By reader Singapore Sports Fan
A member of the public, Edmund Lin, wrote to a local newspaper (see full letter below) about Li Jiawei’s probable departure for Beijing to get married and pursue her studies.
I couldn't help being amused by Edmund Lin's last paragraph in which he wondered whether the Singapore Table Tennis Association (STTA) and the Singapore Sports Council (SSC) will pull out all the stops to encourage Li to stay on and contribute to the local sports scene.
Let's be realistic.
There is NOTHING that the STTA and the SSC can do to keep Li in Singapore simply because she does not have a sense of belonging to the country beyond table tennis.
In fact, I wonder whether Li has ever felt a sense of belonging to Singapore in the first place.
Don't get me wrong. The above sentence is not – I repeat – not a criticism of her.
But it harks back to my previous postings of what the Singapore passport and the pink identity card means to all these foreign sports talents who have been scouted and brought in by some of our national sports associations (in particular, the Singapore Table Tennis Association and the Singapore Badminton Association).
As I wrote previously, the Singapore passport, in such instances, is just the symbol of the exchange of services that takes place between the foreign-born athlete and the National Sporting Association (NSA).
The NSA offers the foreign-born athlete citizenship and the chance to represent a country at the highest levels of competition, opportunities which will not come the athlete's way if he or she continues to stay in his or her country.
This offer also includes many lovely carrots too, namely all the financial rewards that can be reaped from winning international competitions.
In return, the foreign-born athlete offers the NSA the best years of his/her life as a professional athlete, and immerses himself/herself in a life that revolves only around training, competition and bringing sporting success to the country.
After several years of servitude, the foreign-born athlete decides to retire or stop playing. When that happens, there's nothing left to attach him or her to the country. Why? Because it's just the end of a well-paying playing contract.
The foreign-born athlete decides it's time to go home to his/her country of origin – and Singapore sports fans throw up their arms in despair because the numerous sporting honours that the athlete has won for Singapore suddenly seems hollow and meaningless.
Coming back to Li – how could one have ever expected her to feel a sense of belonging to Singapore when each and every single day of her 15 years here was spent either in training or travelling overseas to represent Singapore in competition?
I am given to understand that she never had any form of public or private education here, and spent many years living in STTA quarters. So the chances of her interacting with Singaporeans on a daily basis were minimal at best.
It's also why even after 15 years, she is still only seen and heard speaking in Mandarin and can barely utter a sentence in English/Singlish.
Also, look at who she has (publicly) fallen in love with in the time she has been here: first it was Ronald Susilo. Now, it's this Beijing businessman. One can only conclude from here that she is only able to identify with a fellow foreign-born athlete or with a fellow Chinese national.
So, really, could one really expect Li to continue living in Singapore after wrapping up her playing career?
Once again, the people at fault here would have to be the STTA officials and to a certain extent, the SSC.
And let me clarify:when I say STTA officials, I don't mean Lee Bee Wah, who became the NSA's new president in July, and her management team.
I mean the people of the previous regime – in this case, the ones responsible for scounting her and bringing her in 15 years ago and who have been looking after her development as a player.
Clearly, there were no efforts by them to help the likes of Li and her fellow foreign sports talents to get to know their new country better. It doesn't look as though the SSC did much either to ensure that the STTA do a better job of integrating their new citizens with their new country.
So now, the STTA, the SSC and Singapore sports find themselves finally reaping what they have sown. And my, my, what a bitter harvest it is turning out to be, hey?
What's worse, there's nothing both organisations can do now by way of damage control. Because the damage was done a long ago.
And as a result, slowly but surely, the sweet euphoria of winning that Olympic silver medal in Beijing is starting to leave a bitter aftertaste in the mouth. The sense of national pride in that achievement is starting to deflate and the win is now increasingly looking like a hollow victory.
Can you imagine what you will be telling your children or even your grandchildren in future if they should ever ask about this historic sporting achievement?
Can you imagine yourself saying: "Yes, we won an Olympic medal after 48 long years. But most of the players who won it for us have all gone back to China. I don't know what they are doing now."
Better start practising – because it's going to happen.
Because now that national women's table tennis coach Liu Guodong has huffily rejected a new contact with the STTA (see report here), the word is out that his protege, Feng Tianwei, regarded by many Singaporeans as the true heroine of the Singapore team's capture of the Olympic silver medal, may soon leave to join him wherever he goes (they have a very close relationship, apparently).
Well, like I said, we are now reaping what was callously sowed by the previous regime of the STTA.
Nice feeling, hey?
This letter was published in the Think section of The Sunday Times last weekend (12 Oct 2008).
Will Jiawei stay on after marriage? (The Sunday Times, 12 Oct 2008)
I refer to the report ‘Li and Li – Jiawei engaged' (Oct 5).
It is good to hear about our table tennis star's engagement and we wish her a happy marriage ahead.
While it is not in my interest to rain on her wedding parade, it seems inevitable that Singapore will lose Li Jiawei in time to come. The signals are there.
In your report, it was mentioned that the couple registered their marriage in Beijing, where Li's parents and fiance live. There were also considerations over a place to live in after their marriage.
There are too many pull factors for Li to return to her place of birth in Beijing. In fact, she had contemplated going to Beijing to further her studies when she came back to Singapore after winning her Olympic medal.
While I can empathise with her reasons for eventually moving back to Beijing, as a Singaporean, I can't help but feel disappointed.
Singapore gave Li many opportunities to don its national colours in international sporting events and even allowed her to be its flagbearer at the Olympics opening ceremony, yet the chances of her returning to China are very high.
Have we failed on our part? Could we have done more to make her stay?
That our foreign talent no longer feels beholden when presented a gift of good faith reflects a shortcoming on our part.
On the other hand, we should not be too judgmental. We need to spare a thought for Li as she is torn between trying to fulfil her obligations to Singapore while being a filial daughter to her parents and a future wife to her husband-to-be in Beijing.
It took much sacrifice on her part to be separated from her parents at an early age to train in Singapore. It is only natural that she will be homesick.
Still, we must examine and reflect on what more we could have done to make foreign athletes call Singapore their home.
We cannot help but wonder if the Singapore Table Tennis Association and Singapore Sports Council will pull out all the stops to encourage Li to stay on and contribute to our local sports ecosystem even after her marriage.
Edmund Lin
It is very simple.
Come Singapore to win a medal, get the money, go back China to retire. Don’t get much money even if you win the gold in China.
In her case, its one-up cos she gets to be a trophy bride for a rich businessman.
I don’t get the whole idea of competitive sports. Somebody wins a silver medal and so what? Why does Singapore bother to import foreign talents to represent the country? If we don’t win any sporting events, so what?
I have never felt proud of Mr Ang or Ms Lee for winning medals for Singapore. In fact, I’m already overgrown and I never thought to ask my parents or my teachers who won what medals at which competition in which year and sportsmen born in which country (and which country have they fled to after winning medal for Singapore). This topic also never came up in school, at home or at work.
I’m more proud of useful stuff like Singapore’s housing solution, water shortage solution, racial harmony solution and many more (Things that we take for granted but should thank LKY for).
These are the things that really matters to its citizens…
why should I care for a fast-aging sportsperson, no matter made in which country, who hasn’t produced anything useful for the country?
Singapore do have our own talented sportsman and women alike. Competing on the international stage takes more then just talents alone. Support is vital, monetary and moral.
It seems to be outrageous if one were to expect ‘our’ talents to juggle 8-9hrs of school and still have the mentality and energy to focus on training. Lets be realistic, there can’t be a situation of best of both worlds. Grooming takes effort and sacrifices.
If Singapore sent a singapore hopeful to train and compete in China or Germany etc, for 15 years, we may have the team that we are looking for. i.e. reverse engineering, Just like the Table Tennis Players were here, send Singaporeans to other countries on a 15 year scholorship. They must start as young as 12 years old. This must be very difficult to do huh…. Sigh…
Frankly that these players are leaving only sums up the fact they are leaving to live the life that they have been dreaming of.
It must be tough on the sporting scene that this happens. Money certainly is not the answer to everything. Then what is?? We need to answer this question first before we find the people to fit.
If sepak takraw was an olympic game competition, we would probably win a gold as we are really very good at it. How about our commandos in a parasailing competition? We stand a good chance there.
Are many of our best atheletes highly educated? Have we looked around to find that Ah Beng or mat or that mama who actually got it but are working in some carpark division, selling chicken rice or having a nasi lemak stall? They may not havesound education, but they may have a dream that super atheletes have. To WIN!
On the sports scene, we have a lot of heart, but we dont got the material bacause of our physique, and sporting mentality. If you sent a commando to West point for training for 5 years and he is back after 5 years, he will have the mentality and the physique. The best of the olympians display one quality – True Grit. Do we have that expressed from our atheletes?
So how.. I cant help but keep wondering why is it so important to have a gold medal? What purpose must it serve? Cant we win medals just for the sake of winning it? When we paid these guys alot of money I wonder what signals was really sent out to the masses? What was the media trying to communicate? What were the non verbals?
In fact I always thought Singapore can start its own Championships and eventually make it a worlwide event. Why must be SEA and ASIAN games. Start with something small and grow from there. We need to refresh the page once in a while to be creative again.
As a people, a nation we already win so many ‘medals’ in other areas. This means that there is a time and place for such things to happen. That maturity must arrive.
I love Singapore and certainly in some corner / copi thiam we have a champion grooming. And I am certain in time we will find our very own local throughbred who will win the GOLD for us and he will stay because of his roots.. Many will folow thereafter.
Have a little patience and faith. We will make it.
All the best.
James Das
it jus merely show that they don’t appreciate whatever that singapore has done for them. jus revoke their singapore passport and pink ic and they can go back to china for good. local talents are still the best 🙂 like our paralympians! simply awesome job done by them!
I’d rather we lose with local talents representing Singapore because a medal won by foreigners is meaningless and we wont exactly feel that proud.
Moral of the story: Retain hope in local
talent, our budding athletes! Our local talent
is just as strong! Just look at Said, she won a
gold medal in shooting during our
Commonwealth Youth games!
– Tao li, and the other fellow swimmers.
– Calvin Kang, Amanda choo, 100m
sprinters
These are all examples to show that we
singaporeans like everyelse have the
substance to make it out there on the
international sporting scene.
Here i will diverge from topic to applaud Ang
Peng Siong. Seriously, he has contributed
an immense deal to the medal exploits of
Tao Li and our fellow paralymic swimmers!
This is the way: To have past winners, past
champions, those who have been there to
exprience singapore’s bright days in the
sporting arena, to lead the way, show the
new generation how to do it.
Singapore used to be quite a powerhouse
on the track scene, blazing such a trail, one
would never think could be wiped out. Yet it
did, juding from our athletics medal drought
and it no longer being the discipline which
brings in the bulk of our medals. The past
champions should come out to help coach
our runners.
The young athlete could do much better
with a coach that is an idol, a living example
that with determination, one can make it
too. Singapore’s system just does not allow
for such strong, fervent pursuit of sport.
Just look, all the sacrifices
secondary/college students fork out to take
part in competitions – the sweat, tears,
blood and MONEY. What do they get in
return? Some maybe nothing, some if
lucky, maybe some money (which of
course is insufficient). Gradually, their
instinct tells them it is not worth it –
Singapore will buy foreign talent anyway…
[And again, time and time, we have been reading of cases of foreign talent not being ‘loyal’ , ‘patriotic’ to their adopted country, the country they compete for. We have to face reality, you cannot take your neighbour’s dog and expect it to obey your commands and perform well in competitions. Anyway how do singaporeans identify with a win that is supposedly by Singapore but actually from someone who is actually not a singaporean – there is just no point. Then, where’s the justification in spending money poaching foreign athletes instead of having them spot local talents and work on them.]
So yup thats what i think, how bout you
guys?
Isn’t it like all other policies with such elements.
It started with instant trees when LKY want an instantaneous transformation into a garden city. He was too impatient to wait for trees to be grown from seedlings or saplings. He wants a tree here, there and everywhere he pointed his finger. Now we know what happened to all those instant trees. Now there are hardly any of those angsana instant trees because they either snap in the storm or got blown down by strong winds or they were removed because the roots of these trees caused widespread damages to car parks where they were often grown. Just too many aspects of Singapore’s policies are like that -convenient and expedient and totally transient.
When WNBA star becky hammon played for Russia, USA Coach Anne Donovan said OPENLY:
“If you play in this country, live in this country and you grow up in the heartland – and you put on a Russian uniform – you are not a patriotic person, in my mind.”
becky is labeled a traitor and currently public enemy NO 1.
Yet Becky Hammon’s case is different. She is rich…she didnt play for Russia for money.
Have to agree – Ah Siao’s suggeston has a wonderful Singaporean elegance about it! 🙂
Ah Siao!! GOOD IDEA!!! 1st time i hear this but i think very inovative…one up for you..
Frankly speaking i dont feel proud for this money made medal. In fact i feel it is an insult to me as a Singaporean. These people are driven by our money..
our situation now is like we have marry a women who sleep every day with us, saying how deep she love me but deep inside me, i know she is for my money and will leave me one day…that is sad
Who say we cannot stop them from leaving.
We are Singaporean, we can do it the Singapore way.
Just like our CPF, we can also delay paying their prize money. Split it out to 50 yearly payment, to collect the yearly payment, they need to stay in Singapore for at least 6 month every year.
LOL, what a great country!
They may not have Singapore in their hearts but neither do they have their home country in their hearts either.
Different things are important to different people.
It is obvious that patriotism isn’t that important to her.
Pride then Prejudice. Both are self-imposed. Pride – Singaporeans are made to think that we have made it coz we finally got a medal after 48 years. Prejudice – it’s only a job. You do well, you get your rewards and then what? Retire or stay on to meet everyone’s expectations?
Didn’t anyone see how one of the table tennis players was mouthing the china anthem? As far as citizenship goes, my 1 year old nephew is older than the silver medallist.
I’ve always wondered if at the Beijing Olympics, at the corner of our national flag, was there a small tag that said ‘Made in China’?
Hi Watanabe
To be honest, there’s nothing wrong in trying to make a living out of sports. If a country is willing to let you represent it and help you to make a living out of it, then why not.
But I am starting to conclude that it is the national sports association that is at fault when these foreign-born athletes decide to leave Singapore when their playing careers are over.
What has the NSA done to help them to feel a sense of belonging to Singapore? If the NSA has been remiss in this, then really, the real betrayers of Singapore – and Singapore sport – are its officials, not these athletes.
Like I said, we are now paying the price for these NSAs’ relentless pursuit of personal glory.
Now the next question has to be asked: did they really want to achieve something for Singapore, or was it for their own glory and bragging rights ie the chance to swagger around and boast: “Hey, it was me that helped Singapore to win that Olympic medal, you know?”
They are Singaprean, aint they? These foreign has no sense of belonging to Singapore…u call them Singaporean but what they have in heart is the $$$ that Singapore can provide…
When u buy service by $$$ it is very natural that these kinda loyalty is very short n weak….
It is like marrying a women who only sees the old man’s money…no love just sex in exchange for wealth…
This is so true.
It’s funny how Singapore fails to ‘retain’ the Chinese talent, which is never an issue for other nations that take in foreign talents from China. I mean, I do not think that the Chinese foreign talents I know in France, Germany or Netherlands or other European nations do ‘identify’ with the country too, yet they stay on. BUT, I do notice that these Chinese nationals have all picked up the local language because there is no way they can survive speaking in their mother tongue unlike in Singapore.
So this makes me consider how this ‘retaining talent’ issue mght have to do with the complex issue of how Singaporeans also struggle in defining a ‘national identity’, so I think it is even tougher for these foreign talents to identify with the country no matter what is implemented to ‘assimilate’ them. Even the younger Singaporean generation themselves struggle with identifying with the nation too, hence brain draining overseas.
Moreover, Singapore being the pragmatic society it is, the prospects of retiring as a sports personnel is very bleak, which explains why the local youths are not encouraged to pursue a full-time sporting career. I trust there may be the prospects of a well-paying coaching contract, however, if it is implicated with the issue of marriage, then it is a different story altogether. I mean, recent statistics show that, Singapore is not doing that well in ensuring that Singaporean women marry locally, Li’s choice doesn’t come to me as a surprise at all.