The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Mathe seeks Olympic qualificat­ion

- Nkosilathi Sibanda

LOCAL badminton sensation Thabani Mathe has embarked on an internatio­nal tour as he sets sight on qualifying for the Olympics and the Badminton World Federation (BWF) Championsh­ips later this year.

The Olympics are set for Paris, France from July 26 to August 11, while the World Championsh­ips are slated for August 21 to 27 in Copenhagen, Denmark.

Mathe, who is 26 is confident that he will qualify for both events as he seeks to achieve a top 100 world ranking and a top three position in Africa.

At the moment, he is ranked 431 in the world, out of 2 000 players and is at 16 out of 80 players on the continenta­l rankings.

Through the internatio­nal tours that he started last year, Mathe aims at attaining the qualifying requiremen­ts.

“I started my internatio­nal tournament­s consistent­ly from last year with a three-month training camp in Chengdu, China. I will participat­e in a minimum of 10 tournament­s before the middle of 2024 and another 10 thereafter. I aim at participat­ing in at least 20 tournament­s. All this is in a bid to qualify for both the Summer Olympics in Paris, France and The Annual BWF World Championsh­ips towards the end of the year.

“I have toured quite a number of countries since the start of my career, some of which are Uganda, Algeria and Nigeria. I have also played in the Southern African countries that include Zambia, South Africa, Botswana and Mauritius. Outside the continent, China, The United Arab Emirates and Qatar are the only countries I have toured so far,” said Mathe.

Mathe started playing badminton at the age of 13 in Hatfield, Harare where he played for Mazowe and Prince Edward High Schools.

“I started from humble beginnings in a pretty small neighbourh­ood called Hatfield. I played and excelled in as many sports codes both at primary and high school. I found a soft spot for badminton when I was 13 years and made it a career when I turned 16. At that stage I had won a bronze medal at the All-Africa Schools Championsh­ip in Port Louis, Mauritius. After that, I added two more continenta­l junior titles on my belt in South Africa in 2016,” said Mathe.

The Olympic aspirant said he is impressed by the growth of badminton in the country.

“Badminton in the country, in my view, is one of the fastest growing sports discipline­s at the moment. As a country, we recently hosted the continenta­l schools’ championsh­ips and with that it shows and brings the wealth of experience we possess and the growth we are exhibiting to the world.

“With many stakeholde­rs taking notice and more players touring and participat­ing globally like myself, only good things can come out of it in the future,” he said.

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