USA TODAY US Edition

Plenty of reasons Bangladesh lacks Olympic medal

- Martin Rogers

Some countries RIO DE JANEIRO are great at the Olympics, some … not so much. Bangladesh is the eighth-most populated country on earth, home to more than 171 million people, but its Games record makes for sorry reading.

Bangladesh not only has never won a medal but until golfer Siddikur Rahman clinched his spot in Rio by finishing 55th out of 60 in final qualifying, no athlete had reached the Olympics on merit.

The disappoint­ing tale means Bangladesh boasts a worse Games record than Bahrain, Barbados, Bermuda, Botswana, Burundi and plenty of other nations with different first letters — all of the aforementi­oned have won one, and only one, medal in their history.

Other than Bangladesh, wartorn Democratic Republic of the Congo and Myanmar, until recently cut off from the wider world by its dictatoria­l government, are the other countries in the top 40 of the population rankings never to have won an Olympic medal, summer or winter.

In previous Olympics the only spots for Bangladesh­i athletes came through the wild-card system, which offers places to countries that had not met typical qualifying criteria and otherwise would have no involvemen­t.

Part of the reason behind Bangladesh’s struggles is much of the nation’s sporting interest is focused solely upon cricket, which is not an Olympic sport.

Internatio­nal cricket matches in Bangladesh attract huge crowds, and leading players are among the biggest celebritie­s in the country.

“It’s crazy over there,” says Shameen Tarafder, an expat Bangladesh­i table tennis player now living in Australia. “Since 1997, when Bangladesh first qualified for the cricket World Cup, everyone wants a piece of it. The cricket players are sporting rock stars, the rest nowhere. Kids want to be cricketers, not athletes or football players. It’s a constant problem for other sports hoping to recruit talent.”

Among the wild-card athletes to represent Bangladesh in London four years ago was gymnast Syque Caesar — an American from the University of Michigan who qualified through his parentage. Caesar, now the men’s assistant coach at Stanford, was selected after his college coach suggested seeking dual nationalit­y.

“My dad was a profession­al soccer player in Bangladesh, so a lot of his teammates and colleagues and friends actually hold pretty high positions with the sports federation there,” Ceasar told USA TODAY Sports. “So he contacted them to see what the options were.”

Caesar, whose parents and two siblings were born in Bangladesh, was awarded citizenshi­p, then invited to an internatio­nal meet in Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, where he won several medals. On the back of that performanc­e he was selected for the Games but suffered a biceps tear in January that threatened his involvemen­t and forced him out of NCAA events.

“I was actually pretty hushhush about it. I didn’t tell the federation or anything. I kept it under wraps. So if I had given them even one little incident of failure or something going wrong, I’m putting my eligibilit­y to go at risk. I kept it very, very quiet, and if they read something about it, I would just say it’s a small injury.”

More injury misfortune struck two weeks before the competitio­n. Caesar tore his other biceps, but he was not prepared to let his Olympic dream fade. He competed in four events — with a best of 27th on the parallel bars.

“Bangladesh had never won a medal, but at the same time they were realistic,” Ceasar added. “I would’ve loved to win a medal obviously, but that wasn’t what was going through my head. I was just thinking of nailing my routines and at the end of it telling people, ‘Oh yeah, I also did it with one bicep.’ ”

Even with the spate of withdrawal­s from the Olympic men’s golf tournament, purportedl­y on the grounds of Zika concerns, Rahman doesn’t stand much of a chance of reaching the podium.

But the 31-year-old got to carry the national flag at the opening ceremony and is proud to be part of history. When asked what made him most proud of the achievemen­t of reaching Rio, he had an immediate answer.

“That I qualified,” he said.

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