https://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/opinion/2020/06/05/foreign-base-the-answer-to-achieving-sports-excellence/
Foreign
base the answer to achieving sports excellence?
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There
has been much hype over two women hockey players – Nuraini Abdul Rashid and
Farah Ayuni Yahya – who are poised to make their European Hockey League debut
later this year.
Goalkeeper
Farah, 29, and defender/midfielder Nuraini, 28, will represent English club
East Grinstead in West Sussex, in the continental league.
Farah
from Johor has been playing in England since 2018 in four windows of three
months each while Pahang-born Nuraini went there last year after a season in Italy.
Their stint at the club was arranged by former national women’s hockey coach K
Dharmaraj who described them as the “two best women hockey players in
Malaysia”.
Dharmaraj
said East Grinstead demanded a high standard of hockey and that the two women
had proved themselves capable.
Dharmaraj
had also used his international connections to arrange playing stints for other
players in the 2018 and 2019 German, Italian and English women’s hockey
leagues.
These
platforms enrich the players, giving them international experience and making
them more mature in their play.
A few
men players too have played in overseas leagues.
Other
sports too can benefit from vital overseas exposure and training under
top-notch coaches.
Twelve
years ago, the proposed Brickendonbury High Performance Training Centre (HPTC)
in Hertfordshire could have been our gateway to Europe and an opportunity to absorb
a professional sports culture. However, the East Herts Council did not allow
the plan to take off, citing environmental reasons.
Perhaps
it is time for the ministry of youth and sports or the National Sports Council
to consider setting up a HPTC in Europe as the numerous other ways that have
been attempted to push Malaysian sports to optimum standards have produced
little result.
Revisiting
the idea for a HPTC in Hertfordshire, which was to be part of the Tun Abdul
Razak Research Centre (TARRC), is still an option as the land belongs to the
Malaysian government.
But
judging from the lengthy process to gain permission to develop the place and
possibly another round of public uproar, an alternative country seems a better
option.
The
planned HPTC in England met with objections from the Malaysian media and the
public due to the astronomical building cost of RM490 million mentioned in a
leaked paper to the Cabinet.
Criticism
continued despite the government clarifying that the amount was the proposal to
convert the TARRC into a full sports centre when its intention was to only
develop part of it as the HPTC at a far lesser cost.
After
much hue and cry the centre’s plans were laid to rest when the East Herts
Council shot down the application for development of a part of the TARRC.
It
cited nine reasons which included contravening the Metropolitan GreenBelt
policy; being detrimental to the open and historic landscape; ecological
issues; and threat to flooding and traffic congestion.
The
Malaysian authorities decided not to file an appeal as they felt an appeal
would heighten the adverse publicity and would also be time consuming.
Some,
however, felt the government had handled the matter poorly and should have gone
ahead with the project.
Had the
HPTC in England become a reality, we would, in all probability, have witnessed
many of our young sportspeople attain international finesse under the guidance
of quality coaches and top sports scientists.
Former
world squash champion Nicol David and top cyclist Azizulhasni Awang benefited
greatly from being based in the Netherlands and Australia respectively.
Hockey
defender A Francis played in Germany before returning to play in the 1975 World
Cup in Kuala Lumpur while in 1977 junior player Updesh Singh returned from
France to play in the 1979 Junior World Cup.
First
time gold medallists Argentina, who beat Belgium 4-2 in the men’s hockey final
at the 2016 Rio Olympics, were based in Holland from 2013. Their players were
involved in the Dutch League with different teams and on their days off trained
as a team.
In
football, the likes of Wong Kam Fook, the late Chow Chee Keong, the late Wong
Choon Wah and Yip Chee Keong, to name a few, played in Hong Kong in the 70s.
The
only difference was these footballers played as professionals while the women
hockey players went for overseas stints with their air tickets, accommodation
and allowances paid for by the National Sports Council and lately by the clubs.
It has
been proven on several occasions that with overseas-based programmes and
stints, Malaysia has produced world class sportsmen and sportswomen.
As
sports authorities pursue the never-ending hunt for a winning formula, perhaps
an overseas base should now sit on the priority list.
The views expressed are those of the author
and do not necessarily reflect those of FMT.
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