Pakistan sport hits low point with qualifying debacle
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[July 15, 2016]
By Drazen Jorgic
LAHORE, Pakistan (Reuters) - Pakistan's
sporting decline has left the vast South Asian nation that once
prided itself on producing the world's best hockey and squash
players facing up to an Olympics for which none of its athletes have
qualified.
While cricket remains a wildly popular game in Pakistan, a nation of
almost 200 million people, most other sports have shrunk in
popularity as the successes of the 1980s and early 1990s have become
a distant memory.
In dilapidated gyms and crumbling sports fields Pakistani athletes
lament the dated equipment and obsolete training methods which leave
them struggling against foreign foes who adhere to the latest
science-based techniques.
Female athletes have an even bigger mountain to climb: most young
girls in the deeply conservative Muslim nation are pressured by
their families to stop exercising in public, while those with family
backing face the wrath of their communities.
"We are behind the rest of the world," said Inam Butt, a Pakistani
wrestling champion who won gold at the 2010 Commonwealth Games. "Our
budget, training and facilities are just nothing. How can we
compete?"
Butt, like other athletes, says the future will remain bleak until
Pakistan's government starts pouring money into sport.
The seven participants due to represent Pakistan at next month's Rio
Olympics have all been given wildcard entries and stand "no chance"
of winning medals, according to Arif Hasan, the Pakistan Olympic
Association president.
"They are more or less going for the participation and gaining the
experience. Let's hope next time will be better," he said.
1980s TRAINING METHODS
Those in charge of promoting sport in Pakistan despair.
The grassroots system is almost non-existent, children in schools
rarely play a sport which is not cricket, and top athletes seldom
compete against the world's best as cash-strapped federations cannot
afford to send them abroad.
Waqar Ahmed, deputy director of the Pakistan Sports Board, said
federations also cannot afford to hire top coaches familiar with
scientific training techniques and end up relying on Pakistani
trainers with "obsolete" methods from the 1980s.
"Athletes are really frustrated because... the coaches are not
literate and they have been teaching what they were taught 30 years
back," he said. "Without infrastructure we can do a lot, but without
the techniques you cannot win."
The demise of hockey, Pakistan's national sport, has been painful to
watch for an older generation who prospered during the halcyon days
between 1960 and 1994, when Pakistan regularly won Olympic gold
medals and world championships.
Tahir Zaman, Pakistan hockey team coach, said the lack of government
support means many young athletes no longer see a future in sports
like hockey where top players get $10 per day. Pakistani cricketers,
by contrast, are paid $5,000 monthly retainers and make a fortune
from sponsorship deals.
"The attraction is not there anymore. The (government) is not
offering regular jobs for players," said Zaman, who won a bronze
playing for Pakistan at the 1992 Olympics.
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Weightlifter Neelam Riaz (L) watches as her protege Iqra Chanzaib
trains at a sports hall in Lahore, Pakistan July 11, 2016.
REUTERS/Caren Firouz
At Lahore's empty 45,000-seat hockey stadium, Pakistani hockey
player Hassan Anwar, 21, said that as a teenager his family begged
him: "please don't play hockey if you want a bright future".
The demise of hockey has been mirrored by the decline in the
Pakistani squash scene, where young players know all about 1980s
legend Jahangir Khan - considered the greatest ever squash player -
but none match his bravura on the court.
WOMEN HARASSED
Pakistan's best known squash player is Maria Toorpakay Wazir, ranked
65 in the world, but to train she spent years dressing and
pretending to be a boy in the ultra-conservative tribal areas near
Afghanistan. Now she trains abroad.
Pakistan Olympic chief Hasan says societal "barriers are coming
down" for women but many female athletes rue the slow pace of
change.
At 16, Neelam Riaz's first love was cycling, but her father banned
her from training on roads as men would stare at her. In response,
she took up karate to learn how to fend off men and eventually
stumbled on weightlifting.
"Usually in Pakistan girls are discouraged from sports, and often
coaches push back," said Riaz, 25, who last year became a national
champion and Pakistan's first female weightlifter to compete abroad.
"Now my family is happy with me doing weightlifting."
In a dimly lit Lahore gym, where paint peels off walls, windows are
shattered and cobwebs cling to a damp ceiling, Riaz is tutoring
16-year-old Iqra Chanzaib, who is new to weightlifting.
Chanzaib wanted to play basketball, but the only hoop near her house
was out in the open and full of boys, so one of her pious brothers
protested. She then opted for weightlifting, indoors.
"There are plenty of girls like me but they cannot come because of
family pressures. My own friends want to come but their families
stop them," she said.
(Additional reporting by Mubasher Bukhari; Writing by Drazen Jorgic;
Editing by Ken Ferris)
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