Hyderabad: Starting at a young age with children -- boys and girls -- in her locality, Vivek Nagar, Dola Ghosh decided to take a step forward to make her football known outside her locality at the age of 27. Though it was late, she was not willing to give up her dream to play at the highest level. She was always true to her dream. So, on her own initiative, she moved out of her locality to play for Dharmatala's Itika Memorial in 1994.
"My parents never objected to my decision to play football. They always encouraged me. But people in my locality looked at me with an eye of suspicion. At Dharmatala while playing I noticed many people assembled to watch football, but they used to laugh seeing a girl playing among 21 boys," Dola Ghosh, who played at stopper back position, told Etv Bharat recollecting the days of her hurdles.
As it happened, Dola, despite being born and raised in a conservative society, was not willing to be bogged down by the societal pressures and evil eyes of spectators.
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Her decision to play at Maidan was bold and courageous as she was coming off to play at a place where no other girl was visible, neither at the ground nor on the sidelines. Dola had no choice but to play with boys to keep her passion afloat.
Dola's dedication and commitment to football eventually worked wonders as she made it to the Calcutta University (now Kolkata University) and Bengal team and in the very next year, after she started playing in Maidan in 1995, she got a call from the All India Football Federation to play for India women's senior team in the AFC Women's Championship. The tournament turned out to be a disaster for India. They returned home losing all of their three group stage matches to Japan, South Korea and Uzbekistan. They had conceded an average of four goals in each game.
After another year with the Indian women's team, Dola left everyone surprised by hanging her boots up. The obvious question that came on her way was why did she take retirement so early?
It was nothing but a marriage that made her convinced to give up playing. A month before the India women's team's tour of China and Japan in December 1997, she got married to former India international Subir Ghosh and took a call on her career.