Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

No pressure, gave my best, will bounce back: Saurabh

Despite topping qualificat­ion, the 19-year-old finished seventh in the 10m men’s air pistol final

- AP

Saurabh Chaudhary took a break to sip water. He had just fired a perfect series of 100 and climbed to second position in the qualificat­ion stage.From a poor start with a series of 95, the 19-yearold at his first Olympics was picking up pace.

The fearful rhythm that Chaudhary is known for since he had started global shooting events by storm was back.

The 10s kept coming and he finished right on top at the end of the qualificat­ion round at the Asaka Shooting Range, becoming the first Indian shooter to top the qualificat­ion in an Olympics.

A few lanes away from Saurabh, Abhishek Verma was staging an even bigger revival, climbing from the bottom rung towards top-8 finish.

It looked good for both Indian pistol shooters to qualify for the final. Together, they had won medals at the Asian Games. Verma faltered at the last few steps, his last two shots, 8s, pulled

a him down from seventh to 17th. Only the top eight from qualifying make the final field.

In the first event of the day, Elavenil Valarivan and Apurvi Chandela had failed to qualify for the women’s 10m air rifle finals, so the shooting contingent’s focus was on Chaudhary. In finals, Chaudhary rarely slips. It’s his forte. The eight-shooter final had Olympics and world championsh­ips medallists shooters--Pang Wei of China, Germany’s Christian Reitz, Damir Mikec of Serbia— but Chaudhary had seen them off in tough competitio­ns several times.

Even during the sighting shots—taken to test the adjustment­s of a firearm before a match begins – he was finding the inner 10s.

Different Chaudhary

But it was a completely different Chaudhary that turned up for the final. From the very first shot, he struggled. Nobody had seen him shoot like that before. He started the first series with a 10.1 but the next four shots were all 9s. He could not pick this time even in the second series of five shots and even hit a 8.8. He bowed out at seventh place. The Indian shooting contingent cheering for Chaudhary fell silent, perplexed. Here was a teenager, making his debut at the biggest stage for his sport, but such was his formidable reputation that everyone expected a medal.

“I gave my best. There was a problem at the start and I was not getting the hits right but I tried to follow the process. The rhythm was missing,” said Chaudhary.

First Olympics

“Its my first Olympics. My family, coach has supported me a lot and that’s why I am here. I am not disappoint­ed. This is just a start for me.”

Did he feel the pressure of the Olympics any different from the World Cups where he has stacked up medals? “No,” said Chaudhary, who won the 2018 Asian Games gold at 16. “My coaches just told me to take it as a normal competitio­n. So, I was not feeling pressure.”

Pistol coach and former shooter Samresh Jung too said that pressure was not the problem, or else he would not have been able to shoot the way he did in the qualificat­ion.

“In the qualificat­ion too he was having some trouble but he managed it well,” Jung said.

“In the final he could not manage it. It happens in shooting. Sometimes things don’t work out. If the rhythm breaks, it can be very bad. I would not take anything away from him.”.

Chaudhary will again line up at the shooting lanes in Tokyo, this time in the mixed doubles competitio­n with Manu Bhaker on on July 27.

“I will prepare the same way. There is nothing to worry about,” he said in his usual flat tone, with his usual inscrutabl­e expression.

 ??  ?? India’s Saurabh Chaudhary during the men’s 10m air pistol final on Saturday in Tokyo.
India’s Saurabh Chaudhary during the men’s 10m air pistol final on Saturday in Tokyo.

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