Indian footballer and manager (1909–1963)
Syed Abdul Rahim (17 August 1909 – 11 June 1963), popularly known as Rahim Saab ,[ 2] was an Indian football coach and manager of the India national team [ 3] from 1950 until his death in 1963, and a former player.[ 4] [ 5] [ 6] He is regarded as the architect of modern Indian football.[ 7] A teacher by profession,[ 8] he was a strong motivator[ 9] and his tenure as a coach is regarded as the "golden age" of football in India.[ 10] [ 11] [ 12]
Under his stewardship, the India national team earned superiority in both technical qualities and tactical innovations, and got the nickname "Brazil of Asia".[ 13] [ 14] They went on to win gold medals in Asian Games of—(1951-Delhi and 1962-Jakarta ), played semi-finals of the Summer Olympics —(1956-Melbourne )[ 15] making India the first ever Asian country to achieve this place,[ 16] win the titles of Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament for the years of—(1952-Colombo and 1954-Calcutta and came runners-up in Pestabola Merdeka —(1959 Kuala Lumpur ).[ 17] [ 18] [ 19] [ 20] [ 21]
Playing career
Rahim was born on 17 August 1909 in Hyderabad , Hyderabad State , British India .[ 22] [ 23] In his early years, he worked as a school teacher.[ 24] After taking football seriously, Rahim represented the football team of Osmania University , from where he graduated.[ 25] [ 26] He also played for a team named "Eleven Hunters", consisting of then enrolled and former students of the college.[ 27]
After his journey as a teacher, Rahim returned to his college to complete his arts degree. Thereafter, he worked as the teacher successively in Kachiguda Middle School, Urdu Sharif School, Darul-ul-Uloom High School and Chaderghat High School.[ 27] He then got a diploma in physical education and took charge of sports in the last two schools he served as teacher.[ 27]
Rahim was a professional footballer for a while, representing Qamar Club, which was then considered to be one of the best teams in the local league.[ 28] Rahim also played for the Dutch Amateur League club HSV Hoek in the Netherlands,[ 29] before going on to become a manager.[ 30]
When playing domestic football, Rahim along with legendary Indian sports pioneer Syed Mohammad Hadi , became associated with activities related to football organization in Hyderabad State.[ 13] He was one of the founding members of Hyderabad Football Association (HFA), incorporated in 1939.[ 13] [ 31] In 1943, Rahim was elected secretary of HFA, while Ghulam Muhammad was elected as the first President in 1942. During the tenure of then AIFF vice-president Shiv Kumar Lal, both Andhra (incepted later) and Hyderabad Football Associations were merged to form Andhra Pradesh Football Association (APFA).[ 33] [ 34] [ 13] Soon after the merger, Rahim was elected secretary of APFA, and became involved in developing infrastructure of the game in both Hyderabad and Secunderabad.[ 13] Rahim played an influential role behind a compact development of football in Hyderabad in the 1950s, when five organized clubs were competing, fifteen thousand footballers were registered, and nearly forty qualified referees came up in the state.[ 13] A lover of Hyderabadi one-touch football, he later scouted young players such as Tulsidas Balaram , from Secundrabad League while visiting local matches as chief guest.[ 35]
Managerial career
Hyderabad City Police
In 1950, Rahim joined Hyderabad City Police Club as coach.[ 36] He succeeded Norbert Andrew Fruvall for the post.[ 37] He managed the team from 1950 until his death in 1963.[ 13] [ 38] The Hyderabadi club won five consecutive Rovers Cups during his tenure from 1950 to 1955.[ 39] [ 40] He also took his team to five Durand Cup finals, winning three of them.[ 24] One of the finest players of that team, Muhammad Noor , recalled the training session years under Rahim as: "Often at practice we had just one football and for refreshments afterwards just a cup of tea but our hard practice, a will to succeed and excellent coaching from the late Rahim Saheb enabled us to become a successful team".[ 24]
Hyderabad
Rahim managed Hyderabad football team in Santosh Trophy , known as the senior national championships. He guided the team clinching two consecutive titles in 1956–57 and 1957–58, defeating the same team, Bombay , in finals.[ 41] [ 42] At the 1958–59 edition, Hyderabad were on the verge of a hat-trick of Santosh Trophy titles in Madras , but went down 5–2 to Services in quarter-finals.[ 43] Most of the members of his Hyderabad City Police team, represented Hyderabad in the tournament.[ 43]
India
He became manager of the India national football team in 1950, the same year, India had not gone to the 1950 FIFA World Cup in Brazil.[ 44] [ 45] [ 46] [ 47] Rahim's first assignment as the coach of India was to train the team that toured Ceylon in 1949.[ 27] Rahim made the Indian team prominent during the "golden era" of Indian football ,[ 48] became one of the best teams in Asia .[ 49] [ 50] In March 1951, at the inaugural 1951 Asian Games in New Delhi , Rahim helped India in winning the gold medal. They defeated Iran 1–0 in the gold medal match to gain their first trophy,[ 51] [ 52] as Sheoo Mewalal finished the tournament as top scorer.[ 53] [ 54] In 1954, noted British manager Bert Flatley became Rahim's assistant at the 1954 Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament .[ 55] [ 56]
During Rahim's tenure, the Indian football team enjoyed a great deal of success.[ 50] Apart from winning the Asian games in 1951 and 1962 ,[ 57] India also reached the semi-finals of the 1956 Melbourne Olympics which is still considered India's greatest ever achievement in football.[ 58] [ 59] Under his coaching at that tournament, players like Neville D'Souza ,[ 60] [ 61] Samar Banerjee ,[ 62] P. K. Banerjee ,[ 63] [ 64] [ 65] J. Krishnaswamy [ 66] achieved fame worldwide.[ 67] At the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome , India lost to Hungary 2–1 in their first game, with Balaram scoring the consolation goal in the 79th minute. India almost upset 1958 FIFA World Cup semi-finalists France few days later, in which Balaram's goal gave the lead to India but a mistake from Ram Bahadur Thapa denied India a famous victory.[ 24]
Rahim's last success was at the 1962 Asian games in Jakarta , where India won gold, beating South Korea in the finals in front of a crowd of 100,000.[ 68] He is also credited for bringing up and nurturing Indian talents during his tenure, including Peter Thangaraj ,[ 69] Nikhil Nandy, Kesto Pal, Chuni Goswami ,[ 70] [ 71] Jarnail Singh ,[ 72] [ 73] Tulsidas Balaram ,[ 74] Sheikh Abdul Latif ,[ 75] Mariappa Kempaiah ,[ 76] Dharmalingam Kannan ,[ 77] Hussain Ahmed ,[ 78] [ 79] Mohammed Rahmatullah ,[ 80] [ 81] Yousuf Khan,[ 82] Arun Ghosh,[ 83] Nikhil Nandy,[ 84] and Amal Dutta .[ 85] Rahim was succeeded by English coach Harry Wright in 1964, who led the side to the runners-up spot in the 1964 Asian Cup .[ 86]
Tactics and style
Rahim is considered to be the greatest football coach India has ever produced.[ 24] [ 87] His tenure is considered as a "Golden age" of Indian football.[ 88] Rahim was a teacher in his early career and coached Hyderabad City Police FC ,[ 89] which made him a strict disciplinarian and a good tactician. Utilizing the available resources, he made the best out of them by conducting non-dribbling and weaker leg (the players supposedly play with their weaker foot) tournaments to improve one-touch play .[ 90]
Rahim introduced the classic 4–2–4 formation in Indian football team much before Brazil popularised it in the 1958 World Cup .[ 91]
The 1962 Asian Games was Rahim's final major tournament, winning a 2–1 victory over South Korea .[ 24] Before that final, he famously said to his players, "Kal aap logon se mujhe ek tohfa chahiye...kal aap sona jitlo" (lit. ' I want a gift from you tomorrow...the gold medal ' ).[ 24]
When Indian national coach Alberto Fernando had gone to a workshop in Brazil in 1964, he said:
What I learnt from Rahim in 1956 is being taught now in Brazil. Verily, he was a football prophet. [ 92]
Former Indian international Mohammed Zulfiqaruddin said about Rahim, as:
He was a master at work. He made the Indian football team a formidable unit. He had the uncanny ability of spotting talent and turning them into solid players. But he was a strict disciplinarian. [ 24]
Personal life
Rahim was popularly known as 'Maulvi Sahib' due to his gentleman gesture and tireless works and dedications in developing football at that time.[ 13] He went to the Nizam College, and later, was part of its football section.[ 13]
Rahim was married to Saira Rahim. Their son Syed Shahid Hakim was a former professional football player,[ 93] who represented India at the 1960 Summer Olympics .[ 94] [ 95] Hakim also worked as a FIFA official, a squadron leader in the Indian Air Force ,[ 96] and a referee.[ 97] He later managed the national team like his father, and was a recipient of the Dhyan Chand Award .[ 98] [ 99]
Death
Rahim died of lung cancer on 12 June 1963 after being bed-ridden for six months.[ 100] [ 27]
Legacy
A former Indian football player Fortunato Franco said about "Rahim Saab";
With him he took Indian Football to the grave .[ 101]
In memory of Rahim, the I-League "Best Coach Award" is renamed as "Syed Abdul Rahim Award", given to the best coach in each season by the All India Football Federation (AIFF).[ 102] [ 103] [ 104] [ 105] [ 106] [ 107]
In popular culture
A biopic on Rahim named Maidaan , directed by Amit Sharma , with Ajay Devgn as Rahim in lead role,[ 108] [ 109] was released theatrically on Eid al-Fitr 2024.[ 110] [ 111]
Honours
Managerial
Hyderabad City Police [ 112]
Durand Cup : 1950–51, 1954, 1957–58, 1961; runner-up: 1952, 1956–57
Rovers Cup : 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1954, 1957, 1960, 1962
DCM Trophy : 1959
India [ 113] [ 114] [ 115]
Hyderabad State [ 43]
See also
References
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External links
Senior Tournament Under-23 Tournament