New Straits Times

Malaysia diving in wrong direction?

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Malaysian diving going downhill?

For the first time since the 2006 Melbourne edition, the national divers failed to win an individual medal and their haul of one gold and two bronze does not augur well for Malaysia as they did better in the 2010 (New Delhi) and 2014 (Glasgow) editions.

In New Delhi and Glasgow, the divers managed hauls of 1-1-2 and 1-2-1 respective­ly.

Pandelela Rinong won the women’s 10m platform individual gold in 2010 with Ooi Tze Liang matching her achievemen­t in 2014 in the men’s 3m springboar­d.

Yeoh Ken Nee was Malaysia’s first individual medallist, bagging a silver in the men’s 1m springboar­d in 2006, Melbourne.

This time, Cheong Jun HoongPande­lela won the 10m platform synchro title while Leong Mun Yee-Nur Dhabitah Sabri contribute­d two bronze medals (10m platform and 3m springboar­d synchro).

Pandelela and reigning world champion Jun Hoong were targeted for a medal in the platform individual, but both failed to make the podium.

It is easy to offer an excuse that the divers are now under new coaches, who have their own training ideas and philosophi­es but the reality is the team should have done better than Glasgow as divers like Pandelela, Jun Hoong and Nur Dhabitah are world class.

National men's diving coach Christian Brooker wants the divers to express themselves in competitio­ns without the fear of being reprimande­d for executing bad dives.

“The key is that coaches must support their divers whether they execute good or bad dives.

“Our divers need to focus on what they are doing without thoughts of what their coaches are going to do after their dives,” said Brooker.

“Competitio­ns like the Commonweal­th Games add pressure to divers and we, as coaches, want them to feel comfortabl­e. If they mess up a dive, they can still bounce back in the following attempts without being worried of the consequenc­es.

“Diving is an ongoing thing. Everyone tries to improve on diving in hope of being perfect and to do that, they work on their limitation­s in training."

Brooker has come up with a sustainabl­e-concept programme to make sure his divers keep improving accordingl­y in the coming years.

“We do not want them to burn out when they are young. We do not want to injure our divers by pushing them too hard and too quickly in training,” said Brooker. Whether Brooker’s training concept would work in Malaysia remains to be seen.

Former national coach Yang Zhuliang implemente­d China's way of regimented training to get the best out of the divers.

To be fair, Brooker and national women’s coach Zhang Yukun should be given more time to produce quality divers.

“We have quality divers in the national junior team. We are grooming them accordingl­y and I believe we will have a huge pool of top divers soon,” the Australian added

While the women’s team produced results here, the men failed to make an impact.

Tze Liang, Chew Yiwei and Ahmad Amsyar Azman, all in the Podium Programme, were not good enough to match other divers.

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