Dr Taleram Ao played for the love of
the game. But the impact he left behind on the sport in the North East and its
society are still being felt.
The Indian Captain Taleram Aao and the
France Captain
It was the last week of November, and Dimapur was dry, dusty,
and chilly in the mornings and evenings. The 19th Dr T. Ao inter-district
football tournament had got under way the day I reached this crowded commercial
hub at the foothills of Nagaland, and I watched Phek district beat a somewhat
overconfident Mokokchung district (the previous year’s champions) 2-0 in the
opening match at the Dimapur District Sport Council stadium. At the venue were
several black-and-white hoardings, blown-up from old photographs, of the late
Dr T. Ao taking to the field at the 1948 Olympics as the captain of independent
India’s first national football team.
I met Akok Tally, way back in 1989 when I was at Manipur on an
official assignmentr when I was at TRIFED
, New Delhi , the second of the late Dr Talimeren Ao’s four children,
two days later at his residence in a large, tree-filled compound on the
outskirts of Dimapur, to talk about his father’s life. The plot was allotted to
his father by the Nagaland government in 1970, when it was unclassified forest
land. Tally, 56, runs a school started by his father in the compound, and named
after his grandfather, the Reverend Subongwati Ningdangri.
Talimeren
Ao was born in 1918 in Changki, an Ao village in the then
Naga Hills district of Assam and now in Nagaland’s Mokokchung district. The Aos
are one of the 16 tribes of Nagaland. The First World War had just ended, and
as the members of the Naga labour corps who had been recruited by the British
for service in France returned home there were the first stirrings of change: a
greater awareness of the outside world and the vexed question of Naga identity.
First
brushes with football
The Aos were one of the first tribes among whom Baptist
missionaries started working in the Naga Hills in the second half of the 19th
century, and T. Ao’s father Subongwati Ningdangri was the first Reverend in the
Naga Hills. T. Ao was his fourth-born child (there were 12 children in all –
six boys and six girls – but the girl born before T. Ao died).
Two or three years after T. Ao was born, the family moved to the
Impur mission compound near Mokokchung town, where the Reverend had been
allotted a house by the American missionaries. Near the house was a field where
boys would play football after school with a ball made of tightly-tied rags.
The Americans played volleyball, but the British influence meant football was
played too. This was where T. Ao picked up the game, learning to dribble those
low-bouncing balls and shoot them with both feet. Being one of the younger
brothers, T. Ao also had to help chop
firewood, carry water, and herd the family’s cows.
In 1933, the Reverend sent his son to the Jorhat mission school
(now the Eastern Theological College) in Assam. This was T. Ao’s first exposure
to proper football, and his skills were soon noticed by students and teachers
alike. The Reverend Ningdangri passed away from typhoid at the Mokokchung Civil
Hospital in 1935, aged about 45. His last wish for his son Talimeren (“a lot of
glory” in the Ao language) was for him to become a doctor and serve the Naga
people. T. Ao was the last person to see his father alive as the only other
attendant, his cousin brother Oungthang, had trekked down to Mariani in Assam
to buy medicines.
From
Jorhat, T. Ao went to Guwahati in 1937 to join Cotton College.
Here his game moved up another level. The biggest football club in Assam in
those days was the Maharana Club. Their players would train at a maidan near
Cotton College, and T. Ao was soon joining them in their drills. He asked to
join the club and was taken in. He was already playing for Cotton College as a
striker then, and later became its sports secretary.
Leading
the Indian team
At Maharana, however, T. Ao was made a defender/midfielder, a
position he would retain thereafter. At a game in Guwahati versus a visiting
Calcutta side, a combined tackle by two frustrated opposition strikers
fractured T. Ao’s jaw. Ever the sportsman, he helped one of his attackers to
their feet. At another match in Calcutta, the young T. Ao managed to mark and
block the famous striker Noor Mohammed, a feat that got him noticed at the
national level. Even as he worked at improving his game, T. Ao had not
forgotten his late father’s wishes. In 1942, on his second attempt, he secured
one of the two seats then reserved for undivided Assam at the Carmichael
Medical College in Calcutta.
When T. Ao got to Calcutta, his old friend from Maharana Club,
Sarat Das, who was then playing for Mohun Bagan, brought him over to his club.
After paying a joining fee, T. Ao was inducted into the Mohun Bagan squad as a
defender. His skills and his unruffled temperament soon led to T. Ao being made
captain of Mohun Bagan. In 1948 he was asked to join the Indian national team,
where he was again the unanimous choice for captain. He led the Indian team at
the 1948 Olympics in London, the first to be held after a gap of 14 years on
account of the Second World War.
He was then, as always, playing barefooted, like most other
players of his time. “My father at some point tried the leather football boots
available then,” Tally said, “but soon discarded them.” A story narrated by a
referee at the inter-district tournament in Dimapur had a journalist at the
1948 games asking T. Ao why he did not wear football boots, to which the Indian
captain supposedly replied, “Because it’s football, not bootball.”
The British principal of the Carmichael Medical College granted
him a year’s leave on account of his duties as India captain. The national
football team trained for a few weeks in Shillong, after which there was an
exhibition match in Guwahati against a combined Guwahati XI. Gopen Chowdhury,
80, of Uzan Bazar in Guwahati, was present at the match, and must be among the
few people alive today who had seen T. Ao play. He remembers the Indian captain
as a tall, well-built midfielder who seemed to have plenty of time whether he
was receiving or distributing the ball.
Career
as a doctor
At the Olympics, T. Ao was the flag-bearer for the Indian
contingent. The Indian team had a walkover in the first round against Burma,
then went down 2-1 to France in a close contest where the Indians missed two
penalties. T. Ao was reportedly offered a season’s contract by the club
Arsenal, whose management also offered to get him admission into a medical
school, but he just wanted to get back home.
Pic-::
The Indian Olympic Football team 1948 at London
In the same year he rejoined his MBBS
course at the Carmichael Medical College, graduating in 1950. He was 30 years
old at the Olympics and at the height of his game. After he finished his MBBS
and was to bid farewell to the city and to Mohun Bagan, his club offered him a
plot of land in Calcutta, but T. Ao politely refused.
Coming back to North East India in 1951 he joined the ENT department at the
Dibrugarh Medical College in Assam. The same year there was a Far East tour
with the national team to countries such as Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, and Japan. Back in Dibrugarh, his work among tuberculosis patients
led to him to contract the disease himself. His old club Mohun Bagan offered to
take him to Vienna for treatment, but T. Ao, now a doctor, told them that the
availability of drugs like penicillin meant he could get cured where he was.
Dr T. Ao finally got back to the Naga Hills in 1953, as an
Assistant Civil Surgeon at the Kohima Civil Hospital. He met his future wife,
Deikim Doungel, while she was a staff nurse at the hospital. The Naga independence
movement had by then turned into an armed insurgency, and the Indian army was
conducting operations in the Naga Hills. Dr T. Ao ended up treating injured
combatants from both sides. He then become Civil Surgeon, and retired as the
Director of Health Services of Nagaland in 1978. He passed away in 1998, at the
age of 80, and lies buried at the Naga Cemetery in Khermahal, Dimapur. He is
survived by his wife, who is 84, four children and eight grandchildren (two of
whom are medical students).
Honoured
across region
Unlike today’s players, T. Ao was never a professional in the
sense that he was never paid, apart from expenses. In fact, he had to pay Rs.5
to register as a member at Mohun Bagan. Later, the club made him a life member
(besides posthumously awarding him the Mohun Bagan Ratna in 2002). “My father
played for the love of the game,” Tally said, “and had the drive to keep
bettering himself.” The Kolkata-based football historian Subhransu Roy said, “In those days football players had to
support themselves with other jobs. For example, Sailen Manna, the defender and
captain of the 1951 team that won gold at the Asian Games, worked with the
Geological Survey of India.”
Listening to this remarkable story made me wonder about the
legacy the man had left behind, as well as the current state of football in
Nagaland. Anjan Mitra, longtime secretary of Mohun Bagan club, had one word to
describe T. Ao: “genius”. People from various tribes and communities I spoke to
in Nagaland all recalled T. Ao’s name, if not his exact achievements. He is the
closest Nagaland may have had, given the traditional tensions between the
various tribes, to a truly “national” hero.
Dr T. Ao’s achievements stand testament to what people from the
margins of the nation can achieve. Baichung Bhutia also rose from a village in
the hills of Sikkim to become captain of the Indian football team, but that was
many years after India’s independence. Subhransu Roy points out that T. Ao led
the Indian football team at a time when a new nation was being created, and
stood as a symbol of moral character, especially in his later work as a doctor.
Roy said, “Dr T. Ao is still remembered by the football fraternity in Kolkata.
When he was posthumously awarded the Mohun Bagan Ratna in 2002, there was a lot
of coverage.”
In Assam, an outdoor stadium at Koliabor near Nagaon and an
indoor stadium at Cotton College in Guwahati have been named after Dr T. Ao,
and there is a North East inter-state football tournament in his name (as well
as the Nagaland state inter-district tournament), but Tally said, “nothing
fitting has been done for him in his home state.”
Poor
infrastructure in Nagaland
Anjan
Mitra says 20% to 25% of India’s professional football players come from the
North East, a region that comprises roughly 8% of India’s land mass with about
3% of the country’s population. The states of Manipur,
Mizoram and Meghalaya supply the majority of those players. Mohun Bagan’s
under-18 football academy’s North East recruits are mostly from Manipur and
Mizoram, with only a few from Nagaland. Why doesn’t the state which produced T.
Ao have more players at the national level?
Dominic Sutnga, owner and managing director of the Royal
Wahingdoh football club from Shillong, which has qualified for the I-League’s
8th season, said, “Lack of sports infrastructure and the absence of a state
league for a long time prevented players from Nagaland making a mark at the national
level. There have been a few Naga players, but mostly from the hill districts
of Manipur.” The Nagaland Premier League started only two years back and is
fast gaining popularity in the state.
The chief guest at the Dr T. Ao inter-district football
tournament, the parliamentary secretary Khriehu Liezietsu, said the Nagaland
state junior football team had won the Subroto Mukherjee football tournament in
2008, 2012 and 2014, but the state had not been able to shine at the senior
level mainly due to poor sports infrastructure. This lack of infrastructure is
something people in Nagaland have gotten used to. An official of the Nagaland
Football Association said, “Funds do not reach where they are supposed to.”
On December 1, at the DDSC stadium in Dimapur, the late Dr T.
Ao’s home district of Mokokchung beat Kohima 3-0 to win the Dr T. Ao
inter-district tournament. There was a sizeable crowd present, and Mokokchung’s
Sakutemjen Ao, the player of the tournament, scored all three goals for his
side. In February 2015, the sixth Dr T. Ao Memorial Football Championship, a
North-East inter-state tournament organised by the Department for the North
East Region, will be held in Arunachal Pradesh.
Love
of the game
Thangboi Singto, head coach of the I-League side Shillong Lajong
FC, says the older generation of football players from the North East (the
likes of Baichung Bhutia and Renedy Singh) do remember T. Ao, but not so much
the new generation of players, possibly due to a lack of coverage about the
man. He said, “Dr T. Ao was someone who established the North East in the map
of India, and served society as well.” Singto says all I-League and Indian
Super League teams have players from the North East, mainly from Manipur,
Mizoram and Meghalaya, where a football culture is boosted by competent
administrators and popular, professional state leagues.
The
sports commentator Novy Kapadia says Dr T. Ao, like all Indian footballers of
his generation, has been largely forgotten. “He was a competent, hard-working
centre half in the old-fashioned 2-3-5 system.” According to Kapadia, after T.
Ao stopped playing, football in the North East was largely marginalised till
the discovery of players like Kiron Khongsai (who played for JCT, East Bengal
and the Indian team) and Jewel Bey from Assam by the special area games scheme
of the Sports Authority of India in the late 1980s.
“T. Ao’s career, while being noteworthy and inspirational, did not lead to
anything for football in the North East,” he says. “The real impetus came from
the special area games scheme, teams from the North East reaching the finals of
the Subroto Mukherjee Cup regularly from 1978 onwards, and the Tata Football
Academy in Jamshedpur.”
The player of the tournament Sakutemjen Ao, 29, and a constable
in the Nagaland Police, turned out to be the hardest to track down. Ao is
posted at Chumukedima near Dimapur, and is married with two children. He comes
from Salulemang village near Mokokchung, where he started playing football. He
plays for his district, Mokokchung, as well as for Nagaland Police and the
state football team. He said, “Our state produces good players, but they do not
like going elsewhere to play football, they are happy to be where they are.”
What were his future plans? To simply keep playing football, he said. A
sentiment the former Indian captain from his district might have agreed with:
playing for the love of the game, while recognising that there is more to life
than football.
The
1983 Indian Football team for the Nehru Cup had another Nagalnd player T Akum
who represented India and scored a goal in India's 1-2 loss against Hungary the
game in which Manoranjan Bhatacharjee was adjudicated as the BEST PLAYER of the
match even if india had lost
On
that day when that match was played Monada as he is known and called had lost
his father in the morning of that match day.Yet he played and won the
MAN-OF-THE-MATCH-AWARD
“ That was FOR the second time that
Manoranjan Bhattacharjee was adjudicated as the BEST player of the match even
in a losing cause the first being the 0-1 loss to Argentina at the Salt Lake
stadium at Kolkatta in the Jawaharlal Nehro International Football Tournament in 1984 “
That is it
Rgds
Shyamal Bhattacharjee
T. Haokip , Imphal, Manipur
ReplyDeleteA beautiful article with so much of details in minutes and with so many a facts and information. Makes an interesting study of the same
The N-E state is now the factory that produces the Indian footballers and this man was the origin of the same It is an admirable achievement for the footballers of that time from the N-E region and the author has described it in an outstanding manner
Thanks for the article
T.Haokip
Thank You Mr T.Haokip . A boy by the same name was working with me when he was at Trifed and he too was from Manipur .He was a Diploma in Civil Engineering
DeleteAnyway Thanks once again for the compliments
Rgds
Shyamal