The Herald (Zimbabwe)

A feather in Dete’s cap

- Collin Matiza and Ellina Mhlanga

SMART Deke, the president of the Judo Associatio­n of Zimbabwe, has now added a feather to his cap.

Deke, who was ushered in as the new president of JAZ at the beginning of this year, was recently elected by the Internatio­nal Judo Federation to lead Judo Education in the Southern African Region.

This came after he attended the Internatio­nal Judo Federation’s Congress which was held ahead of the World Championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary, two weeks ago.

Deke, who replaced former top female judoka Debbie Jeans as president of JAZ at the beginning of this year, was elated about his latest appointmen­t which will see him leading “the crusade” in the developmen­t of the sport in the Southern African Region.

“I’m going to help all the judo coaches in the Region to have a very high level of coaching qualificat­ion, which is the (biggest) challenge at the moment, and have our own qualified coaches which will reduce costs of sending people to be trained as coaches overseas.

“We will be having seminars for coaches in the Southern African Region and invite internatio­nal coaches to train our local coaches.

“In fact, there’s a diploma coaching course which is being run by the Internatio­nal Judo Federation. It has three levels and at the moment we have nine Zimbabwean coaches who are doing it, so I’m going to oversee it as a supervisor,” Deke said.

And as they say “charity begins at home”, the seasoned judo coach also said that he was looking at setting up an academy in Harare and this will see him inviting top coaches from the sport’s powerhouse countries such as Japan.

“I’m seriously looking at setting up an academy that will specifical­ly be for judo and then invite expert coaches from Japan to train our local coaches and athletes,” Deke said.

And for Zimbabwe’s representa­tives at the World Judo Championsh­ips in Budapest their participat­ion was a key step towards what they hope would be a better future for the sport locally.

Zimbabwe had two judokas – Tapiwa Pavari and Brian Chiminya - carrying the nation’s hopes at the event that ended on Sunday. However, they were both eliminated in the first round fights.

Pavari took up the challenge in the Under-60kg weight division and Chiminya battled it out in the Under66kg.

But with both of them making their debut appearance­s at the World Senior Individual and Teams Championsh­ips it was always going to be a tough task for them taking on some of the best in the sport.

Pavari and Chiminya could not go beyond the first round and they are now back home, hoping to make use of the exposure and experience from the global showpiece.

“It was an eye-opener for me although I went with high expectatio­ns. I thought I would reach the quarter-finals.

“I saw what is lacking in our judo. I realised that I wasn’t used to that level which is a huge problem for us here because we are not able to send athletes abroad.

“Judo is the same across the world but if you are not used to fighting elite athletes it’s hard to be in their league,” said Pavari.

Looking into the future Pavari, who is the local champion in the Under60kg, appealed for investment in sport.

“One thing I realised is I have to find a sponsor to go and train abroad. We need a lot of help from the corporate world to get to that level.

“I think I know where I am lacking. I am expecting to train harder. My biggest wish is to find someone or a company to help the whole of Zimbabwe, the top athletes, to go and train. And compete in more internatio­nal tournament­s.

“I am expecting to go on a higher level now, because I am now on a different level,” said Pavari.

His teammate Chiminya feels lack of experience was their major downfall in Hungary.

“It was good but very tough because what happened some athletes had more camps than us and they were ahead in terms of experience, they have been to the World Championsh­ips several times. So experience was their advantage.

“My fight was very tough, I learnt that you have to be confident in what you do. There is need to take time when preparing for such big events,” said Chiminya.

make the cut.

The player had done well in the other event, the Sun River Challenge, when he made the cut by finishing at two-under after the three rounds and pocketed R12 165.

Williams will be the first on the course when he joins Doug McGuigan and Titch Moore at 8:20am this morning while Mandhu will follow a few minutes later with Dongkwan Kim and Jacques P de Villiers as his partners at 9:30am.

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