Sports
Heart break for Nilani as barrier heights are elevated due to faux-pas
by Reemus Fernando
Steeplechase athlete Nilani Ratnayake is the closest to Olympic entry standards in the female category. Sugathadasa Stadium is the only venue in Sri Lanka where her pet event can be held as the facility at Diyagama is in a dilapidated state. Ratnayake trains at high altitudes where there are no actual barriers and water pits for proper training. She came to Colombo yesterday with the hope of producing a sub nine minutes 50 seconds at the first Selection Trial as she prepares to improve her rankings to be in contention to win a berth at the Tokyo Olympics. But a faux pas on the part of technical officials prevented her from achieving her goal and also put her in danger of being injured.
After completing the race in a time of nine minutes and 57.81 seconds the first thing she did was to question about the height of the barriers.
It was found that the barriers had been elevated by a few centimeters more than the stipulated official 76.2 cm height forcing all athletes to make an extra effort to clear the barriers.
Sources close to officials said that it was a ‘result of clear negligence’ and could have ‘been prevented if the officials were vigilant.’
“You have only local meets to improve performances due to the Covid 19 pandemic. But when you experience this kind of disappointments how can you improve. We do not have many athletes edging closer to qualifying standards,” an analyst pointed out.
Her coach Sajith Jayalal who was encouraging her to run faster from the sidelines refrained from expressing his views.
A senior coach who witnessed the event said “you can not see the difference in the height of the barriers from the sidelines. Sajith was obviously worried about her speed and was encouraging her to run faster. The extra height forced athletes to make an extra effort. It was dissapointing.
When such a faux pass happened at the National Sports Festival eight years ago the technical officials who were responsible for the incident were slapped with bans.
Latest News
The RAPP sheet: Steve Smith, Daryl Mitchell, Umesh Yadav among over 1300 players
(a) not having been taken in the Player Auction and
(b) not having withdrawn from the Player Auction process.
Latest News
U19 World Cup: Pakistan overcome New Zealand by 8 wickets
New Zealand began in a poor manner losing Marco Alpe for just 2. However, the second wicket partnership carried them to 59/1 inside 8 overs to give New Zealand an excellent platform. From thereon, New Zealand lost their last 9 wickets for just 51 runs in quite an extraordinary manner. The well-set Hugo Bogue’s dismissal triggered the collapse as Abdul Subhan and Ali Raza tormented New Zealand. The duo combined to pick seven wickets as the New Zealand innings came to an end as early as in the 29th over.
New Zealand Under 19s 110 in 28.3 overs (Hugo Bogue 39; Abdul Subhan 4/11, Ali Raza 3/36) lost to Pakistan Under 19s 112/2 in 17.1 overs (Sameer Minhas 76*; Mason Clarke 1/34) by 8 wickets
Latest News
U19 World Cup: Vihaan Malhotra ton headlines India’s massive win
India Under 19s 352/8 in 50 overs (Vihaan Malhotra 109*, Vaibhav Sooriyawanshi 52, Abhigyan Kundu 61; Panashe Mazai 2-86, Tatenda Chimugoro 3/49, Simbarashe Mudzengerere 2-51) beat Zimbabwe Under 19s 148 in 37.4 overs (Leeroy Chiwaula 62; RS Ambrish 2-19. Ayush Mhatre 3-14, Udhav Mohan 3-20) by 204 runs[Cricbuzz]
-
Business2 days agoComBank, UnionPay launch SplendorPlus Card for travelers to China
-
Business3 days agoComBank advances ForwardTogether agenda with event on sustainable business transformation
-
Opinion6 days agoRemembering Cedric, who helped neutralise LTTE terrorism
-
Business6 days agoCORALL Conservation Trust Fund – a historic first for SL
-
Opinion3 days agoConference “Microfinance and Credit Regulatory Authority Bill: Neither Here, Nor There”
-
Opinion5 days agoA puppet show?
-
Opinion2 days agoLuck knocks at your door every day
-
Features5 days ago‘Building Blocks’ of early childhood education: Some reflections
