I first got to know ”Ah Mong”, as he was always referred to that way, during our first MSSM (Majlis Sukan Sekolah-Sekolah Malaysia or Malaysian Schools Sports Council) training camp in the late 1960s at the Specialists’ Teachers Training Institute (STTI) in Cheras, Kuala Lumpur. Our first trip abroad together was to Tokyo for the Asian Schools Championships in 1968.
During our badminton playing years, we remained good friends. Although we got together during centralized training, we hardly had time for socials or fun time because we were so focused on our own training regime.
I had nicknamed him ”Giant” because he was a huge guy with a loud voice and laughter. He didn’t need a loud speaker.
Tan Aik Mong (left) with Rosalind Singa Ang & Sylvia (right).
In recent times after he had retired from his career in the corporate world, he would call me up whenever time permitted for lunch or a cup of coffee. And he always jokingly referred to me as his “girlfriend”.
During the annual Chinese New Year gatherings organised by fellow badminton player Albert Goh Teong Hoe in Kuala Lumpur, “Giant Mong” would ring me up to offer me a ride in a chauffeure-driven car to the restaurant and send me back to my apartment. He was such a kind soul as he said my safety was a priority. He would always say aloud, ”What are friends for?”
Tan Aik Mong, a few months before his death
“Ah Mong” certainly held a special view of the recent MCO (Movement Control Order) imposed after the Covid-19 pandemic. He asked me what was the lesson or takeaway in the more than eight weeks of partial lockdown. He was of the view that it was like being a mother, especially before the 1970s, when many women didn’t work outside but focused on the home for most of their lives after they got married.
Women then, he said in a WhatsApp message to me on May 13 this year, were cleaners, baby-sitters, cooks, social workers and companions in the house. But he had one proviso to his statement – “Although it does not apply to all wives but generally to all good mothers who dedicated their lives towards family needs and (upheld) the importance of (showing) loving kindness and responsibilities.”
“The lesson learnt (during the MCO) was what was it like to stay home most of the time. We (only) did it for eight weeks (or so) and almost all of us were crying out as if it was so terrible while mothers of the past looked upon it as an honour to be home and be responsible.”
That’s “Ah Mong” for you.
He will definitely be dearly missed by all of us who knew him. Let peace be with you, my dear friend.
In the background, Jim Reeves was crooning “I Won’t Forget You”. It seemed so apt, this country ballad, befittingly played in the cremation ceremony of a legend who had passed away. It was May 18, 2020, and V Nellan was on his final course of his illustrious life.
One of his favourite putters, a Slazenger, was cradled in 71-year-old Nellan’s hand as his casket was wheeled towards the mouth of the furnace.
That was the finishing touch for Malaysia’s most colourful golfer – holing out his final putt.
There was no clapping, no cheers — just tears and a very solemn atmosphere at the cremation ceremony for Nellan who died unexpectedly on May 16, 2020.
Because of the Covid-19 movement control order in the country, the thousands of friends and students he had coached in the past 40-odd years, could not come to bid him farewell.
It was just his immediate family of about 14, the Hindu priest, my colleague Lazarus Rokk and I, representing the sportswriters who knew him, making up the numbers.
Like me, many others had only fond memories of this chappie.
Nellan lived and breathed golf. It was his spiritual base – every day, he just dreamt of nothing but golf, and he religiously worked on his game.
He lived his dream as a professional golfer. He never despaired. There is a saying in golf: You take the good with the bad.
And so, with grit and determination, Nellan survived the fears, the pressures, the failures, and the loneliness that came with professional sport. But he also enjoyed the successes, the pleasures of handing in a good score. Most importantly, he lived the adventure. He never lost sight of his dream and his passion.
Golf had a way of pumping him up. He loved it so much that even until his death, he was still flying off to India, Japan, Indonesia, Singapore and around Malaysia, teaching or just keeping company with some businessmen over a round of golf.
He was away most days, coming home for a week or so. That’s when he caught up with friends, driving off with brothers Qadeer and Hamid Ahmad every month to some small golf course an hour or 90 minutes away from Kuala Lumpur.
It was during those relaxing weeks that you could bet Nellan would call. Just to keep in contact. He never failed to do this on every home visit.
As Rokk and I walked away from the sombre scene, my mind was racing back to 1976 — 45 years ago when Qadeer, my schoolmate from St John’s Institution Kuala Lumpur introduced me to Nellan, Bobby Lim, M Ramayah, and Nazamuddin Yusof, all struggling Malaysian professional golfers.
Qadeer’s plea to me was: “Please help promote the local professionals. They are suffering to be competitive. Without sponsorship, they have difficulty getting to play on the Asian Tour.”
I was then a sports reporter with the New Straits Times [Malaysia]. And this was the beginning of my love for golf.
Until that casual dinner with them, I was a complete philistine who thought that golf was a lazy man’s game.
My understanding was that golfers just did a lot of walking while hitting a dimpled ball around.
How wrong I was to have such a misconception of the game, especially being a sports reporter. I discovered there were woods, irons, and putters. Each club gave the golfer a different option to execute shots.
I would hang around them almost every night either at the Equatorial or Holiday Inn on the Park, two hotels in Kuala Lumpur. Sometimes there were other professional golfers from the Philippines (Frankie Minoza, Mario Siodina), Thailand (Sukree Onsham), who would join us.
I would listen to their golf tales intently especially after that particular day’s round in a tournament. Each had some exciting experience and some woeful moments in their game.
In between, Nellan, as usual, would interject with a few jokes which not only tickled us but boosted the spirits of those who had a poor game earlier.
It was here that I was schooled in the game without having to play it. They unfolded the intricacies of what was perplexing to me through their explanations. It gave me a better understanding of how they prepared for tournaments, the exercises, their diet, their commitment and their love of the game.
Nellan would always stress to me the importance of a fitness regime.
“It’s just not going to the driving range and whacking a few hundred balls or doing stretches. You need to build your fitness too.” Nellan did it by running and doing light gym workouts and maintained a strict diet.
He told me that he studied the older foreign professionals who used to grace the Malayan Open [later Malaysian Open] since 1962 at the Royal Selangor Golf Club course. This was where he honed his game as a 12-year-old caddie.
They would all follow Peter Thomson, the five-time British Open champion. Thomson was already a golf legend and like all of them, Nellan watched every action of Thomson’s game, how he hit the ball, his swing and his putting motions.
Here, he learned to focus on one thing at a time. “Today’s youngsters are more into equipment and technique instead of going out there and playing the game.”
“We, Bobby Lim, Zainal Abidin, Nazamudin Yusof, Sahabuddin Yusof and M.Ramayah, didn’t have the equipment but we really worked on our game and “developed it”, he recalled in 2004.
He started to caddy the leading RSGC amateur players in the ‘60s — Benny Low, K C Chew, Edmund Yong, and the Lee brothers Tommy and Alex. He and the others modelled themselves after them –their golf etiquette, their behaviour on the course, their sense of dressing.
As an eight-year-old, Nellan together with M Ramayah, K Selaruas and other youngsters would follow their mothers after school to pick balls for 10 cents a day at the RSGC tennis courts and then run off to watch the leading club golfers play. He also remembered being a ballboy at the 1954 and 1955 Malayan Tennis championships.
All of them lived in the housing quarters provided by the club as their parents worked for the Royal Selangor Golf Club.
Nellan’s father was employed as a fairway turf-cutter who doubled-up as a caddie after work. And it was natural for all the club employees’ sons to pick up the game for their homes overlooked the greens or fairways.
At night, Nellan and his friends would go to the driving range where the club members had earlier hit hundreds of balls. With their homemade clubs made out of guava tree branches, they would hit the balls. Their workout would be to hit the balls as close to one spot as possible to make it easier the next morning to collect the balls.
This is where they learned to drive the ball with accuracy.
I recall Nellan telling me decades ago: “Nothing serves your game better than putting in a lot of practice. All the top players in the world follow this system.”
Nellan was a superb bunker player. He could play an intentional shot from any bunker onto the fairway or green with ease and was regarded as the” bunker king “in the country. His favourite club for getting out of bunkers was the Arnold Palmer Dunlop sand wedge while for practice he used the 4-iron.
As Nazamuddin Yusof, a fellow Malaysian pro, who watched Nellan play in the 1974 Malaysia Open at the Royal Perak Golf Club course as an 18-year-old schoolboy said: “He was brilliant. No, he was a master craftsman when it came to hitting out of the bunkers. He was no doubt the best there ever was in Malaysia when it came to bunker play.” Nellan finished 32nd to pocket US$300.
Nazamuddin said that when he turned pro in 1976, Nellan passed him many tips on how to get out of bunkers. “I still use Nellan’s tips in teaching golf today.”
Here’s how Nellan developed his mastery of bunker play.
His childhood home was just a couple of putts away from RSGC’s 17th hole of the Old Course – a par-3 elevated green surrounded by five bunkers where Nellan worked for hours under the moonlight to perfect his shots.
“He could play some superb trick shots and crack a joke to the excitement of the crowd,” recollects Bobby Lim, who partnered Nellan in the 1977 World Cup tournament at the Wack Wack Golf Club course in Manila. They finished 11th overall for Malaysia’s best finish ever.
Although Lim lived in the adjoining Chinese quarters at RSGC , he only became close to Nellan when they were about 14 years of age and that close bond continued until Nellan’s death. In 1968, Lim loaned his full golf set with which Nellan captured the RSGC caddie championship title.
Nellan was an easy-going character and would pass on his golf knowledge to anyone and everyone. He was known to walk up to strangers practicing and correct their swing or even bunker shots.
“When we toured Indonesia in 1977 for a month, Nellan corrected my drives, my swing, and my putting. That was how generous Nellan was,” said Ramayah, who came from the same “kampung”.
Like Ramayah and Nazamuddin, there were many others he would help — this included a 19 year-old rookie pro Vijay Singh of Fiji.
Vijay made Malaysia his launchpad, playing on the local circuit. He was still trying to get his game right, and Nellan was there to help him.
He was like a mentor to Vijay, and whenever the Fijian came this way after he made his name on the world stage, Vijay never forgot his humble beginnings. He always took time to meet Nellan to reminisce.
There was one nagging disappointment that he carried all through the years. After winning the Caddie championship crown, he requested to play in the 1969 Malaysia Open at RSGC but they did not entertain his request. However, the Singapore Open (1969) organisers accepted his application together with Lim and Ramasamy. This was Nellan’s first international professional golf competition.
He was very appreciative of Saujana Golf and Country Club for they continued support for him by sponsoring him as their touring pro throughout the years playing in the Senior British Open, and other senior events in the US, Europe and Australia.
“I still have got a lot of golf left in me. No way am I going to put my clubs away. I love the game too much,” was how he regarded golf and even the early stage colon cancer which he contracted in 2007 could not keep him away for long from his passion.Three months after surgery he was doing light training and within a year he started competing again.
Nellan could have worked at many lucrative golf assignments overseas, but he never took up those opportunities. From 1992 to 1995, the Callaway Golf Company wanted him to be a coach at their headquarters in California. There was another offer to coach youngsters in Mexico.
He turned down all these offers. He didn’t want to be stuck in one place. He enjoyed being a nomadic golf pro, travelling, meeting different people and above all, enjoy playing the love of his life.
For sure, the golfer with those trick shots and a pocketful of jokes, often mimicking Fred Couples, Seve Ballesteros, Lee Trevino and others, had helped establish a new frontier for Malaysian golf.
Skiing or Golf By Kyi Hla Han
I first met V. Nellan at a tournament in Sweden in the early 80s.
I went to play in Europe in 1983. The European Tour was not what it is today. There was no Challenge Tour in those days, but there were well-organised tournaments in countries such as Sweden, France, Italy, Germany and others.
In one of the Swedish events in Malmo, the tournament organisers said I would be housed with a Swedish family, along with two players from Malaysia.
I found out it was Nellan and M. Ramayah. I was quite happy to see them as I was the only player from Asia plying my trade in Europe in those days and had been in Europe for a few months.
We played the practice round together. The weather was pleasant, but on the first day of the tournament, a storm swept in. It was 8 degrees Centigrade, rainy, and windy.
Nellan and I were teeing off around the same time, and he whispered to me: “Kyi Hla, I don’t think I want to play in this weather so I want to withdraw.”
He didn’t have any cold weather or rain gear, so I lent him mine. He looked like he was going skiing.
I laughed when he said, ‘This is the first and last time I’m going to play in Europe’.
It was quite funny the way he was talking to me about the conditions saying, ‘Why did he ever come and play here’. Anyway, he did play and did not score very well.
(Kyi Hla Han is a golf pro from Mynamar. Was the former Executive Chairman of the Asian Tour & the 1999 Asian Order of Merit No. 1).
By Shyam Ghosh (Shyam Ghosh, cricketer turned sports journalist was Sports Editor of The Statesman, Kolkata. Has covered 7 FIFA World Cup, 4 Olympic Games & 3 Asian Games).
In the space of 40 days, I lost two close friends.
The first to go was P K Banerjee, the greatest winger in Indian football who went on to forge a successful coaching career.
The second was Subimal Goswami, better known as Chuni, under whose captaincy India won the 1962 Asian Games gold medal.
Both – Banerjee captained the team for the 1960 Rome Olympics — played for years together in the Indian team. Of the two, Goswami was closer to me as we played cricket together in the 60s. Goswami played for the Mohun Bagan club and me for the East Bengal Club. But for one of those years, we played together for Mohun Bagan.
Goswami created a sensation when he helped a combined East and Central Zone team beat a mighty West Indies side led by Garfield Sobers by taking eight wickets in that match.
Cricket followers of Bengal, particularly Mohun Bagan supporters, wanted Goswami to be in the Indian Test side. After Goswami died, many journalists asked me ‘whether an injustice had been done on him’. My reply was no. He was a born sportsman, but he took cricket seriously only after retiring from international football.
I admired Goswami’s fighting spirit.
His debut for the Bengal cricket team in the Ranji Trophy was against Hyderabad who had West Indies pace bowler Roy Gilchrist in their side.
In 1962, the Board of Control for Cricket in India hired four West Indies pace bowlers to train Indian fast bowlers. Lester King coached the East Zone boys, and I trained under him.
During a Mohun Bagan-East Bengal match, Manindra Dutta Roy, the then chairman of the Bengal cricket team, said a spot would be found for Goswami, who had been scoring a lot of runs in friendlies in Hyderabad, for the Ranji Trophy quarter-final match against Hyderabad at Eden Gardens.
Goswami contributed a valuable 37 runs on debut and went on to play for Bengal for the next 10 years. In 1971-72 he captained Bengal in the Ranji Trophy final.
But we were close when I joined The Statesman as its football correspondent in 1971. He was a guest columnist for the largest circulated Bengali daily Ananda Bazarpartrika. Banerjee contributed a weekly column in the Telegraph, an English daily of the Ananda Bazar Group.
As a result, the All India Football Federation would from time to time involve us for the betterment of the sport in the country. The best contribution that we made together was when India started the National League in 1996.
The then secretary of the Asian Football Confederation, Peter Velappan, who has since died, pushed to get India to start a national league. He was surprised we did not have one at all.
The AIFF appointed a five-member committee to start the National League. The members were T.O. Abdullah and Sugunan from the AIFF and Goswami, Banerjee and myself.
We travelled together around India before formalising the structure of the National League.
In those days, I saw how determined Goswami was about forming the National League. At times, we three had different views — but in the end, we formulated the scheme for the betterment of football in the country.
The Indian Football Federation decided to send the national team to England in 2000 for international exposure. Baichung Bhutiya was the captain of the team, Sukhvinder Singh was appointed coach and Banerjee, Goswami and myself accompanied the side.
India played three matches. Every night before dinner, we three, along with Sukhvinder, discussed how to improve Indian football.
After Goswami died, I remembered two incidents.
In 1975, we were travelling together in a cab from Cochin to Kozhikode.
During our conversation, the driver suddenly asked Goswami: “You are Chuni Goswami?”
As we laughed, the driver said that he could still visualise Goswami’s artistry during the Santosh Trophy at Ernakulam in 1955.
That was Goswami’s first participation in the national football championship and Bengal won the title defeating Mysore 1-0. Goswami received a lot of prizes for his outstanding performances.
The driver was initially reluctant to take the fare. He took an autograph for his grandson.
The other incident was at the Mexico World Cup. As we were talking outside the ground after the match between Brazil and France, a group of boys suddenly surrounded Goswami and asked him why Brazil lost the game.
Goswami nicely analysed the game, and after the boys left, he asked me: “My assessment is ok?”
He was just not any ordinary golfer
All about him was golf
A local legend
Father of Malaysia’s professional golf
An epitome of golf
A colourful golf entertainer
Golfers from around Asia loved him
Some called him the “Lee Trevino” of Asia
For if it was not his skilful trick shots
He had you doubled-over in stitches
With jokes that had fluid follow-through
So this caddie turned pro
With his favourite club in hand
And his well-worn bag over his shoulder
Is walking the close-mown greens somewhere
His skill and wit, we’ll see no more
Truely, Nellan was golf
And golf was Nellan
(In memory of my friend V. Nellan
Departed on 16th May 2020).
By Colin Hart: My enduring memory of Muhammad Ali’s world title defence against Joe Bugner was that it was a crushing breakfast-time bore.
Along with the 22,000 fans in the Merdeka Stadium, I yawned my way through 15 tedious rounds, as Bugner at the opening bell put himself in reverse and didn’t bother to change gear for the next 45 minutes.
It must have been a bitter disappointment for those who bought tickets as the Malaysians had been looking forward to seeing a spectacular Ali performance.
But Bugner’s passive negativity made that impossible, much to the embarrassment of the British boxing writers at ringside.
Joe had lost a 12-round decision to Ali in a non-title fight in Las Vegas, two years before.
And it became blatantly obvious from the start he had decided he had no chance of beating Ali, so his main objective was survival.
Though the fight began at 9.30am to meet the requirements of American TV, I still found the heat and humidity overpowering. I felt extremely sorry for Ali as he never stopped chasing the reluctant and ever-retreating Bugner.
After Ali’s inevitable and extremely easy victory Bugner was hammered by the British media, incensed at his lack of ambition. In my report I called him “The Harmless Hercules.”
And what made us even more incensed was Bugner’s nonchalant attitude once he got back to his hotel.
While Ali was lying in his bedroom suffering from heat exhaustion Bugner was telling us “The heat was unbearable. I’d have killed myself if I had forced the fight too early.”
An hour later Bugner was enjoying himself in the swimming pool splashing about and waving to his friends, only stopping to drink champagne.
Mickey Duff, his promoter, was disgusted with him. The fact Bugner hadn’t tried to win the richest prize in sport, made Duff angry. He said “He should have locked himself in his room and cried his eyes out.”
There was a telling conversation between the pair of them at that poolside. Duff said “I suppose at the end of the day the name of the game is money.”
An unmarked grinning Bugner replied. “Yes, and being able to spend it.”
The Hungarian-born Bugner was never popular with British fans after he had controversially beaten national idol Henry Cooper.
His docile demise in Kuala Lumpur certainly didn’t increase his popularity in the UK.
By Terence Netto: Most Malaysian sports fans who lived through the period would be apt to argue that the era between 1966, when we earned an overachiever’s share of gold medals at the Asian Games, and 1980, when we qualified for, albeit did not go, to the Moscow Olympics, was the golden age of Malaysian sport.
Malaysia’s victory, though marred by volatile Indonesian fan behaviour, at the Thomas Cup in 1967; the soccer team’s unprecedented qualification for the 1972 Munich Olympics; and a hitherto unattained fourth place at the 1975 World Cup of hockey, were a triad of achievements which fortify the claim that the 1966-80 period was the anni mirabilis of Malaysian sport.
The accuracy of this description is reinforced once we factor in the popular satisfaction felt in Dr Mani Jegathesan being declared “Asia’s fastest man” at the 1966 Bangkok Asiad; the exhilaration of shuttler Tan Aik Huang’s winning the All-England singles title in 1966, and the doubles combo of Tan Yee Khan and Ng Boon Bee thrillingly grabbing practically every title in sight in the mid-1960s, for a grand Malaysian haul of coveted laurels in that halcyon era.
Though it was a fleeting moment of glory, Mokhtar Dahari’s brilliant goal from 40 metres out against the England B football team in May 1978, his shot dipping in flight over out-of-position keeper Joe Corrigan, underscored the Malaysian potential for tantalising glimpses of world class potential, if, alas, largely unfulfilled.
Adding piquancy to the flavour of those early achievements was the unofficial declaration of Vijayanathan Gulasingam in the 1975 World Cup — which Malaysia staged in a rousing exposition of the sport’s aesthetic values – as the best hockey umpire in the world.
His awarding a disputed goal to India in a rapturous final match contested by Pakistan displayed the discerning, delicate touch of a surgeon separating Siamese twins joined at the head. This last bit of arcana paves the way for a discussion of sports administration values the country was gifted to enjoy, simply from having three of the most skilled secretaries of national sports bodies who were also widely perceived as just about the best of the kind in the world.
The three were Viji, as he was popularly called, Edmund Yong Joon Hong in golf, and Paul Mony Samuel in football.
Near contemporaries Viji and Edmund were in harness in the Malaysian Hockey Federation and Malaysian Golf Association respectively over about the same span of time, from the 1960s through to the early 1980s.
Paul Mony was appointed to the general secretary’s post in the Football Association of Malaysia in 1984 when our position in FIFA’s rankings had begun their slide into what seems like lasting mediocrity.
As that slippage took effect, international observers were puzzled as to why Malaysian football was sliding while the administrative mettle of its general secretary was regarded as world class. If this discrepancy was the subject of discussion among international observers, among local sportswriters it became the topic of handwringing commiseration.
To be sure, administrative skills and on-field sports performance belong to a different order of things. But just as Paul Mony did not appear like an apparition out of thin air, for that matter neither Viji nor Edmund Yong, but instead sprung out of the whole cloth of Malaysian sport, the 1950s’ subcultures which produced all three standouts were already waning when this trio displayed their vintage in the national bodies they steered and for the regional and continental bodies, to which they were appointed, because of their merits. The chief features of the subcultures were an education system that had English as the medium of instruction, schooling that emphasised academic attainments in tandem with extracurricular distinction, and propped up by an ethos that did not lose sight of the fact that certain pursuits must be done for the intrinsic satisfaction they afford more than the extrinsic rewards that could be gained.
All these features began their descent into oblivion from our national milieu as this trio of top qualify administrators reached the heights of their capabilities. A social engineering process was afoot in the country that had negative consequences on all aspects of national endeavour. Against this backdrop of decline, this trio stood exceptionally apart. Edmund Yong was held to be capable of refereeing the Masters competition at Augusta National, Viji would have been a credit to the FIH, the French initials of the world body for hockey, and Paul Money could have administered FIFA minus the dross that has floated in Joseph Blatter’s slipstream. Incidentally, long-time FIFA general secretary Sepp Blatter, on an evaluation visit to FAM in the early 1990s, pronounced the national body as one of the best run in the world. Paul was then the general secretary.
When he left the FAM post in mid-2000, the national body had RM5 million in cash deposits and fixed assets of RM100 million. Upon assumption of the post in 1984, the corresponding figures were RM500,000 and RM5 million. It was caretaking of the highest probity.
In a 32-year career (1975-2007) as a sportswriter, I consider myself gifted to have observed all three Malaysians in their administrative prime. Watching them at work was a delight in itself. But more than delight, it was an education.
I was too young to realise its meaning even as I witnessed it, but it was an education into what I eventually understood as the profound truth of what the writer E.M. Forster, of Passage to India fame, opined about the need for democracy in human affairs.
He said that all government is about force and that democratic government is the least destructive of such force because its processes draw out and camouflage this force. He said the good of this deliberative process lay in how it enables the real work of man to be done and the real life of man to be lived.
Watching Viji, Edmund and Paul, I saw real work being done and how that enhanced the lives set free to be lived. Probably because he had a life outside of his passions, which were sports administration and hockey umpiring, Viji has endured the longest of the three, alive and still vital, at 86 years, as I write.
Edmund died of cancer in 1997 close on 62 years and Paul succumbed to Parkinson’s disease in 2016 when he neared 72. Of the trio, I most benefited from watching Paul Mony because of what I felt was the breadth of his vision, depth of his understanding, and, more importantly, the generosity of his spirit.
Our lives are blinks of duration but when they possess what Viji exuded, Edmund epitomised and Paul embodied, they can be tiny diamonds in the cosmic sands.
By R.Velu: When I was asked to write an article for this Malaysian sports book of untold stories, reminiscences, personalities and events, I was a bit reluctant. What could a has-been sports journalist at the closing chapters of his life write about that has not already been written.
Then I thought about my association with sports from childhood till now – the wonderful personalities (heroes and officials) I had the opportunity to meet and interact with, the incidents and challenges that I faced as a journalist and later as a sports marketing consultant. The evolution of sports from amateurism to professionalism to the multi-billion dollar business it is today.
As I thought about it, I was slowly convinced that I had a story to tell about how the people, incidents and challenges, many pleasant and some nasty and forgettable, helped shape, build my life and gave me many opportunities and wonderful memories.
In short, sports was (and is) my university, my career and my life.
Growing up in Penang, like any schoolboy I had my dreams of becoming a champion, but I was nothing more than a backyard sportsman competing with neighbourhood boys in football, badminton and cross-country races.
But my interest in sports ran deep. There was no television or live broadcasts at that time. We had to get our daily dose of sports fix by reading the newspapers or listening to Radio Malaysia’s live commentaries of events like the Malaysia Cup (Malaya Cup) and Thomas Cup; or BBC’s live radio broadcasts of the English Football League (Division One – the top league then).
Names like Abdul Ghani, Arthur Koh, Stanley Gabriel, Edwin Dutton, M.Kuppan kept popping up during live radio commentaries of Malaya Cup (later Malaysia Cup) football matches. When All England or Thomas Cup badminton events were on, attention was switched to headline–grabbing heroes like Eddy Choong, Teh Kew San, Lim Say Hup or Ng Boon Bee. All Malaysia’s early sports heroes.
And I remember how thrilled my friends and I were when Penang hosted a Malaysian athletics meet at the City Stadium in Penang in the 1960’s. We finally had the chance to see live in action the top Malaysian athletes of that era, headed by Asian sprint king Mani Jegathesan, in his trademark sun-glasses and thigh tightly strapped.
Never in my wildest dreams would I ever have thought that I would meet face to face many of these amazing sports heroes or interview them. But it happened and gave me many wonderful moments to cherish and remember.
After finishing school, I bummed around for a while, jumping from one small job to another, before finally ending up as a sports reporter with The Star in Penang in the mid 1970’s and later moved to Kuala Lumpur.
My first major assignment was covering the 1977 South East Asian (SEA) Games in Kuala Lumpur which gave me the opportunity to meet and interview the top athletes and officials in the region of that period.
IBF – WBF TUSSLE
One official who made a great impression on me in the early days of my reporting career was the late Tan Sri Khir Johari, President of the Badminton Association of Malaysia (BAM). Despite the high positions he has held in government, business and sports, Pak Khir – as he was affectionately called by many – was very simple and approachable.
In the late 1970’s, world badminton was split between the International Badminton Federation – IBF (now the Badminton World Federation) and the break-away World Badminton Federation led by China because of the two China issue.
There was a day when I had to interview Pak Khir on this IBF – WBF issue and Malaysia’s stand on it. I didn’t have an appointment. But I took a chance and went by taxi to his house in Damansara Heights. Pak Khir was about to leave the house for a meeting. But when he saw me, he welcomed me inside and gave the interview.
Pak Khir was a man who stood by his principles and convictions. When the government then directed the BAM to leave the IBF and join the WBF, Pak Khir stood firm with the IBF. He was convinced the WBF wouldn’t last and it would be better for Malaysia to stick with the IBF. He was proven right as the WBF subsequently wound up and China, along with the other WBF members, joined the IBF.
PUNCH GUNALAN
Malaysians have played important roles in sports in the international level as players, or administrators. One man who left a deep impression on me, both as a player and official is the indefatigable and unforgettable Punch Gunalan. At the height of his playing career, I didn’t have the chance to meet him. I only got to know him when he was a coach, and official in local and world badminton.
Punch left an indelible mark on his chosen sport as a brilliant player, capable administrator and a kingmaker in world badminton. He will be remembered as the man who brought the Badminton World Federation (then called the International Badminton Federation) headquarters to Malaysia, engineered the change in the scoring system to make the sport television friendly which in turn brought in the sponsors.
In spite of his success as a player and official, he remained an affable, ever helpful, friendly and accommodating person till his final days when he passed away in 2012.
REPORTING —
NOT HAZARD FREE
Sports reporting is not hazard-free. Like many of my colleagues then, I had my share of threats of being sued or physically harmed because someone did not like what I wrote. One of the silliest threats I received was when I covered the 1981 World Cup badminton tournament at Stadium Negara. I wrote some articles and a profile piece on the eventual winner and All England Champion Prakash Padukone of India.
Someone apparently didn’t like what I wrote. During the course of the tournament, I received a letter by mail, saying: “You are writing too much about an Indian player. Remember Sentul May 13. History will repeat itself.”`I was puzzled and shaken by this. Here I was writing about an incredible player, very disciplined, humble and highly motivated. A sportsman who should be held up as a role model for our own youths. Yet, I received a note like this. When I showed this to my editor, he told me to just ignore it.
By S.Sabapathy: I was nearly outfoxed by ‘athletics politics’ for a place in the 4 x 400m relay team to the 1972 Munich Olympic Games.
The relay quartet was made up of T Krishnan, B S Peyadesa, Hassan Osman and myself, with S Sivaraman as the reserve.
The five of us together with Ishtiaq Mobarak, Junaidah Aman, Zainuddin Wahab and Gladys Chai were in Cologne for a three-month training and coaching stint before going to the Olympic Village.
Just a couple of weeks before departing for the Games, Shamsuddin Jaffar, who was attending a coaching course in Cologne but was not an official in our Olympic contingent, approached athletics team manager Zainal Abidin and asked him to relegate me to be a reserve and promote Sivaraman as fourth member of the relay team.
Zainal Abidin obliged and told me I would be the reserve runner but I wasn’t willing to accept this sudden change of the relay team line-up.
Except for Krishnan, a teacher and I, an employee of the National Electricity Board, the other three runners were employed by Malaysian Prisons. Shamsuddin, who was also with Prisons, was their club coach.
I then demanded a 400m time trial be conducted in Cologne between Peyadesa, Hassan, Sivaraman and myself to determine who should qualify to be in the team. Krishnan was exempted as he was also entered for the 400m event in the Games.
However, Payadesa, Hassan and Sivaraman suggested a 300m run instead of a 400m time trial.
I accepted the challenge. What the three of them did not realise was that I was very fast in the last 100m, having clocked a personal best of 10.6 seconds in a Malaysian government services meet just before leaving Malaysia. And also had endurance on my side.
They were no match for me. I outran all three of them in a time of 33.1 seconds over the 300m. I had outfoxed them. They had no choice but to reinstate me as a regular member of the relay team for the Olympic Games.
After the trial, I told the team manager, “I came to run in the Olympics and not to watch the Olympics.”
By Lazarus Rokk: My first ambition in life, since my upper secondary days in St John’s Institution, has always been to be a lawyer, a litigating lawyer fighting courtroom battles,as arguing is what I do best. I suppose that’s an ability which comes with my ethnicity. It’s in our DNA. Which is probably why litigation reads well with Indian lawyers.
But, as it turned out, I couldn’t get a place at the University of Malaya after my HSC, and there weren’t a myriad of universities and colleges at my disposal back then, not to mention I wasn’t born with a silver spoon in my mouth. So, grudgingly I was forced to abandon that ship until such time when I could afford to pay my way through law school in England.
An opportunity arose in early 1975 at The Star, at its office at 7, Jalan Travers. The fledgling newspaper that was just four years old then, needed a feature writer. I had just turned 20 a month ago, and had found myself in an office that was situated a floor above Hawaii Bar, a girlie bar – not my kind cos they looked like aunties, but nevertheless they were a favourite with the production boys.
And little did I expect that journalism, a profession that I had stumbled into, merely to serve a bigger purpose – law school – was to change everything I felt and loved. I was so seduced by its charm, power and glamour that suddenly cross-examinations and courtroom battles, didn’t seem enticing enough anymore.
The allure of journalism was just so overwhelming for a 20-year-old who was coming out in the world for the first time from a regimented lifestyle, imposed so religiously and enforced by my school teacher dad, that even prison wardens would look like social workers.
Like an unleashed horse freed from its prison, I bolted into the ‘wilderness’ tasting and savouring the freedom, the power, and the thrill of seeing my byline in the newspaper. At that time, even though The Star’s circulation couldn’t have been more than 30,000 copies, I would be scrambling, like an excited teenager on his first hot date, for the papers the next day to look for my story with the byline. That thrill never lost its oomph, even till the day I quit in 2006.
But George Das, my first mentor at The Star, always watched over me and didn’t let me wander too far into that wilderness. He always kept me within his sights, showing me the ropes, and even introducing me to sportswriting by getting me to contribute to the paper’s magazine Fanfare. I used to write weekly profile stories on sports personalities. And that launched me into sportswriting.
The thing that I loved about this job, which was really a joy, was that while we worked hard, we also played hard. And it was on one of those ‘play hard’ nights that I met Fauzi Omar of Malay Mail back then. It was at the Glass Bubble disco (Uncle Chilis now) at Jaya Puri Hotel (PJ Hilton now). It was where the sportswriters from The Star, NST, and Malay Mail hung out, our final pit stop of the night. Fauzi and I were the only rookies in that motley crew of hardened sports journalists, but we were made to feel at home with them. Before the night was over, which was like about 4am, Fauzi and I had forged such a friendship that it was to grow in strength and last to this day, 43 years later. George, dear George, never touched a drop of alcohol, nor lit up a cigarette in his entire life, but he will be there among all of us every night we were out. And “By George!’ it would be this little guy who will be dancing on table tops in pubs, drunk only on orange juice.
You know, when I keep looking back at the proceedings of my life as a journalist, I am convinced that it was journalism and its life lessons that have defined my character, and who I am today. I don’t know how many of you can boast of a career or a profession that has shaped the way you are, the way you feel, and the way you think. But mine did.
My first encounter with life’s lessons was in early 1976. In one of my usual mornings at work, I checked in with my features editor, Maureen Hoo, to discuss an angle for a feature story. But that day was different. On that day, she handed me an envelope, which I eagerly opened, believing it to be a promotion letter. To my utter shock and disbelief, it was my letter of termination. I looked up at Maureen, and I knew she had nothing to do with it. She looked sad, and was struggling for a sensible explanation.
I was 21, impressionable, governed mainly by my emotions, and ready to fire from my hips at a twitch of an eye. I was so blinded by rage that I couldn’t see through the web of deceit. It was George, who pointed out to me that something was amiss because my letter of termination was signed by the Director of Finance, and not legally the Managing Editor, who happened to be abroad then.
I was 20, and naïve as an uninitiated 20-year-old could get, to office politics. I couldn’t believe I was a victim of a conspiracy. I couldn’t believe it, as I was just a cadet journalist, and I would have thought I didn’t pose a threat to the powers that be. But as it turned out, I had stepped on a few sensitive toes belonging to news editors whom I had unwittingly embarrassed with my one-liners, that can sometimes be offensive to people with fragile egos, and critically deficient in a sense of humour.
A reliable source, who was in a position to listen in on telephone conversations, told me confidentially that these humourless people, who had the ear of the top-level management, had falsely accused me of starting a union. A union then, was perceived as an abomination, something to abhor as it was made out to be an organisation of trouble makers. But in reality, all I was trying to do, given my passion, was to help put together a sports club.
That was my first cut, and somehow it didn’t seem to feel deeper than the one dealt by my first love, just a year ago when I was in Upper Six. For, on the day I had received the letter, there was a house party organised by a former colleague, and I found myself there together with George, Fauzi, music man Patrick Teoh, and lawyer Sivarasa, who’s now a PKR man. In the middle of the night, when we were in high spirits, in more ways than one, I told Fauzi very nonchalantly that I had lost my job. At first Fauzi was stunned into silence, not knowing how to react. But when I laughed, he thought I was crazy, and he too laughed along.
But to use a very well-worn phrase, all that’s water under the bridge now. As I picked myself up, and brushed the arrows off my back, I believed that even though life had dealt me an unkind hand in my first ‘round’, the deck was still fresh. And true enough, three months later, Fauzi informed me that he had spoken with Sunday Mail editor Ahmad Sebi, about a stringer’s (partime) job, for the sports pages. I was given a column to write, and it was called “Around the schools with Lazarus Rokk’. And that, kicked off my career as a full-fledged sportswriter.
At the risk of sounding banal, I felt like I was swept into a whirlwind romance with sportswriting.
I was so caught up in it, that I was working every day and enjoying every minute of it, working for both the Sunday Mail and the Malay Mail sports desk. Like Fauzi, George and I would always say, it wasn’t a job, it was fun. It got even better when I came on as a fulltime journalist in February 1978, assigned to the Malay Mail.
Things were just so hunky dory, until in January 1980, the management dropped the second bombshell in my career. I come back from my Christmas leave, looking forward to getting back into action again, when I get this transfer letter to the Johor Baru branch at Taman Maju Jaya, then. I looked in bewilderment at the letter, seeking a sensible explanation for this highly unprecedented decision for the Malay Mail.
Since I couldn’t make any sense of it, I decided to ask the boss man, Chuah Huck Cheng, the editor of the Malay Mail, what that was about. He said something about insubordination, and being a journalist who was taught to stand up for what’s right without fear or favour, I believed I would be given a chance to defend myself. I was mistaken. When Huck Cheng shouted “get the f..k out of my room”, I realised three things. One, when you are a rookie, you don’t have rights. Two, you never question your bosses, even though you mean well. And three, bosses don’t practise what they preach.
About that insubordination issue. Sometime in May 1979, I was given a show-cause letter, asking why disciplinary action shouldn’t be taken against me for not covering a Selangor Division 2 match, which at best would be worth a two-paragraph filler.
It so happened on that very evening, my sources told me that the Danish Thomas Cup team had arrived at the Subang Airport enroute to the Thomas Cup Finals in Jakarta, Indonesia. As a badminton beat reporter, it would naturally be incumbent upon me to follow this lead. Which I did. I managed to jump into their bus and followed them to the KL Hilton. I sat with their team manager Tom Bacher, whom I had met before through the late Punch Gunalan.
Bacher wanted to see the “sights of KL”. And being a good host, as we Malaysians are, I showed him around. To cut a long story short, when I got back to the office in Jalan Riong, it was almost 11pm. But I had tucked comfortably under my belt, and proudly too, five stories from my interviews with Bacher and some of his players. At the office, the sports editor, the late Maurice Khoo, and his deputy, the late Francis Emmanuel weren’t around. The Malay Mail editors and the sub-editors really start work at 5am every day, as we were an afternoon paper back then.
Nevertheless, my five stories filled up two and a half pages, with two page leads, and exclusives to boot. As a 24-year-old, still very wet behind the ears in journalism, I was naïve to expect a pat on the back the next day by the boss. But all I got was a bollocking for not covering that Div. 2 football match. They told me, the least I could have done was to make a call or two to get the results. Insubordination, was what it was, and I could offer no form of defence that would appease the big bosses.
It was evident, that my outspokenness, my one-liners that were meant to be funny, and the self-confidence that I oozed effortlessly, were mistaken for arrogance, insolence, and effrontery. And they felt the need to put me in my place. But I wasn’t going to change for them. I was going to be whom I wanted to be and I was comfortable with that. Comfortable also with the knowledge that, this was just the beginning of tougher battles to come.
So, misunderstood, and lamenting my fate, I packed my bags and left home in OUG, Old Klang Road to JB. In the six-hour bus ride, I could only hear Francis who was sympathetic to my cause, telling me this: “Rokk, they are sending you to your graveyard.” With that sitting grimly at the back of my mind, I arrived at JB with a vengeance. I was angry, betrayed, torn away from my family, and totally disillusioned.
My first target was the Johor FA. The poor chaps, they didn’t know what hit them. I was on their backs for days, dismantling their administrative methods, and criticising everything that I could. Then one morning, the deputy president of the JFA, the late Datuk Suleiman Mohamed Noor, called my office and told me this; “Mr. Rokk, if you are truly interested in the welfare of Johor football, please come to my office tomorrow.”
Suleiman was also the state secretary then, and a very powerful man in the state government. His boss, the Menteri Besar, was Datuk Ajib Mohideen, the president of Johor FA, and the leader of Barisan Nasional’s invincible state. Those were enough credentials to intimidate a relatively rookie sportswriter.
Nevertheless I made my way to the imposing Sultan Ibrahim Building at Bukit Timbalan where the state government office was back then, with an open mind. I didn’t have anything to lose. I waited all of five minutes before I was ushered into his office. After the usual greetings, I sat myself opposite him waiting for the onslaught. To me it was a story-opportunity.
But there was no onslaught. He opened with: “Young man, the easiest thing to do in this world is to criticise people, and get paid for it.” I told myself true, but not enough. But that meeting changed my perspectives in journalism. The teachings in my formative years in the profession was to be impartial, to write it as we saw it. But after the two-hour chat with Suleiman, it became evident that to help the development of Johor sports, the media had to be inclusive. We had to be a part of the development process through our writing. And with that began my schooling in ‘development journalism’.
And as I told myself that Johor will be my graveyard only if I allowed it, I rounded up the gang in JB comprising Rizal Abdullah of The Star, Johari Mohamed of Berita Harian, Sudi Othman of Utusan Malaysia, and Kamel Osman of Bernama to set about the task. We formed a strong pact, and set about to provide the kind of media support that Johor sports needed to thrive on.
We ‘worked’ with the hardcore officials who were the unsung heroes in their respective sport. Among them, were teachers K. Sukumaran, coach of the 1982 Razak Cup football squad, and B. Rajakulasingam of SM Dato Jaafar who bred championship cricket players, and TNB’s Balbir Singh who was grooming hockey players.
These three coaches spent more time with their respective charges than with their own families. But their efforts and sacrifices weren’t in vain. Sukumaran’s boys grew into the senior ranks to take Johor to their first Malaysia Cup quarter-final in 1984, and then making history in 1985 by winning the Malaysia Cup. Rajakulasingam’s boys were the perennial winners of the National under-20 Dunlop Trophy tournament, and made it to the national teams. Balbir’s boys too went on to gain national and international glory, like former national captain Sarjit Singh.
There were dedicated officials too, apart from of course Suleiman who was the Father of Johor football, there were ENT specialist Dr Harjit Singh who held cricket together as an administrator, former Olympian ASP S.Sabapathy, Inspector Harbajhan Singh (Samurai), and MPJB president the late Datuk Ishak Yusof, in hockey. In their corners, they had the power to make things happen. And they did.
Yes, Johor grew from the boondogs of Malaysian sport, to a growing powerhouse. It was all very fulfilling. I met my wife in JB in 1981, got married to her in 1982, had my two boys there, and was settling down to life as a Johorean, and loving it. And then as fate would have it again, I got a letter in May 1986 asking me to report to the NST sports desk in KL in July. My second son, was just a month old, and I was preparing with some buddies in MBL then (now Guinness Anchor Berhad) to watch the Mexico 1986 World Cup in some of their outlets. I guess, his time I was being punished for enjoying my working life in JB. Yes, I was back on the road again. Only this time, I had to pack more than a suitcase. This time, it was a container load, driven by KC DAT. I was moving house, and getting back into battle stations.
Yes, battle stations, for that’s what life for a competitive and combative sportswriter was in KL then. If you have been given a beat (sport) to handle, you can’t afford to lose a big story to the rival newspapers. You have to always be a few steps ahead of the rival media. Unless of course, you are that breed of beat reporters who didn’t mind getting your faces rubbed in the mud day in and day out by the opposition. Or those type of sportswriters who got their stories through the telephone. These days, they get their stories from websites.
No sir, not for me. I took great pride in my beat, and in my work. I would consider being beaten to a story in my beat, as an insult to my ability. And I loved to work with a team that was just as competitive and passionate. Which was why, I was looking forward to going back to KL with renewed enthusiasm, as Tony Francis had just taken over Timesport, Bill Tegjeu who was a very strong sub-editor, and the other half of the striking partnership, Fauzi, were all assembled like The Avengers, to beef up the NST sports pages. At the Malay Mail, our closest rivals, there was Johnson Fernandez and Tony Mariadass to contend with.
Even as the task at hand was still fun and exciting, my personal battles that were on account of my personality and my outspokenness, were very much ongoing. I remember in one sports desk meeting, Tony Francis, was complaining about stories from Fauzi and I, though well before deadline, but late by his standards. And he said, why we couldn’t file our stories before 7pm like the others.
I pounced back with: “Well, if you want us to get out stories on the telephone like the rest, and not be on the ground, then we can give you our stories even before 5 pm.”
Tony wasn’t amused, his face got red, and he slammed his cigarette pack and lighter on the table and said: ”Rokk, don’t rock the boat.” That same night, after he closed the pages, we were having a few beers in Bangsar. No one bore a grudge.
Then there was this time, when Bill Tegjeu had taken over with Tony moving up to Chief News Editor, and Fauzi moving to the London office as staff correspondent, the pressure of the back page lead stories seemed to rest solely and squarely on my shoulders. While the others weren’t as driven, it was entirely up to me to bring in the leads. And there were days when I couldn’t. And Bill used to chide me over that. And I asked him over a few beers once, why he saved the best punches for me. And he said: “Rokk, that’s because you can take it.”
It was then that it dawned on me, that this profession was actually defining the man I was then, and the man I am today. Yes, I could take the punches in my chin, and still remain standing, with plenty of fight left in me. Oh yes, there were more battles, but to me, it had become who I was, and who I am.
So I should really thank people like Kalimullah Hassan who was the group-editor-in chief in the 2000s, for suspending me for two weeks without pay because I didn’t run my stories past him. I was the sports editor then, and had 32 years of sportswriting experience under my belt, and here was a group editor — who was a businessman first and probably a journalist second – and who had no experience in sports, wanting to dictate terms. Sure, he was the boss, but he didn’t know enough about sports to dictate its policies.
This was the same guy, who in one management meeting, asked me why I had assigned two pages to school sports, during the school sports season. And when I explained to him that as a responsible newspaper, we needed to play our part in the development of sports in Malaysia, he said if that was the case, I should quit and join the then sports minister, Azalina Mohamed Said.
In this profession, you can’t be a businessman and a journalist at the same time. One will always be sacrificed, and almost all the time, it will be journalism. But in all fairness to Kali, he gave me my biggest pay rise ever. If there was one thing about him, he was colour blind. And the NST needed that, someone who didn’t appoint, promote, or judge you by your birthright, or your religion.
This job taught me about justice, about standing up for the truth and what is fair, and not for the individual. The individual in this equation, is of little consequence. Stand up for what is right first, and then for the individual who’s right. Not for the individual first, for then what is right, may be secondary.
I shared this philosophy with my children as they were growing up, so that their perspectives wouldn’t be skewed towards biasness towards individuals. Yes, journalism, specifically sportswriting, where we had more freedom to write, was a great teacher.
And I am thankful to all the battles in this journey, because they helped me find my strength. But when I look back at all those wonderful years, those painful experiences that I had overcome, I know now that God had always been there every step of the way, walking ahead of me.