The Asian Age

Mary Kom emerges as India’s top sports icon

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The diminutive Manipuri Mary Kom has been India’s finest sporting icon. With a record of six women’s titles in world championsh­ips, besides a silver medal, she has only enhanced her standing as a great example of an Indian sportspers­on who has excelled through her natural talent. An Indian woman boxing legend would be unimaginab­le despite our epics and folklore being filled with feisty goddesses. To think an Indian athlete could sustain this level of elite performanc­e across 17 years in internatio­nal competitio­n only adds to her lustre. Her emergence from the Northeast to the centre of Indian sport makes her a Muhammad Ali- type icon, defying social, racial barriers and even gender barriers. Her dedicating her sixth medal to the nation was a charming and elegant way of thanking the people for their support.

Such talent is known to emerge in India despite the system, not because of it. It may have taken a while for us to realise that our sportspeop­le, who do not start competing while young enough because of the lack of sporting infrastruc­ture, except perhaps in a few metros, need all the support that they can get. But it does appear we may have caught up in offering as the Centre and states do now in terms of substantia­l cash incentives for winning performanc­es, besides subsidies for coaches, trainers and dieticians to be involved in the preparatio­n of athletes. Despite all that, however, Mary Kom will continue to define the Indian way of sporting talent emerging naturally, that is perhaps why individual­s rather than teams have tended to dominate the Indian sporting scene. The reports of discrimina­tory or whimsical selection of the Indian women’s XI in the World T20 Championsh­ip is indicative of the hazards Indians face in team sports where unity, harmony and collective effort count even more than talent and game skills.

The advent of prominent Indians sportswome­n in the new millennium, who set very high standards in internatio­nal competitio­n, was heralded by Mary Kom. Badminton stars Saina Nehwal and P. V. Sindhu have been carrying the pennant but without quite achieving the heights Mary scaled in dominating her flyweight class ( 48 kg), winning the most world championsh­ip titles for a woman. Her dream of an Olympic gold medal may depend on whether she can cope with the weight classifica­tion. It is in serving as an inspiratio­nal figure that Mary Kom has contribute­d hugely to Indian sport. If there are promising young athletes who have taken to a contact sport demanding strength as well as suppleness, speedy reflexes as well as subtlety and sheer obduracy in working past the pain of training and the physical punishment of competitio­n, it is all owed to the Manipuri who defied national stereotype­s in picking her sport. Three young boxers who picked up medals in their maiden appearance in the world championsh­ip mark the finest tribute to Mary Kom. Mary Kom’s emergence from the Northeast to the centre of Indian sport makes her a Muhammad Alitype icon, defying social, racial barriers and even gender barriers

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