The elite English league has partnered with Reliance Foundation to offer exchange of ideas and expertise and, through the Next Generation Cup, provides a platform for young footballers to go head-to-head with their international counterparts
On a hot May afternoon, even as temperatures remained above 30 degree Celsius around 6 pm in Mumbai, 22 young soccer fiends continued to raise the heat at the Reliance Corporate Park in Navi Mumbai, on the outskirts of Mumbai. They crossed, they passed, they dribbled, they tackled, and they scored too. While the occasional chatter among a small crowd gathered on the sidelines veered towards the IPL playoff match that would follow later in the evening, squeals of “shoot”, “get him”, or an exasperated “come one, ref” would immediately bring you back to the intense battle of attrition going on in the middle.
This was not your everyday soccer match, not the kind that inhabits every other alley in India. Because the winner would take home silverware signifying a multi-national conquest: The ‘Reliance Foundation presents Premier League Next Generation Cup’ that’s a collaboration between the philanthropic arm of Reliance Industries Limited (the owners of Network18, the publishers of Forbes India) and the Premier League (PL), England’s most elite football league.
The competition was launched in 2019, with Mumbai hosting, among others, the under-14 and under-15 sides of Arsenal, Manchester United and Chelsea in the inaugural season, with a repeat season in the city in 2020. The third edition moved to the UK in 2022, where the under-21 colts of ISL outfits Kerala Blasters and Bengaluru FC, which topped the domestic Reliance Foundation Development League (RFDL), faced off against the academy teams of Tottenham Hotspur, Leicester City (now relegated to the lower division) and West Ham United, among others.
The fourth edition of the Next Gen Cup, which recently concluded in Mumbai, doubled the number of Indian participants to four—the top four finishers of the 60-team RFDL—along with PL clubs Wolverhampton Wanderers aka Wolves, West Ham United and Everton, and South Africa’s five-year-old soccer venture Stellenbosch. The Wolves won the trophy by beating defending champion Stellenbosch 5-4 through a penalty shootout.
“When we started, we had the under-14 competition. Fast forward to now, we have under-21 teams playing against each other,” says Neil Saunders, director of football, PL, a globally acclaimed league of 20 English teams. “The fact that we’ve been able to progress to this age group shows the quality of young players in India.”