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How Jamil, Constantine, Stefan may only deepen India football’s crisis

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New Delhi, July 27: At a time when Indian football finds itself at a critical juncture—desperately needing revival, fresh direction, and global competitiveness—the shortlist for the new head coach has sparked more disappointment than hope.
The All India Football Federation (AIFF)’s reported final three candidates for the top job—Khalid Jamil, Stephen Constantine, and Stefan Tarkovic—reveal a worrying lack of vision, ambition, and strategy. If anything, the move reeks of compromise, recycling, and underachievement.
Khalid Jamil, while a well-respected figure in domestic circles, remains untested at the international level. His most notable feat—a fairy-tale I-League title with Aizawl FC in 2017—was historic, no doubt. But that solitary triumph cannot justify entrusting him with the national team, which requires more than local flair. The Indian team’s problems lie beyond club-level tactics. They need a global outlook, experience with high-pressure international fixtures, and the ability to build a modern footballing system. Jamil, despite his sincerity, simply doesn’t check those boxes.
Then comes Stephen Constantine—an all-too-familiar name. Twice before he has led the Indian side, and twice he has overseen stagnation masked by inflated FIFA rankings and safe, percentage-based football. His return would be a regressive step, a backward glance in a sport that demands forward motion. Indian football under Constantine lacked creativity, risk-taking, and technical evolution. To reappoint him now would signal that Indian football is content recycling old strategies instead of embracing progress.
The third name—Slovakian coach Stefan Tarkovic—offers little comfort either. A coach with modest success at best, Tarkovic led Slovakia to the UEFA Euro 2020 but failed to leave a lasting impact.
His tactical acumen hasn’t stood out, and his managerial résumé lacks the strength or scale to inspire confidence in Indian football’s revival. His name doesn’t spark excitement, nor does it align with the vision of building a dynamic, modern football ecosystem in India.
This trio of choices suggests that the AIFF is either unwilling or unable to scout globally competitive options. While neighbouring countries like Uzbekistan, Japan, and even Vietnam are investing in youth development and modern coaching philosophies, India seems content settling for mediocrity. In a footballing era that demands tactical innovation, data-backed preparation, and international exposure, this shortlist looks worryingly outdated.
The decision to select any of these three could have long-term consequences—not just in terms of India’s FIFA rankings, but in the morale of emerging players, fan interest, and the credibility of Indian football as a serious global contender.
The Indian Super League has brought in better infrastructure and visibility. Yet, without a visionary head coach to translate that into a national strategy, all that investment risks being wasted.
Rather than solving India’s footballing woes, hiring any of these three could push the national team deeper into a spiral of mediocrity. What Indian football needs is evolution. This, sadly, looks like repetition. (Agencies)

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