Are the kids alright?
The answer could lie in India’s performance in the Asian finals of the under-17 men and women’s competition this month
On Pamela Conti and Bibiano Fernandes lies the responsibility of making India look good among Asia’s youngest competitive football cohort. The Asian under-17 finals for women and men will start within days of each other in Suzhou, China, and in Saudi Arabia. Under Conti, the women will go first followed by Fernandes’s men.
Conti’s team has reached China, the under-17 men are expected to fly to Jeddah from Doha on May 3. The women’s team have been grouped with Australia, Japan and Lebanon; the men with Uzbekistan and Australia after North Korea withdrew. For the women, a 12-team competition, the top two from each group and two best third sides will qualify to the quarter-finals. For the men, where 16 countries have been split into four groups, the group winners and the second-placed team will make the round of eight.
World Cup: a distraction?
Qualifying for the quarter-final will mean a berth in the men’s under-17 World Cup in Qatar later this year. It will be the first time India will have done that on merit. To reach there in the women’s equivalent in Morocco, also this year, India will make the semi-final in Asia.
Will thinking of the World Cup be a distraction as it possibly was for the team in the AFC Women’s Asian Cup? India went to Australia thinking of Brazil 2027 and to say what they got was a rude awakening would be understating the obvious. On commentary during the Indian Super League match between East Bengal and Odisha FC, Pradhyum Reddy spoke of players from India’s 2017 under-17 World Cup group still not being sure of their basics. Evaluation of India’s performance in these finals should be made keeping that in mind. What is true for the men is truer for the women given their lack of game time at all levels.
It is good to be hopeful, having beaten Iran to get to the men’s finals and Conti’s team winning the SAFF under-19, but it would definitely not be a disappointment if India do not make the World Cup. What is important is how India cope with the occasion and how cohesive their game is against opponents from countries way more invested in the sport.
Appointed in January, Conti, a former Italy international midfielder with 30 goals in a 16-year career, had more time with the team that Amelia Valverde. The women’s team head coach had six weeks to make an impact and was removed when she could not. Conti’s team lost their friendlies against Russia but it would have given them an idea of what to expect against, say, Australia. Players do not need to be scared of the ball, she has said. In one of the friendlies against Russia, India had 60% of the ball.
Conti’s squad has also trained longer, in Bengaluru and then in Gurugram before leaving for China. In that time, they played practice matches against age-specific boys’ teams and away friendlies against Myanmar winning both.

On familiar territory
Fernandes, a former India international, is on familiar territory having taken India to the finals four times since 2018. In 2018, India lost 0-1 to South Korea in the quarter-finals. It was the only goal India had conceded and it meant South Korea qualified for the semi-final and the 2019 World Cup in Brazil. That was then. Make the quarter-finals in Saudi Arabia and India would be assured of a World Cup berth. That India made the finals after a come-from-behind win against Iran is a big deal and proof of how the gap is narrower at this level. Fernandes made that point when we spoke last December soon after India qualified.
“Iran and South Korea are almost on the same level. And if we can win against Iran, you never know, we can be in the top eight if we work on the squad and play friendlies against stronger teams,” he said.
India lost 1-2 to South Korea in a closed-door match during a three-match friendly tour of Thailand where they drew 2-2 with the home team and beat Indonesia 3-0. In April, they beat UAE 1-0 but also lost 1-5. On Saturday, they drew 1-1 with Qatar in Doha.
The under-17 teams have had long preparatory camps and travelled for friendlies. Pretty much the minimum requirement, right? True. But it was arranged by a federation without a commercial partner. The All India Football Federation did the same for the women’s and the under-20 teams before their Asian finals as well.
PLAY OF THE WEEK
GRAPHICS BY PRIJIT SASHIDHARAN
IN OTHER NEWS
New five-year deal for Mainoo
Kobbie Mainoo has signed a new contract at Manchester United that will keep him at Old Trafford until 2031, bringing an end to months of uncertainty over his future, reports AFP. The 21-year-old, who joined United’s academy in 2014, has already made 98 appearances for the club, scoring seven goals, including in the FA Cup final win against Manchester City in 2024. Mainoo fell out of favour under former boss Ruben Amorim and had a request to leave on loan in August rejected. But Mainoo has been rejuvenated under Michael Carrick, who was appointed as head coach until the end of the season, starting all but one game since then, playing a key role as United have climbed to third in the Premier League, all but securing a return to the Champions League.
Stones to leave City
John Stones said he had lived “all my dreams out” as he announced on Tuesday he would be leaving Manchester City at the end of the season after 10 trophy-laden years at the Etihad, report AFP. The defender, 31, joined City from Everton in 2016, becoming manager Pep Guardiola’s second signing, and has made 293 appearances to date, scoring 19 goals. He has won six Premier League titles and the Champions League among multiple trophies and there may be more silverware to come this season, with City chasing a domestic treble. “It has been my home for the past 10 years and it will be my home for the rest of my life,” Stones said in an emotional social media post.
Italy official suspends himself
The man in charge of assigning Serie A and B referees, Gianluca Rocchi, has suspended himself from the role with immediate effect while under investigation for sports fraud by Milan’s Public Prosecutor’s Office, reports Reuters. VAR supervisor Andrea Gervasoni has taken similar action for the same reasons, and the investigation is looking into incidents during last season’s Serie A campaign. “This choice, painful, difficult but shared with my family, is intended to allow the legal proceedings to run their course properly, from which I am sure I will come out unscathed and stronger than before,” Rocchi’s statement to Italy’s referees’ association (AIA) said. According to Italian media reports, Rocchi is accused of interfering with VAR protocols along with selecting referees preferable to Inter Milan. The club has denied the charge.
13-match ban on goalie
The Spanish football federation has banned Real Zaragoza’s 35-year-old goalkeeper Esteban Andrada for 13 matches after he punched a Huesca player in the face, reports AFP. The federation’s disciplinary committee said in a statement both the Argentina international and his club would also be fined, after he was first sent off and then “attacked” Huesca’s Jorge Pulido in the second-tier derby clash last Sunday. Andrada was issued a 12-match ban for the punch itself, while his initial red card carries an automatic one-match ban, ruling him out for the rest of the season dealing a blow to Zaragoza’s hopes in their battle to avoid relegation.

Millie Bright retires
Former England defender Millie Bright announced her retirement from football with immediate effect at the age of 32 on Wednesday after “playing injured for the last six years.” “I’m tired. I’m just a human,” Bright said in an emotional video posted by Chelsea, her club since 2014, reports AFP. Bright, who hasn’t played for Chelsea since February because of an ankle problem, withdrew herself from selection for last year’s European Championship - won by England - for mental and physical health reasons. She played 88 times for England, having a key role in the national team’s title-winning campaign at Euro 2022, and won eight league titles with Chelsea.
Title for Punjab FC
Three second-half goals in 10 minutes saw Punjab FC successfully defend their AIFF Elite Youth League 2025-26 title, securing a commanding 3-0 victory over Zinc Football Academy in the final at the Ramsar Sahib Sports Stadium in Paddi Sura Singh, Garshankar on Tuesday. Karish Soram (69), Vishal Yadav (70) and Thongram Rishikanta Singh (79) scored, as per a media release from AIFF.
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Al-Ahli Asia’s best again

Ten-man Al-Ahli retained the Asian Champions League Elite title in Jeddah on Saturday as Feras Al-Brikan’s extra-time strike earned the Saudi Pro League side a 1-0 win over Japan’s Machida Zelvia at the King Abdullah Sports City Stadium, reports Reuters. Matthias Jaissle’s side became only the second team to retain the trophy in the Asian Champions League era after cross-Jeddah rivals Al-Ittihad in 2005, having seen Zakaria Hawsawi sent off in the 68th minute. Full report here.
THEY SAID IT
That’s all for this week. As always, I look forward to your feedback. You can either write to me at dhiman@htlive.com, or reply to this mail.








