How a favela kid became Brazil's top badminton player
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| Mexico City
Samba dancing may not be the traditional way to train for badminton. But then again, most everything about Brazilian Ygor Coelho de Oliveira鈥檚 Olympic story is unconventional.
Like many Olympic athletes, he started young 鈥 at the age of three. There, the similarities end.
A kid from the favelas of Rio de Janeiro 鈥 slums better known for drug trafficking and poverty than Athenian models of athleticism 鈥 Mr. Coelho grew up in a badminton program created by his father.
As Coelho developed his own athletic prowess, even using the quick, rhythmic samba to speed up his footwork, he also mentored younger players to focus on sport and school rather than getting involved in criminal activity.
Now, as Brazil鈥檚 first-ever men鈥檚 Olympic badminton player, he hopes his message will resonate far beyond his own community.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter what is your social class, or where you are from, you can achieve greatness,鈥 says the lanky, 19-year-old.
Badminton is such an obscure sport in soccer-crazed Brazil that many kids in the program joke that they have to use cellphone videos to explain it 鈥 the rackets, the birdies, the moves 鈥 to friends.
In 1998, when the Olympian鈥檚 dad, Sebasti茫o de Oliveira, started his badminton program, Miratus, it was little more than a dirt court in his backyard. Since then, the elder Oliveira has made badminton a central part of聽Chacrinha, a community of sweeping, informally-built redbrick and corrugated metal structures on the western edge of Rio.
Today, students gather on bright orange badminton courts in their yellow-and-green jerseys and swing their rackets while zipping their feet to a samba beat. They learn through a training program created by Oliveira that incorporates five levels of samba, as opposed to the more traditional jumping rope. And students compete all over Brazil 鈥 and the world. There are roughly 200 kids who show up to play on a daily basis.
Coelho鈥檚 hard work and drive are what qualified him as Brazil鈥檚 No. 1 player in 2015. But his journey to this Olympic moment is deeply intertwined with his father鈥檚 story.
The elder Oliveira grew up in a poor children鈥檚 home while his mother served as a live-in maid for a wealthy member of Brazil鈥檚 military government. Later, he would spend his holidays helping her as a trash collector in a local junkyard. But he was determined from a young age to make something of himself 鈥 and give back. When he was 16, a 鈥渧ery special鈥 professor told him, 鈥測ou spend all of your time planning and you forget to learn. I want to find you a course of study,鈥 Oliveira recalls.
That attention motivated him to study physical education, and to realize the importance of a caring adult role model in the lives of at-risk youth.
鈥淲ith my limited resources I wanted to [help] people so they could have the type of success, the type of security that I had,鈥 Oliveira says. The badminton school, which he constructed by hand with the help of family and friends, 鈥渨as made with love,鈥 he says.
鈥淵ou go into the favelas and it鈥檚 chaos,鈥 says Kirk Bowman, a political scientist at Georgia Tech and co-founder of Rise Up & Care, an American NGO that gives funding to established projects like Miratus in poor communities around the world. 鈥淏ut you walk into [Miratus] and it is order and purpose and聽happ[iness].聽It鈥檚 a totally different world, and it鈥檚 no wonder that these kids, their grades improve, relationships in the family improve. They have role models and are achieving goals at a really young age.鈥
Coelho has lived it. Growing up, he watched peers not just fall in with the 鈥渨rong鈥 crowd, but die because they felt their only options were drugs or crime.
鈥淚n our community there are two paths, that of drugs and then the positive path. That can be the path of sports, work, or school,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 an example of someone 鈥 who works to stay on the positive path. That can change a life.鈥
He鈥檚 become a role model within the community, showing just how far a kid from the favelas can go. And now he, along with female badminton teammate聽Lohaynny Vicente, is making history for Brazil at the Olympics.
Kids here 鈥渓ook at my son and they see he is a champion. They find hope in these examples.鈥 says Oliveira. 鈥淚f they don鈥檛 [identify with someone like Ygor] they identify with traffickers.鈥
The past year has been a whirlwind of travel and qualifiers for Coelho. He is ranked 64th 聽in the world 鈥 a significant improvement over his 77th -place ranking this time last year, though still nowhere close to medal contention. But he鈥檚 his father鈥檚 son, and he鈥檚 motivated more by setting a positive example than bringing home hardware.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important [to give back to the community],鈥 he says. 鈥淸Miratus] doesn鈥檛 just form champions in sports, but also in life.鈥
In recent years, Miratus has incorporated programs that reach beyond badminton, giving classes on topics including computers, accounting, English, and theater. They hope to introduce even more.
鈥淚f you work a lot, a lot, a lot,鈥 Coelho says. 鈥淵ou can reach your dreams.鈥