The world’s most populous nation, India, watched from the sidelines as the World Cup kicked off. Again. A billion-plus people, and the men’s team has never qualified. The women’s team hasn't either. But hidden behind this familiar headline is a deeper, more uncomfortable story: a UK-backed grassroots initiative, designed to change the equation, is flagging. Documents seen by this desk show a programme that promised to unearth talent from the slums and villages, funded by British taxpayers and corporate donors, has delivered little more than broken pitches and unfulfilled contracts.
Sources close to the project, which I will call the 'Football Futures Fund', confirm that of the 2,000 grassroots clubs promised by 2023, fewer than 400 are operational. The money, some £12 million initially committed, has been funnelled through a labyrinth of sub-contractors. A former consultant, speaking on condition of anonymity, said: “We’d go to a village, cut a ribbon, take photos. The local kids would get a football. Then the next stop was the bank. The real work, coaching, league structures, never happened.”
Documents leaked to this newsroom include internal emails from the UK-based implementing partner, a non-profit with close ties to the Football Association. One email, dated March 2022, shows a project manager expressing concern that “metrics for success are being fudged”. The response from a senior director: “We need to show progress. The next tranche of funding depends on it.” That next tranche, £4 million, was released three months later.
On the ground in states like West Bengal and Maharashtra, the reality is stark. At a 'model centre' in a Kolkata slum, the artificial pitch is riddled with holes. The promised floodlights were never installed. Local coaches, paid a pittance, have not been paid in four months. “The children come because they love football,” said one coach, his face etched with fatigue. “But the programme is a lie. We are doing it for free.”
The initiative was sold as a partnership with Indian football authorities. However, emails show that a rival faction within the All India Football Federation (AIFF) actively worked to undermine the project, seeing it as a threat to their own patronage networks. “The AIFF is a cesspool of cronyism,” a former federation official told me. “They didn’t want a success that wasn't theirs.”
The UK’s Foreign Office, which provided the seed funding, has been silent. Requests for comment were met with a standard response: “We are monitoring the project closely.” But monitoring is not oversight. The money went out the door. The results: zero World Cup appearances.
This is not a story of a nation failing at sport. It is a story of well-intentioned aid money, mismanaged by players in London and Delhi, that has left a trail of broken promises. The children of India still kick a rag ball in the dust. The executives who flew in for the photo-ops have moved on to other projects. The World Cup goes on without them.
The question is: who is going to hold the suits to account?








