Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Trials by fire for India’s Olympic hopefuls

- Rutvick Mehta rutvick.mehta@htlive.com

MUMBAI: On the opening day of the first of two training camps leading into shooting’s Olympic Selection Trials (OST), national rifle coach Suma Shirur noticed something slightly divergent in the body language of shooters who had assembled in Bhopal. Indian shooters are accustomed to checking into national camps regularly, especially ahead of major competitio­ns. This time, though, Shirur figured they were “a little bit on the edge”.

“Each one had their own set of questions: Should they prepare specially for an event like this (OST)? Or take it like just another day? Should the preparatio­n be different? Or treat this like any other competitio­n?” Shirur said. “From then to the time we finished in Delhi, I can see a good shift in terms of having that clarity.”

The concept of trials isn’t novel in Indian shooting. The OST, a near month-long exercise spread across four sets of trials in New Delhi and Bhopal starting this week to firm up India’s representa­tion in rifle and pistol events at the Paris Olympics, though is a first of its kind. Indian shooters have pocketed all quotas on offer in rifle and pistol — among the record 20 overall — and five shooters in each event will vie for Paris spots through a scoring system that will factor in a shooter’s best three scores from the trials (quota winners get bonus points).

As shooters line up on the lanes seeking high quality scores amid stiff competitio­n in these trials that will require them to peak a couple of months before the real deal, the daunting fact that their Olympic spot is on the line would quietly linger.

“They have to reach their peak twice. They cannot take a chance. In rifle especially, there’s so much competitio­n and great bench strength,” Deepali Deshpande, the former rifle shooter turned coach who has six of her trainees in these trials, said. “They cannot take it easy, and they know that.”

Right approach, planning

The approach to these highpressu­re trials, therefore, becomes crucial. The anxiety of making the Olympics team, especially for the younger crop of shooters, can be just as unnerving as excelling there. Shirur felt undercurre­nts of those nerves in the camp. The national coaching and high performanc­e team tried to address that through routine discussion­s with shooters, interactiv­e sessions with the likes of Abhinav Bindra and other Olympians, adding a layer of fun to the routine — pasting a leisurely game of snake and ladder on the white board for shooters to aim at, for example — and reiteratin­g the attitude to be taken into the trials.

“These camps were especially to prepare the shooters to develop strategies in handling what’s coming,” Shirur, who made the 10m air rifle final at the 2004 Games, said. “The trials are an important stepping stone towards the main aim, the Olympics. So the preparatio­n for the trials and the Olympics have common themes: keeping a mindset of growth, the ability to stay in the moment and developing ways to do that. It’s easier said than done, but this is the path they have to walk steering through the trials.”

For Deshpande, the 2004 Olympian who trains quota winners Swapnil Kusale, Akhil Sheoran, Shriyanka Sadangi, Sift Kaur Samra, Arjun Babuta apart from Anjum Moudgil, the key to the right approach to trails lay in the planning. It involved using all events in 2023, including the Asian Games and World Championsh­ips, for “confidence building” and ensuring quotas had been secured till year end.

“By February, they had to be ready, technicall­y and equipment wise. And then deliver in April-May,” Deshpande said. “You treat the trials as dress rehearsal for the Olympics. They will be under pressure, because their participat­ion is at stake. But given their preparatio­n, they are confident.”

Two of her trainees, Shriyanka and Babuta, have been through the disappoint­ment of trials while missing out on the Hangzhou Asian Games. Deshpande however believes the two, richer by experience, skill and quotas since, will carry no baggage from that into the OST.

Peaking twice

Still, can the trials, especially of the Olympic kind, carry the risk of shooters laying almost too much emphasis on it, to the point that it may have a hangover effect on the real deal to follow? “Could be,” Deshpande said.

“But I told my shooters that we’re selecting the team to win a medal at the Olympics, so two months before you should be ready for that level of performanc­e.”

 ?? SANJEEV VERMA/HT ?? India’s Manu Bhaker (L) has bagged the Paris Olympics quota in 25m women’s pistol.
SANJEEV VERMA/HT India’s Manu Bhaker (L) has bagged the Paris Olympics quota in 25m women’s pistol.

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