Kolkata: Tulsidas Balaram, India's Asian Games gold-medal winning footballer and Olympian, has passed away aged 87 after a prolonged illness. The same has been confirmed by sources close to his family, as reported by news agency PTI. A widower, Balaram, was living in a flat on the banks of the river Hooghly in Uttarpara.
The 1962 Asian Games champion was hospitalised on December 26 last year and was being treated for urinary infection and abdominal distension.
"His condition did not improve and he breathed his last around 2pm today," a source close to the family told PTI.
"We are grateful to the state government and the sports minister Aroop Biswas for taking good care of him during his last days," he added.
Balaram belonged to the golden generation of Indian football in the 1950s and 60s where he paired with legends such as Chuni Goswami and PK Banerjee, and they came to be known as 'holy trinity'.
An Arjuna awardee, Balaram's exploits at the 1960 Rome Olympics are well documented.
Placed in the 'group of death' with Hungary, France and Peru, India lost the opener to Hungary 1-2 but Balaram covered himself in glory by scoring a 79th-minute goal.
India came close to upsetting France a few days later with Balaram again showing his class.
Balaram, who mostly played as a centre-forward or as a left-winger, called it a day in 1963 owing to poor health.
The President of the All India Football Federation and Join Secretary of the Indian Olympic Association, Kalyan Chaubey took to Twitter to share his condolence for the departed football star. "Visited Hospital and met his family with heavy heart I mourn of the passing away of Tulsidas Balaram. He was from a golden generation of Indian Football and one of the best we have ever seen. My thoughts go out to his family ओम। ওঁ শান্তি @IndianFootball #OmShanti," he wrote on Twitter.
(With Inputs From PTI)