The West Bengal schoolboys should feel elated and lucky after having been left off the hook by the NCC team when they were pressing hard against their rivals. In fact, the Maharashtra team had its chances coming their way, particularly in the second half, but the West Bengal schoolboys staved off whatever threat they posed.
With the teams spending some anxious moments in rival boxes the frustration was palpable and it was time for Krishnadevpur boys to play rough, resulting in Ranajoy Das bringing down NCC's central midfield Ansari Mohammad Kamran in the box.
The referee not only red-carded Das but also blew for the spot, giving NCC a good chance. Nevertheless, Kamran failed to convert as his feeble shot was stopped by substitute goalkeeper Ranajay Pal. Disappointed as the team was, the NCC boys' forlorn faces and drooping shoulders told the dismal story.
"The red card proved to be decisive. I feel only a yellow should have been shown. But I am proud of my boys for the way they played with 10 players," said Soumitra Hazra, coach of the West Bengal school team.
But Mohammad Mubin, coach of the NCC team, put it more succinctly.
"We lost the game that we should have won. We failed to convert the penalty. It was a costly miss," said the coach, adding, "we have to go back to the drawing board and see where all we had erred."
There will be 32 teams from across the country competing in the Under-14 boys' event, besides the six foreign outfits. The girl's under-17 event will witness 28 teams, including three from abroad along with a YUWA Team from Jharkhand, vying for top honours.
