The making of a champion

Niluka Karunaratne’s selection for 
the 2012 London Olympics has  great significance because he has achieved
 this feat by getting rated within the  top 50 singles players in the 
world.
Niluka has been the ‘king of badminton’ in Sri Lanka 
for a  while. However, critics often posed the question whether the 
champ could reach  international heights due to the lack of competition 
for him in Sri Lanka. After  many attempts at qualifying for the 
Olympics, the 27-year-old finally made the  grade this year thanks to a 
marathon run he had in contesting 13 international  tournaments from 
which he emerged the victor on five occasions. Many, including  some of 
his friends who are professional badminton players, opined that he’ll  
not make it to the 2012 Olympics. "Niluka never lost focus of his goal 
which was  the Olympics," Louvie Karunaratne, his father, told Sunday 
Island  Sportstar.
Louvie, Niluka’s mentor, who also plays a
 role in his son’s  coaching, said that his son was confident of his 
Olympic berth many months ago  even though the official announcement was
 made only last week. The World  Badminton Federation ratings as at May 3
 (the day the list of Olympians in  badminton was made public) revealed 
that the Sri Lankan was rated 47th, the  furthest a male badminton 
player from this island has progressed in world  rankings.
Niluka’s
 plea is for the Sri Lanka Badminton Federation to  provide him with 
more help and offer him the services of a foreign coach. He  said he is 
playing his best badminton at the moment and added, "I have never  felt 
so confident in my badminton career. I am training six hours a day like a
  professional. The big challenge now is to be in form because there is 
over two  months more for the games," Niluka said.
His 
father said that the world hasn’t seen the best of Niluka as  yet and 
that his son was expected to hit his peak before the Olympics.
According
 to Louvie, Niluka gets up at 4.30 am in the morning  and has his first 
training session at the SLBA courts in Colombo. He has lunch  at 1pm and
 is back again for more training at 4.pm. He returns home around 7.30  
pm, arranges all what he needs the next day and says his prayers for the
 second  time of the day before retiring to bed by 9pm. He expects 
silence to be  maintained there onwards and all members of the family 
comply without a fuss  because they all know it is a must to contribute 
towards a champion’s cause.
Louvie said that Niluka could 
have qualified for the Olympics in  2004, but lack of support prevented 
him from seeing his dream come true. In 2008  he was knocking on the 
door for an Olympic slot again, but Niluka contacted  Chikungunya which 
forced him to shelf his ideas of making the Sri Lanka  contingent for 
the Beijing Olympics in China. In his third attempt he succeeded,  but 
that was a grueling task of working his way up in the rankings from 147 
to  47. Some badminton experts in the world are still baffled how he did
 it! "He  surely has to be one of the fastest to qualify for the 
Olympics because he did  it in about five months" said Louvie.
Louvie,
 a former badminton player himself and an ex-SLBF  official, said that 
if players with talent like Niluka are spotted and nurtured,  the sport 
of badminton had the potential to produce champions and be more  popular
 than cricket in this country. "We must acknowledge that it was after 
the  1996 cricket world cup victory that money started to come in to all
 sports in  Sri Lanka. But if an analysis is made on the earnings of an 
international  cricketer and a player who wins a couple of titles at the
 Badminton Super  Series, the shuttler definitely makes a lot more money
 during a year," said  Niluka’s father. Louvie said it was with great 
difficulty that he was funding  Niluka’s needs in badminton. He was 
quick to mention the generous sponsorship  that has been afforded to his
 son by Rohan de Silva of Mclarence Group of  Companies.
Louvie
 said all that fame has not changed his son. "He will go  out of his way
 to help people. At times he is so generous he’ll give whatever he  has 
to others. When he goes to eat out he looks around if there is someone 
he  knows whom he can buy meal. He is open to ideas and corrects 
himself. The only  concern is that he has no life outside badminton, but
 then this is one of the  demands when playing like a professional," his
 father said.
Niluka is at present training under the 
watchful eyes of a  Malaysian coach at the SLBF courts in Colombo. ‘We 
can’t forget the inputs made  to Niluka’s career by coaches like 
Pushpakumara, Pradeep Welagedara, Shrimal  Aponsu and SLBF coach 
Dhanushka Fernando, " said Louvie.
Many Sri Lankans have 
been part of the island’s contingent  during past Olympics. Some just 
made the numbers without proper training and for  some the Games served 
them with vital experience. What are Niluka’s goals at the  upcoming 
Olympics? "It is difficult to talk about goals right now because the  
draw for the Games is not out yet. But come what may, Niluka plans to 
give a  good fight to whoever his opponent may be," said Louvie.
In
 2003 Niluka was praised for performances against Chinese  player Chen 
Jin (Present world ranking 4th) at the World Juniors, where he went  
down fighting in a three-setter. A leading badminton magazine paid a 
tribute to  the Sri Lankan by referring him to uncut diamond’. That 
diamond has been cut and  polished over the years and is ready for 
exhibition among other diamonds of the  world.
(www.island.lk)

