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Tata
scores perfect 10
Business Standard — April 17,
2004
IT is indeed great
news for sport when a leading and highly credible group
like the Tatas takes interest in sport. Especially,
when everybody else is making a beeline for the over
crowded cricket market.
Earlier this month,
the Tatas added a lovely touch to their patronage of
sports by getting together 10 former India hockey captains
and honouring them with a citation and a purse of Rs
1,00,000 each. It was not just the money but the gesture
that meant a lot. These former captains met each other
after a long time and to them this recognition was something
they would cherish. It made up for all the years of
neglect.
Pargat Singh, the
only Indian captain to have led the team to two Olympics,
said, "I did not even expect this till I got a
letter to come to Delhi for a function. I was touched.
Fortunately, the captains who came for the function
are all decently placed and don’t need the money, but
it felt good to be remembered."
Ajitpal Singh, captain
of Indian team at the 1976 Olympics and MM Somayya,
captain at the 1988 Olympics echoed similar feelings,
as they exchanged notes. Pargat is based in Jalandhar,
Ajitpal in Delhi and Somayya in Mumbai, so an occasion
to get together was indeed a memorable moment.
The Tatas this year
also sponsored the India-Holland Test series in hockey
to mark the birth centenary of ex-Director Tata Sons
and former Indian Hockey Federation president Naval
Tata. His wife, Simone, gave away the awards. The year
2004 is also the birth centenary of the group’s founder,
J R D Tata.
The captains who
came for the function were Balbir Singh (1956), Charanjit
Singh (1964), Gurbux Singh (1968), Harmik Singh (1972),
Ajitpal Singh (1976), V Baskaran (1980), Zafar Iqbal
(1984), M M Sommaya (1988), Pargat Singh (1992 and 1996)
and Ramandeep Singh (2000).
Former Tata employees,
Indian women’s team coach M K Kaushik and Kulwant Arora
were also felicitated. The captain of the 1960 Rome
Olympics team Leslie Claudius and Leo Pinto could not
attend the function.
Vice-President Corporate
Affairs, Tata Services Limited, Romit Chaterji said
on the occasion, "It is a matter of great pride
for the Tata Group in honouring these stalwarts who
have made tremendous contribution to Indian hockey and
this is a humble gesture from our end to recognise and
reward their commitment to the nation."
Balbir Singh, who
captained India at the 1956 Olympics and represented
the team in 1948 at London and 1952 at Helsinki, said
such recognition to the players will go a long way in
giving the sport a fillip.
"Hockey is
our national game but it has been devalued in the past
few years. We have the talent in the country to be on
the top again. But somehow due recognition is not being
given to hockey players which is one of the reasons
of the decline of the sport."
The Tatas have contributed
a great deal to Indian sport — be it in tennis with
the Tata Open, the only ATP Tour tennis event in India,
or in football, where its Tata Football Academy has
been churning out some terrific talent for the national
team. They have supported India’s racing star, Narain
Karthikeyan and more recently have been involved with
golf.
They have also announced
their intention of starting an athletics academy, which
will be inaugurated by Milkha Singh next month. In addition,
the group has been supporting activities like mountaineering
and archery.
In recent years,
the TFA boys performed well in the under-17 and under-19
Asian football qualifying championships held in Kolkata
and Turkmenistan, the Milk Cup in Ireland and the Ian
Rush Trophy at Wales.
Buoyed by the success
of the Tata Football Academy, Tata Steel Managing Director
B Muthuraman, announced recently, that Tata has now
decided to start an athletics academy to be inaugurated
by Milkha Singh on May 29.
Sometimes, corporate
sponsors need to give more than just money to support
sport. They need to show that they care and the Tatas’
gesture showed that in ample measure.
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