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Former captain Sardar Singh has been included in a 13-member Hockey India selection committee, to be headed by BP Govinda, a member of the 1975 World Cup winning team.
Sardar, who wanted to continue playing till the 2020 Tokyo Olympics but was forced to quit after a disappointing Asian Games campaign last year, confirmed the development.
The selection committee also includes Harbinder Singh, Syed Ali, A B Subbaiah, R P Singh, Rajnish Mishra, Joydeep Kaur, Surender Kaur, Asunta Lakra, High Performance Director David John and chief coaches of the senior men's and women's teams.
Having been on the other side of the pitch just a few months back, Sardar very well knows what it takes to build a team and pointed out that any day he would prefer experience over youth.
"I have been player for the past two decades and I know what is important for a team. Youth can never replace experience. What I feel is that any good team is a balance of youth and experience. Look at Belgium," he said.
"As a selector my approach would be the same. I would always vouch for experience but at the same time will like to see good youngsters in the team. India need experienced players like P R Sreejesh, Rupinder Pal Singh and S V Sunil to guide the youngsters till the 2020 Tokyo Olympics."
Post retirement Sardar is a busy man, working on numerous personal projects like his upcoming academy in Haryana and also an NGO. To add to it, he also has a few offers lined up to play in European leagues.
Asked how will he prioritise, the former star midfielder said: "It won't be a problem at all. Yes, I am working on a few personal things but serving Indian hockey is always a priority for me."
Harendra Singh had a major role to play in reviving Sardar's career and the former captain said the sacked India coach wasn't given enough time to prove his worth with the senior national side.
"I think it was not a wise decision. Harendra bhai is one of the best coaches of India. I think we didn't give him enough time. In the 4-5 tournaments with the senior side he managed 3 podium finishes for India.
"I think any coach needs at least 4 years to build a team and get desired results," Sardar said.
Sardar said with no one at the helm, the Indian men's hockey team is now in a no man's land with the Tokyo Olympics just a year-and-a-half away.
"We have to go through a difficult Olympic qualifier and any new coach will take at least 5-6 months to get his footing. With a new coach there is always the risk of adopting to a completely new style of hockey," he said.
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