Sun.Star Pampanga

Bhutan: No medals yet in the Asian Games but still happy

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Jde Janeiro, could break through in archery, which is Bhutan’s national sport. She was also the flagbearer in Saturday’s opening ceremony in Jakarta.

Soccer and cricket are also popular in Bhutan, but competitio­n is amateur. Archery has many participan­ts, but the discipline­s practiced at home are different than those on the Asian Games and Olympic sports programs.

“We’d be happy with any medal,” Nim Dorji, the head of the delegation, told The AP. Several athletes in taekwondo could break through. They talked up their chances — but were realistic, too — on Monday while seated around a table eating lunch and decked out in their distinctiv­e orange and yellow uniforms with the dragon crest on the chest.

“Bhutan is a very small country,” taekwondo athlete Tenzin Dorji explained. “We don’t have the facilities. Maybe that’s why we are not winning. In Bhutan we (athletes) are all students and we only practice for four hours. In other countries they are almost practicing for a whole day.”

Part of the challenge has been Bhutan’s isolation, trapped between China and India in the Himalayas. It has just recently begun to open up with television and social media pushing quick change, and the natural beauty also is a lure that attracts outsiders.

Nim, the head of the delegation, said the Bhutan government was getting more involved and offering incentives.

“We are a small country known for our culture and traditions,” taekwondo athlete Kinzang Choden said. “But sports are not our careers. Education is given more importance than sports by the government.”

Bhutan has sent athletes to every Asian Games since 1990, according the country’s profile on the Asian Games website. The closest it has come to winning a medal was in 1998 in Bangkok, when its men’s archery team lost a bronze-medal match against China.

Bhutan is not alone in Asia in its medal struggles.

East Timor, Indonesia’s neighbor on the eastern border, is also yet to win a medal at the Asian Games, a quadrennia­l event that has attracted more than 11,000 athletes from 45 countries and territorie­s competing in 40 sports.

The website for the Olympic Council of Asia — the governing body of regional sports — shows six other nations that have won medals, but never a gold medal: Afghanista­n, Brunei, Laos, Nepal, Palestine, and Yemen.

“Everyone here is expecting a medal,” Younten, the Bhutanese reporter said. “We are expecting a few, but we’re not very sure about which discipline­s.”

AKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — The Himalayan Kingdom of Bhutan has never won a medal of any kind at the Asian Games, much less the Olympics.

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