The Standard (Zimbabwe)

What a waste of money

- With MICHAEL KARIATI with TIM MIDDLETON For your views, comments, and suggestion­s, mkariati@ gmail.com or WhatsApp on 0773 266 779.  co.zw ceo@atschisz.

THE developmen­ts that have accompanie­d the Zimbabwe team for the 2021 Tokyo Olympic Games do not make good reading for Zimbabwe’s sports lovers.

The whole nation is shocked by the compositio­n of the Zimbabwean delegation which comprises of a few athletes with the majority being officials and for that matter from the administra­tion and political arena.

How can Zimbabwe send a team of five athletes only but accompanie­d by a huge contingent of 13 officials while Botswana for example are sending 10 athletes and only three officials and those officials being coaches.

The truth is that the Olympic Games are not for officials to go on a fully-paid up holiday but for the athletes to compete and win medals and Zimbabwe should know right so.

Fine only two athletes, Scott Vincent and Peter Purcell-Gilpin met the qualifying standards for the Olympics while Ngoni Makusha, Donata Katai and Peter Wetzlar are going via a special dispensati­on but the question is : Why the large contingent of officials ?

This is surely a waste of financial resources which could have been channeled towards junior sport developmen­tal projects or could have been used by the athletes to prepare themselves fully for the Games.

Or alternativ­ely, the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee could have identified a few talented youngsters to take to the Games to learn one or two things for future participat­ion.

Why do we have to send two senior officials from the Zimbabwe Olympic Committee - the ZOC President and the ZOC Chief Executive Officer ?

What role does the Sport and Recreation Commission have to play in this delegation when there are already two people from the ZOC which is in charge of all Olympic events.

In addition to the two ZOC supremos, there is also the Chef de Mission and the team administra­tor.

On top of the SRC chairman Gerald Mlotshwa, the government is also sending the sports minister, Kirsty Coventry, the chairman of the portfolio com

CLIMBING Mount Everest is seen to be the ultimate challenge, though it is certainly not one that this writer has attempted or even considered! Neverthele­ss, it is a feat that over 500 people each year endeavour to do, despite the huge risks involved, while preparatio­n for this massive adventure takes months if not years. Climbers simply cannot afford to be unprepared, not least as many climbers develop serious physical and psychologi­cal problems in achieving the feat. Having said that, it is estimated that over four thousand people have succeeded in climbing the mountain since the first successful ascent in 1953.

When climbers are at a great height, the oxygen is so thin and consequent­ly the effort to take even one step is so much harder; they must be so discipline­d to be able to think clearly. They must have rehearsed for all eventualit­ies. They must be prepared for all that might happen. One step out of line, when they are exhausted, drained, light-headed and they could fall to their death (not to mention take others with them).

One statistic that may not be so often revealed is that, according to Paddy Upton in his book, The mittee on sports Mathias Tongofa as well as the minister’s PA, Tariro Kadzirange.

The other question is : What exactly is the chairman of the parliament­ary portfolio committee on sport going to Tokyo to do ? Or even the minister’s PA ?

Ironically, our political leaders

Barefoot Coach, 80% of mountainee­rs who die on the mountain actually die on the way down — indeed, 85% of the 212 mountainee­rs who died on Mount Everest between 1921 and 2006 died while on their way down. Coming down would normally be seen to be the easy part yet it is actually the most dangerous part. All their focus, attention and energy has been on getting to the top; having achieved their goal the typical reaction is to relax, to ease off, to reflect on their achievemen­t and not on the task ahead, despite being exhausted.

What is called for (but is often not developed) is an exit strategy; just as they have to plan for have never taken sport seriously as evidenced by the neglect and lack of financial attention that sport always gets.

What we have only seen from them is the jostling for air tickets to such events like the Olympics and the World Cup and the grandstand­ing on the podium when a a successful climb, so they must prepare for, train for, plan for the return journey. Going up may be physically more demanding but going down is mentally, emotionall­y, psychologi­cally more threatenin­g. They must train for the coming down as much as for the going up.

What we need to grasp is that if we coach the children how to succeed, to climb the mountain, we must prepare them just as much for failure, the coming down from the mountain top. People will regularly quote the age-old adage that, “Fail to plan, plan to fail”, meaning that if we are going to succeed in any task we must plan and prepare for it (it will not simteam does well on the internatio­nal front — and nothing else.

There is also the position of golfer Scott Vincent.

How can someone who campaigns regularly on the internatio­nal scene be joined by a coach from Zimbabwe who doesn’t have an idea of the golfer’s limitation­s or strengths ?

Since 1980 when Zimbabwe was admitted to internatio­nal sport, the country has always given more slots to officials than athletes on internatio­nal sporting missions, something that needs to come to an end. ply come along). However, the second part of the saying is relevant on its own — we need to plan to fail if we plan to succeed; we need to plan to come down from success safely, from the giddy heights, even if light-headed and drained. We need to prepare our children to come down the mountain as much as to climb it.

A highly talented youngster at school who was Head Boy and First XV rugby captain went on to enjoy an extremely successful university career, before becoming the youngest ever and very successful Housemaste­r in a prodigious boarding school. He then took on the role of the Marketing Manager of that school but after six months he had a nervous breakdown. What went wrong? He had been so trained to be successful but, in his own words, “No-one ever taught me how to fail”.

So how do we teach people to fail? How do we teach people how to deal with failure? How do we help them come down from the mountain top of their sport? Failure is just another step on the journey; it is as important a step as the one on the way up. We can return to where we came from richer for what we have seen and

Much of the money from sporting associatio­ns or the little that comes from the government has always been spent on the officials instead of the athletes who do the job on the field.

We hope that very soon that attitude will change to give the real sportsmen the opportunit­y to compete at the highest level instead of sending high ranking officials on a sight seeing escapade. done, but we are the same person who has simply seen more, the same person who went up the mountain and achieved great things. The mountain is still there but someone else can enjoy it now. The world does continue to go round. No-one can stay at the top forever; others have the opportunit­y. There are other mountains to climb if we still need to climb. We have to work hard to go up the mountain but we also have to work hard to come down safely.

The ultimate benefit of doing such planning is that it will remove the fear of failing. We fear for what we cannot control; if we can control the experience of failing, then we will have nothing to fear. It is not failing that is key; it is being faithful. If we are not afraid of winning we should not be afraid of losing; if we are afraid of losing, we will never win. We must help our children to plan to fail. Now!

Tim Middleton is a former internatio­nal hockey player and headmaster, currently serving as the executive director of the Associatio­n of Trust Schools Email:

 ??  ?? Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation Kirsty Coventry,
Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation Kirsty Coventry,
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