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

Ex-coach's jail sentence cut to a year

PUTRAJAYA: The Court of Appeal yesterday sentenced former athletics coach C. Ramanathan to 12 months' jail for molesting two junior athletes 19 years ago. A three-man bench led by Datuk Mohd Hishamudin Mohd Yunus unanimously dismissed Ramanathan's appeal against conviction, but varied the jail sentence of four years to a year, which was to run concurrently. Following yesterday's ruling, Ramanathan, 75, a former teacher, walked out a free man as he had served 10 months in Kajang Prison. Convicts get one-third remission for good behaviour while in prison. However, he will lose his pension. Hishamudin, who sat with Datuk Abdul Wahab Patail and Datuk Linton Albert, said the court found no merit to overturn the conviction. "However, in reducing the sentence, we considered Ramanathan's age and the long years the appeal has taken." Deputy public prosecutor Awang Armadajaya Awang Mahmud submitted that then High Court judge Tan Sri Abdull Hamid E...

Badminton: Fans rooting for all-Malaysian semis

Reports: RAJES PAUL KUALA LUMPUR: The home fans will be rooting for an all-Malaysian men’s singles semi-final between Lee Chong Wei and Liew Daren. But Chong Wei is more fancied to advance than Daren in quarter-final matches against Indonesian Simon Santoso and Dane Peter Gade-Christensen respectively at the Putra Stadium in Bukit Jalil today. Yesterday, Chong Wei defeated Vietnamese Nguyen Tien Minh 21-9, 18-21, 21-7 in a second-round match that saw the world number one struggling to adapt to the draught in the stadium in the second game. And Daren continued a fairy tale run in his home Open, blowing away a toothless Hsueh Hsuan-yi of Taiwan 21-14, 21-12. Although Choong Wei had to slog for the win over Tien Minh, the top seed and defending champion felt that he was playing better by the day. “I got off to a good start but found it hard to cope with the draught. I tried to catch up after losing my momentum but that did not happen and I decided to conserve energy for ...

Rajagobal Let Off The Hook

PETALING JAYA, April 24 (Bernama) -- National head coach Datuk K. Rajagobal was let off the hook by the Football Association of Malaysia's (FAM) Disciplinary Committee after finding no evidence that he had violated FAM's Article 88, as claimed. FAM Disciplinary Committee chairman Datuk Taufik Abdul Razak said the committee had decided not to charge Rajagobal after carefully analysing the video of the post-match press conference by the 56-year-old coach. "After listening to the recording of the post-match press conference, we decided to drop the charge against Rajagopal as he did not make such a statement. "Maybe his (Rajagobal) assessment and comments of the match was misconstrued by the media. There was no mention of the FAM policy throughout his comments," said Taufik after emerging from a three-hour Disciplinary Committee meeting at Wisma FAM in Kelana Jaya, here, Wednesday. Rajagobal who does not mince his words when asked to com...