Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

‘Hunger to win

- Vinayak Padmadeo

NEW DELHI: Shooting is again India’s best medal bet at the Rio Olympics. The discipline put the country on the podium in the last three Games, and the consistenc­y of Indian shooters at world level gives rise to optimism. Of India’s four shooting medals in the Olympics, Col Rajyavardh­an Singh Rathore’s double trap silver at the 2004 Athens Games was a path-breaking effort. It gave Indian shooters the belief they were second to none. Abhinav Bindra went a step ahead, becoming India’s first individual Olympic medalist by winning the 10m air rifle in Beijing four years later. Vijay Kumar (25m rapid fire silver) and Gagan Narang (10m air rifle bronze) added to the medal kitty at London 2012.

In this interview, Rathore, the minister of state for informatio­n and broadcasti­ng, lays threadbare the mind of a champion shooter and the challenge of staying motivated once one becomes an establishe­d star. Excerpts:

How hard or easy it is for a shooter to replicate his success?

It’s not about how hard or easy, the most important thing is how hungry you are. And to realise that most of these achievemen­ts, especially in shooting, is related to your mind. So, your approach to the competitio­n...obviously all the hard work you have done and all the training you have done comes from the hunger

(to succeed), and the approach comes from the mind. These two things are critical.

Performanc­e is largely driven by what is going on in your mind. Vincent Hancock

(US two-time Olympic skeet champion) could be a great example for Abhinav, and then there is German pistol shooter, Ralf Schumann. They are great examples for Abhinav and others. Hancock is someone I have spoken to often as we are in the sport of flying targets; (he is) an extremely discipline­d person. He keeps it extremely simple, and that’s why every competitio­n he goes to, he is in the reckoning. He is in the armed forces and is committed to keep the flag of his armed forces as well as his country flying high. This can be replicated by Abhinav or anybody else. These are a couple of

So, were you hungrier in Athens than Beijing?

There was a difference of day and night. Before Athens, I hardly had any resources. And after Athens, I had lots of resources… Resources don’t make you a champion. Resources can help you become a champion. But the most crucial thing is the hunger, the will to achieve it, the will to apply knowledge, the will to put that knowledge into action. It is the will to put those thousand hours of practice with singlemind­ed dedication, not just going through the routine. For example, after Athens I remember saying this somewhere that I’ll redefine the definition of hard work. But it is not just pure hard work; it has to be backed by tremendous focus, ability to absorb what you are doing. To simplify, not make it difficult. So, hard work can make things difficult for you.

So, basically it is simplicity then?

This sport can be very complicate­d. Within a second multitude of things are happening in threedimen­sional… targets are flying, your body can move in so many dimensions, your mind can move in many more dimensions. Anything can go wrong. But as you train and come closer to the event, your process of shooting the target needs to become simpler by the day. Let us say you had 15-16 key words or sentences a month prior to the competitio­n. By the day of your competitio­n or closer to it, it should just be a key word, just one word. So, if you say that one word, it puts your mind, body and soul in that exact process to deliver the shot. So, when it does become this simple then your mind is not cluttered; that’s why it remains focused and positive. And even if you miss a target, it doesn’t panic, it is totally in control.

So, like a coach would say that your subconscio­us needs to take control of everything. It is the horse in darkness which will take you to the stable. You let loose the reins and it’ll take you to the stable; you have got to trust the horse because he knows the way. So, you got to trust your subconscio­us. And you will only trust your subconscio­us once you know it is very simple.

Can you break it down further?

How I won my first internatio­nal medal, the 2002 Commonweal­th Games gold, was by reading what my opponents are doing because I didn’t have the luxury of spending a long time with coaches. It was a military mind working.

The first thing you are taught in military is ‘what is your informatio­n and what is the enemy’s informatio­n’? You start from there. My informatio­n, I knew. And what

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