Team S’pore praised for ‘gritty’ Paris Olympics performances; open-top bus parade to be held on Aug 14
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Singaporean kitefoiler Maximilian Maeder with his Paris 2024 bronze medal. It is the country's first medal since Joseph Schooling won gold at Rio 2016.
ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG
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PARIS – Teenager Maximilian Maeder was hailed for his historic men’s kite bronze at Paris 2024,
At a wrap-up press conference at the Olympic Village in Paris on Aug 10, Singapore Sport Institute chief Su Chun Wei lauded the “top-class performance” by 17-year-old Maximilian, who won the country’s first Olympic sailing medal
It was also the first medal since former swimmer Joseph Schooling won a historic gold at Rio 2016.
A celebratory parade is scheduled for Aug 14, featuring Singapore’s Paris 2024 Olympians on an open-top bus which will travel through Bayfront Avenue, Chinatown, Orchard Road, Serangoon Road and Victoria Street from 11.30am to 1pm.
Dr Su, who was joined by Singapore National Olympic Council secretary-general Chris Chan and chef de mission Tan Wearn Haw, said: “We are immensely proud of Max’s performance. At 17, it is very easy for us to forget that he has achieved what many of us did not even dare to dream of at that age on the world’s biggest stage.
“Being so young, the sky’s the limit, and we believe he will come back stronger, continue to do what he does best, and make Singapore proud.”
There were also other bright sparks among the 23-athlete contingent, of which only sprinter Marc Louis was awarded a universality quota.
Dr Su cited Teh Xiu Hong, Gan Ching Hwee,
Swimmer Gan Ching Hwee broke the women’s 800m freestyle national record at the Olympics this year.
PHOTO: EPA-EFE
Badminton players Loh Kean Yew Yeo Jia Min Kiria Tikanah beat a higher-ranked opponent Amita Berthier lost narrowly
Dr Su said: “We are small in numbers, we punch above our weight, and fight with courage and determination. We have shown that a small nation like Singapore is able to compete with the best in the world and give them a run for their money.”
Still, only Maximilian competed for a medal, and there were underwhelming results in some sports.
Saiyidah Aisyah Caroline Chew’s Shanti Pereira Louis
(Fom left) Dr Su Chun Wei, Singapore Sport Institute chief, Tan Wearn Haw, Singapore chef de mission, and Chris Chan, Singapore National Olympic Council secretary general, gave their assessment during a wrap-up press conference on Aug 10.
ST PHOTO: MARK CHEONG
While Mr Tan called for perspective – “to be here competing against the best is hard, to win is damn bloody hard” – Mr Chan urged top Singapore athletes to capitalise on the one-off nature of the Olympics, as opposed to season-long tours and competitions, and take the opportunity to pull off surprises.
There were 15 Olympic debutants in the contingent, with four still teenagers. Dr Su noted: “Yes, we need to string together the consistency and winning touch... We may not have fully done so in each of our athletes’ performances.
“If you track each of their performance profiles in the last one to two years, you will see that at the regional and even Asian levels, we have overcome higher-ranked opponents. And this is exactly what we need to build on at their first Olympics, to go away with knowing how to win at the critical moment and be ruthless about it.
“They have an indomitable fighting spirit. But I agree that learning to win, the winning part takes experience, and our consolation and optimism is that our cohort of athletes here is very young.
“What is important is that the new wind for Singapore sports must catalyse cohort over cohort of new blood who are fearless and are able to dream big.”
Badminton player Loh Kean Yew also performed admirably to reach the knockout rounds.
PHOTO: ST FILE
Reviews will be conducted ahead of the 2025 SEA Games and 2026 Asian Games and Mr Tan suggested that Singapore, which does not have the talent depth of bigger countries, look at future Olympic programmes and seize the opportunity to be “ahead of the curve” with niche sports like kitefoiling and skateboarding. The women medallists in skateboarding were all aged 14 to 16.
He said: “We couldn’t do everything, we tried to do some things. That’s an important step. As a system, we learn. It’s how fast we learn as well. This is high performance sports – every waking moment, there’s somebody out there waiting to steal your lunch.
“In Singapore, we are starting to see more and more kids and parents willing to take that journey. That’s important, it is a whole mindset shift.”
Mr Tan hopes the younger generation can be inspired by the exploits of the likes of Maximilian, noting: “Max is 17 today, so a nine-year-old kid today in Singapore could be a potential medallist at Brisbane 2032.”

