Khaleej Times

From track star to guard

- Suresh Pattali

dubai — There are more forgotten stars from Sri Lanka eking out a living in the UAE.

After Khaleej Times broke the story of Lalith Galappatht­hi, we have tracked down another record-holding athlete, DW Prasantha, who is now employed as a security guard in Abu Dhabi.

Hailing from Kandy, Prasantha started off as a judo player in the ’80s. He joined the army in 1987 and continued as a member of the army judo team up to 1989. In 1991, Prasantha changed his event to 3,000 metres steeplecha­se and came out with flying colours in the event in 1993. “It was a national record. I won gold in 3,000 metres steeplecha­se in 09:05:07.”

Prasantha’s performanc­e started to go downhill in 1994-95 as civil war raged in the country’s north. Training was stopped and athletes were dispatched to the war front. And Prasantha was critically wounded in a barrage of shelling in 2001. “That’s when my journey as an athlete ended and life as a coach started.”

Lalith Prasanna Galappatht­hi, the famed Sri Lankan athlete driving a cab in the UAE, isn’t a lonely star. The Kandian is just one of many impoverish­ed former heroes who have left Sri Lanka to eke out a miserable existence elsewhere.

When Khaleej Times broke the heartwarmi­ng story of Lalith, Sri Lankan social media forums were inundated with stories of neglect and apathy meted out to national heroes. They weren’t obviously exaggerati­ng. And here is why.

Cabbie Lalith Galappatht­hi had just dropped a passenger at the Yas Marina Circuit during the last Grand Prix. He watched as the passenger had a word with the security guard at the entrance. Then their eyes met. Memories of his childhood and track life zoomed through Lalith’s brain faster than the Formula One race cars. Yes, it’s him! Lalith got off the car and raced to the guard, his childhood friend and former record holder, DW Prasantha from Kandy. They were meeting after 15 years.

What on earth are you doing here would have been a misplaced question. They both have the same predicamen­t. They hugged, shook hands, took down each other’s phone numbers and parted.

Hailing from Nawalapiti­ya, Prasantha started off as a judo player in the ’80s. After passing his O Level, he joined the army in 1987 and continued as a member of the army judo team up to 1989. Athletics was not his cup of tea until Brigadier RP Liyanage, a national coach, convinced Prasantha to give up judo as he was blessed with the physical attributes for an athlete.

“He promised to train me, so I changed my event from judo to long-distance running,” reminisces Prasantha. “I started to train in the 10,000 and 5,000 metres events, and the turning point came in 1991 when I won gold in 5,000 metres.”

In 1991, Prasantha changed his event to 3,000 metres steeplecha­se and came out with flying colours in the event in 1993. “It was a national record. I won gold in 3,000 metres steeplecha­se in a dramatic 09:05:07 time.”

Prasantha’s performanc­e started to go downhill in 19941995 as civil war raged in the country’s north. Training was stopped and athletes were dispatched to the war front. The steeplecha­se hero found himself in the battlefiel­d instead of running on a track. Military boots replaced running shoes. The pop of starting guns at the track’s start line gave way to real artillery fire. And Prasantha was critically wounded in a barrage of shelling in 2001.

In recovery two months later, the war veteran was posted to the admin section of the army regimental offices in Panagoda, some 20km from Colombo, where Brigadier Liyanage caught up with him again. The top brass called him back to the army athletics team. “Don’t give up athletics. You have great knowledge. I will give you all the support,” Brig Liyange told him.

“So I took up coaching army athletes. I sharpened my knowledge through various courses,” Prasantha said, tabulating some of them: “One-year diploma in coaching, Level-1 Coaches Training, Certificat­e Course in Sprint Coaching, etc. I even attended the Sprint Coaching Course arranged in Patiala by the Sports Authority of India.”

Based in Colombo, Prasantha continued to coach the army team and also temped in the evening at Royal College as assistant athletics coach. Life wasn’t easy with a paltry renumerati­on of 35,000 SL rupees. And retirement from the army as Warrant Officer in March 2009 was a double whammy. Left with no choice, Prasantha went back to Kandy where he took up coaching jobs in two schools, earning a salary of just about 10,000 SL rupees.

“My Kandy stint was quite successful as I produced 12 junior national-level athletes in such a short period. But it was darkness ahead for my family with no money coming in. The country wasn’t giving enough support to sports. There is no dearth of qualified coaches in Sri Lanka. But cricket takes undue preference as it’s run like a business.

“Applying for the present job in January 2013 through a manpower agency was a half-hearted effort. Looking back, I think I was lucky to get the job in April. In a way, I am happy, because I am now able to feed my family with whatever little I manage to send home,” said Prasantha, 51.

“There is hardly any off day, but I am OK with that because it’s my commitment and responsibi­lity to provide good education to my children,” he said. Prasantha’s spouse Inoka Shyamali is a housewife.

“My future plan is: to go back after two years and take up coaching again to produce good athletes for the country. There is still a desire to live my passion again. I am not sure if I can find such an opening here,” he concluded.

 ??  ?? PRASANTHA: A runner and a coach
PRASANTHA: A runner and a coach
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 ??  ?? NATIONAL RECORD: In 1993, Prasantha won gold in 3,000m steeplecha­se in dramatic 09:05:07 time.
NATIONAL RECORD: In 1993, Prasantha won gold in 3,000m steeplecha­se in dramatic 09:05:07 time.

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