BANGKOK — Shoddy management and a lack of funds look set to condemn Southeast
Asia to yet another dismal Olympics, with one expert warning the region's sport
even faces "collapse" without a drastic re-think.
Home to around 600 million people, surging
economies and a massive sporting fan base, the group of nations stretching from
Myanmar to Indonesia ought to be catching the eye at the world's greatest
sporting event.
Instead, there are few title contenders
making the trip to London, as enduring poverty, threadbare facilities, skewed
funding and a focus on non-Olympic sports strangle the pipeline of talent.
There are some bright spots: Malaysia boasts
the world's second ranked badminton player, Lee Chong-Wei, while Indonesia will
look to maintain its record of gold for its shuttlers at every Games since
1992.
Thailand offers a smattering of
weightlifters; the Philippines, whose vaunted boxers are mainly chasing
professional riches, has its hopes pinned to its shooters; and Singapore will
send some strong swimmers and 2008 team table tennis silver medallist Feng
Tianwei.
Yet among the 11 nations who contest the
regional showpiece Southeast Asian (SEA) Games, there are no realistic medal
prospects in the headline track and field events.
The statistics make grim reading -- Southeast
Asian nations harvested just a dozen medals combined in Beijing four years ago.
It was a paltry return given the region's
size, put further into context by the 13 podium places claimed by sporting
minnow Kazakhstan.
"The risk is that sport in our region
collapses," warns Santiparb Tejavanija, an advisor to the Olympic Council
of Asia.
"If we cannot nurture the best young
people, we will be unable to compete in the long term. Each year that passes,
another group of potential athletes disappears."
The reasons for the poor harvest of talent
are myriad, but experts say they pivot around mismanagement and corruption,
illustrated by massive graft relating to construction projects at last year's
SEA Games in Indonesia.
Under-investment results in a lack of
facilities, financing and top-level coaching, and short-changes athletes and
the patriotic millions they represent, explains Santiparb.
There are also arguments that smaller
physiques put would-be Southeast Asian stars at a disadvantage in many
disciplines, such as the short distance track events.
But the bigger picture, according to Greg
Wilson, an Australian advising the Indonesian Olympic Committee (KOI), is that
a lack of ambition by poorly run sporting bodies means any funding goes to
regional, not global, competition.
"The Olympics was not on the radar for
many athletes even six months before the London Games," he says,
explaining that cash incentives are only offered to Indonesian athletes to
prepare for the SEA Games and domestic competition.
"They don't think they'll make Olympic
qualifications, so they look inward."
Indonesian gold medalists were awarded
$22,000 for "mediocre success" at the SEA Games rather than given
incentives to reach the higher mark of qualifying for the Olympics, says
Wilson.
Others lament a preoccupation with
traditional sports which are virtually unknown outside the region, such as
pencak silat and sepak takraw, and deflect resources from qualifying for the
Games.
"We really need to change the mindset --
we should focus only on favourable (Olympic) sports, instead of some random
ones," Indonesian Olympic Committee (KOI) chairwoman Rita Subowo recently
told the Jakarta Post.
Santiparb is scathing about the situation,
decrying the region's sports fans for mistakenly "going crazy for sports
which they can't even spell".
"And all the time the region continues
to fall further behind," adds the Thai.
His voice is one among a growing clamour for
change as many weary of the region's athletes playing rank underdogs on the
global stage.
But the region's sporting travails may prove
insurmountable, at least in the short term.
Sport is a sideshow to survival in an area
which, despite its fast pace of economic growth, remains desperately poor in
many parts.
Bad healthcare and diet, high rates of
smoking and the fact many people hold down several jobs preclude mass
participation in sport, draining the pool of available talent.
At the same time there is a lack of the
advanced sporting infrastructure enjoyed by similarly poor nations with a rich
sporting history -- such as the ex-Soviet bloc countries, or nations like
Jamaica or Kenya.
However, the outlook is not entirely gloomy.
Indonesia (badminton) and Thailand
(weightlifting) have shown success within particular disciplines can inspire
young athletes and catalyse more funding, creating a conveyor belt of potential
champions relatively quickly.
"London could be the watershed, where
people finally say 'hang on, why are we so far behind the rest of the
world?'" adds Wilson.
Aidan Jones
AFP
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