"I feel many states are not doing enough. If Indian football as a whole has to grow, we need more wholehearted support and participation," Patel said here after chairing the Annual General Meeting of All India Football Federation here today.
"We will soon be going to rank the states much like the licensing criteria which is in existence for the I-League clubs. There has to be accountability from all the state associations," he added.
"AIFF is the custodian of football in India and we are here to give a direction to Indian football. For that, all the states need to move in sync," Patel said.
He said the idea was to take the game to all corners of India and lauded the supply line of players from the North East region of the country.
Patel also stressed on developing an "ecosystem for
football".
"We have introduced an U-15 League and the response has been so encouraging. The idea is to develop an entire ecosystem of football. Indian football is not long away; it's on the horizon," he said.
Das highlighted that the AIFF was facing the "transition phase" to produce better players.
Das also stressed on AIFF's "zero tolerance policy on corruption related to the sport".
"The AIFF has maintained a zero tolerance on corruption. We have conducted Workshops with FIFA and even have an Integrity Officer on board. Maintaining integrity is not just about fighting match fixing. It percolates down to all the administrators who run the state FA, clubs and the AIFF. In fact, we at AIFF have signed a code of ethics to address the issue," Das said.
