Amal Dutta to Have Roads, Stadiums Named After Him: Mamata Banerjee
Amal Dutta was the country's first professional coach, and is credited as brain behind Mohun Bagan's Diamond system -- a 4-1-2-1-2 formation -- in the late 1990s, that had taken the club to a different level
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: July 11, 2016 08:30 pm IST
Highlights
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Roads and stadiums in Kolkata will be named after Amal Dutta
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Dutta passed away after being bedridden for months due to Alzheimer's
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Dutta was a former footballer and India's first full-time coach
Roads and stadiums in the city will be named after former football greats like Amal Datta, West Bengal Chief Minister Mamata Banerjee said as the 'diamond coach' was given a state funeral on Monday.
"He was our pride. The loss is irreparable. We will name streets and the upcoming stadiums after greats like Datta and Sailen Manna," Mamata announced while paying her last homage to Dutta at the Rabindra Sadan.
Datta's body was kept at Rabindra Sadan before being taken to his former clubs East Bengal and Mohun Bagan in his last journey as hundreds of football fans gathered to pay their last tributes.
Suffering from Alzheimer's disease and age-related illness, Datta, who was the country's first professional coach, was bedridden for several months and passed away near Baguiati Sunday evening.
Paying rich tributes to Datta, Indian football icon Bhaichung Bhutia said, "I was fortunate enough to meet him quite a number of times and was amazed to see how he kept talking about strategies."
Among his many tactical innovations was the famous diamond formation in 1997 when a marauding Mohun Bagan routed Churchill Brothers 6-0 before taking on PK Banerjee coached East Bengal on July 13, 1997 in the Federation Cup semifinal.
Amid the hype over diamond formation, there was the verbal duel between the two coaches -- and former teammates -- that saw a record turnout of more than 1.20 lakh.
As fate would have it, Bhutia struck a hat-trick in that match to lead East Bengal to a famous 4-1 win that led to Datta's ouster.
"What he introduced those years were seen among many European teams these days. He had some futuristic ideas. He was outspoken but equally loved by everyone," Bhutia added.