Asean Para Games: Rousing send-off for Singapore athletes

Team check into MBS, energised to do their best at home after months of intensive work

Boccia player Koh Kai Hui (in wheelchair) making her way on the Circle Line from Stadium MRT station to the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands together with Dr Teo-Koh Sock Miang (right), SNPC president, and other officials and athletes.
Boccia player Koh Kai Hui (in wheelchair) making her way on the Circle Line from Stadium MRT station to the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands together with Dr Teo-Koh Sock Miang (right), SNPC president, and other officials and athletes. PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
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Team Singapore contingent gathered outside Stadium MRT station on Monday morning to bid farewell to their loved ones before boarding the trains. PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
The journey from Stadium MRT took about 10 minutes or less. PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
The Team Singapore contingent got a send-off as they checked into the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands (MBS). PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
The Team Singapore contingent got a send-off as they checked into the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands (MBS). PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
The Team Singapore contingent got a send-off as they checked into the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands (MBS). PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES
The Team Singapore contingent got a send-off as they checked into the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands (MBS). PHOTO: LIM YAOHUI FOR THE STRAITS TIMES

Like a scene from a movie, they gathered with luggage by their side and gave out hugs. Only, they were not at the airport, but rather, assembled outside Stadium MRT Station, about to make their way to the Games Village at Marina Bay Sands (MBS).

The 247-strong Team Singapore contingent, comprising athletes and officials, said goodbye to loved ones as they checked into the Games Village ahead of the opening of the Asean Para Games (APG) on Thursday.

It was an emotional but powerful send-off as 17-year-old Anglo-Chinese School (Independent) student Toh Wei Soong, a swimmer, said: "With everyone coming here as one contingent, you really get a sense of unity when you see everyone here and you just want to do well."

Travelling by both chartered buses and public trains, the athletes were divided according to their sports. Boccia, cerebral palsy football, chess and goalball took the train down to MBS, while the remainder travelled by bus.

The three-stop journey took less than 10 minutes and it appeared seamless. The only problem was the lift, which could only take a maximum of three wheelchairs, resulting in a queue.

The line however, dissipated within five minutes and 26-year-old accountant and boccia player Lim Kay Choong said: "The train is very convenient because when you take the bus, you have to go up and down the bus and you also have to carry the wheelchair."

Volunteers were also stationed at the MRT platforms to help direct athletes to their various sporting venues, resulting in less confusion.

And as the athletes move into the Games Village, where they will be housed for the next nine days, the energy around them is palpable.

Said sailor Ng Xiu Zhen, a 31-year-old trainee at the Cerebral Palsy Alliance Singapore: "I am really excited. I can't wait for the Games to begin as I have been training really hard for the APG."

Table-tennis debutant Harrison Gan, a 23-year-old first-year finance student at SIM, added: "It is held in Singapore and I am all hyped up. I know that Singaporeans will come down and support us so we will do our best for the Games."

He, however, stopped short of making any medal predictions: "This is my first APG. I know that opponents in my class (Class 10 for those who compete standing with minimal disability) are professional athletes, so I'm just coming into the Games with an open mindset."

That is exactly the kind of mindset that Dr Teo-Koh Sock Miang, president of the Singapore National Paralympic Council (SNPC), wants.

She said on the sidelines of the send-off ceremony: "The No. 1 priority is for all of our athletes to do their personal best. That is the most important.

"At the end of the day, we just want the athletes to overcome the odds against them."

Beyond the Games, she hopes that the event will be a platform to draw new blood into para-sports.

"With all the public awareness created with this APG, I'm hoping it will bring out as many people with disability as possible, to take up sports or other recreational activities. Whether they choose to compete or not, at the end of the day, I think it is more for a better quality of life."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 01, 2015, with the headline Asean Para Games: Rousing send-off for Singapore athletes. Subscribe