Scope for involvement of pvt sector in sports: MYAS Joint Secretary PK Jha

By ANI | Published: April 19, 2023 09:32 PM2023-04-19T21:32:07+5:302023-04-19T21:35:08+5:30

New Delhi [India], April 19 : In the recent past, one of the most talked about aspects of sports ...

Scope for involvement of pvt sector in sports: MYAS Joint Secretary PK Jha | Scope for involvement of pvt sector in sports: MYAS Joint Secretary PK Jha

Scope for involvement of pvt sector in sports: MYAS Joint Secretary PK Jha

New Delhi [India], April 19 : In the recent past, one of the most talked about aspects of sports has been the support system for Indian athletes. While on one end of the spectrum is the support from the public sector which has grown mfold in India in recent years, there is also investment from the private sector which plays a pivotal role in the development of a sustainable sporting ecosystem.

Further, to develop the sporting ecosystem, one of the key points that need attention is tapping into the enormous amount of talent that is present in the country. And this has been one of the key points of discussion over the last few years - scouting talent and working on them.

"There is a lot of improvement and scope for involvement for the private sector in sports development. For now, most things are supported by the government in sports. And there is a need for private players to step in, and they can adopt sports development to help as well. This can be the basis for CSR support to grassroots development as well. Currently, the major aspect that needs addressing is the identification of talent and scouting at the grassroot levels," said PK Jha, joint secretary (Development), Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, during Y20 Roundtable centred around the theme of sports development.

While support from the private and public sectors is one aspect of the matter, getting the right kind of education and infrastructure integrated into the sports sector is also critical.

"If we have to build infrastructure, a tie-up with an educational institute is a valid avenue to consider. Pick up a sport, a corporate and then they work with ten schools for example. Adopt that sport and then it will give you results. The current government is very supportive of such initiatives. If we can tap the educational institutions, that should be the starting point to build infrastructure and also provide young athletes with the right coaches," Amit Bhalla, co-chair, FICCI Sports, said.

When it comes to finding the talent and building a robust ecosystem, such that the pipeline doesn't dry out, India has also had benchmark orgsations like the BCCI, who have, over the years, ensured that the Indian cricket system sets the standards, globally. Former India cricketer Ashok Malhotra opined that being able to market a sport and bring in accountability will help the sporting ecosystem.

"One should take a leaf out of the BCCI playbook because of how they market the sport. Why has the IPL done well, because it has been marketed well, and one needs to do that. In our country, there are so many private compes who back sports or even state governments such as Odisha. I am sure other states come in as well. Sport now represents a much bigger landscape and we need the private sector's support as well," said the former cricketer.

The decorated badminton ace Manjusha Kanwar added that it is important for support systems at all levels to be equally robust.

"There are so many layers in the system. At what layer should the private and public players come in, should it come at the intermediate level or the grassroots? It should all work towards making India a sporting nation. We have different platforms and levels across the sports sector for bringing in private-sector support. They all should be benchmarked in terms of the kind of support and involvement needed for corporate stakeholders to come in and make an impact." she said.

"Corporates are looking at sport in a bigger way than before beyond CSR as a core brand narrative and business driving investment as well. But here's where the gap is, while the intent is there, many corporate entities don't know whom to talk to. They have the resources, but they're not sure whom to approach and where their involvement will have an aligned and mengful impact. We need to professionalise and also have the NSFs and other sporting bodies be open to corporate participation by first calling out areas of support. Not always for investment but also basis expertise across aspects like technology integration and infrastructure development." Neha Rastogi, Co-Chair, FICCI Sports, said.

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