<p>The names of these two boys were released today by MP Milind Deora following his initiative - the South Mumbai Junior Soccer Challenge which took place last month. The 30 boys selected after the tournament were trained in a four-day training camp conducted by QPR coaches Stephen Gallen and Paul Bruce at the Western Railway Football Ground before Rakesh and Praful were chosen, a media release said.<br /><br />Listing the skills of Rakesh, Gallen said, "He was a good all rounder, with good attitude and good technical ability. The UK coach stressed upon the right attitude and strong fundamentals as the key criteria for selection."<br /><br />The shortlisted children will get an opportunity to train with their counterparts at the QPR. If they are good enough they may even get an opportunity to represent the club in the future, according to Gallen.<br /><br />On the comparison between English kids and India's, Gallen said, "Technically, the English kids are better. But one of the reasons for that is these kids start their training at a very young age."<br /><br />"This year the quality of sportsmanship was better than the one witnessed last year, but there is a large scope for development as the players need to tackle harder, run harder, shoot harder," Gallen said.</p>
<p>The names of these two boys were released today by MP Milind Deora following his initiative - the South Mumbai Junior Soccer Challenge which took place last month. The 30 boys selected after the tournament were trained in a four-day training camp conducted by QPR coaches Stephen Gallen and Paul Bruce at the Western Railway Football Ground before Rakesh and Praful were chosen, a media release said.<br /><br />Listing the skills of Rakesh, Gallen said, "He was a good all rounder, with good attitude and good technical ability. The UK coach stressed upon the right attitude and strong fundamentals as the key criteria for selection."<br /><br />The shortlisted children will get an opportunity to train with their counterparts at the QPR. If they are good enough they may even get an opportunity to represent the club in the future, according to Gallen.<br /><br />On the comparison between English kids and India's, Gallen said, "Technically, the English kids are better. But one of the reasons for that is these kids start their training at a very young age."<br /><br />"This year the quality of sportsmanship was better than the one witnessed last year, but there is a large scope for development as the players need to tackle harder, run harder, shoot harder," Gallen said.</p>