Tom Byer in Dharan |
One recurring phrase I kept hearing Coach Byer use during
his visit was, “Better than expected.” Whether it was Shahid Stadium in
Biratnagar or an Under 14 match we went to see at Budhanilakantha School
or the British Gurkha Cup match we watched – everything was “Better than
expected.”
The reasons for Coach Byer’s initial low expectations were
understandable. When visiting Dasharath Rangasala he was informed that it was
the only decent stadium in Nepal .
When he was at the Under 14 match, one of the teams arrived half-an-hour late
and seemed to have no sense of urgency whatsoever to put on their uniforms and warm-up.
When visiting the training of one of Nepal ’s biggest clubs he was
shocked to see that the team did not even have practice uniforms. Even Coach
Byer’s press conference announcing the launch of his football training DVD in
Nepali had to be rescheduled at the last moment because ANFA only the night
before decided to change the start time of the semi-final matches of the
British Gurkha Cup.
So when Coach Byer entered Shahid Stadium and noticed that
it was not much different than a Brazilian ground or when he saw how skillful
the U14 kids were or when he witnessed how lively a Nepali club match can be –
he was quite impressed, everything was actually “Better than expected.”
In a way Nepali football is just like a Nepali wedding –
total chaos up to the night before the ceremony, but at the end everything
seems to come together, one way or another, and most times it is even quite
enjoyable.
There is a famous adage – “The devil is in the details.”
There are perhaps over a hundred small little details that we could improve to
develop Nepali football further. Imagine if our stadiums were maintained
regularly and not just before a cup tournament or if our youth players were
instilled with more discipline to show up on time or our clubs conducted
training a bit more professionally with proper uniforms or the schedule for a
tournament would be thought-through weeks in advance giving fans time to
prepare for a match. I would venture to guess that just paying attention to
these types of small details would raise the level of Nepali football by
10-15%, which would be enough to beat the likes of Afghanistan
and Maldives
on a regular basis.
With all the challenges
Nepal
and ANFA faces these days – talk of a new international stadium, a world
renowned National Team coach or regular international friendlies against top
class opposition are all unrealistic. Instead
we need to concentrate on the things we can control and easily improve. Pay
attention to all the small details we often neglect and surely the results for
our club and national teams will be a lot “Better than expected.”