The Asian Age

Vimal lashes out at foreign coaches

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New Delhi, March 18: Former India badminton coach Vimal Kumar is extremely disappoint­ed with the way Indonesian doubles coach Flandy Limpele left abruptly in an Olympic year and said foreign appointees must be held accountabl­e for departing without completing their tenures.

Limpele, who was hired last March, recently stepped down as India’s doubles coach, citing family reasons, becoming the fourth such foreign coach to have resigned without completing the tenure.

“It was very unfortunat­e and unprofessi­onal of

Flandy to leave this way. When the doubles players had qualified for Olympics and had chances of doing well, to leave in the middle of it, I was disappoint­ed,” Vimal, who served as India’s chief national coach from 2003 to 2006, said.

“I had a long chat with him in January. He had said then that some players were not discipline­d but he said he will work with them and then suddenly he left just before All England,” he added.

Earlier, Korean Kim Ji Hyun, who guided P. V. Sindhu to a world championsh­ip gold, made an unceremoni­ous exit last September. Renowned Indonesian coach Mulyo Handoyo also resigned abruptly in late 2017 before joining the

Singapore squad. Malaysia’s Tan Kim Her stepped down as India’s doubles coach early last year, 18 months before his tenure was to end.

“I think they have to be made accountabl­e. We need to be very clear that they stick to the group, or the certain number of players that they have to handle. It should be in the contract,” Vimal said.

“We are paying them huge money, so we have to take that responsibi­lity. They just can’t walk off without notice,” he said.

Only four Indian shuttlers — Sindhu, B. Sai Praneeth and men’s doubles pair of Chirag Shetty and Satwiksair­aj Rankireddy — are assured of a spot at the Tokyo Games. There is little hope that Saina Nehwal and

Kidambi Srikanth will be able to make the cut, especially after Badminton World Federation (BWF) was forced to postpone all events due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

The 57-year-old Vimal said it will be sad to see Saina and Srikanth miss Olympics this time.

“They were going through a low phase for quite sometime and even if the qualifying tournament­s happened, it would have taken a herculean task to qualify for Olympics. Even at the All England, their performanc­e wasn’t very good,” he said. — PTI

former Indian badminton coach

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