Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

‘Best-ever support by any state govt to athletes of India’

- Sharad Deep

The event organized by the Yogi Adityanath­led UP government to felicitate Tokyo-returned sporting icons of India was big and grand in every way. All medalists looked mesmerized by the hospitalit­y extended to them at the Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium here on Thursday.

Two giant screens showed the footage of India’s golden boy Neeraj Chopra, who created history by bagging India’s first-ever gold medal in athletics. This wasn’t all. Clips of PV Sindhu’s stellar performanc­e in the badminton court, fine display of skills by wrestlers Ravi Kumar Dahiya, Bajrang Punia and others like Mirabai Chanu and Lovlina Borgohain entertaine­d the 10,000-odd young athletes who came here from all parts of UP to witness the felicitati­on ceremony.

Besides chief minister Yogi Adityanath Singh, governor Anandiben Patel, deputy chief ministers Dinesh Sharma and Keshav Prasad Maurya gave away the awards to the medalists. UP informatio­n department’s special video titled ‘Sashakt Yuva, Sashakt Pradesh’ drew applause from the athletes and young fans.

Neeraj Chopra was given the biggest purse of Rs 2 crore, followed by silver medalists – wrestler Ravi Kumar Dahiya and weightlift­er Mirabai Chanu (Rs 1.5 crore each) while bronze medalists – wrestler Bajrang Punia and boxer Lovlina Borgohain got Rs 1 crore each. Wrestler Deepak Punia and golfer Aditi Ashok were given Rs 50 lakh each.

The 32 members of both the men’s and women’s hockey teams were given Rs 50 lakh each. The men’s hockey team won bronze while their women counterpar­ts finished fourth at the Tokyo Games.

In a special gesture, Vijay

Sharma, the coach of Mirabai Chanu, was given Rs 10 lakh, whereas the hockey teams’ staff members too were given Rs 10 lakh each.

Varanasi’s Lalit Kumar Upadhyay, who was part of India’s men’s hockey team, was given Rs 1.25 crore, whereas women’s team player and Meerut’s Vandana Katariya was given Rs 75 lakh.

As promised by the state government, eight athletes from Uttar Pradesh, who participat­ed at the Tokyo Games, but couldn’t make a podium finish, were also given Rs 25 lakh each as a token of appreciati­on. They included walkracer Priyanka Goswami, javelin thrower Shivpal Singh, shooter Saurabh Chaudhary, Mairaj Ahmed Khan, boxer Satish Kumar, sailor Arvind Singh, discus thrower Seema Punia and javelin thrower Annu Rani.

Neeraj Chopra, in his brief but impressive address, was amazed to see such a huge gathering for Indian athletes on Thursday. “I was running around the stadium all alone after winning the gold medal at Tokyo. But today, I felt the real crowd support. It looks like a ceremony of India, not only of UP.”

“I can see many more Neerajs

sitting in the spectators’ gallery and I wish that one day some of them would surely be winning medals for UP,” Chopra said after he was cheered by young athletes from the spectators’ gallery.

Ace shuttler PV Sindhu, who won her second Olympic medal at Tokyo after a silver at the Rio Olympics in 2016, admired the UP government for holding such a grand felicitati­on ceremony for Olympic medalists.

“This is the best-ever support given by the any state government to the athletes of India. I wish that such things would continue to inspire Indian athletes to win more medals in the future Olympics,” she said. Other athletes like women’s hockey captain Rani Rampal, hockey player Lalit Kumar Upadhyay, Lovlina Borgohain, Ravi Dahiya, Bajrang Punia, men’s hockey captain Manpreet Singh also shared their experience­s at the Tokyo Games.

Manpreet said Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s words a day before the bronze-medal game were very inspiratio­nal. “We were disappoint­ed after losing the semi-finals, but the PM’S words made a big difference and we could create history.”

 ?? DEEPAK GUPTA/HT ?? UP Governor Anandiben Patel and chief minister Yogi Adityanath with the Olympic medal winners.
DEEPAK GUPTA/HT UP Governor Anandiben Patel and chief minister Yogi Adityanath with the Olympic medal winners.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India