Deccan Chronicle

Olympic loss: Tennis assn barred kids from playing!

- AISHWARYA AVSK | DC

As the news of the complete capitulati­on of the Indian tennis contingent at Tokyo Olympics began to sink in — even as the hopes in badminton are high for a sui generis and first gold — sportspers­ons, parents, coaches and fans blame the gormless atavistic attitudes and policies of the All India Tennis Associatio­n (AITA) and its state bodies.

Consider the ban imposed by the Telangana State Tennis Associatio­n, the state chapter of AITA, on local tournament­s being played across the state.

“It has been observed there are private local tennis tournament­s being organised in Telangana. Organisers need to be informed that without prior approval of the TSTA, such tournament­s are not permitted,” the body said on February 10, 2021.

“I tried to organise a tennis tournament,” said a coach. “The associatio­n tried to arm-twist saying I could not. Then they demanded I make a payment for permission.”

“Even to coach, one must be registered with them for which we have to pay”the coach said.

Last year, associatio­n secretary-general Anil Dhupar “objected” to local tennis tournament­s being played across India under Universal Tennis Rating (UTR), saying, “These tournament­s being conducted without permission of AITA are strictly banned.”

He asked state authoritie­s to refrain from “encouragin­g” any local tennis tournament. The AITA threatened that it would take action against players or entities conducting tournament­s by de-recognisin­g or de-registerin­g them.

Imagine the implicatio­ns — if you wish to organise a tennis tournament for children, you can’t. Take permission first. Ideal recipe for a gold medal in the Olympics. If you raise your voice, the associatio­n has a long memory; which will “not help your players, or children”. So most parents keep quiet.

Not all parents get intimidate­d though. The issue got highlighte­d after some parents petitioned against the move. Chakravart­hy Nalamotu, parent of a young tennis player, led the petition drive and got it signed by parents from across the country, including many from Hyderabad, Manipal, Patna, besides the USA and Africa.

He said Universal Tennis Rating (UTR, a system that rates a person on the basis of playing skills, irrespecti­ve of age or gender) is a criteria considered by universiti­es in the US and other countries for accepting students.

“To get a good UTR, our children and other players play matches conducted by the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation (ITF). But AITA, which is a semigovern­ment body, has blatantly declared that players can be playing only under tournament­s conducted by the AITA,” Nalamotu said.

Concurring, Dave Fish, tennis coach at Harvard University, who supported the petition, said, “The UTR system is now being recognised by many college coaches as the best metric available for judging junior talent.”

Parents requested AITA to either tie up with UTR, like the ITF, Asian Tennis Federation (ATF), and US Tennis Associatio­n (USTA) have done, to encourage and motivate the children, or let the children play tournament­s that are based under both the AITA and UTR.

He said he came across some people who organised local tournament­s, but were threatened by the associatio­n. “Associatio­ns dont reply to parents, but they call organisers of local tournament­s and threaten them or and extract money,” said a parent.

Another petitioner, a tennis coach, who was stopped from organising tournament­s at the local level, said, “We used to do tournament­s under India Tennis League (ITL) at a local level. We then shifted to UTR in 2018 to help young players. Last year, around September, I was told not to conduct any tournament­s.”

“AITA banning these local tournament­s is a setback for all players. Local tournament­s give good practice to the players, thus making them strong enough to compete at state, national as well as internatio­nal levels,” the coach added.

By stopping local initiative and conduct of tournament­s, the biggest enemy of excellence is the associatio­n, whose bureaucrac­y seeks power over the game rather than care for results.

Speaking to Deccan Chronicle, Ashok Kumar, honorary secretary of the TSTA, said, “If something goes wrong in these tournament­s people will come to us, which is why we banned it.”

He justified the ban but added, “We care for tennis more than anything else. We want all coaches and tournament­s to seek permission three weeks before they organise it.”

No doubt, with so much associatio­n power, the Indian team crashed out of the Olympics. It was not a loss of the players but the failure of the associatio­n.

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