Badminton coach wants authorities to forget past
KARACHI: Former Pakistan badminton coach Raziuddin Ahmed said on Friday that poor coaching standard was the main reason behind the national team’s first round exit in the Asian Junior Table Tennis Championship in Thailand.
“Our coaching standard is very poor. Our coaches are unable to prepare the players as per international requirements,” Razi told ‘The News’ from Islamabad.
“Unless you imparted quality training to your players they would not be able to impress in international circuit,” he said.
He stressed that the Pakistan Badminton Federation should utilise all the available resources for the betterment of the sport.
“If there are a few good coaches who know how to prepare the team for international events then their services should be utilised,” said Razi, a highly qualified coach.
Razi, who did most of his coaching courses in England, said that the PBF should forget what happened in the past and take all the stakeholders along so that the sport could be developed.
“The federation should forget now that it had rivals in the past. The differences now should be ended like other federations have done. It’s time to think positive, otherwise the federation would not be able to bring any improvement in the standard of the game,” Razi said.
Accusations of human trafficking and violation of international rules damaged the sport in the country.
Pakistan also remained suspended from international action for quite some time.
It was after a long time that the country sent players to Glasgow Commonwealth Games and Asian Games in 2014 after Badminton World Federation (BWF) lifted the ban.
At the Asian Junior Championship in Thailand, Pakistan performed very poorly in boys singles and doubles.
In boys singles, China’s Hong Yang Weng whacked Shehroz Jamil 21-4, 21-7. Lam Houhim of Macau defeated Zohaib Khalil 21-15, 21-15. Thailand’s Pachaarapo Nipornram overpowered Shahmeer Iftikhar 21-14, 21-11. Kyohei Yamashita of Japan outgunned Ahmer Jalal 21-5, 21-14.
In doubles Natchanon Tulamok and Sukrit Maungli of Thailand overcame Ahmer Jalal and Zohaib Khalil 21-12, 21-13.
The pair of Kyohei Yamashita and Naoki Yamazawa of Japan defeated Shameer Iftikhar and Shehroz Jamil of Pakistan 21-9, 21-7.
Razi said losing to Macau and Thailand was not a good sign for future of Pakistan badminton. “It’s really disturbing,” the coach said.
He said the other countries had developed a lot. “Others are progressing at a high pace and it would be difficult for us to arrest our decline in the game unless we thought positively,” the coach added.
-
AI Innovation Could Make Trade Secrets More Valuable Than Patents, Says Billionaire Investor -
King Charles Heckling: Calls For 10 BAFTAs And A Knighthood For Sign Language Interpreter -
Kim Kardashian Leaves Meghan Markle 'upset' With Latest 'cheap Shot' -
Royal Expert On Andrew, Sarah Ferguson’s ‘entitled’ Behaviour Since Marriage -
Instagram And YouTube Accused Of Engineering Addiction In Children’s Brains -
Trump Reached Out To Police Chief Investigating Epstein In 2006, Records Show -
Keke Palmer Praises Actor Who Inspired 'The Burbs' Role -
Humans May Have 33 Senses, Not 5: New Study Challenges Long-held Science -
Kim Kardashian Prepared To Have Child With Lewis Hamilton: 'Baby Using A Surrogate' -
Internet Splits Over New York's Toilet Data Amid Bad Bunny's Super Bowl Show -
Prince William Inspects Saudi Arabia's Efforts To Promote Football In Young Girls -
Northern Lights: Calm Conditions Persist Amid Low Space Weather Activity -
'Look What Andrew Has Done': Meghan Markle Defended On Jeremy Vine Show -
Apple, Google Agree To Make 'app Store' Changes Over UK Regulator Concerns -
Autodesk Files Lawsuit Against Google Over AI Video Tool Trademark Dispute -
San Francisco 49ers Player Shot Near Post-Super Bowl Party