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Vishwa may have been the best within the nation: Sharath Kamal’s tribute to teenage TT champ

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The ‘morning practice group’ gained’t be the identical once more. The cream of the crop of children from desk tennis golf equipment in Chennai practised underneath one roof 3 times per week. The choose few have been handpicked by senior professional Achanta Sharath Kamal, an Olympian and medallist on the Asian Games and Commonwealth Games. Training classes with Sharath began in the course of the lockdown and continued until date. The trainees shared a detailed bond with their mentor.

On Sunday midday, the ‘morning practice group’ misplaced a member. Vishwa Deenadayalan, 18, a cadet and sub-junior nationwide champion, died in a highway accident when travelling from Guwahati to Shillong for the Senior Nationals and Inter-state championships.

“The last time I saw Vishwa was on Saturday morning when he beat me in a practice session. Saturday afternoon, he had forwarded on our group an Instagram post by World Table Tennis which had a photo of me as part of a caption contest,” Sharath stated.

The mentor would have met his trainee in Shillong, the venue of the nationals. Vishwa had left a day earlier, on Sunday. Sharath was flying out the following day.

His voice choking with emotion, Sharath recalled the fateful Sunday.

Vishwa Deenadayalan with long-time coach R Ramnath Prasad of the Krishnaswamy TT membership. (Express Photo)

“I was in Chennai. I was to leave on Monday morning. I was going to have an afternoon nap (on Sunday) before my practice session with my brother Rajath. That is when I got a call saying Vishwa is critical. When I heard that he passed away, my head was spinning. I didn’t know if I heard it right,” Sharath stated.

The temper in Shillong was solemn on Monday, the primary day of the nationals. Many of the gamers have been unable to concentrate on the sport after listening to the tragic information.

Very unhappy to study that younger Table Tennis participant from Tamil Nadu, Deenadayalan Vishwa died in an accident at Ri-Bhoi in Meghalaya whereas on his solution to Shillong to take part within the 83rd Senior National Table Tennis Championship. My deepest condolences to his household. RIP pic.twitter.com/eaUweRzdiC

— Kiren Rijiju (@KirenRijiju) April 17, 2022

“Some of the players from the Tamil Nadu girls’ team saw the accident right before their eyes. They lost games they would not have otherwise. It was very sombre yesterday. Those in his age group were affected. A tough loss not just for me and his family and friends, but for the whole country. He was a talented kid, disciplined and with a great attitude,” Sharath stated.
The veteran believes Vishwa would have turn out to be one of many ‘finest in the country’. He was making a clean transition from the junior to the senior stage. His aggressive type of play, which takes time to develop in a teen, had impressed Sharath.

“His game style was very much like a senior player. He went for the attacking shots, he never played safe. He had a controlled game but he was always looking to create the point, which is a senior attitude. Generally, juniors win because they have good ball control and play defensively. In juniors, if you control the ball and play defensively, you win if you are able to put one more ball back in than your opponent who doesn’t have the power and speed.”

Dedicated & disciplined

Sharath shares a dialog he had with a coach on Sunday to sum up why Vishwa was a delight to work with.

“As quickly because the information got here that he handed away, there’s a health coach I had launched Vishwa to. He referred to as me up and began crying. He stated ‘Vishwa was virtually like my son. When he says 5 pm, Vishwa could be there at 4.45 pm. If he wanted a theraband, it was all the time there in his bag. He was so meticulous and all the time ready.

“There is no one time when he said ‘Anna, I forgot my shoes, I don’t have a t-shirt to change into’. Or something like that. There have been times I have called him at 10.30 pm saying ‘tomorrow morning can we practise.’ He will show up for practice.”

Shocked past phrases to listen to concerning the heartbreaking & premature demise of our younger, promising Table Tennis participant Vishwa Deenadayalan. He was a legend-in-making and it pains me that he left us too quickly.

I provide my deepest condolences to his household, associates & sports activities fraternity. pic.twitter.com/hFlrR0Mycl

— M.Ok.Stalin (@mkstalin) April 18, 2022

Sharath had been recurrently mentoring Vishwa for 2 years. The veteran took the initiative in the course of the lockdown. The Tokyo Olympics have been not far away and Sharath was searching for good coaching companions. The children on the verge of graduating to the senior class wanted somebody to information them. It was a win-win scenario.

“What happens is when you get into the senior category, a lot of kids you would have played with would have quit table tennis because of education and other stuff. All of Vishwa’s mates from the club had quit or were too junior.”

Vishwa’s was launched to the game when he accompanied his elder sister Raveena to the Krishnaswamy TT Club at Anna Nagar, Chennai. The boy who beloved soccer didn’t enter the TT corridor and waited exterior. Coach R Ramnath Prasad recalled how he satisfied Vishwa to attempt his hand on the sport after some cajoling.

WTT mourn the lack of Indian youth star Vishwa Deenadayalan who handed away in a motor accident en path to compete within the Senior National and Inter-State Championships.

Rest in peace Vishwa.

Read extra 👉 https://t.co/YzacRrBmnv#WTT #TableTennis pic.twitter.com/XdzGDjZ10x

— World Table Tennis (@WTTGlobal) April 19, 2022

Within per week of selecting up a desk tennis racquet for the primary time, a six-year-old Vishwa was hitting 150 balls throughout a coaching session. “He was a natural right from the start. Forehand drive, backhand drive. He picked these shots up quickly. I knew he had potential straightaway,” coach Prasad stated of Vishwa’s early steps within the sport.

Vishwa and Prasad shared a bond of coach-trainee for 13 years — from the primary time he performed the game until his premature loss of life within the highway accident. Next month, he would have been in Linz, Austria, for the WTT Youth Contender Series.

Before he travelled overseas, the coach had given him a goal. “I wanted him to reach the semifinals in Shillong. He was determined to do well. He had a bright future. This is a big loss.”