The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Why Momota’s career will not be defined by elusive Olympic glory

- SHIVANI NAIK

Newolympic­championsg­etcrowneda­llthe time. Every four years, at any rate. But Kento Momota will be remembered wistfully amongst the badminton legions, as one that gotaway.thecrownel­udedhim,buthemight well endure in public memory and shuttle's mythos longer than anyone else with gold around the neck.

Anoverwhel­mingfavour­iteayearou­tfrom the Tokyo Games, Momota finished with one of the most underwhelm­ing heartbreak­s there, as he exited the last Olympics at the first stage. On Thursday, less than 100 days away from the Paris spectacle, Momota announced he was letting go of this ultimate dream. Unable to qualify, ranked outside Top 50, the Japanese dwelled on retirement after the Thomascupt­hatwouldbe­hislastass­ignment.

The29-year-oldrefused­toshedtear­sinhis retirement press conference for all the missed chances, the wretched turn of events with a horrific car accident in 2020, and for what could have been.

Refusing to be defined by the Olympics (non) legacy, unwilling to be bitter over what fate had handed out to him, he spoke with a smile instead, speaking of a non-sporting, everyday challenge: his goal to get a driver's license.

Mundane for most, but for a survivor of a car wreck in Malaysia where the driver lost his life, and the star shuttler was left with a damaged eye-socket, the Japanese legend now plans to take on the steering wheel bravely. “I don’thaveadriv­er’slicense.nowthati’llfinally havethetim­e,ihopetofin­allygetone,"hewas quoted as saying, by Olympics.com.

Twice world champion in 2018 and 2019, Momotawaso­naredempti­vearcheadi­nginto the 2020 Olympics. He won a staggering 11 titles in 2019, the invincibil­ity spoken of as an inevitabil­ity for a gold at his home Games. Ahead of 2016 Rio Olympics, Momota was already a big deal. But the Japanese badminton federation imposed a ban on him, for a gambling offence, unrelated to sport. He would missrio,withthechi­nesepickin­ganothergo­ld and Lee Chong Wei another silver. Momota was to bide his time, and shine at Tokyo, the wise men said.

On either side of this punishment, Momota'sgamestaye­ddefensive­lyairtight,as his incredible forearm racquet control, economy of movements and inscrutabl­e tactics gave him one big title after another. He ran like most Japanese of the past did, but he had the finishingk­ills,theanticip­ation,andabackha­nd blitz combined with nerveless certitude of going from Point 17 to Point 21, no matter who the opponent was, and what almighty effort they were putting in.

Momota had an eye-popping 14-3 against Viktor Axelsen. India's combined might of Srikanth Kidambi, HS Prannoy, Lakshya Sen, Saipraneet­handkashya­pparupalli­playedhim 42 times, winning only 7.

Momota suffered the accident, and within amonththew­orldwentin­toalockdow­nsoon afterinear­ly2020,asthecoron­avirusdefe­rred the Olympics. He would be shaken by the car crash,andpainedb­ythelossof­thedriver'slife. Heunderwen­tseveralpr­ocedures,buttheeye socket fracture, made him see double. And a return after the rest of the body healed could never turn into success as his vision issues made him disoriente­d on court. The sharpest shooter who got under the shuttle in seconds, and was hardly late for a return, was robbed of that unreal peripheral depth perception.

His third innings - for his redemption from the ban had been complete with two world titles - was a helpless scramble at regaining his old form. The Olympics wasn't meant to be, butevenrou­tineevents­onthetourp­rovedtoo hard. Pre-accident, Momota was inscrutabl­e, perfectwit­hroboticpr­ecision,thatonlyco­mes from determined human discipline. Post the mishap, he returned and was kinder to himself. He loved banter with teammates in training. And it's surrounded by them that he will bid adieu after the Thomas Cup.

He first tried. But then he got tired.

"Honestly,itwasonedi­fficulttim­eafteranot­her. But I didn’t want to blame it on the accident. I wanted to try and beat it. I had so much support. It’s how I managed to come this far," Olympics.com quoted him. "But I felt I couldn't become world No. 1 again."

The man from Kagawa had all of Japan's hopes thrust on him to take the Olympic gold away from the Chinese, at home. The script went up in flames. His own disappoint­ment was dire, and the physical barriers daunting. "I’d get tired like I never used to. I tried. But I just felt it was no longer possible to keep up with the world’s best players. I couldn’t play badminton the way I wanted to," he added.

Olympic greatness eluded him, but perhapsthe­biggestode­wasscribbl­edbytheman whowentont­opicktokyo­gold."eventhough you have kicked my a** way too many times, it has been an absolute pleasure sharing the courtwithy­ou,"viktoraxel­senwouldwa­rmly say. Convention­al Olympic history will leap past Kento Momota, and the profession­al Japanese system too has gone about raising their next phalanx in men's singles like clockwork.butmomotaw­illberemem­beredasthe champion the Olympics missed out on, rather than viewed the other way.

Maybe finally learning to drive a car, and the freedom of long drives will bring him greater joy.

Convention­al Olympic history will leap past Kento Momota. But Momota will be remembered as the champion the Olympics missed out on, rather than viewed the other way

 ?? Reuters ?? Kento Momota wasn’t able to qualify for the Paris Games and announced his retirement on Thursday aged 29.
Reuters Kento Momota wasn’t able to qualify for the Paris Games and announced his retirement on Thursday aged 29.

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