Skip to main content

No chance of a medal in highly competitive table tennis event

FOCUS ON TABLE TENNIS
DATES OF COMPETITION: Nov 13-20
VENUE: Guangzhou Gymnasium
MEDALS AT STAKE: 7-7-7
EVENTS: Men and women team, singles, doubles and mixed doubles

TEAM MALAYSIA
MEN: Mohd Shakirin Ibrahim
WOMEN: Beh Lee Wei, Ng Sock Khim, Chiu Soo Jiin
MANAGER: Han Kee Juan
COACH: Soong Poh Wah
PREVIOUS ACHIEVEMENTS: Nil

THE Malaysian women’s table tennis team created history by winning the first ever medal in the New Delhi Commonwealth Games recently.
Beh Lee Wei, Ng Sock Khim and Chiu Soo Jiin chalked up a hard fought 3-2 win over England to bag the team bronze medal.

But the trio, and men’s national player Mohd Shakirin Ibrahim, will be heading for the Asian Games next month knowing they stand no chance at all of winning a medal in Guangzhou, China.
Malaysian paddlers will be featuring in the Asiad for the first time after a lapse of 32 years.
The standard in the Asian Games is very much higher compared to the Commonwealth Games and powerhouse China are expected to make a clean sweep of the seven gold medals at stake.

Even countries like North Korea, South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Hong Kong and Taiwan have far superior paddlers than Malaysia, who last featured in the Games way back in 1978 in Bangkok.
For the record, Malaysia have never won a single medal in the Asiad.
National coach Soong Poh Wah, who featured in the 1966 Games, admitted that the national players have a very slim chance to be on the podium.

“The standard in the Asian Games is very high and there is no way our players can win a medal. We are sending them to Guangzhou for exposure,” said Poh Wah.

He explained that the Table Tennis Association of Malaysia (TTAM) did not take part in the last eight Asian Games because the Olympic Council of Malaysia (OCM) decided to send national paddlers under Category B.

“We (TTAM) were not willing to bear the expenses of the players under Category B as we felt it would be a waste of money,” said Poh Wah.


“It was better to use the money to compete in other competitions where we stood a chance to win medals.”
However, this time TTAM decided to send the players to Asiad “because OCM were kind enough to allow one man and one woman paddler to compete under Category A”.

“So we decided to send two more women players under Category B for winning the bronze medal in the team event,” said Poh Wah.

The 27-year-old Lee Wei, who has been representing Malaysia for 11 years, said she never thought that she would get a chance to feature in the Asiad.

“I know that winning a medal is out of my reach but I am looking forward to playing against world class players. I will not only play in the team event but will also compete in the singles and mixed doubles with Shakirin,” said Lee Wei.

Besides playing in the singles and team events, Sock Khim and Soo Jiin will also feature in the doubles


By AFTAR SINGH

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Malaysian junior athletes are just too ‘lembik’

Saya setuju. We are working on more coaches! “ @ManOlimpik : Malaysian junior athletes are just too ‘lembik’ http://t.co/7D7wmHWaNy ” — Khairy Jamaluddin (@Khairykj) June 10, 2014 The benchmark. Can our junior athletes train as hard as Malaysia's world No.1 badminton player, Lee Chong Wei? “IT IS okay lah. The training is not too bad lah. I will try lah … Wah, so hard lah today.” These are some of the common statements I hear from our juniors nowadays. It is not only in badminton. It is the easy-going, laid-back attitude and lack of competitiveness at grassroots level that we have problems producing quality players. I have travelled quite a bit. After ending my decade-long career with the national team, I went to play in the league in Europe. It’s different there. The European athletes know what they want. And they do it with real focus. Even the young ones possess admirable self-control and show a high level of commitment. During my time in the ...

Organising Major Sports Events Can Inspire Sports Culture Among The People - Khairy

PUTRAJAYA, June 5 (Bernama) -- Organising major sports events can help inspire sports culture among the people and ensure a healthy lifestyle said Youth and Sports Minister Khairy Jamaluddin. Khairy said the Tour of Malaysia cycling race organised since 1963, for example, can encourage more people to take the sport in a more competitive way or just for recreation purposes. "A study carried out by a world renown medical journal, The Lancet, revealed that 61 percent of adults in Malaysia do not engage themselves in active sports. "A study by the Health Ministry revealed that only 25 percent of Malaysians exercise," he said in his speech when launching the 2013 Tour of Malaysia (Jelajah Malaysia) at the Youth and Sports Ministry, here, Wednesday. "Cycling, though not as popular here as in countries like Denmark, the activity is becoming popular among the people as can be seen through an increase in sale of bicycles for recreation," he sa...

KBS realistik

TERUJA...Shabery (dua dari kanan) melancarkan Logo Tahun Industri Sukan 2011-2012 di Casa 1, MSN, semalam.    KETIKA beberapa sukan utama diletakkan sasaran meraih pingat khususnya emas di Sukan Olimpik 2012 London, penyertaan bola sepak dan hoki sebagai keluarga baru program Road To London pula dilihat sekadar membantu mereka melepasi kelayakan. Mungkin bersikap lebih realistik dengan keupayaan kedua-dua sukan itu di pentas lebih tinggi, Menteri Belia dan Sukan, Datuk Seri Ahmad Shabery Cheek mahu segala bantuan diberikan kepada sejumlah 50 pemain bola sepak dan hoki kebangsaan bagi membolehkan mereka tersenarai sebagai kontinjen ke London. “Bagi acara hoki dan bola sepak, kita tidak boleh melihat bantuan perlu diberi selepas mereka layak tetapi kita akan cuba bantu mereka supaya mereka layak. “Tiada kompromi terhadap misi mendapatkan emas pertama tetapi sasaran kita tahun ini ialah mendapatkan seberapa ramai atlet ke Sukan Olimpik,” katanya selepas mempen...