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FIFA Women's World Cup 2023: Rural football raises the stakes for the women's game in India

Andhra Pradesh's Anantapur district is running the country's biggest rural football league that is discovering talent and spreading social change.

July 30, 2023 / 10:36 IST
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Young footballers at the Anantapur Sports Academy run by the Rural Development Trust, which organises the biggest rural football league in the country.

As the famous league football kicks off in Europe next month, a district in Andhra Pradesh, too, is getting ready to embark on its own competitive version of the Beautiful Game. Anantapur Football League begins in August and ends in December every year, a championship as long as the Indian Super League, albeit played between clubs in villages spread across Anantapur district. Twenty-eight clubs field teams in seven age-groups from U-7 to U-18, making the competition the biggest rural football league in the country.

The Anantapur Football League, which runs from August to December every year, saw the participation of 2,743 players, including 907 girls aged between seven and 18, last year.

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The Anantapur Football League is also one of the biggest events in the game in the country for women's football. Nearly a thousand girls take part in the league donning jerseys representing the colours of their village clubs. For the young girls, playing football also means taking on discrimination, inequalities and lack of opportunities in rural regions.

Run every year from 2014, Anantapur Football League saw the participation of 156 rural clubs which fielded 2,743 players aged between seven and 18 last year. Among them were 907 girls. While U-11 to U-18 teams play the league based on a format similar to European leagues, U-7 and U-9 teams in Anantapur compete in mixed-gender seven-a-side matches, a rarity in Indian football.