New Straits Times

TEEN TITAN ZOHRI FIRES UP INDONESIA

From bamboo shack to track, sprinter is inspiratio­n for country

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RAGS-to-riches teenage sprinter Lalu Zohri has given Indonesia an unexpected confidence boost as the Asian Games hosts look to pull off their first top-10 medals finish in decades.

Zohri, 18, won the hearts of Indonesian­s last month with a shock 100-metres victory over two favoured American rivals at the world junior championsh­ips in Finland.

It was the first medal for an Indonesian athlete at the under20 tournament and capped a heady rise for Zohri, who was raised in a bamboo shack and trained barefoot on the beach as a youngster.

Now, Zohri is facing his biggest test as he competes against a field of older and faster athletes at the world’s second-largest multi-sports event.

“My goal is to give my best for Indonesia,” Zohri, who clocked 10.18sec to win world gold, said after a training session in Jakarta. “But I’m not targeting a medal in the 100 metres.”

Still, his unlikely rise has given Indonesia a glimmer of hope that it too can manage a surprise showing — and overcome a history of middling performanc­es at internatio­nal tournament­s.

Badminton, weightlift­ing, Indonesian martial art pencak silat and even paraglidin­g are all potential medal sports for the hosts at the Aug 18-Sep 2 Games in Jakarta and Palembang.

Despite a population of more than 260 million, Indonesia frequently trails smaller Southeast Asian nations like Malaysia and Thailand at the Asian Games.

Indonesia has ranked no better than 13th at the past four Asiads and last placed in the top 10 in 1990. They were 17th at the 2014 Games in Incheon.

Although the Asian Games allow the host nation to tailor the sporting programme to suit its strengths, some remain sceptical that Indonesia can finish in the top 10.

“Last year we had a very poor performanc­e at the Southeast Asian Games with the same athletes, so I think it is really difficult to achieve,” sports analyst Fritz Simanjunta­k told

The country ranked fifth at the Southeast Asian Games in Kuala Lumpur last year behind hosts Malaysia, Thailand, Vietnam and Singapore.

Even so, many Indonesian athletes will be hell-bent on proving they’re gold medal-worthy in front of passionate home crowds.

Paraglidin­g — along with bridge and pencak silat — will feature for the first time in the Asian Games, and there are sky-high expectatio­ns for Indonesia’s team, which includes four top-10 fliers in both the men’s and women’s accuracy discipline.

While Indonesia’s strangleho­ld on world badminton has loosened since the 1990s, it stands a strong chance resurrecti­ng some past glory at the showpiece tournament.

Diminutive duo Marcus Gideon and Kevin Sukamuljo — affectiona­tely dubbed the “Minions” after the little yellow characters featured in a popular 2015 animated film — are the world’s top-ranked men’s doubles pair and will be tough to beat.

Team manager Susi Susanti, a former Olympic gold medallist and world champion, said Indonesia’s shuttlers were ready to go.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? Indonesian sprinter Lalu Zohri (centre) in a practice session with teammates on July 27 ahead of the Asian Games.
AFP PIC Indonesian sprinter Lalu Zohri (centre) in a practice session with teammates on July 27 ahead of the Asian Games.
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