Pradip Kumar Banerjee

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P K Banerjee
Personal information
Full name Pradip Kumar Banerjee
Date of birth October 15, 1936
Place of birth Jalpaiguri, West Bengal, India
Nickname PK
Position Striker
National team
1955 - 1967 India
Teams managed
1972 - 1986 Indian Football Team[1]

Pradip Kumar Banerjee (Bengali: প্রদীপ কুমার ব্যানার্জি)(October 15, 1936 – ) or PK Banerjee as he is called often, is one of the famous football players in India. He was born in Jalpaiguri in West Bengal. He was one among the first few Arjuna Awardees, when the awards were instituted in 1961. He was awarded the prestigious Padma Shri Award in 1990 and was named Indian Footballer of the 20th Century by FIFA. He was the youngest ever player to have represented a state or a country in an international tournament.[2] He represented India for 13 years, and was one of the top scorers in Asia at that time.

Contents

[edit] Early Life

Pradip Kumar Banerjee was born on October 15, 1936, in Jalpaiguri in West Bengal He completed his schooling from H.P.M. School in Jamshedpur. He was barely 15 when he played as right-winger for Bihar in the Santosh Trophy.

[edit] Career

In 1954 he moved on to Kolkata and joined the Aryans Club in West bengal later moving on to represent Eastern Railway Soccer Club. He played striker position in football and had scored 65 goals in 84 international games which he played during his career. His first game as part of the Indian team, was in the 1955 Quadrangular tournament in Dhaka, East Pakistan (now capital of Bangladesh) at the age of 19.[3]

He represented India in three Asian Games namely, the 1958 Asian Games in Tokyo, the 1962 Asian Games in Jakarta where India clinched the gold medal in football and then the 1966 Asian Games in Bangkok. He became an olympian at the age of 20, when he was part of the national team that played at the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne. He was the captain of the Indian Football Team at the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, where he scored the famous equaliser against France to hold a 1-1 draw. He represented India thrice at the Merdeka Cup in Kuala Lumpur where India won silver in 1959 and 1964 and bronze in 1965. Recurring injuries forced him to drop out of the national team leading to his retirement in 1967.

After his retirement, his first stint at coaching came with the East Bengal Football Club, one of the clubs best times from 1970-75, when they won the Calcutta League six consecutive times. In the 1977 season he guided the Mohan Bagan Football Club to a historic feat, winning the IFA Shield, Rovers Cup and Durand Cup espectively to achieve their first-ever triple-crown triumph in one season. He became the national coach for the first time in 1972 when he coached the Indian side for the qualifying matches of the 1972 Munich Olympics. He went on to coach the Indian Football Team from 1972 to 1986.[1] He joined the Tata Football Academy at Jamshedpur as its Technical Director from 1991 to 1997.[4]

In 1999, Banerjee uncerimoniously was relaced as the technical director of the All-India Football Federation team by his younger brother, Prasun Banerjee. [5] In 2001, Banerjee's father, Promode Kumar Banerjee, died.[6] On October 26, 2006, 70-year-old Banerjee suffered a minor cerebral haemorrhage at the nursing home where he is admitted.[7]

[edit] Awards

He was one among the first few Arjuna Awardees, when the awards were instituted in 1961. He was awarded the prestigious Padma Shri Award in 1990. He is one or the four footballers awarded Padma Shri so far. His younger brother, Prasun Banerjee, is also a distinguished footballer winning the Arjuna Award in 1979-80. Further, PK Banerjee was named Indian Footballer of the 20th Century by FIFA. He was awarded the highest award from FIFA, FIFA Centennial Order of Merit in 2004.[8]


[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports Website, accessed Nov 12, 2006
  2. ^ FIFA Centennial Order of Merit, PDF Document, accessed, Nov 12, 2006.
  3. ^ Rahim, Amal Dutta, P.K. and Nayeem: The Coaches Who Shaped Indian Football, accessed Nov 12, 2006.
  4. ^ Tata Football Academy Website, accessed Nov 12, 2006.
  5. ^ The Statesman. (July 29, 1999). PK in the Dark about TD for Mauritius Trip.
  6. ^ The Statesman. (Nov. 2, 2001). Death. (writing, " On October 24, 2001, at his residence at 8, Ashutosh Mukherjee Road, Kolkata, Promode Kumar Banerjee. Deeply mourned by his only son, Pradip Kumar Banerjee and granddaughters, Jhumka, Tumka."
  7. ^ Press Trust of India. (Oct. 26, 2006). P K Banerjee suffers minor cerebral haemorrhage; now stable. Accessed Nov 13, 2006.
  8. ^ The Hindu Article dated Jun 23, 2004, accessed Nov 12, 2006.