BWF move to cut match time uncalled for, says Vimal Kumar
There is disappointment, and then there is the kind that lingers. The Badminton World Federationโs recent decision to alter the scoring system has drawn concern from within the sport. Among those voicing their unease is former India coach Vimal Kumar, who believes the move risks unsettling badmintonโs very core.
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โI donโt see the need for this change at all,โ Kumar says. โThe existing system was already fair and tested. It allowed different styles of players to compete on equal terms,โ said Vimal while talking to News Arena India.
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For decades, the rhythm of badminton, especially in singles, has been shaped by endurance and patience. Matches were not just contests; they were layered battles where recovery, adaptation and resilience mattered as much as shot-making. That, Kumar feels, is now under threat.
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โSingles is the soul of badminton,โ he says. โIf you take away duration, you take away the chance for players to build a match. It becomes more about bursts than about character.โ
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The new scoring structure, which effectively shortens match time, has been positioned as a way to generate early excitement. But for Kumar, that reasoning misses the essence of the sport. โBadminton was never short of excitement,โ he points out. โWhat made it special was sustained intensity through long rallies and long matches. Thatโs where the real test is. Why would you want to reduce that?โ
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There is also a sense, he believes, that the change lacks nuance. โIf you really wanted to experiment, you could have tried it in doubles. Doubles is already faster and more aggressive. But singles didnโt need fixing.โ
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Instead, Kumar argues, the focus should have been on deeper structural issues that continue to affect the sport. โLook at the real concerns,โ he says. โThereโs still no prize money for the World Championships. Singles players who carry the sportโs biggest load are not rewarded enough. And we still donโt have a proper review system for key decisions. These are things that matter.โ
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Badminton, he adds, remains one of the most physically demanding sports in the world, something its format has always reflected. โInstead of strengthening that image, we are moving away from it.โ
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Perhaps the most telling concern is the widening gap between decision-makers and those on court. โPlayers will adapt, they always do,โ Kumar says. โBut the question is, are they being heard? I donโt think so.โ
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At a time when other global sports are evolving by prioritising athlete welfare and competitive integrity, badminton seems to be taking a different route, one that feels disconnected. โYou want to take the sport ahead, but growth has to make sense,โ Kumar adds. โThis doesnโt address the real problems. It only changes the surface.โ
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For a sport followed with such passion, especially across Asia, the shift feels difficult to accept. Not because change is unwelcome, but because this one appears misplaced. โThis isnโt progress,โ Kumar says. โItโs just making the game smaller.โ
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By Joe Williams