Ancestry24 Answerit Careers24 Entertainment Fin24 Food24 GoTravel24 Health24 Kalahari.net Mobile News24 Play Property24 Sport24 Weather24 Wheels24 Women24

Clutter clearing

Get rid of negative energy around your house, by cleaning out the clutter...

Footloose

If you ever needed an excuse to kick off those stilettos, this is it...
Ask an expert...

Football fever for India's female coach


 
Not only can Anita Sarkar bend it like David Beckham, she's coaching an all-male football team in India's eastern town of Kolkata to do the same.

 
Sarkar, who is in her 40s, is the only woman coach registered with the Indian Football Association. She started playing football in clubs in 1975, representing the state of West Bengal in various tournaments, before turning coach in 1996.

"My aim is to produce excellent players for the country," said Sarkar who lives and breathes football and who was trained in coaching at England's renowned Football Association.

In addition to coaching the Mirzapur Union Club, Sarkar recently set up a football camp in Kolkata to train up to 50 boys to play the beautiful game.

Many Indians have compared Sarkar's story to hit Bollywood movie Chak De India, which features superstar Shahrukh Khan as the coach of a women's hockey team.

When asked what it's like for a woman to train men in a sport long considered a male bastion, Sarkar resignedly rolls her eyes before answering one of the questions she dislikes the most.

"My motive is to cultivate the best playing skills in these boys. I make sure my boys know all the techniques so that they become successful players," she told Reuters Television.

For Sarkar's trainees, the fact that she's a woman pales before her ball skills and practical approach.

"She knows all the technicalities of the game. There's nothing that she is unaware of. It's better than training at any big club. She tells us our mistakes. Even if we ask her 10 times, she answers," says Tanveer Hassan Khan, a football trainee.

Women in urban India largely enjoy equal opportunities although their counterparts in the countryside are known to face traditional gender discrimination and harassment in what has been a patriarchal society for centuries.

Indian women have also done well in sports such as field hockey, shooting, athletics, tennis, badminton, weightlifting and boxing although few have gained the same kind of global recognition as some of their Western counterparts.


 
Article Search
Have something to say?
Your name
*email
Subject
Comment

 
Article: from Reuters
Image: AFP
Quick Quiz

Struggling to lose weight? Struggling to lose weight?
Do this quiz to find out if you've got what it takes to achieve permanent weight loss.

GO GREEN!

Want to do something about your carbon foot-
print? Let us point you in the right direction...

Declare body peace!

Sign the Body Peace Treaty
Seventeen recently launched its Body Peace awareness campaign to highlight teen girls? self-conscious issues with their bodies.

The wellness centre

Tips for a safe & healthy detox

The cheats guide to losing weight

A healthy detox plan

Facts about cravings

Fill up wisely

Crash and burn

Mouse-over a tool to view a brief description.

Your breast health tool

Don't confuse ovarian failure for menopause

What tea can do for you

Mind power

Sleepless nights?

Coffee may lower ovarian cancer risk

Mouse-over a tool to view a brief description.

Yoga styles

Walk it out

Loving boot camp

Exercise for you

Exercise groove

Keep moving

Mouse-over a tool to view a brief description.
Your voice, every day
Vent or Spew?
Solataire thinks there's a lot of ugliness going around in blogland...