Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Facetoface

- Navneet Singh navneet.singh@htlive.com

NEWDELHI: One August evening at the 2003 World Athletics Championsh­ips at the Stade de France in northern Paris, Indian women’s long jump champion Anju Bobby George was measuring her runway, and placing the marker. Anju glanced up at Mike Powell, the world record holder seated in the coaches’ area of the stands with her husband-cum-coach Robert Bobby George. Powell, who had been guiding her in the build-up to the championsh­ips, nodded. Anju started with a modest jump of 6.61m. It was in her fifth attempt that she recorded 6.70m, which fetched her bronze. It is India’s only medal at the world championsh­ips to date. At the 2004 Athens Olympics, she finished fifth in the final after setting a national record of 6.83m. But next year, at the 2005 World Athletics Final in Monaco, she won gold clearing 6.75m, to cap one of the finest sequences of performanc­es by an Indian athlete. The athlete from Kerala, a national selector, believes a good coaching system is vital to end India’s medal drought at the Worlds and Olympics.

Excerpts:

You managed to stay at the world level for many years...

That was because my coach (her husband) regularly incorporat­ed new jumping techniques in the training system. It helped me stay in peak condition during major competitio­ns on the European circuit.

What role did Powell play in the build up to 2003 Paris Worlds? He played a vital role, like fine tuning my fundamenta­l technique. Some basic details like head position during take-off and holding the breath in the last four strides before takeoff— improving small details made the difference in excelling at the world stage.

Why do Indian athletes who win many medals at the Asian Games not able to do that in the World Championsh­ips?

This is because top athletes are just focused to excel at the Asian Games. The number of participat­ing nations at Asian level is 40-odd while at the Worlds or Olympics there are more than 200 countries competing for a medal. To excel at a bigger stage, an athlete should be mentally and physically prepared to achieve the goal.

Murali Sreeshanka­r, the 20-yearold national record holder (8.20m) is seen as an Olympic hopeful. Your assessment.

His performanc­e (7.62m) at the Doha world championsh­ips wasn’t encouragin­g. It shows his training isn’t on expected lines. If his goal is a podium finish at the Worlds or Olympics, he must constantly compete at the elite level like the Diamond League. Rubbing shoulders with the best will give him more confidence as well as improve his performanc­es. A big leap of 8.20m in the domestic meet last October and then decline is not a good sign for his Olympic preparatio­n.

It has been more than a decade since you won a world medal. When will the wait end?

We need a good system. There should be a training programme to match the talent and temperamen­t of individual athletes. More importantl­y, the coach and athlete should have the same goals. I believe there is no dearth of funds these days, but for any new system to be productive, it might take time.

What training system did you fol

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