Road to Rio Program

{{Short description|Program during the 2016 Summer Olympics}}

{{Other uses|Road To Rio (disambiguation)}}

Road to Rio Program was a program that provided all the possible technical and some financial support to selected African badminton players who have the possibility to qualify for the 2016 Summer Olympics. The project was a collaboration between Badminton Confederation of Africa and Badminton World Federation. The program was exclusively for singles players as it would be difficult to qualify for the doubles events.{{cite web|title=Newsletter du Mois de Septembre 2013 Road to Rio|url=http://www.africa-badminton.com/A%20NEWSLETTERSARCHIVES/nl201309.htm|website=Africa Badminton|publisher=Badminton Confederation Africa|accessdate=22 March 2017}}

Background

During a meeting which was held with the selected players and their coaches in Mauritius, Ian Wright the development director of the BWF explained that the BWF wants to help more African to qualify for the next Olympic Games and this is why the BWF/BCA are investing a lot of resources to achieve this objective. Mr. Wright also added that it is a must that all the National Federations commit to this program by respecting the different criteria that will be set by the BWF/BCA. For instance, National Federation should respect deadlines for entering their players in the selected tournaments and also provide necessary information for visa and other purposes in time. On the other hand, the players should also provide their training details and their availability until the Olympic Games in 2016.

Training Camp

The selected players had their first training camp in Gaborone, Botswana. After the end of the 2013 Botswana International, the training camp was moved to Pretoria, South Africa.

Selected Players

The following were the 14 players selected for the Road to Rio Program:

Male Players

class="sortable wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"

! |Country

! |Player

align="left" | {{flagicon|UGA}} Uganda

| align="left" | Edwin Ekiring

align="left" | {{flagicon|RSA}} South Africa

| align="left" | Jacob Maliekal

align="left" | {{flagicon|RSA}} South Africa

| align="left" | Prakash Vijayanath

align="left" | {{flagicon|ALG}} Algeria

| align="left" | Adel Hamek

align="left" | {{flagicon|ALG}} Algeria

| align="left" | Mohamed Abderrahime Belarbi

align="left" | {{flagicon|GHA}} Ghana

| align="left" | Daniel Sam

align="left" | {{flagicon|MRI}} Mauritius

| align="left" | Aatish Lubah

align="left" | {{flagicon|BWA}} Botswana

| align="left" | Gaone Tawana

Female Players

class="sortable wikitable" style="font-size: 90%;"

! |Country

! |Player

align="left" | {{flagicon|NGA}} Nigeria

| align="left" | Grace Gabriel

align="left" | {{flagicon|MRI}} Mauritius

| align="left" | Kate Foo Kune

align="left" | {{flagicon|EGY}} Egypt

| align="left" | Hadia Hosny

align="left" | {{flagicon|KEN}} Kenya

| align="left" | Mercy Joseph

align="left" | {{flagicon|RSA}} South Africa

| align="left" | Elme De Villiers

align="left" | {{flagicon|MRI}} Mauritius

| align="left" | Nicki Chan-Lam

Result

Jacob Maliekal and Kate Foo Kune represented their respective nations at the Rio 2016 Summer Olympics. Both players won one game during the group stage and ended up second in their groups, thus did not qualify for the knockout round.

  • Jacob Maliekal

style='font-size: 90%; text-align: center;' class='wikitable'

!colspan="4"|2016 Summer Olympics – Men's Singles

|Round

! |Opponent

! |Score

! |Result

style="text-align:left; background:white" | Group stage

| align="left" | {{flagicon|KOR}} Son Wan-ho

| align="left" | 10–21, 10-21

| align="center" | Lost

style="text-align:left; background:white" | Group stage

| align="left" | {{flagicon|UKR}} Artem Pochtarev

| align="left" | 21–18, 21-19

| align="center" | Win

  • Kate Foo Kune

style='font-size: 90%; text-align: center;' class='wikitable'

!colspan="4"|2016 Summer Olympics – Women's Singles

|Round

! |Opponent

! |Score

! |Result

style="text-align:left; background:white" | Group stage

| align="left" | {{flagicon|AUS}} Wendy Chen Hsuan-yu

| align="left" | 21–16, 21-19

| align="center" | Win

style="text-align:left; background:white" | Group stage

| align="left" | {{flagicon|THA}} Porntip Buranaprasertsuk

| align="left" | 7-21, 18-21

| align="center" | Lost

References