Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Harvinder keeps calm for bronze; Praveen sails high

- Rutvick Mehta

MUMBAI: Last year during the nationwide lockdown, Praveen Kumar dug up a pit, filled it with a layer of loose sand and began practising his jumps in his family’s small farm in Jewar, Noida. Some 250 kilometres away in Ajitnagar village in Kaithal, Haryana, Harvinder Singh converted a part of his family’s multi-acre farm into an archery setup.

It was the pandemic effect— with all sporting facilities shut, the two athletes needed to improvise, using their creativity and grit, if they wanted to continue to prepare for the 2020 Tokyo Paralympic­s.

On a rainy Friday in Tokyo, both of them stood on the podium—kumar, 18, as India’s youngest medal winner at these Paralympic­s and Singh, 30, as India’s first-ever archer to win a medal at any Paralympic­s. Kumar won silver in the high jump T64/T44 (athletes with lower limb impairment) combined category after a jump of 2.07m that set a new Asian record, while Singh clinched bronze in the individual recurve open category after beating Korea’s Kim Min Su 6-5 in a shootoff in the bronze medal match.

It has been a meteoric rise for Kumar who began pursuing the sport only three years ago. Kumar was born with an impairment that affects the bones connecting the hip and his left leg. He played a bit of volleyball in school before moving to high jump. During an inter-district competitio­n, a coach asked him to meet para athletics coach Satyapal Singh, who tested the young boy and began training him at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi from 2018.

Next year, besides winning silver in the junior event, Kumar finished fourth in the at the 2019 World Para Athletics Championsh­ips. A Tokyo berth secured, and the boy’s career was off to a fast start. The pandemic last year threatened to slow it down. But Satyapal and Kumar decided to make use of one tiny corner of his father’s field. “We dug a section of it and refilled it with loose sand so that he could at least practice his jumps on it daily and perform his fitness drills there,” Satyapal, who watched Kumar’s jumps through video calls sitting in Delhi, said.

“I didn’t believe that I would be able to reach this stage one day,” Kumar said. “After I cleared 2.01m in my first attempt, my confidence increased. I knew that if I gave my best now, even rain couldn’t stop me,” he said.

Rain couldn’t stop Harvinder either later in the day. After losing the semi-final 6-4 to American Kevin Mather, the Indian showed tremendous composure in the bronze medal match against the Korean. Leading 4-2, Harvinder could have wrapped it up in the fourth set when he needed to shoot an 8 to win. He shot 7, splitting the two points between them. Min Su eked out the fifth set to force a shootoff, where Harvinder struck a perfect 10 to the Korean’s 8.

It was his third shootoff win out of the five matches on the day. Stuck in his village at the start of the lockdown in March last year, Harvinder made his father’s farm a training base after transporti­ng the entire equipment, including the target and arrows, from his university in Patiala. “In those days, our field was also empty, so my brother and father rolled the tractor over a section of it and I set up my target there and would practice twice a day. I would practice alone, while two kids from my village would come and watch me. They gave me good company,” Harvinder said.

A botched treatment when he had dengue while only 18 months old caused his leg impairment. Pursuing his Phd in economics in Patiala’s Punjabi University, Harvinder is also a Paralympic medallist now.

 ?? GETTY ?? Praveen Kumar
GETTY Praveen Kumar

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