stars such as Robert Pires, Fabio Cannavaro and Jay-Jay Okocha involved
  • Six franchises will play each other in a bid to boost soccer in India

(CNN) -- It has long come as a mystery to soccer fans: how can India, with a population of 1.2 billion and a burgeoning passion for football, be languishing at 162nd in the world rankings below Madagascar and Nepal?

It is an anomaly that organizers of the country's new Premier League Soccer franchise hope to tackle, with their model that intends to echo the success of cricket's money-spinning IPL tournament -- a shortened format of the sport featuring some of its biggest entertainers.

Six former legends of the game, including ex-Arsenal and France midfielder Robert Pires and Italy's 2006 World Cup-winning captain Fabio Cannavaro, have signed up for the inaugural tournament due to start in February.

The Celebrity Management Group has signed a 30-year deal with the Indian Football Association and hopes to create a new surge of popularity for soccer in one of the most densely populated countries on earth.

High hopes for Indian football

Six teams will participate in Monday's auction in Kolkata to acquire stars of football's past. The list also includes former Spain forward Fernando Morientes, who won three European Champions League titles with Real Madrid, ex-Argentina striker Hernan Crespo, Liverpool legend Robbie Fowler and Nigeria's former World Cup star Jay-Jay Okocha.

Each club will have a maximum of $2.5 million to spend in the first year, with no team allowed more than four foreign players. Each squad must also contain six under-21 Indian players.

It is a concept that Bhaswar Goswami, executive director of CMG, hopes will transform the fortunes of the nation's soccer team.

The PLS will actually complement football in India. It will create a new market, a new audience
CMG director Bhaswar Goswami

"The PLS has already created a huge interest among fans, players and sponsors. It's a great chance to be associated with global brands," he told CNN.

According to Goswami, around 155 million Indians watched football on television in 2010, and a study in 2009 by the World Bank found that 47% of the population would describe themselves as soccer fans.

But there is no question that India is cricket crazy, with revered batsman Sachin Tendulkar, known as the "Little Master," sure to trump former England and Manchester United footballer David Beckham as an icon on the sub-continent.

Though Goswami denies the PLS will be similar to the IPL, there are many similarities -- not least the hope that big names will add a large helping of glitz and glamor to proceedings.

The annual 20-over cricket competition has proved a huge success since it launched in 2008, with the world's best players auctioned off to the nine teams, set against a backdrop of Bollywood bling.

There are foreign players, foreign coaches and, if it is conducted like the IPL with proper planning, the PLS too can be superb
Sports analyst Harpal Singh Bedi

However, Goswami prefers to look elsewhere for a comparison -- English football's Premier League.

"If I have to benchmark myself, I will benchmark with the EPL, which is the most successful league across the world," he said.

"Moreover, the PLS will actually complement football in India. It will create a new market, a new audience and will produce more homegrown talent," he said.

Sports analyst Harpal Singh Bedi told CNN that football was now the second most-watched sport in India behind cricket, and that the PLS could prove a game-changer.

"This is a very good attempt," he said. "There are foreign players, foreign coaches and, if it is conducted like the IPL with proper planning, the PLS too can be superb."

ADVERTISEMENT
Part of complete coverage on
February 22, 2012 -- Updated 1728 GMT (0128 HKT)
CNN investigates the problem of racism in football in "World Sport Presents: It's Not Black & White."
February 22, 2012 -- Updated 1738 GMT (0138 HKT)
From CNN's "It's Not Black or White," Clyde Best on what it was like as one of England's first black footballers.
Carlos Tevez
Carlos Tevez has finally said sorry after going AWOL, but CNN's Gary Morley wonders whether Manchester City should welcome him back?
February 16, 2012 -- Updated 0041 GMT (0841 HKT)
Brazil's best footballers often seek riches in leagues abroad, but the country's booming economy is changing that.
Liverpool's U.S. owners finally take a stance on the club's reaction to the Luis Suarez race row, but CNN's Pedro Pinto asks if it is too late?
February 15, 2012 -- Updated 1226 GMT (2026 HKT)
Apologies from Luis Suarez and manager Kenny Dalglish are a sign that Liverpool's American owners are finally stepping in, says U.S. journalist Grant Wahl.
February 14, 2012 -- Updated 1442 GMT (2242 HKT)
Former Zambia star Kalusha Bwalya tells CNN's Alex Thomas about the 1993 plane crash that killed his teammates.
February 14, 2012 -- Updated 0953 GMT (1753 HKT)
Coach Herve Renard dedicates Zambia's first Africa Cup of Nations title to former player Kalusha Bwalya, who escaped the deadly 1993 plane crash.
February 13, 2012 -- Updated 1802 GMT (0202 HKT)
Zambia triumph in the Africa Cup of Nations Sunday after beating the Ivory Coast 8-7 in a dramatic penalty shoot out in the final in Libreville.
February 13, 2012 -- Updated 1446 GMT (2246 HKT)
Zambians celebrate the Copper Bullets' Africa Cup of Nations success, while the beaten Ivory Coast suffer another final defeat.
CNN Sport's Pedro Pinto is not surprised there is more controversy surrounding the England national team ahead of Euro 2012.
February 9, 2012 -- Updated 1235 GMT (2035 HKT)
Football fans could find themselves sitting in seats made from sugar when Brazil hosts the FIFA World Cup for the first time in 64 years.
Dickson Etuhu
Leaving Nigeria at an early age, Dickson Etuhu has climbed from a crime-riddled London district to grace the stage of England's Premier League.
January 31, 2012 -- Updated 1558 GMT (2358 HKT)
It happens at the end of January every year -- an apparently mad and desperate dash to sign players before the deadline.
January 25, 2012 -- Updated 1136 GMT (1936 HKT)
Can doping of athletes affect their children? Some former Algerian footballers want answers as to why their kids have mental health problems.
January 20, 2012 -- Updated 1816 GMT (0216 HKT)
Ghana fans
The kick-off of the 28th Africa Cup of Nations launches a three-week explosion of color and noise in the soccer-crazy continent.
December 22, 2011 -- Updated 1931 GMT (0331 HKT)
Modern football is a melting pot of cultures, as players from a variety of ethnic backgrounds share top billing as superstars. That wasn't always the case.
ADVERTISEMENT