‘Don’t let your child pursue sports unless you are rich!’: Pullela Gopichand
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In a chat with TOI, the man who played a key role in making India a badminton superpower, says, “I advise parents not to put their children in sports. We are not in a position to offer sports as a career. Unless the children are from rich backgrounds or have a family business, it is not advisable for children to take up sport.”
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His contention is simple. Very few make it big. Those who don’t break into the elite rung of players, lack the skills to survive without sports after they retire at around 30.
The Dronacharya awardee’s concern comes from initiatives like Khelo India, Top Scheme, Go Sports, OGQ and corporates making sports extremely attractive to youngsters. But there is no safety net to fall back on in case they fail to make it big.
“The reality of sport is that less than 1% of people who take up sport end up having it as a profession or career,” he says. “In sports like cricket, this number could be marginally better, but in essence sport would mean that a very small percentage of them make it. Where do we end up? What are the returns of the people who have made it?”
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Sitting in his academy office in Hyderabad, a large glass window separating him from the playing
courts where future champions are practising, he says, “Olympic medallists who work in the Railways, RBI, Income Tax, police or a PSU have a lower rank than a civil servant who gets to reap benefits of his learning till the age of 60. The Olympic medallist who has burned himself out, will have to call the civil servant ‘sir’ or ‘madam’. They are at the mercy of the officer, hoping they will have people who will respect sportspersons who won medals for the country. And you may also find a boss with a negative mindset towards sportspersons.”
He wondered if those who represented the country should be at the mercy of society where they may or may not get respect. “Think of what has happened to hundreds of people who have represented the country in the last 20 years in various sports, won medals. Where are they today? What is their future? What is their earning capacity?”
He gives the example of sprinter Jyothi Yarraji – a 100m hurdles silver medallist from the 2022 Hangzhou Asian Games – who has been making numerous appeals for a proper job. Gopichand is also disappointed with how hockey stars like Dhanraj Pillay and Mukesh Kumar and shooter Vijay Kumar have been treated after they achieved so much for the country. “Going by what they have done for the country, is this the right kind of reward they deserve?” he asks. “If this is the case, how can we encourage our children to take up sport?”
Former hockey captain Mukesh Kumar told TOI that even national-level hockey players are not getting jobs today, a statement supported by Mukesh. “In our days, we used to get some job, but now many top PSUs and banks have stopped recruiting hockey players,” he says. “The situation is depressing.”
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