The sizeable chunk of the Malayali diaspora in Saudi Arabia didn’t flip up in massive numbers on the stadium as a result of absence of Kerala from the Santosh Trophy knock-out, feels AIFF president Kalyan Chaubey.
Taken to international shores for the primary time in its eight-decade-long historical past, the National Football Championship is being performed on the King Fahad International Stadium the place famous person footballers Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo have been in motion in an exhibition match in January.
However, the semifinal between Nagaland and Punjab hardly attracted any crowd on the 60,000-seater stadium.
“I was hoping Kerala or Bengal qualify for the semifinals. If they had qualified, maybe a lot of people from Kerala would have come to watch the matches. If these football fans who lived in Saudi Arabia turned up, it would have helped in generating revenue. It would be good both for the Saudi federation and for India also,” Chaubey mentioned.
“That is the reason the stadium (King Fahd International Stadium with above 60,000 capacity) was allocated. But it did not happen in the way we wanted it to, because Kerala has not qualified.” Kerala, the final version’s champions, had completed third in Group A within the second spherical of the event held in Bhubaneswar, thereby lacking out on the semifinals.
Chaubey mentioned that the matches will even characteristic Video Assistant Referee (VAR), which might make Santosh Trophy the primary ‘domestic’ occasion to make use of the know-how first launched globally in 2018.
But the know-how was not used throughout the semifinals on Wednesday.
In the primary semi-finals, Meghalaya surprised former champions Punjab 2-1 to qualify for his or her maiden closing. Services play in opposition to Karnataka within the second semifinals.
Talking concerning the rationale for bringing the Santosh Trophy to Saudi Arabia, he mentioned, “25 lakh Indians reside in Saudi Arabia and there are another 12 lakh Indians in nearby Bahrain and Qatar.
“During the 2022 World Cup in Doha also, Indians formed the second largest among spectators. This is the strength that we can capitalise on,” mentioned Chaubey, narrating a narrative of how some Indians residing in Doha got here to fulfill him at his lodge when he visited the Qatari capital after taking cost as AIFF chief final 12 months.
“This is part of the development of Indian football. This is giving players more exposure, a better environment, better facilities, playing ground. Only the opponents are not new, all others are new,” he mentioned.
Asked if it’s going to proceed in future additionally, Chaubey mentioned, “We would like to continue this, maybe in this country if all goes well. But it comes with budgetary provisions.
“Until this tournament is over, I am not in a position to say much. But as of today, I want to have this (part of Santosh Trophy playing on foreign shores) to be an annual affair.”
Source: sportstar.thehindu.com