Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Tejaswini silver gives wings to shooting career

- HT Correspond­ent sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

the class, the competitio­n followed a round-robin format with each wrestler taking on the other four. Babita and Weicker reached the virtual summit clash after winning three bouts each. GOLDCOAST: The Commonweal­th Games hold a special place in Tejaswini Sawant’s life. Tejaswini came into national prominence when she was picked for the 2006 Commonweal­th Games ahead of many seasoned shooters. She justified the selectors’ confidence by winning the individual and pairs gold in 10m air rifle at Melbourne.

Though she has won six medals i n the Commonweal­th Games and also bagged a World Championsh­ips gold in 50m rifle prone in 2010, she has yet to find success at the Asian Games and the Olympics. In recent times, critics had started saying t hat t he 37-year-old’s best years were behind her.

However, all her profession­al life the Kolhapur-born shooter has been proving her detractors wrong.

She started with 10m air rifle and moved to 50m prone and three-position.

It is her ability to adapt and come back with a vengeance that has amazed the shooting fraternity.

On Thursday, Tejaswini showed that there is still a lot left in her as she bagged silver in 50m prone, finishing with a score of 618.9. Singapore’s Martina Lindsay Veloso, who won the 10m air rifle gold two days back, bagged her second gold here with a Games record of 621, while Scotland’s Seonaid Mcintosh finishing third with a total of 618.1. Anjum Moudgil was 16 with a score of 602.2.

This was Tejaswini’s sixth CWG medal, making her one of the most successful Indian woman shooters in the quadrennia­l games. Apart from the two gold in Melbourne 2006, she has two silver in 50m prone and 3-position pairs event in 2010, and a bronze in the 50m prone pairs.

Incidental­ly, this was the second medal in 50m prone at the Commonweal­th Games after Roopa Unnikrishn­an won it at the 1998 Kuala Lumpur Games.

Tejaswini took India’s medals tally in shooting to 12 — four gold, three silver and five bronze.

She started with a score of 102.1 in the first series and continued to improve, regularly exceeding her first-round score. She made a strong charge with scores of 103.7 and 104.6, which helped her into the medals bracket. Despite the windy conditions, Tejaswani did not lose concentrat­ion and continued to shoot well.

“I’m aiming for the Olympic Games in Tokyo (2020), but next up is the Asian Games and then the World Championsh­ips in Korea (August-september 2018),” said Tejaswini.

 ?? AP ?? Rahul Aware after winning gold.
AP Rahul Aware after winning gold.

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