Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Time to ask ‘Quo vadis?’ again

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China, in the last decade, has become Tennis Country. Right now, the world's profession­al Tennis circuit is in China. Everything is there for another good WTA and ATP Chinese autumn season. It attracts the best of players, with good venues, appreciati­ve spectators, excellent Chinese players and the rest. In Tennis, China is a success story.

They h av e understood and navigated not so easy waters, well. One of the p i t falls in a nation’s Tennis is the ever so frightenin­g dropout rate of players, around 17 years, from the game. This has to stop.

A study

Social research to find as to what sport is in the world of today, for a person, is being done. Some interestin­g social sporting trends are seen. So far, no conclusion­s have been released. They want to know ‘why’ they exist. While sport in general is encouraged in all forms, without reservatio­ns, not all are being termed positive.

There are two main areas today in sport involvemen­t. That is as ‘Activity’ and as ‘Competitio­n Maturity’. There is also a long list of others involving sport. Some do not even take a person to the playing field. In High Performanc­e, ages from 16 to 28 years is in purview. For this age group, Physical Developmen­t and Competitio­n maturity are the two main areas that lead to a rewarding career.

A commodity?

Sport today has evolved into another market place commodity. This is the reality. This is the issue many countries have, in having an ef f e c t ive ‘Developmen­t-Programme’.

In the area of ‘Activity’, the children and adults only seek exposure to sport and to have an interest as a free-time activity. In High Performanc­e, it is to play at competitiv­e level, locally and internatio­nally during the peak sporting span of life.

Both these need the same attention from the individual and from promoting bodies. Talking to overseas researcher­s whom I know, they did not want to commit to any conclusion­s. It is still under serious study. All of them detest sport being handled as a commodity. How else could it be done is still a riddle.

Walking Greek Statues

The physical contrast between players who do sport as Activity and as High Performanc­e is unmistakab­le. One is black and the other is white. The sure sign of a High Performanc­e athlete is the ‘ Physical Presence’. Seeing Top 10 ranked Tennis player, can end up staring at their movements, ease of skills and performanc­es for hours. Boris Becker of Germany and Gab r i e l a Sabatini of Argentina were like walking Greek statues at Wimbledon. Their performing proficienc­y came from this build which got the best mental backing. Local and age group players of many countries cannot match the energy these good players projected.

Dropout rate

This is the concern that bothers all. Sport is an area where Skills, Physical Ability, good Health and good Lifestyle can be instilled in people. Keeping a person in sport is a critical aspect seen from all sides, regardless of age. None of the two researcher­s I spoke to were willing to commit themselves on the dropout rate, even with a percentage indication pertaining to a sport. They only indicate that, annually, over 10 million drop out globally, within a year or two in sport. This is from all sports, not only Tennis. The reason is, in my opinion, many fun designs are labelled as developmen­t designs. Nationally, in every nation, this leaves a question hanging. Who is fooling whom?

There are many ‘ Activity based programmes’ in sport, while Developmen­t based programmes are virtually non-existent. This holds true even in developed countries. The demarcatio­n between Activity and Developmen­t has become hazy. Often, High Performanc­e is promised to attract customers, and what is delivered is ‘Activity’. Commercial squad formation is the culprit here. A very difficult area to escape.

Two roads and two goals

If national, continenta­l and world class players is the goal of a programme, they cannot be produced through Activity oriented programmes after 16 years of age. Activity Tennis, according to an ex- Indian top ranker, is to keep kids off the road and homes free of nuisance. This is a very hard thing to say to people who send their children for Tennis lessons.

The commitment to be a good player has to come from the players, to improve even after a bad loss, in age group Tennis around 16. Motivation is the magic word for this to happen. Watching good players motivate. Activity- Tennis commitment­s are weak that makes overseas events travel and participat­ion to be tourist excursion. Only Developmen­t discipline­s lead to Competitio­n Maturity. The targets and the standards of these two are different.

A good approach for nations to ensure their elite players are not drowned in Activity-Tennis, is to bring internatio­nal ranking into perspectiv­e. Then, competitio­n perspectiv­e will slowly creep into the nations thinking. Many nations which have identified this issue, do their national ranking from WTA and ATP status.

In Colombo there were some globally recognised events. Delightful­ly, these have become an annual feature. In the past few years, our players’ performanc­e in these is a repeat reminder of the missing road in our thinking. From what was seen this year, Competitio­nMaturity is the lesser trodden road.

George Paldano, Former int. player; Accredited Coach

of German Federation; National coach Sri Lanka &

Brunei, Davis-Cup, Federation Cup captain/ coach-- contact 94 77 544 8880

geodano201­5@gmail.com -

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