While sports headlines at home weigh heavy with controversy, two Malaysian women offered moment of pure joy. Shuttlers Pearly Tan and M Thinaah did more than lift the women’s doubles title at the Kumamoto Masters in Japan; they inspired.
They turned every point, every
rally, and every moment on court into a statement of purpose and pride for
Malaysian sport. With every precise smash, clever rally, and unwavering display
of teamwork, they showcased the best of sport — discipline, resilience, and the
joy of playing at the highest level. They reminded Malaysians what sport can be
at its most pure: honest, joyful, and capable of lifting spirits far beyond the
scoreboard.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org
That’s not the same for the national football team. The shadow of a scandal over the naturalisation of seven players hangs over them.
In contrast, Pearly and Thinaah’s triumph felt like a rare moment of uncomplicated joy, a moment when the country could cheer without reservation, without worry, and without cynicism. Watching them play is like watching poetry in motion. Pearly’s fire meets Thinaah’s calm. One roars, the other steadies. One leaps, the other anchors. Their chemistry is effortless, built on trust, laughter, and a shared love of the game. It is this partnership that makes every comeback remarkable, every tight rally thrilling. Even under pressure, their smiles never falter. Even when the crowd is hostile, their focus never wavers. In them, Malaysians can see what dedication, discipline, and joy look like in action.
The duo’s semi-final where they saved three game points, and the 54-minute final against the Japanese pair, reinforced their trademark quality: resilience. They do not crumble when the odds are stacked; they grow stronger. In a sporting landscape overshadowed by off-field distractions and fractured leadership, their example is quietly radical. It says that excellence does not require controversy. That commitment does not need drama. That joy, when genuine, is its own reward.
This year has been extraordinary for Pearly and Thinaah. Three titles. Seven finals. World No 2 ranking. Runner-up at the World Championships. They have consistently transformed potential into performance, rewriting expectations for Malaysian women’s doubles and giving the nation glimpses of sporting brilliance reminiscent of Razif and Jailani Sidek’s legendary 1989 season. But it is not just statistics that matter. It is the way they carry themselves — with humility, poise, and a generosity of spirit that makes their victories feel like communal triumphs.
Beyond skill and titles, Pearly and Thinaah embody something Malaysia needs right now: unity. A Chinese Malaysian and an Indian Malaysian moving in perfect rhythm, supporting each other and inspiring the nation, remind us that collaboration and mutual respect are always possible, even when headlines suggest otherwise. And who is their coach? Rosman Razak, an exceptional coach. So, clearly, we have it. If we work together, we can beat the world! Where others divide, they synchronise. Where others look at attire, they look at delivery. God is fair. He does not see the outward appearance but your heart. And that is what matters! When these two women (guided by their coach) lift their racquets, Malaysia lifts its chin.
Reference:
Two women who lifted a nation’s
mood, Frankie D’Cruz, FMT, 17 November 2025

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