The Orange County Badminton Center sprawls, warehouse-like, within walking distance of the Honda Center, where the Anaheim Ducks play.
The OCBC is 73,000 square feet, big enough to hold a Thai restaurant,
an expansive printing business, the USA's premier badminton facility
and an against-all-odds dream.
Here, Howard Bach is training with partner Bob Malaythong for the 2008
Summer Olympics in Beijing. Here, over a Thai dinner, owner of the OCBC
conglomerate and U.S. badminton benefactor Don Chew calls Bach and
Malaythong's ambition to win an Olympic medal "an impossible goal."
Bach differs. "Nothing's impossible now," he says. "That's the wrong word to use."
In 2005, Bach did the unimaginable. He won a world title in doubles
badminton partnering with Tony Gunawan, a 2000 Olympic champion from
Indonesia. Before Bach, no American had ever made it to the
quarterfinals of the world championships or the Olympics.
To repeat the feat in Beijing without Gunawan, who won't obtain U.S.
citizenship in time, will be more unimaginable. Home team China has won
19 badminton medals since the sport gained Olympic status in 1992. Only
two non-Asian countries have won an Olympic badminton medal; Denmark
has three, the Netherlands one.
Asked about the USA's medal chances in Beijing, U.S. coach and former
Chinese national team player Cai Zi Min says: "I think, frankly, it's
very hard."
Bach and Malaythong's mission improbable begins today, at the Pan
American Badminton Championships in Calgary, their first opportunity to
earn Olympic qualifying points. They're ranked 32nd in the world.
Bach, 28, will return from Canada in time for his graduation from Cal
State Fullerton on Sunday. Bach took seven classes this semester in
order to finish his bachelor's degree in business.
"I will devote my heart to badminton once again," he says, "because I know what it takes to get to the top."
Bach also knows hope can be found even in the slimmest of chances. A
month before the Athens Olympics, where Bach partnered with Kevin Han
and made it through one round, his uncle called to tell Bach he needed
to take an unexpected trip to Vietnam.
Bach's father, Cam, was in a diabetes-related coma. Doctors gave him a
20% chance to live. The coma lasted three weeks. As he came out of it,
he was giving his son badminton pointers.
A year later Cam, a Vietnamese national badminton team player who
immigrated to San Francisco during the Vietnam War, was in the stands
at the Honda Center, watching his son win a world title.
OCBC owner Chew also was there, beaming.
Both Chew and his wife, Kim, were elite-level badminton players in
Thailand before immigrating to Southern California in 1972 in search of
economic opportunity. They learned the print business and, in 1981,
began operating a print shop out of their garage on a used press.
K&D Graphics is so successful today that Chew has a love-or-money
dilemma: He needs to add more printing machinery, but to do so he would
have to take over more of the badminton courts that he installed in
1996 purely because of his passion for the game. He already has taken
over six; 12 are left.
The majority of U.S. team members train at the OCBC. Chew, a former USA
Badminton president, estimates he spends at least $250,000 per year in
sponsorships, coaching salaries and upkeep.
Gunawan immigrated to Southern California in January 2002 to study
computer science. Chew gave him a job as a coach and Gunawan began
competing with Malaythong. Two years later, when Han retired after
Athens, Gunawan and Bach became partners.
"Before we met Tony," says Malaythong, a 26-year-old native of Laos who
grew up in Rockville, Md., "we had no confidence in ourselves or
ability to play against international teams. I feel this has helped us
a lot. Whether we win or we lose, I feel we're going in with the best
chance of winning."