Not very expensive to run a women’s team, says former international Bentla

Football
Published 06.06.2023
Not very expensive to run a women’s team, says former international Bentla
Former international Bentla D’Coth

Former worldwide Bentla D’Coth
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

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Former worldwide Bentla D’Coth
| Photo Credit: SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

It is without doubt one of the nation’s hottest soccer golf equipment with an enormous fanbase. Kerala Blasters’ transfer to quickly cease its ladies’s crew’s actions has come as a shock to many.

Why ought to the ladies undergo for the issues created by the boys’s crew (the nationwide physique AIFF fined the Blasters Rs 4 crore for his or her ISL walkout in March), is the large query doing the rounds.

But former worldwide Bentla D’coth was shocked.

“It is their decision, but it is not very expensive to run a women’s team,” stated Bentla, who was an enormous star when Kerala was among the many sturdy sides in ladies’s soccer a few years in the past, who later grew to become a referees teacher and is now a coach too.

“It could come to about Rs 50 lakh to run one season. And for a club like Don Bosco (a Kochi-based club which played the Kerala Women’s League), the players’ salary is about Rs 10 lakh for the entire team of about 25 players. Add to that accommodation and other expenses and it could come to Rs 25 lakh.”

Amrutha Aravind, who led Chennai’s Sethu FC to the Indian Women’s League title a number of years in the past and who coached Bengaluru’s Kickstart FC to the runner-up spot within the final IWL, feels that lots of the golf equipment have only a short-term outlook relating to ladies’s soccer in Kerala.

Amrutha Aravind, who led Chennai’s Sethu FC to the Indian Women’s League title a few years ago feels that many of the clubs have just a short-term outlook when it comes to women’s football in Kerala.

Amrutha Aravind, who led Chennai’s Sethu FC to the Indian Women’s League title a number of years in the past feels that lots of the golf equipment have only a short-term outlook relating to ladies’s soccer in Kerala.
| Photo Credit:
SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT

“Most of the clubs are just result-oriented, not development-oriented. They have just short-term goals. They just want to run the women’s team for the club’s prestige and have some activity in the few months before tournaments,” she stated.

“Except Gokulam Kerala FC (the current IWL champion), no other club thinks seriously about women’s football.”

P. Anilkumar, the final secretary of the Kerala Football Association, had an analogous view.

“If a club has a long-term plan and a proper club structure, the officials will build their own office, their own practice facilities and that property itself will be a big asset for them,” stated Anilkumar, in a chat with  Sportstar, on Tuesday.

“Even if they don’t want to continue the club later, they can sell off the property. Here, every year they are running behind someone to get the ground, fighting with somebody for training grounds or to get into the stadium and then access is denied by someone. In this situation, how can we say that they have long-term plans?”

But Malavika, one of many huge names within the Kerala Blasters ladies’s crew and its main goal-getter, selected to stay quiet when requested about her response.

Probably, her silence spoke out loud and clear about her agony.