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Barefoot Boys


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  • 1. British Conceptions

    19:28||Season 1, Ep. 1
    It’s 1857. British soldiers play football in the barracks of Bengal, but Bengalis—with their “delicate limbs”—aren’t welcome to play ball. How could India come to be known as “the Brazil of Asia”? In this episode, we meet the Immortal Eleven.

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  • 2. The Father of Indian Football

    19:20||Season 1, Ep. 2
    We meet Nagendraprasad Sarbadhikari, founding father of Indian football. He showed Indians that they could not only express their masculinity, but also beat the British at their own sport.
  • 3. No Boots? No Problem

    15:28||Season 1, Ep. 3
    Nagendra marries into the Sovabazaar family, and starts a football club in its name. The British are baffled when the Indians show up…barefoot.
  • 4. Mohun Bagan's Palatial Origins

    19:50||Season 1, Ep. 4
    Three royal families set out to find a proper setting for a football club, and find it in the Mohun Bagan marble palace. Bagan’s start is rocky, but the winds of change—sporting and political—start to gather speed.
  • 5. Kicked Into Shape

    17:50||Season 1, Ep. 5
    Former army man Sailen Bose shakes things up at Mohun Bagan, kicking (literally) the players into shape. The British decide to partition Bengal, in furtherance of the strategy of ‘Divide and Rule,’ but Bengal rises in protest. For inspiration, people begin to look to indigenous scientific innovators, nationalist writers and…footballers.
  • 6. The Bhaduri Brothers

    16:08||Season 1, Ep. 6
    With the help of the Bhaduri Brothers, the Immortal Eleven ascend the ranks—all the way to the 1905 Gladstone Cup. Bengalis from all over travel to Chinsurah in the hopes of witnessing a victory against the British neatly packaged into a football tournament.
  • 7. The Bomb Heard 'Round Bengal

    18:04||Season 1, Ep. 7
    A revolutionary terrorist bomb attack on a British magistrate in Muzzafarpur goes horribly wrong. A fired-up Mohun Bagan wins their way into the IFA Shield; politics can’t help but spill onto the field.