Thursday, August 09, 2012

Commentaries from the witness (me!) at the live venue in London


On 5th August 2012, I was there at the venue Wembley Arena London, to witness the historic moment and to cheer for Lee Chong Wei, in the Badminton Men's Singles Final. That was touted to be the most realistic Gold Medal hope for Malaysia ever, for the first time in history. That was also the second showdown in Olympic game final since Beijing Olympics 2008, between the top 2 seeds – Malaysia’s Lee Chong Wei and China’s Lin Dan.

I was extremely fortunate to have obtained the ticket, which drew a lot of jealousy back in my homeland. The match was itself an epic. The live atmosphere was superb, exhibiting the fierce rivalry of show of support for both players’ origin country. I was in a row of majority Malaysian supporters, and behind me was a row of Chinese supporters. As the match was going on, we exchanged the loud shouts and stomps. 'Malaysia/Lee Chong Wei BOLEH' vs 'Zhong Guo Dui/Lin Dan JIAYOU' Meanwhile, I did spot the Malaysia No.1 fan for Badminton, who else other than the famous ‘First Lady’ Prime Minister’s wife Rosmah Mansor (who traveled a great distance just the night before for this final match)? Her signature oversized hair shape was unmistakably recognised from afar, as she entered the venue belatedly, surrounding with other VIPs cladded in orange national sports team jacket. The next time when I saw her again at close distance, it was after the narrow defeat of Lee CW. She seemed not too much affected by the result, heading to the exit with an entourage of no less than 10 people. I was not in the mood at all for shaking hands or taking photos.

Despite the final score line, I must confess that both players have performed at their best, even for the case of eventual loser Lee CW. The third set was particularly an anxious nailbiting breathtaking experience to watch. The score was super tight and the rally went point by point, chasing each other right towards the end of match. The watershed was at the point of 19-19, where Super Dan gained the ‘turbo’ to kill the game decisively by taking the final 2 straight points with his outburst confidence. Lee CW succumbed and I was left immediately deeply disappointed. The stadium ran wild with loud cheers and waving of 5 star red flags. I could not bear to witness the cocky topless frenzy running celebration style of Lin Dan (in Football game, this would merit a straight yellow card!). Still I could not ask more from Dato Lee whom has given his best to the nation. My Thai friend analysed that to me, saying that Lin Dan has the stronger mental strength and sheer determination to carry him through the crucial final points, and obviously outpowered Lee. Although I believe also that Lee was out of luck, I do think my friend got some truth in his analysis.


I can't help but also ponder on these questions: Where do we go from here? If Dato Lee would not participate in the next Olympic game, then who will succeed him as the leading hope for the first Gold? Besides Badminton, what other sports could also make it happen and make us proud as a nation? Sure we have invested quite a substantial amount of money in Badminton, as this is the traditional sport we excel at. However, that is not good enough. In this Olympics, we have seen other previously unknown athletes, our homegrown unsung heroes representing our nation in the final round of other sports such as diving and track-cycling ( latest update: we have just won one bronze medal for Women’s 10m diving!)but unfortunately they drew lower attention than Badminton sport did. I guess now it is time to call for national sports 'transformation'. National Sports Council of Malaysia should manage and distribute the funding better so that all resources could be channeled directly to the benefits of athletes and coaches, meanwhile also for spotting and training the new genuine sport talents.

1 comment:

@iwei said...

its the same in singapore, the limelight is on table tennis. the controversy is, why buy players for table tennis only then and not the other games? the home-grown athletes for the other games are slogging hard but without much attention cos they couldn't get in the final matches.

btw *coaches* not couches :P