Chhetri becoming finer with age
Instead of giving up bits and pieces of his game to Father Time, Bengaluru FC and Indian captain Sunil Chhetri has only gotten fitter, faster and more effective with age.
Published : Mar 12, 2018 16:36 IST
At the start of every Indian football season in recent years, one question always comes up - “Has Sunil Chhetri lost some his mojo? Has he lost a step or two?”. Once the action begins, the answer - a resounding ‘no’ - becomes all too apparent. Instead of giving up bits and pieces of his game to Father Time, Chhetri has gotten fitter, faster and more effective. At 33, Chhetri has no threat to his position as the India's best footballer. After a spectacular hat-trick on Sunday, which carried Bengaluru FC (BFC) past a tough FC Pune City into the Indian Super League final, the debate around his legacy raged on. “Sunil is the best player in Indian football history,” FC Pune City coach Ranko Popovic stated. It is a big claim, but not one without merit. READ: Chhetri's hat-trick seals final spot for Bengaluru
The BFC skipper is India’s all-time highest goal-scorer in international fixtures. He is also the all-time highest goal-scorer in the domestic league among Indians (going past Baichung Bhutia’s record of 89 goals).
And the goals just keep coming. In the ongoing ISL season, Chhetri sits fifth on the league’s charts with 13 goals. The tally is all the more impressive when you consider that Chhetri does his fair share of marking and defensive work. This demanding role change – from his days as an all-out forward – was introduced by Ashley Westwood, who was BFC's Head Coach when Chhetri joined the club’s inaugural 2013-14 season.
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Chhetri has come a long way since his days as a teenager with City FC, an amateur club in New Delhi. “I'm totally blessed. I would say I'm living a dream, but this is beyond any dream. At 17, when I was playing for City FC, if God gave me a pen and a piece of paper, and asked me to write what I wanted for my future...I wouldn't have been able to come up with this. The love I have received from people, the goals I've got, the fact that I play for my country and captain it. No way.
The only thing I tell myself is, 'Do not take it for granted.' This is not something everyone gets. So I keep it close to me and work very hard,” said the Indian captain.