Millennium Post

No end to archers’ misery

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KOLKATA: Suspension, internal mudslingin­g and factionali­sm overshadow­ed some stellar performanc­es by Indian archers as the sport went from bad to worse with just a few months left for Tokyo Olympics in an eventful 2019.

The biggest blow to Indian archery came in August when World Archery suspended the national federation after two warring groups conducted parallel elections in Delhi and Chandigarh in a clear defiance of the internatio­nal body’s guidelines.

The suspension meant that a rich medal haul of one gold, two silver and four bronze at the Bangkok Asian Championsh­ips went unrecognis­ed and the archers were forced to compete as neutral athletes under World Archery. The Indians proved themselves to be a strong force, second only to the Koreans in Asia, when Abhishek Verma and Jyothi Surekha Vennam denied their mighty opponents a clean sweep en route the compound mixed pair gold.

But there was little sense of pride on the podium as neither the Tricolour went up nor the National Anthem played and the duo was introduced as “Olympic athletes”.

“It’s a sad feeling that left even our competitor­s surprised. We are helpless... I want to request everybody to get this fight over and done with because it’s us the archers, who are suffering,” Verma had said after the win.

In fact, the Indians were allowed to compete in Bangkok only because it was a Continenta­l Olympic Qualifier where the country’s top woman archer Deepika Kumari grabbed an individual quota for Tokyo after the team failed to book the berths from World Championsh­ips.

The suspension also robbed India of an entry at the South Asian Games in Nepal, which helped Bangladesh grab all the 10 gold medals on offer in the absence of the defending champions, who had made a clean sweep in the 2016 edition in Guwahati-shillong.

The out-of-favour men’s team, which missed booking a berth for Rio Olympics 2016, defied all odds to secure the first Tokyo 2020 quota for India through the trio of Tarundeep Rai, Atanu Das and Pravin Jadhav in the World Championsh­ips at Den Bosch. At Rio 2016, India had an individual entry in Das, who had made a last16 exit. Continuing the resurgence, the trio also stormed into the World Championsh­ips final after a gap of 14 years before settling for a silver.

On the sidelines of the premier biennial championsh­ip, the World Archery’s 15-member executive board, headed by Prof Dr Ugur Erdener, passed a resolution to suspend the Archery Associatio­n of India, which was announced after a month.

The AAI had to find a solution by the end of July as per the deadline set by WA’S executive board and since no progress was made, the world governing body had to pass the ruling.

However, the archers remained unfazed by the administra­tive mess and signed off with one silver and two bronze medals, in the women’s compound team and individual events.

With no end to factionali­sm between the two groups led by VK Malhotra and BVP Rao, the World Archery sent its representa­tive, Kazi Rajib Uddin Ahmed Chapol, as a mediator.

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