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WORLD FIRST FOR UK DUO

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Jürgen4PM

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WORLD FIRST FOR UK DUO
Steve Hunter 08 June 2009
Liverpool FC made its first significant move to become the most popular English club in India today, when it launched an innovative Football Development Centre in Pune, India.
The Anfield club has teamed up with Cheshire based international football company, Kickworldwide, and the Bharati Vidyapeeth University to create the world's first centre aimed at creating football industry professionals for the booming Indian football market.

Last year Barclays Premier League clubs were criticised by some of the biggest names in Indian football for providing false hope to Indian youngsters and for their short-term approach to this rapidly developing market.

A number of English clubs have visited India in recent years and looked to develop football academies in conjunction with some of the country's leading corporate organisations.

Liverpool, however, has adopted a highly innovative approach that will genuinely assist the development of the football industry in India.

With Kickworldwide, the Reds have created the 'Ahbijit Kadam Football Development Centre' in one of India's most dynamic cities, Pune.

The centre is based within the campus of the Bharati Vidyapeeth University, which boasts nearly 250,000 students and is named after the son of the founder, Dr. Patangrao Kadam.

Abhijit, an avid football player, was tragically killed in a car crash, and since then, his family, led by his brother Vishwajeet, has devoted much of its time to enhancing the level of football in India in his memory.

Students at the centre will be able to enrol on a number of football related courses, which are to be delivered in partnership with some leading UK colleges. The courses include coaching, refereeing, sports science, sports turf technology and football industry management. Most of the curriculum will be delivered in Pune but students will be offered the chance to complete some of their studies in the UK.

Aspiring young footballers will be able to combine their studies with football playing under the guidance of Liverpool FC coaches.

The centre was officially launched today and will open its doors to students in September to deliver courses in sports science, coaching and refereeing. Other courses will be added in January.

Liverpool FC commercial director Ian Ayre, who attended today's launch in Pune, said: "As a football club we always strive to find important partners and important opportunities in a market like India.

"To get this right we have to invest for the long-term and in the right areas.

"As a highly successful football club with great heritage and a historic level of success, this is very much an opportunity to share our experience across all the disciplines of the game, not just the playing side.

"Anyone who has ever been to Anfield to watch one of our games will tell you that what we have here is unique. Our fans are and always have been innovative, inclusive and often break from tradition. The more of that type of unique approach we can export and include in our developing overseas ambitions, the better chance we have of long-term success and successful partnerships in this or any overseas market.

"This project brings football together with first-class education and an ambition to feed the Indian game. Its certainly an exciting start and one of a variety of key projects that Liverpool Football Club will unveil in the Indian market over the coming months."

Steve Bellis, director of Kickworldwide added: "This is a highly significant day in the history of Indian football.

"The football development centre will create a number of football industry professionals for the game in India and will help to build a strong infrastructure for the sport.

"It is heart warming to see one of world's biggest football clubs adopting such a long term and sincere approach to a developing market and the primary aim of the FDC is to support Indian football development to a level where it can compete with the best in the world."

One man who has done more than most in recent years to push the development of football in India is Vishwajeet Kadam. A highly respected educationalist, politician, industrialist, social worker and sportsman, Vishwajeet is determined to take Indian football to the highest level.

As secretary of Bharati Vidyapeeth University and vice president of the All India Football Federation, Vishwajeet is delighted to have the support of Liverpool and Kickworldwide. He revealed 'the AKMFDC is a project that was born with the simple ideology of producing budding professionals with an aim of continuing the passion my brother Abhijit had for the game.'

He explained: "Abhijit was a die-hard player with a burning desire to excel. The AKMFDC thus provides a platform for likeminded to excel and pursue the game, which is surrounded by the myth - that in India football does not have a career.

"In fact, when the project was conceived we at AKMF were looking at starting a venture of such big magnitude on if we were able to convince and rope in a big name from the world of football to be associated. Liverpool fits the bill and moreover their 'sustained' interest and thanks to Kickworldwide's persistence has enabled the FDC become reality."

The launch was attended by the Secretary General of the All India Football Federation, Mr Alberto Colaco, and the British Deputy High Commissioner for India, Vicki Treadell.

Liverpool and Kickworldwide plan to open a second centre in China early next year.
 
Good move this and it's nice to see us beating Utd to something of this nature (for once).
 
http://kickworldwide.com/

Kickworldwide is a football development business

We identify, develop and manage football playing talent from hard to scout territories

We create football industry skills infrastructure in developing football nations

We export and internationally exploit soccer brands in emerging football markets

Through Soccer Prince – the highly successful TV talent search format – KWW has created an unequalled, highly defensible grass-roots brand amongst hundreds of millions of aspirant people in the fast-developing economies of the ‘second world’.

Interesting, one of their members is Dr Rogan Taylor, who founded the fans' group ShareLiverpoolFC. He acts as their consultant.
 
Hmm. As I understand it, he's not universally admired. Oh well, it won't be just him that's taking this forward.
 
[quote author=Judge Jules link=topic=34050.msg884216#msg884216 date=1244464011]
Hmm. As I understand it, he's not universally admired. Oh well, it won't be just him that's taking this forward.
[/quote]

His heart's in the right place but he's a bit of a self-preening gob shite. In my opinion.
 
[quote author=Judge Jules link=topic=34050.msg884251#msg884251 date=1244466798]
...the man says next to a photo of Peter Mandelson. 😉
[/quote]

You got me.
 
Making Liverpool Big in Asia
Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Whilst Liverpool's tour to Asia this summer has been touted as an attempt to raise the club's profile the reality is that this is an exercise to, as the Americans call it, make a quick buck. Liverpool have already made such trips before, as have other English and European clubs, yet none have had any lasting impact: the only real profit that football clubs have been able to make from Asia has come from the appearance money earned for playing such games.

The issue is one of approach. It is true that there are many football fans in Asian country and it is equally true that Liverpool is a popular club. The problem is that so are Manchester United, Juventus, Barcelona and any one of the big European giants. And it isn't uncommon for people to support three or four clubs at one go.

In other words, there is no affinity for any one club. It is like appreciating a particular actor or actress: you're likely to watch their movies but it doesn't mean that you won't watch anyone else's. And, if that actor suddently starts making bad choices when looking through scripts, then you'll stop watching his movies. Which, translated to football, means that you decide not follow a club when it starts performing badly.

The trick, therefore, is to try and build a relationship with these fans. Which is why the most profitable - in the long term - venture that Liverpool will be making in Asia won't be the team's tour but rather a football centre being set up in India.

Announced earlier this week, the promise is that the 'Abhijit Kadam Football Development Centre' where young footballers will combine their studies with football under the guidance of Liverpool FC coaches will "include, coaching, refereeing, Sports Science, Sports Turf technology and Football Industry Management. Most of the curriculum will be delivered in Pune but students will be offered the chance to complete some of their studies in the UK."

Away from the usual marketing talk, what this project means is that it ensures Liverpool direct involvement in the area. Sure, there is no hiding from the fact that they are in it to make money, but they are giving something in return as well as helping local football. That it is linked with education - a highly valued attribute in many Asian countries - also helps make it an attractive proposal.

On top of everything, however, it also means that all the students who pass through the centre will have a special reason to have a bond with Liverpool FC: they're more likely to become real fans rather than casual ones. Which is what clubs, albeit for their own reasons, are really interested in.
 
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