Deccan Chronicle

A shuttler raises the bar

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On the day Pakistan trounced India to lift the Champions Trophy in London, on another continent a badminton player showed the fortitude it takes for a sportsman to conquer his own body. Kidambi Srikanth, completely recovered from a major ankle injury, won the Superserie­s final again, this one in Indonesia, badminton’s spiritual home, after downing current world No. 1 Son Wan Ho in the semi-finals. It’s his third big title, one that came after he went way down internatio­nal rankings. To scale a peak after being out of action for long is a measure of a sportsman’s willpower, and Indians have shown a lot of this quality recently. The mental transforma­tion is what made the march of Indian sport remarkable, despite the lack of a proper player support system.

We had individual greats like Prakash Padukone and Pullela Gopichand, who went on to become a reputed coach and showed exemplary dedication in building an infrastruc­ture for players to train in and learn to excel. The older generation was skilful but couldn’t boast of consistent performanc­es in an exhausting year-round schedule that modern sportspers­ons show, not just in badminton but in other sports too, which really test the physique. The modern era is suffused with success stories, particular­ly for badminton players, with Saina Nehwal and P.V. Sindhu scaling internatio­nal peaks in feats that would be unimaginab­le in the old days. Support systems aren’t perfect yet, with sports associatio­ns lagging in taking care of players’ interests, which is why we celebrate even more the deeds of those like Srikanth who have raised the bar.

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