It took up a lot of his spare time, giving his parents, who moved to the US when he was five, some anxious moments. "I think they would have preferred me to have a little balance—not too far from most typical Indian parents in that respect," he says. But he did keep the balance, initially following the traditional academic route, getting a masters and an M.Phil from Columbia University, New York and teaching economics there before making his next stop as an economist at the World Bank. Meanwhile, he was also collecting laurels in soccer. In 1984, he got involved with the national team programme, going on to become the director of national games, chairman of the international games committee and managing director of national teams.