1998 Indian Federation Cup

The 1998 Indian Federation Cup, also known as 1998 Kalyani Black Label Federation Cup due to sponsorship reasons, was the 21st season of the Indian Federation Cup. It was held between 23 August and 12 September 1998. Salgaocar were the defending champions, but were eliminated in the first round by State Bank of Travancore. Mohun Bagan won the tournament for the tenth time, following a 2–1 over East Bengal in the final played at the Salt Lake Stadium, Kolkata, a replay of the previous edition's semifinal when the latter won.[1] Amit Das and Hemanta Dora of Mohun Bagan were named the Player and Goalkeeper of the Tournament.[2]

1998 Indian Federation Cup
Kalyani Black Label Federation Cup
Tournament details
CountryIndia
Dates23 August–12 September 1998
Teams16
Final positions
ChampionsMohun Bagan (10th title)
Runner-upEast Bengal
Tournament statistics
Matches played16
Goals scored36 (2.25 per match)
Top goal scorer(s)Cyril Barreto
(4 goals)
Best playerAmit Das (Mohun Bagan)
← 1997
2001 →

Qualification edit

For the 1998 edition, the All India Football Federation (AIFF) decided to increase the number of entries to justify the tournament as that "for champion clubs" on the back of two decades of "[failure] to achieve its propagated aims and objectives."[3] Accordingly, on 16 July 1998, the President of AIFF, Priya Ranjan Dasmunsi, announced that the edition would have 48 teams competing. Eight teams would be seeded directly into the round of 16 and eight other teams would qualify from five zones: North, East, North-East, West and South. He added that the qualifying rounds would be played on a knock-out basis, and that top two teams from South Zone and the winners of the four other zones would qualify for the tournament proper, while the other two would come from a play-off among runners-up of the four zones.[4] Salgaocar, East Bengal, Mohun Bagan, Mohammedan, Border Security Force, Indian Telephone Industries, Dempo and Churchill Brothers were announced as the eight seeded teams. A report carried by Sportstar said that the teams were seeded based on their quarter-final entry in the previous edition.[5]

The qualification round saw 37 teams vying from five zones for the eight spots. A then newly formed club, Bengal Mumbai, was not allowed to enter the competition from the West Zone as, according to the AIFF, "the team would have to come through the state league and prove themselves."[4][2]

Qualified teams edit

Team Qualified as Qualified on
Border Security Force 1997 quarter-final 16 July
Churchill Brothers 1997 quarter-final 16 July
Dempo 1997 quarter-final 16 July
East Bengal 1997 quarter-final 16 July
Indian Telephone Industries 1997 quarter-final 16 July
JCT Mills North Zone winner 10 August
Jorba Durga East Zone winner 22 July
Kochin South Zone winner 2 August
Langsning North-East Zone winner 1 August
Mohammedan 1997 quarter-final 16 July
Mohun Bagan 1997 quarter-final 16 July
Punjab State Electricity Board Play-off winner 23 August
Salgaocar 1997 quarter-final 16 July
State Bank of Travancore South Zone runner-up 2 August
Tollygunge Agragami Play-off winner 20 August
Vasco West Zone winner 8 August

Results edit

In case of a tie at regular time, extra time with golden goal was used. In case scores remain tied even after extra time, penalty shoot-out was used.

Pre-quarterfinals (round of 16) edit

Dempo0–2Vasco
Report Gadekar   62'
Nickson   64'

East Bengal3–1Jorba Durga
Biswas   90'
Mondal   57'
Vijayan   84'
Report Thapa   82'
Attendance: 10,000

Churchill Brothers7–0Langsning
Barreto   4', 6', 8', 17'
Soares   43'
Ansari   75', 76'
Report




Indian Telephone Industries0–1Punjab State Electricity Board
Gurdish Singh   26'

Mohammedan Sporting1–0 (a.e.t.)JCT Mills
Owino   116' Report
Attendance: 8,000

Quarter-finals edit

Churchill Brothers2–1 (a.e.t.)Border Security Force
Mensah   32',   111'  (pen.) Report Singh   84'
Referee: Ramesh Rehani

Vasco0–5East Bengal
Report Vijayan   38', 45'
R. Singh   56', 86'
Chapman   86'

Mohammedan Sporting0–0 (a.e.t.)Punjab State Electricity Board
Report
Penalties
Moses Ohira  
Joy Kabui  
Amitava Ghosh  
Subir Ghosh  
Arjan Ali  
4–3 Sandeep Saini  
Jujhar Singh  
Harjap Singh  
Dalip Kumar  
Sukhbir Singh  

Mohun Bagan1–0State Bank of Travancore
Omollo   82' Report
Referee: Gokuldas Nagvenkar (Goa)

Semi-finals edit


Third place play-off edit

Churchill Brothers1–1Mohammedan Sporting
Elvis Fernandes   90' Report

Final edit

Mohun Bagan2–1East Bengal
Amit Das   10'
Vijayan   20'
Report Chapman   85'

Statistics edit

Goalscorers edit

4 goals
  • Cyril Barreto (Churchill Brothers)
3 goals
2 goals
1 goal
  • Gauranga Pal (Border Security Force)
  • Harvinder Singh (Border Security Force)
  • Mario Soares (Churchill Brothers)
  • Elvis Fernandes (Churchill Brothers)
  • Dipendu Biswas (East Bengal)
  • Basudeb Mondal (East Bengal)
  • Suraj Thapa (Jorba Durga)
  • Cassius Owino (Mohammedan Sporting)
  • Joy Kabui (Mohammedan Sporting)
  • Sammy Omollo (Mohun Bagan)
  • Gurdish Singh (Punjab State Electricity Board)
  • Sylvester Ignatius (State Bank of Travancore)
  • Premanand Gadekar (Vasco)
  • Louis Nickson (Vasco)

Awards edit

Player of the Tournament
Amit Das (Mohun Bagan)
Best Goalkeeper
Hemanta Dora (Mohun Bagan)

Prize money edit

United Breweries Group sponsored the tournament and announced a prize money of 2 million for the winning team. The team that came second, third and fourth were given 1.5 million, 1 million and 500,000 respectively. All the other teams that participated in the tournament proper received 100,000 each.[4]

References edit

  1. ^ Bose, Saibal (13 September 1998). "Bagan ride on luck, EB errors to crown". The Indian Express. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  2. ^ a b "21th "Kalyani Black Label" Federation Cup 1998:". indianfootball.de. Archived from the original on 6 February 2017. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  3. ^ "It has failed to achieve its objective". The Hindu. indianfootball.de. 29 August 1998. Archived from the original on 31 July 2001. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  4. ^ a b c "News: 16 July 1998". indianfootball.de. 16 July 1998. Archived from the original on 30 July 2001. Retrieved 7 February 2017.
  5. ^ Ghosh, Arnab (9 October 1998). "Mohun Bagan retails title". Sportstar. indianfootball.de. Archived from the original on 12 June 2002. Retrieved 6 February 2017.

External links edit