SEJAHTERA BADMINTON CLUB

BERSAMA MEMBANGUN BULUTANGKIS INDONESIA

Tong Sin Fu Masalah Kewarganegaraan Membuatnya Hijrah

Posted by valsus on May 18, 2009

Tang Xianhu (The Thing)Miris, melihat kesuksesan pemain-pemain China terutama di tunggal putra ternyata diarsiteki oleh Putra Bangsa Indonesia “TONG SIN FU”. Selain Lin Dan, sederet pemain China juga berhasil dipoles oleh tangan dingin Om Tong, demikian biasa beliau dipanggil. Adalah Chen Jin. Bao Cun Lai memperpanjang daftar keberhasilan Om Tong. Tong Sin Fu memang warga keturunan. Namun beliau Lahir di Indonesia, besar di Indonesia, berkarya di Indonesia. Hanya karena masalah kewarganegaraan memaksanya hijrah ke negeri ”Tirai Bambu”. Tanyalah kepada beliau betapa besar cintanya kepada Indonesia, betapa besar keinginannya untuk kembali berkarya di Indonesia. Namun perhatian pemerintah terhadap masalah kewarganegaraan membuatnya urung kembali ke negara tercintanya. Seandainya pemerintah tanggap dan peduli akan permasalahan ini, bukan tidak mungkin melalui tangan dinginnya Indonesia akan melahirkan pemain-pemain tingkat dunia yang handal. Kasus serupa pernah menimpa pemain-pemain Indonesia lainya dan bahkan sampai saat ini mereka masih mengalami hal serupa. Jika kasus ini kembali terulang, maka akan lebih banyak Tong Sin Fu, Tong Sin Fu lain yang akan hengkang ke luar negeri. (Arief Rachman)

Tang Xianhu – The Thing  (Is He The Greatest Ever ?)

Tang Xian HuI was wondering if someone would volunteer to consolidate whatever material we have on The Thing – Tang Xianhu.

It’s a shame that many of us don’t really know the man who was perhaps the greatest badminton player of the last century.

Although Chinese, Tang Xianhu was born in Indonesia (Teluk Betung, Lampung) on 13 March 1942 (yes, on Friday the 13th)

He grew up in Jakarta speaking Bahasa Indonesia… and, to this day, he is not fluent in either Cantonese or Mandarin.

In the late 1950s, Tang was the leading Indonesian junior and was originally called Thing Hian Houw (which is how he got the nickname ‘The Thing’).

He represented Indonesia in the Malayan Open Championships before a forced ouster programme in Indonesia made him migrate to China.

From 1961 to 1979, Tang Xianhu (representing China) was active in competitive badminton and went on to absolutely dominate the sport.

The unfortunate part was that China’s political compulsions kept him away from Europe, which was quite a good thing for European players.

It’s also reported that Erland Kops, Europe’s finest player, was steamrolled (15-0, 15-0) by Tang Xianhu when they met for an exhibition series.

Well, so much for Kops’ legendary victories at All England !

Tang Xian Hu was literally unbeatable.

Only two players were anywhere in his league – they were his team-mate Hou Jia Chang (who was quite familiar with Tang’s play) and the mercurial Indonesian shuttler Iie Sumirat (possibly the most unreadable badminton player ever).

Rudy Hartono never played Tang, but it is ardently argued by old-timers that Hartono wouldn’t have stood a chance against him. (Well, I know this is gonna raise a few hackles somewhere)

After retiring from competition, Tang took up advanced coaching, first in 1982 as China’s National Coach.

In 1987, he began coaching the Indonesian National Team and stayed put until 1998 when he returned to China.

He was then attached to the Fujian Provincial Badminton Team and was later appointed Head Coach, first for men’s singles and later for men’s doubles.

At the 2000  Sydney Olympics, Tang had the dubious pleasure of watching his pupils from China and Indonesia slug it out. Xia Xuanze lost to Hendrawan who then lost to Ji Xinpeng.

Tang’s biggest mission began in 2002, when he took over as Head Coach for China’s Men’s Doubles of the Chinese National Team (men’s doubles)

The ‘mental toughness training’, which has repeatedly allowed China to fight back even from the brink, is Tang Xian Hu’s contribution.

(One recent example: the MD match at the Singapore Open 2007 where China’s Cai Yun & Fu Haifeng kept their cool to snatch an amazing victory from Malaysia’s Tan Fook Chong & Wan Wah Lee who were frozen on Match Point.)

(One older example: the 2000 Olympics where an unfancied Ji Xinpeng clawed his way to the gold with Tang’s combination prescription of ‘aggression and flexible tactics’.)

In fact, ‘The Thing’ has coached so many top players that the upper tier of the Indonesian and Chinese teams since 1987 owes much to Tang Xianhu.

Principal Competitive Achievements :

Singles Champion – 1963 Games of New Emerging Forces

Singles Champion – 1966 Asian Games of New Emerging Forces

Singles & Team Champion – 1965 to 1975 National Games, China

Mixed Doubles Champion – 1978 Asian Games
Principal Coaching Achievements :

2000  Olympic Games – Men’s Singles Gold (Ji Xinpeng)

2004  Thomas Cup – China – Champions
The Kason TSF 86Ti, used by China’s U-19 national team, was reportedly designed by Tang Xianhu.

Apparently, he wanted a racquet with a range of properties that he specified, including a stiff shaft.

The shaft design (graphite enhanced with titanium) was tailored for short, hard-hitting players.

(Well, only Sir Panda would be able to explain whether this is true)

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