Stephen Constantine Lambasts SAFF Cup Organisers For Mismanagement
India coach Stephen Constantine said the SAFF Cup organisers failed to provide the teams with good practice pitches, travel facilities while the hotel rooms were also insufficient. The British-Cypriot coach termed the organisation of the tournament as 'joke'. India won the tournament by defeating Afghanistan in the final
- Written by Press Trust of India
- Updated: January 14, 2016 12:18 am IST
Indian football team head coach Stephen Constantine has slammed the SAFF Cup organisers for the logistical chaos during the event and said that the tournament was a 'joke' in terms of organisation. (India vs Afghanistan, SAFF Cup Final: Sunil Chhetri's Goal Takes Hosts to Seventh Title)
India won the tournament for the seventh time, earlier this month, in Thiruvananthapuram after defeating defending champions Afghanistan 2-1 in the summit clash. (India Not in a Hurry to Sack Football Coach Stephen Constantine)
For Constantine, the title triumph was a much needed respite after India lost five successive matches before winning one in the 2018 World Cup qualifiers under him after taking charge early last year.
"I don't think going into the competition anyone thought we would get out of the group stage let alone win it! On top of the playing issues, we also had all sorts of problems from the organisational side of things," Constantine wrote in his personal blog.
"The hotels did not have enough rooms, the team buses were often late, no training pitches available and well you get the picture. All I will say is, it was a joke and SAFF really need to sort this out once and for all."
The 53-year-old Constantine also expressed a similar view before the start of the tournament as he was left to wait for a few hours to get to his hotel room.
'State Association Not Responsible'
Kerala Football Association (KFA) secretary Anil Kumar washed his hands off on the alleged organisational chaos. He said the KFA was responsible only for the main stadium and all the matters, including that of hospitality and training grounds, was at the hands of SAFF and All India Football Federation.
"I agree that there were some issues regarding training pitches but I don't agree that there were issues concerning transport of the players and officials. We were responsible for the main stadium only and all the matters, including hospitality and training pitches, were at the hands of SAFF and AIFF," Kumar said.
"After the SAFF awarded the tournament to India and the AIFF told up to host it, we told them that more funds will have to be put in for the improvement of the facilities to international standard but nothing happened.
"Of course, the coach has a freedom to speak on the issue and he must have been doing that from the standpoint of what are available in top footballing nations like in Europe. Facilities are lacking in India," he added.
Constantine was happy to have started the year with a title triumph. "A great win to start off the year winning the SAFF Championship. I am really delighted for the players, staff and fans who were amazing. I am the only foreign coach to win the SAFF with India, we won all four of our games in the SAFF, the average age of the team was 23, and we won it without several key players," said the Anglo-Cyprot coach.