Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Indian athletes not just on a European holiday anymore

- Avishek Roy

NEW DELHI: Neeraj Chopra vividly recalls one of his early European trips in 2014; the chilling winter and the anxiety that gripped him at the thought of competing against foreign athletes. It proved to be a momentary thought though.

“Khone ke liye kuch nahi tha (there was nothing to lose). Nobody had any expectatio­ns, so I decided to enjoy myself and compete with a free mind,” says Chopra.

This fearless and positive mindset ensured that the then 19-year-old Chopra broke the (86.48m) under-20 world record in Bydogszcz, Poland in 2016. The feat announced his arrival in the big league and gave confidence to the athletes back home.

“You feel that the others are very good strong athletes and how we can compete with them. But we work equally hard, leave our home at a small age and go through so much of sacrifice and pain. So there is nothing to lose,” said Chopra, on the sidelines of his new venture #Javrun challenge on Youtube Shorts, where fans are asked to replicate his run-up.

Chopra’s gold at the Tokyo Olympics has further fuelled the ambition of Indian athletes who are no longer satisfied with the tag of also-rans. A spate of impressive performanc­es in recent internatio­nal meets— from Avinash Sable, Murali Sreeshanka­r and Jyothi Yarraji —show they are keen to make a mark on the internatio­nal stage.

The increase in foreign exposure tours and competitio­ns have helped Indian athletes break the mould while technical experts have added to their know-how.

“Competing in an event in India and abroad is very different,” says Sreeshanka­r. The main thing is to adjust to the climate and food. Food is the main part. Then you have to get used to the atmosphere, announceme­nts will be in different languages, tracks will be different.”

Sreeshanka­r, for example, has stuck to continenta­l diet even at home in India. “I struggled during my initial days and then I changed my diet, very specific.

Now, I can survive on boiled food, non-veg etc. So, when I go there I face no issues.”

Indian athletes are also exploring possibilit­ies of better training opportunit­ies. Like Sreeshanka­r did after meeting Tokyo Olympics gold medallist Miltiadis Tentoglou of Greece at the World Indoor Championsh­ips in Belgrade in March. He finished 7th in a world class field with a jump of 7.92, setting a new national indoor record. Last month Sreeshanka­r trained at the Olympic Stadium in Greece, where Tentoglou trains.

The 23-year-old also won gold at the Internatio­nal Jumping Meet in Kallithea, Greece with a jump of 8.31m on May 27. His national record stands at 8.36m.

It has also helped that private organisati­ons like JSW and Reliance Foundation are doing their bit in backing talented juniors with their programmes.

Hurdler Jyothi has been on a national record-smashing spree. Her itinerary was carefully planned by Reliance Odisha Athletics High Performanc­e coach James Hillier, a former England hurdler.

Jyothi was travelling abroad for the first time and she had not even heard an electronic starting gun before. She was scared to think of competing in foreign conditions. Prior to her competitio­n, Hillier took her to a threeweek acclimatis­ing camp in Tenerife Islands in Spain, a known destinatio­n for world renowned athletes.

Chopra says competing abroad helps you evolve as an athlete and find your own methods to prepare.

“In a new environmen­t, you are constantly thinking. You see the training of other athletes, how they prepare before a competitio­n, their warm up routines could be so different. You have to accept the challenge and move ahead. At the end of the day, it is an athlete who has to use his mind to adapt to different challenges on the field of play. These competitio­ns help you develop your own mind.

“Our athletes are using the opportunit­y very well. When you do well in quality internatio­nal meets, you have confidence to win in major internatio­nal competitio­ns,” says Chopra.

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