"Shitty” days when nothing worked. “Crying” days when
an injured body didn’t adequately respond. “Insane” days of running, weights,
training. Days no one sees, for no TV cameras record, no audience cheers, just
days when he’s trying to be some better version of himself.
These are some of the days of H.S. Prannoy on the practice
court.
Practice days every athlete knows, loves, detests, wakes
for. Days that dancers identify with for they’re familiar with repetition and
the balm of ice after a day of dancing on pointe, a 50kg body supported on the
tip of ballet shoes.
Days of breakthroughs and dented confidence, loneliness and
camaraderie. Days that badminton star Prannoy, the world championship bronze
medallist in 2023, is telling me about. He’s articulate, unfiltered, generous,
but I interrupt: Wait, you cry on the practice court?
“Crying is very normal for me. There’s a lot of emotion. (Training is) not something you do for timepass.”
The practice court is the sweaty foundry of personal
greatness. It’s also the sportswriter’s privilege. Most people are like the
cliched kid looking through the chink in the wooden fence. They’re not allowed
in, but we sometimes are. A seat is taken and quietly we watch athletic actors
rehearse their lines.
Drag flickers hiss the ball into a hockey goal. Thirty
times, 50, till muscles have a memory. Divers mime movements. Tennis players
curl serves into empty ball cans standing as targets on lines. Fencers dance to
the clicking music of their foils. Swimmers count strokes and sing in their
heads in the soundless water.
The making of brilliance is mostly magnificently unsexy.
Performance is what we buy tickets for, but practice is
revealing rehearsal. Purpose, rigour, commitment are like the concrete piles
driven into the ground to set a building’s foundation. In both places you hear
the hammer of construction. Again, again, again. There is so much in this
private space: eagerness, exasperation, love of learning, a fear someone else
is doing it harder, an understanding that to go faster takes time. This is the
factory of better.
There is a precision we can’t tell and a harmony we can’t
see. But athletes feel it within and so do musicians. In Strings magazine,
years ago, cellist Yo-Yo Ma says: “I think that part of practicing is great
because it unites what you want to do in engineering, as in technically, where
do you put your arms and your fingers and your body—micro movements—with that
desire and the feeling of what it needs to be. That’s a wonderful process
because it’s a constant of going toward something bigger than the notes and
yourself, and very lovingly so.”
Prannoy is disentangling the many threads of practice. Like
the athlete’s discovery of who he is. Some players, Prannoy explains, “come
from sleep and hit the lines”. They’re naturally skilled, the savant offspring
of Roger Federer. “But for me to do that I had to train for 10 days. There’s no
point comparing. Everyone’s skill set is different. The only thing is to do the
hard work.”
On the court he finds who he is. A grinder. So was Emil
Zátopek, distance running’s finest exponent, who some days jogged in a tub of
wet laundry. Zátopek once said—as recounted in Richard Askwith’s book, Today
We Die a Little —that “when a person trained once, nothing happens.
When a person forces himself to do a thing a hundred or a thousand times he
certainly develops in ways more than physical. Is it raining? It doesn’t
matter. Am I tired? That doesn’t matter either. Willpower becomes no longer a
problem.”
Practice, yes it’s madness.
What does practice tell Prannoy about himself? He pauses.
“Most of the days (and he’s talking more about his younger days) are shitty
days. Out of 10, maybe eight-nine days. Days you would be so irritated,
frustrated, for the things you’re not able to do.”
There’s a skill that can’t be executed or a player in
practice who’s awkward to play against. “As a young player you don’t know how
to deal with it. But it’s a good thing to be irritated. It means you’re looking
to improve yourself.”
Now he’s older, altered, wiser. “It’s OK to lose in
practice, you have to be openly trying new things during game sessions. You
have to feel those uncomfortable situations here, you don’t want to feel that
in matches. You have to get comfortable being in uncomfortable situations.
“I hardly won matches in practice sessions. I’d get
frustrated, break rackets, but I convinced myself I have to try new things. If
I am 16-10, I want to purposely get to 16-16 and then try and get out of it.”
The practice arena is a place of joyous masochism and sweaty
meditation. Muhammad Ali said he started counting sit-ups “when it starts
hurting because they’re the only ones that count”. Abhinav Bindra says, “I only
loved practice. I hated competition. I loved the purity of refining my skill.”
Later he found he was only a practice champion and had to
fix that but all thinking athletes tinker with practice and grow with it.
Prannoy, now 32, had days in his youth he didn’t want to train. “Because it was
gruelling.” Badminton can appear delicate but its insides are rugged. “Lot of
things you have to do are from an endurance perspective, that’s the killer side
of it.”
But in the past four-five years he’s started to “enjoy”
practice. “I love being on court.” Maybe he knows himself now, and his body,
and can also hear what all athletes eventually do: That clock. “Psychologically
the feeling kicks in that not many years are left.” There was a time he’d go on
holiday for weeks, or a month. “Now ask me and I would say no.”
Days shitty and tearful on the practice court, days
uplifting and revealing, he wants them all. Because everyone has only so many
days left.
Rohit Brijnath is an assistant sports editor at The
Straits Times, Singapore, and a co-author of Abhinav Bindra’s book A
Shot At History: My Obsessive Journey To Olympic Gold. He posts
@rohitdbrijnath.
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