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Sports Ministry help was not sought as there was no plan to take poles to Uzbekistan- Palitha

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Chandana Ekanayake (2nd right), the manager of the Youth Athletics team that toured Uzbekistan for the Asian Youth Championships presents the manager’s report to Palitha Fernando, President, Sri Lanka Athletics. Also in the picture are Palitha Jayathilaka (left), Acting Secretary of Sri Lanka Athletics and Shantha Silva, Treasurer of Sri Lanka Athletics.

by Reemus Fernando

Maj. Gen. (rtd.) Palitha Fernando, the President of Sri Lanka Athletics refuted media reports that criticized the track and field governing body’s failure to air freight the poles for Maris Stella College pole vaulter Thushen Silva to compete at the just concluded Asian Youth Athletics Championships in Uzbekistan.

Thushen Silva competing with a borrowed pole from a Kazakhstani counterpart won the silver medal at the Asian Youth Championships. Following his triumph, there were media reports that suggested that Sri Lanka Athletics had failed to make necessary arrangements for the athlete to use his own poles at the biennial event.

Following the negative media reports the Sports Ministry too in a statement said that Sri Lanka Athletics had not sought its help to air freight the much-needed equipment.

“There was no need for us to request Sports Ministry help to send poles to Uzbekistan as we were not planning to send the equipment. We knew a couple of days ahead of the departure that the athlete would not take his poles with him,” said Fernando at a media briefing held on Thursday.

Fernando said that the manager of the touring team, Chandana Ekanayake had made pre-departure arrangements for the athlete to use quality poles used by the Kazakhstani athletes in Uzbekistan.The seven-member Sri Lanka team returned home with two silver and two bronze medals. Ekanayake said that most of the seven athletes reached their personal best during the meet.

Fernando said the negative publicity had taken the gloss out of an otherwise successful campaign at the Under 18 event. Sri Lanka finished at the 13 position in the points table dominated by China and India. Both countries collected 24 medals each. China won 15 gold, seven silver and two bronze medals. India won six gold, 11 silver and seven bronze medals. Apart from India, Sri Lanka were the only other South Asian country to have won medals at this meet.

Meanwhile, the track and field governing body also expressed hopes of ending more than one and half decades old medal drought at the Asian Games this year as the likes of sprinter Yupun Abeykoon have reached top international level.

Track and field is Sri Lanka’s most successful sport at the regional games. It has won the country 27 medals (Gold 10, Silver 6, Bronze 11). Sri Lanka won its last medals at the Asian Games in 2006. While Susanthika Jayasinghe (100m- Silver, 200m- Bronze) won individual medals, country’s men’s 4x400metres relay team of Rohan Pradeep Kumara, Rohitha Pushpakumara, Prasanna Amarasekara and Ashoka Jayasundara clinched the bronze medal.

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