View Full Version : NEWS : American Kevin Han dreaming of Olympic gold


kwun
05-13-2004, 04:54 PM
American Kevin Han dreaming of Olympic gold

Eva C. Komandjaja, Jakarta Post

After the United States team's exit from the Thomas Cup badminton team championship, Kevin Han plans to try his luck at the upcoming Olympics.


With partner Howard Bach, Han will be competing in the Olympics with the dream of winning a gold. They are the only American players among 172 badminton qualifiers.

Han said he knew it would be difficult coming up against the world's best players, but said he was keen to try his best.

The Shanghai-born player started to play badminton when he was 13 years old. He joined a small badminton club and played singles in his city but did not make it to the national training center in his country.

He moved to the United States with his family when he was 17 years old and stopped playing badminton for almost two years due to a work commitment before resuming play again and made it into the U.S. national team.

Like many badminton players in the U.S., Han, the father of two daughters, said that he could not live on his earnings as a player. "There's zero money in badminton." Han works for a home improvement warehouse in the U.S.

He said many other athletes also work there. The company allows flexible working hours for them. "We do not have to be around all the time," he said.

When he first arrived in the U.S., Han said he could have tried to take up more popular sports such as basketball or tennis.

But he chose to continue playing badminton because he said it was the only sport which would give him the opportunity to go to the top.

Han had to bury his Thomas Cup dream after the U.S. team was beaten by fellow minnow Germany in the playoff round on Tuesday night.

Han's fellow members were Howard Bach, Eric Go, Khan Bob Malaythong and former Indonesian star Tony Gunawan, who took the role of player and coach.

With the small number of team members, Han also played in the singles.

"I play doubles but there are only five of us so I also took the singles. It's hard for me because I have been trained as a doubles player," he said.

In the group matches, U.S. suffered a 5-0 drubbing by badminton giants China and Indonesia.

Han said he was happy that he had the chance to play against the world's best teams.

"China is getting better and better. They have five very good singles players and have two strong doubles. They're the top team in the world and stand a very good chance of winning the Thomas Cup this year and maybe for many years to come," he said about the team from his native land.

Han and Howard, currently ranked 21st in the world, have participated in many competitions such as the Thailand Open, Swiss Open, All England, Korea Open and Japan Open this year, though they have never been able to get past the quarterfinals.

Their rare moment of glory came in a continental tournament by winning the Peru International in April 2004. "We're not among the best teams in the world. We're actually in the middle but we're going to give our best in the Olympic Games in Athens," Han said.

wilfredlgf
05-13-2004, 11:27 PM
Kevin Han and Kwun Han. Any relativity?

kwun
05-13-2004, 11:29 PM
Kevin Han and Kwun Han. Any relativity?
no. but we can both dream.

Pecheur
05-13-2004, 11:56 PM
no. but we can both dream.

Er well realistically is that sort of thing legal over there? And think about how Janet would feel. ;)

-wei-
05-16-2004, 02:19 PM
i like the thread title :)

"dreaming"

dlp
05-18-2004, 08:58 AM
I think Kwun and Kevin Han have equal chance of olympic gold :)

cooler
05-18-2004, 09:07 AM
I think Kwun and Kevin Han have equal chance of olympic gold :)

you mean Kwun Han Jr. ? :D :)

kwun
05-18-2004, 02:02 PM
you mean Kwun Han Jr. ? :D :)
no. i think he means kwun... ;)

kwun jr will have a higher chance!

hcyong
05-18-2004, 09:10 PM
I think Kwun and Kevin Han have equal chance of olympic gold :)

Kwun is not even going to the Olympics. He has zero chance.

Kevin can hope that his opponents all withdraw from injury. He has approximately 0.02 x 0.03 x 0.04 x 0.04 x 0.05 (5 rounds, chances of injury increases each round) = almost zero.

Winex West Can
05-27-2004, 07:37 PM
Bach and Han aim for gold in Athens

by Nikki Dee Corum // USOC Media Services Jan. 21, 2004

In the world of sports, where competition is everything, it takes a strong determination to win for athletes to admit that they can be more successful competing with each other than against each other. That is exactly what Kevin Han (Colorado Springs, Colo.) and Howard Bach (San Francisco, Calif.) have done. For two men who could not be more different off the court, they work well together on the court.

Han is married to Cindy Shi, a USA Badminton Team member, and the couple has a son who was born in the fall of 2002 and is living with Cindy’s parents in China while Han prepares for the 2004 Olympic Games. He also works full time for Home Depot through the Olympic Job Opportunities Program (OJOP).


“It’s hard to work, take care of a child and train for the Olympics at the same time. With our family situation my wife and I both need to be working. That’s why her parents are taking care of our son in China,” Han said.


Bach, who was a full time student at Cal State Fullerton, took off from school to train. He plans to return to the classroom after the Olympics and finish his degree in business information systems, but for now his full time job is getting ready for Athens.


“You only get a limited number of chances to do this, so why not?” Bach said when asked about taking time off from school to train.


It might seem that the odds are stacked against them – two completely dissimilar men from diverse backgrounds who have only been playing together for three years. On top of that, before they began to play together, Han was a singles player and Bach had a partner who has since retired. However, neither of them is concerned about the past.


“Kevin and I haven’t been partners for that long, and he came from a singles background. So, there was a transition we went through, but we both have the right personality, mentality and attitude to form a good team and to win as a team,” said Bach.


In fact, they have the chance not only to win but also to make history in the process. If the pair claims a medal in Athens it will be the first time that Americans have taken a podium for badminton since the sport was introduced to the Olympic Games in 1992. Han and Bach are confident that they can straighten out a few consistency problems they have been battling and claim a place in the record books.


“If we play well we can play with anybody, even the top players in the world,” Han stated. “I think if we get our consistency worked out over the next six months we really have a shot at a medal.”


Badminton players, including pairs, qualify for the Olympics based on their official International Badminton Federation ranking as of April 30, 2004. The pair has not yet qualified for the Games in Athens, but Han and Bach, who are currently ranked No. 19, will qualify unless they fall below the Canadian pair that is currently ranked No. 47.


In order to prepare for the challenges ahead of them, they have been training five days a week for five to six hours per day in Orange, Calif. Not to mention the fact that they each have lives off the court.


“Everyone around me is being very supportive of my Olympic dream, and they are giving me the opportunity to do my best,” Han said.


Athens will be Han’s third Olympiad. He was a member of both the 1996 and 2000 USA Badminton teams. However, he used his first two Olympic experiences to improve as a player, and this year he hopes to capitalize on the things he has learned.


“I want to play more than well. Hopefully, I will get even farther than the last time and give myself a memorable experience to look back on,” stated Han.


Bach will be a first-time Olympian in 2004, but that in no way means he is a stranger to this level of competition. He has played some of the best in the world. In fact, Han and Bach are in Thailand attempting to improve their world ranking at the Thailand Open in Bangkok, Jan. 20-25.


As for what will happen to these two men after August, only time will tell. Bach plans to go back to school and begin training for the 2005 World Championships in Anaheim, Calif. Han wants to continue playing and begin mentoring younger players. He said that helping them achieve their goals will be his main priority.


“I learned from my past experience so I want to give all the young players what I know about the game and put USA Badminton on the map,” said Han.



-- Copyright © 2003 United States Olympic Committee All Rights Reserved

Qidong
05-27-2004, 10:48 PM
Did Kwun forget to put Han/Bach in the "who will win Olympic Men's Double Poll"? :D