Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Another day of double gold, 4 medals Narwal, Adhana make it one-two in shooting

Bhagat, Narwal do what Sumit Antil and Avani Lekhara did on Monday—clinch two gold medals in one day taking India’s medal count to 17

- GETTY IMAGES Avishek Roy avishek.roy@htlive.com READ: PTI

“Ideally, I would have loved to be sitting in both the corners,” national para coach Khanna said with a laugh. “Manoj played a very aggressive game today, from the beginning to end. He showed his confidence playing against a local player, which was the key to success.”

Two more assured

In the semi-finals earlier on Saturday, Bhagat defeated Fujihara 21-11, 21-16, while Sarkar lost to Bethell 8-21, 10-21. Apart from winning the two medals, India also confirmed a couple more.

Noida’s district magistrate Suhas Yathiraj booked his place in the final of the SL4 category, brushing aside Indonesia’s Fredy Setiawan 21-9, 21-15. Joining in Sunday’s title clash was

Krishna Nagar, who beat Great Britain’s Krysten Coombs 21-10, 21-11 in the women’s SH6 semifinals. Tarun Dhillon though lost to France’s Luca Mazur 16-21, 21-16, 18-21 in the SL4 semi-final and will now fight for bronze.

Bhagat could well win a second medal on Sunday, in the mixed doubles with young Palak Kohli. The pair will fight for bronze in the SL3-SU5 category, after losing 3-21, 15-21 to Indonesia’s Susanto Hary and Leani Ratri Oktila in the semifinals.

Creating own “bio bubble” It’s been far from easy for these shuttlers heading to Tokyo. During the lockdown last year, they were forced to create their own bio bubble in Lucknow. In April, the likes of

Bhagat and Kohli along with Khanna created a makeshift open court in a park to continue training. Most shuttlers, and Khanna, spent their money to run the day-to-day activities, even getting a cook and domestic help to stay with them.

They made the Guru Gobind Singh Sports College their training base before moving to the UP Badminton Academy, the Sports Authority of India centre and finally the Gaurav Khanna Excellia Badminton Academy on the outskirts of the city as the situation eased.

“We shifted to a small place during the lockdown where every shuttler had his/her own room and some facilities. We created our own world where nothing could stop us in our mission,” Khanna said.

NEW DELHI: Manish Narwal went to the Tokyo Paralympic­s as a potential gold medallist considerin­g the internatio­nal medals and records the 19-year-old had stacked up at furious pace in the last few years. But the youngster finished seventh in his first event, 10m air pistol SH1, after having topped the qualificat­ion, which tempered expectatio­ns.

Four days on, Narwal shook off that disappoint­ment and showed his class in winning gold in the mixed 50m pistol SH1 event on Saturday, setting a Paralympic­s record (218.2) in the final. Singhraj Adhana won silver (216.7) to make it a sight to watch, two Indians on the podium with the tri-colour being raised. They are both from Faridabad, Haryana and train together. It was 39-year-old Singhraj’s second medal from the range, having won bronze in 10m air pistol.

It was a tense final for Narwal and Singhraj. Narwal had a bad start but rose to the top three after the first series of five shots (45.4) with Singhraj leading the field of eight shooters (46.1). Narwal then slipped to sixth before he mounted a strong comeback, improving his position with each shot as he displayed steady shooting under pressure.

By the 12th shot, the teenager was climbing back, overcoming the pressure of possible eliminatio­n. He was back in medal contention with scores of 19.6 and 19.7 in the 4th and 5th series. Shingraj though dropped to fourth after 19 shots. Both held their nerve in the final few shots, and Narwal moved to lead after the 21st shot. Sergey Malyshev of Russian Paralympic Committee, who was holding on to the top position, felt the pressure, scoring a poor 15.4 in the 8th series. It left Narwal and Singharj to go for gold and silver in the final two shots.

“I’m very happy with the gold medal. It was an intense contest and to come good was huge,” said a jubilant Narwal. “I was a bit disappoint­ed after the air pistol event but my coaches worked with me and I was able to put up a good performanc­e today,” he said.

Heading to the Paralympic­s, Narwal had shot a world record score in the mixed 50m pistol SH1 event (229.1 points) at the Al Ain Para Shooting World Cup in March. At the Asian Para Games in 2018, Narwal was the only Indian shooter to win gold, in 10m air pistol where he shot a junior world record. He also won silver in the P4 category of 50m mixed free pistol. He continued to take big strides, winning three bronze medals in P1 and P4 (individual and team) in the 2019 Sydney Para Shooting World Championsh­ips. He received the Arjuna Award last year.

Before Narwal became a shooter—he has a congenital impairment in his right hand— who habitually broke records, he was known as a quiet boy in Ballabgarh, Haryana. He tried many sports—athletics, football and badminton—before taking up shooting in 2015.

“He was 13-years-old when he came to my academy,” said his first coach Rakesh Thakur. “It took him sometime to like shooting. He would shoot for some days and not return. I know his father, so I would call him back. That happened for some days before he started taking interest in 2016,” he said.

“He would hardly talk. It is difficult for differentl­y-abled kids to mingle with others at the start. It was difficult to teach him at first because his holding arm (left) would not get the support, balance from the other arm. He can only move his fingers a bit. So, it took some time to learn the technique. Within a year he was winning

© Gemini Crosswords 2018 All rights reserved medals.”

Narwal competed with ablebodied shooters in the 2017 and 2018 national championsh­ips. “It helped. I wanted to give him as much competitio­n as possible,” said Thakur.

Second medal for Singhraj

It was not the first time Singhraj and Narwal were fighting for medals. In the Al Ain World Shooting Para Sport in March, Narwal won gold in mixed 50m pistol event and Singhraj bronze.

“Every shot was very difficult in the final today,” said Singhraj. “Our coach kept telling us to just focus on one shot. When I was in third position, I told myself to be calm, breathe and focus on just one shot, not to have any other thought.”

Avani flag-bearer at closing ceremony

Avani Lekhara, who has already won two medals--gold in 10m air rifle SHI and bronze in 50m air rifle SH1, has been named India’s flag-bearer for the closing ceremony. The first Indian woman to win two Paralympic medals will have a shot at claiming a third on the last day of the Games on Sunday in the mixed 50m rifle prone event.

India have won five medals in shooting—two gold, one silver and two bronze.

Vaishali village erupts in joy after Pramod Bhagat’s gold

 ??  ?? Pramod Bhagat celebrates after beating Britain’s Daniel Bethell in the badminton men's singles SL3 final at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic­s on Saturday.
Pramod Bhagat celebrates after beating Britain’s Daniel Bethell in the badminton men's singles SL3 final at the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic­s on Saturday.
 ??  ?? India's Manish Narwal (L) and Singhraj Adhana during the men's 50m pistol event in Tokyo.
India's Manish Narwal (L) and Singhraj Adhana during the men's 50m pistol event in Tokyo.
 ?? A metal ring damaged in the harness (10)
Clean break or cut (5)
One who has a strong hand in clubs? (7)
Half-a-dozen found a place and stayed (7)
Exhausted, as a wrestler may be (3-2)
In pain father is brave (6) One’s occupation may require this regu ??
A metal ring damaged in the harness (10) Clean break or cut (5) One who has a strong hand in clubs? (7) Half-a-dozen found a place and stayed (7) Exhausted, as a wrestler may be (3-2) In pain father is brave (6) One’s occupation may require this regu
 ?? PCI ?? India’s Manoj Sarkar won bronze in the same SL 3 category as Pramod Bhagat after beating home favourite Daisuke Fujihara.
PCI India’s Manoj Sarkar won bronze in the same SL 3 category as Pramod Bhagat after beating home favourite Daisuke Fujihara.
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