Английская Википедия:Indian Arrows

Материал из Онлайн справочника
Перейти к навигацииПерейти к поиску

Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use Indian English Шаблон:Infobox football club

Indian Arrows (formerly known as Pailan Arrows) was an Indian developmental football club that competed in the I-League.[1][2] The club was formed by the All India Football Federation in 2010, with a main goal of nurturing young Indian football talents.[3]

After disbanding in 2013, the project was revived as Indian Arrows in 2017. In September 2022, the technical committee of All India Football Federation decided to discontinue the participation of the Indian Arrows in the I-League because of the difficulty in fulfilling the AFC licensing criteria. Instead, the funding was decided to invest in the youth competitions such as Reliance Foundation Development League.[4]

History

AIFF XI (2010–2011)

2010–11 season

The club was founded as the AIFF XI in 2010 under the recommendation of then India head coach Bob Houghton and All India Football Federation president Praful Patel after Bob noticed that almost all the India U19 and India U23 players were on the bench during the I-League season and were never getting any game time.[5] The club was originally slated to join the I-League 2nd Division but after the disbanding of Mahindra United the AIFF allowed AIFF XI into the I-League automatically.[6] The club participated in their first competition in 2010 which was the Federation Cup and played their first ever professional match on 21 September against JCT FC, in which AIFF XI won 1–0 with Malsawmfela scoring the first goal in the team's history.[7] The team finished third in the group in the end, missing out on going to the next round by four points.[8] The club then participated in their first I-League match on 3 December 2010 against Chirag United in which the club lost 1–2 and with Lalrindika Ralte scoring the first goal for the club in the league.[9] The club then earned their first points on 8 December 2010 against ONGC F.C. after drawing 1–1.[10] On 11 January 2011 it was announced that AIFF XI would change their name to Indian Arrows which would take effect on 1 February 2011.[11] Arrows finished the 2010–11 I-League season in 9th place.

Pailan Arrows (2011–2013)

2011–12 season

The summer of 2011 would be a busy one for the club. The club changed their name to Pailan Arrows[12] on 15 June 2011 after the All India Football Federation reached an agreement with Pailan Group to sponsor the team.[13] With the deal Pailan Arrows was also relocated to Kolkata and the Salt Lake Stadium. Then on 13 August 2012 head coach Desmond Bulpin was sacked by the club due to his "style of football" while former India national football team coach Sukhwinder Singh was signed to take over the club.[14] The club also lost many of the stars of the previous season like Lalrindika Ralte, Jeje Lalpekhlua (top scorer for Pailan and among Indians in 2010–11), Manandeep Singh and Gurpreet Singh Sandhu. The club again participated in the Federation Cup in 2011 where Pailan won two matches but lost one which meant that they would finish 2nd behind Salgaocar and thus meant Pailan were knocked out in the group stage again.[15] Pailan Arrows then began the 2011–12 I-League campaign against Mohun Bagan at the Salt Lake Stadium on 23 October 2012 in which they lost 1–3 after Lalrozama Fanai gave them the early lead.[16] On 7 February 2012 Sukhwinder Singh resigned as coach of Pailan Arrows due to personal reasons, at this point also Pailan had not won a single match in I-League and had only managed eight draws in 17 matches.[17] Assistant coach Sujit Chakravarty took over the reins as head coach for the remainder of the season.[17] Towards the end of the season Pailan managed to win two matches, one against Chirag United Club Kerala and another against HAL to finished the season in 13th place out of 14 teams but since they are a developmental team, Pailan were not relegated.[18][19]

2012–13 season

After the disastrous season Pailan endured, the club and All India Football Federation signed Australian Arthur Papas as the new permanent head coach of the India U23 and Pailan Arrows on 24 May 2012.[20] Papas came to the club after coaching his former club, Oakleigh Cannons FC, to the 2011 Victorian Premier League runners-up title.[20]

Disbanding

On 29 August 2013 it was announced that Pailan Arrows had been disbanded by the All India Football Federation as the club sponsors, Pailan Group, could not financially support the team.[21]

Revival as Indian Arrows (2017–2022)

After successful hosting of 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup, AIFF revived the project as Indian Arrows with the aim of giving regular game time to U–17 world cup players as a team, and fielded the team in 2017–18 I-League.[22] They were immune from relegation. Despite being praised for their competitive showings in 2017–18 I-League season, they finished bottom of the league with 15 points from 18 games.[23] In the 2018–19 I League, with six wins and three drews, the Arrows finished eighth in the table among 11 teams. They qualified for the 2019 Super Cup by defeating Kerala Blasters 2–0.[24] Due to the Coronavirus pandemic, the 2019–20 season was cancelled after 16 matches and the Arrows were placed at the bottom.[25] In the 2021–21 I League season, they were placed tenth in the league.

Disbanding

In September 2022, the AIFF executive committee accepted the recommendation of its new technical committee, to discontinue Indian Arrows because of the difficulty in fulfilling the AFC Licensing criteria.[26][27] They also announced that the finances used for the Indian Arrows will be invested in creating a new Elite Youth League in the country.[28]

Crest and colours

The club's colours were blue and white, just like the India national football team. During the first season Pailan Arrows started with a dark blue kit[29] but eventually during the 2010–11 season the club started using a normal blue kit with black shorts.[30] For the 2011–12 season Pailan used a dark blue jersey[31] and a white kit with black or red socks.[32]

Kit manufacturers and shirt sponsors

Period Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
2010—2011 Nike None
2011—2013 POTO Potato Flakes
2017—2018 None
2018—2022 Six5Six Hero[33]

In october 2018, Government of Odisha signed Rs.50 million sponsorship deal with AIFF for the Arrows. The sponsorship deal will also cover India's under-15 football team. As part of the deal, the state government will host the Arrows and under-15 national team at the Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneswar.[34] The deal also covers the two teams’ stay in Bhubaneswar, providing them with the ground facility as well as boarding/lodging during the I-league and off-season.[35]

Stadium

For the 2010–11 I-League season the club played at the Tau Devi Lal Stadium in Gurgaon, Haryana when they were originally due to play at the Ambedkar Stadium in Delhi but due to the pitch condition the club was moved to Gurgaon.[36] After relocating to Kolkata the club started to play at the Salt Lake Stadium which is also home to East Bengal, Mohun Bagan and Prayag United.[37] In 2017–18, the team played in Goa and Delhi. In 2018–19, they used the Barabati Stadium and Kalinga Stadium. Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneswar, Odisha were the last home base of the Indian Arrows before getting disbanded in September 2022.[34]

Notable former players

For all former or notable Indian Arrows players with a Wikipedia article, see: Indian Arrows players.

Final staff

Position Name
Head coach Шаблон:Flagicon Shanmugam Venkatesh
Team manager Шаблон:Flagicon Shalak Patade
Assistant coach Шаблон:Flagicon Mahesh Gawli
Goalkeeping coach Шаблон:Flagicon Abhijeet Mondal
Team analyst Шаблон:Flagicon Prashanth Murthy
Physiotherapist Шаблон:Flagicon Neeraj Churi

Team records

Overview

Season Division Teams Position Attendance Super Cup Durand Cup IFAShield
Шаблон:Nowrap I-League 14 8 Group stage DNP DNP
2011–12 14 13 Group stage DNP DNP
2012–13 14 12 Group stage Group stage DNP
2017–18 10 10 Qualification round DNP DNP
2018–19 11 8 Round of 16 DNP DNP
2019–20 11 11 DNP DNP DNP
2020–21 11 11 DNP DNP GS
2021–22 13 10 DNP DNP GS

Overall records

Season Division Continental Top scorer
Division Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip Шаблон:Tooltip
Шаблон:Nowrap I-League 26 7 8 11 31 49 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Jeje Lalpekhlua 13
2011–12 26 2 10 14 17 40 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Chinadorai Sabeeth 9
2012–13 26 6 5 15 45 40 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Halicharan Narzary

Шаблон:Flagicon Milan Singh

5
2017–18 18 4 3 11 13 24 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Abhijit Sarkar 4
2018–19 20 6 3 11 19 28 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Rohit Danu 4
2019–20 16 2 3 11 7 20 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Vikram Pratap Singh 4
2020–21 10 1 1 8 6 31 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Harsh Patre 3
2021–22 2 1 1 0 2 1 Not qualified Шаблон:Flagicon Parthib Gogoi 1

Head coaching history

This is a full list of Indian Arrows's coaches and their records, from 2010 until they were disbanded in 2022.

Only competitive matches are counted. Wins, losses and draws are results at the final whistle; the results of penalty shoot-outs are not counted.

Name Nationality From To P W D L GF GA Win%
Des Bulpin Шаблон:SCO August 2010 August 2011

Шаблон:WDL

Sukhwinder Singh Шаблон:IND 15 August 2011 7 February 2012

Шаблон:WDL

Sujit Chakravarty Шаблон:IND 8 February 2012 7 May 2012

Шаблон:WDL

Arthur Papas Шаблон:AUS 22 May 2012 28 May 2013

Шаблон:WDL

Sanjoy Sen Шаблон:IND 20 July 2013 29 August 2013

Шаблон:WDL

Luís Norton de Matos Шаблон:POR 17 August 2017 18 July 2018

Шаблон:WDL

Floyd Pinto Шаблон:IND 25 July 2018 29 November 2019

Шаблон:WDL

Shanmugam Venkatesh Шаблон:IND 29 November 2019 April 2022

Шаблон:WDL

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

External links

Шаблон:Indian Arrows Шаблон:I-League Шаблон:Football in Odisha