Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Programme for juniors

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Thehan Wijemanne created history when he made his Davis Cup debut against Paraguay at the age of 16 following in the footsteps of his father Sanjay who represente­d Sri Lanka from 1989 to 1995.

“It’s a great achievemen­t for him to get in at 16. Even I first entered the team when I was 18 and played at 19. It’s quite a fabulous achievemen­t,” said Wijemanne proud of his eldest son’s feat.

“Last year was his defining year. He made it to the Junior Davis Cup last year where they actually qualified after three or four years of Sri Lanka not making it in the pre qualifying in the Asia/ Oceania. Tha t team comprising Nelaka Dissanayak­e, Chathurya Nilaweera, Thehan Wijemanne and Dhilvan Herath, won all their ties losing only to Syria in the final,” he said.

“That experience was great for the juniors and within a year Thehan managed to get into the senior DavisCup team,” said Wijemanne of his son who is captain of the Royal College team and top ranked under 16 player.

Sanjay Wijemanne, who won bronze medals at the Colombo and Madras South Asian Games, reiterated the need for a strong national programme at junior level if Sri Lanka is to keep pace with the world.

“The junior standard in Asia is high with a Japanese boy going onto win the Junior Wimbledon. From the SLTA ( Sri Lanka Tennis Associatio­n) and Sri Lanka point of view, if we are to compete at that level, we need to have a strong national programme with sort of very good coaches. The amount of time almost four to five hours of solid tennis a day, with good physical training programmes, etc. That sort of profession­al set up needs to come to take these boys forward specially starting from the 12, 14, 16 level. Those are the age groups they have to focus on now. It’s almost like a 10- year plan. We need to put forward now,” said Wijemanne whose second son Nethvan represente­d Sri Lanka at under 12 level.

“The ATF (Asian Tennis Federation) has lot more competitio­ns than during my time where it was only under 18 and under 16. Now they have a very strong under 14 programme where they had it in Sri Lanka. They play five matches because even if you lose, you keep playing for your position. That gives them lot of opportunit­ies. Nethvan came ninth. From Thailand to Philippine­s to Singapore, they all have this ATF tournament. From a young age you are exposed to the quality or the standard you need to be ready for,” he said.

“Talent is there and the eagerness of the parents to support. The only thing missing is the national programme. Now each individual and parent are going after the coach and have your own support system. But if the national centre can have a national training programme and have the top guys being trained with the rest that I mentioned, and also have a support programme where they go for these internatio­nal tournament­s and compete, then it will be much better,” he said.

That experience was great for the juniors and within a year Thehan managed to get into the senior DavisCup team,”

 ??  ?? Thehan Wijemanne in action at the Davis Cup match
Thehan Wijemanne in action at the Davis Cup match

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