DT Next

HOLDING COURT

Sindhu thanks her coach Park Tae Sang for creating match situations in training

-

NEW DELHI: The lack of competitio­ns before the Olympics is a major concern for Indian shuttlers but not so much for PV Sindhu, who trusts her Korean coach Park Tae Sang to create match situations for her in training itself.

Owing to the raging COVID-19 pandemic, the Badminton World Federation has been forced to cancel the remaining three Olympic qualifiers in India, Malaysia and Singapore. These were to be the last set of events before the Tokyo Games in July-August.

Asked if cancellati­ons will affect her preparatio­ns, Sindhu said: “Well, we were thinking that Singapore will be the last event before Olympics but now we don’t have another option, so I am playing matches against different players and my coach Park is trying to create match situations for me in training.

“Different players have different styles like Tai Tzu (Ying) or Ratchanok (Intanon) have different styles of play but Park is there to guide me, to prepare me for it,” Sindhu said. “Obviously, we will be playing each other after a few months and there will be something new in our games, so I will have to prepare for that.”

Sindhu doesn’t train with the rest of the Indian Olympic-bound team. She has been training at the Gachibowli indoor stadium in Telangana and does her fitness training at Suchitra academy.

The 25-year-old endorsed BWF’s decision to cancel the events, saying while it is sad that competitio­ns could not take place, life is more important than sports.

“It is sad that the whole world has come to a standstill but before sportspers­ons, we are human beings and life comes first,” Sindhu said. “For the moment, events are being cancelled and I know sportspers­ons are sad but I think it is good for the people... Organisers take a lot of measures and keep us in a bubble but still we need to be careful.”

Sindhu, the reigning world champion, said it will be a tough task for organisers and athletes to adhere to the COVID-19 protocols in a showpiece event like the Olympics and everyone has to brace for the challenge.

“Every country has their own COVID-19 rules. In Thailand, we were tested every 2-3 days, in All England an entire contingent had to pull out for one case in their flight but we have to deal with it,” the Hyderabadi shuttler said.

“Even in Olympics, I have heard that every day they will be testing us. Before we take off, we have to clear an RT-PCR test and after getting down we do a test again, it is definitely a tough task.” There was a lot of chaos in some of the internatio­nal badminton events early this year when a few false positives forced some of the top players, including Saina Nehwal and B Sai Praneeth, to withdraw. Sindhu hoped that such instances do not happen during the Olympics.

 ??  ?? PV Sindhu
PV Sindhu

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India