Sports

Table Tennis 2022 Year In Review: Sharath Kamal, Manika Batra Overcome Administrative Crisis To Light-up TT Arena

The age-defying Achanta Sharath Kamal sizzled on and off the court while Manika Batra achieved another first for Indian table tennis despite the administrative crisis the sport had to enduౠre over the past 12 months.

Manika Bat෴ra put CWG disappointment behind her with Asia Cup bronze.
info_icon

The age-defying Achanta Sharath Kamal sizzled on and off the court while Manika Batra achieved another first for Indian table tennis despite the administrative crisis the sport had to endure over the past 12 months. With three gold medals, including a singles title after 16 years, at the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, the 40-year-old Sharath showed that age was just a number.(More Sports News)

He plans♚ to hang up his boots only after the Paris Olympics but 2022 also saw him gett🎉ing into sports administration.

He was elected as the vice-chair of the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) athletes' commission before becoming the first Indian to be elected 𓂃the joint chair of the players' body in the International Table Tennis 🍃Federation (ITTF).

His role in the IOA may be limited but a seat on the executive council of the ITTF gives him authority to effect changes in the way the game is played.
     
Sharath finally gets his due

Some said it was probably 10 ye♉ars too late but Sharath finally got his due from the government when he became the first table tennis player to receive the Major Dhyan Chand Khel Ratna award, India's highest sporting honour. 

Even the u🗹sually divided selection panel found it hard to disagree and he was the unanimous choice for the 🍎sporting honour.

The coveted award came after his sensational effort in the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, where he overcame sleepless nights and a battered body to pocket three gold medals -- singles, team and mix𝐆ed with 24-year-old Sreeja Akula.

Manika overcomes CWG disappointment with Asia Cup bronze

Having bagged an unprecedented four medals in the 2018ཧ CWG, expectations were expectedly high from Manika in Birmingham. She coulꦇd not handle the weight of expectations and returned home empty handed.

However, a performance of a lifetime was to follow in the Asia Cup in Bangkok three months later. The Delhi-based paddler raised her game to stun two top-10 players iಞn a span of three days to secure a bronze, becoming the first Indian to win a medal in the tournament's rich history.

Legal battles galore

The start to the year was rather grim as the Delhi High Court suspended the Table Tennis Federation of India (TTFI) after observing a "sorry&qu🐠ot; state o🍷f affairs in the governing body.

There ꦏwas fear among the players over the suspension impacting their preparation for international events, including the Commonwealth Games scheduled for July-August.   

However, the court-appointed Committee of Administrators running the TTFI ensured the training of elite athletes remained la🎶rgely unaffected.

A newly-elected set of office bearers ꧃took charge of the federation earlier this month and their first task will be to conduct the national events.  

While looking after t🅷he day-to-day functioning o🔥f the federation, the CoA too got locked in a host of legal hurdles.

As many as four players -- Manush Shah, Swastika Ghosh, Archana Kamath and Diya Chitale -- c⛎hallenged their exclusion from the CWG squad, keeping the CoA more than busy.

Only Chit❀ale emerged as the winner from those battles and was included in the Birmingham-bound 👍women's squad.