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‘India will keep fancied rivals on their toes’

Kamal keen to come home with a medal from Asian Games

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Still basking in the afterglow of Commonweal­th Games glory, India’s top paddler Achanta Sharath Kamal feels the country’s upswing in table tennis will keep their more fancied rivals on their toes at the Asian Games although the team will set foot in Indonesia as underdogs.

“This is our best chance to win a team medal at the Asian Games. It’s very difficult individual­ly, but when I say good performanc­e at the Asian Games, it’s winning a medal,” Sharath said,

“We’ve never won an Asian Games medal, but we have always made it to the quarterfin­als in the team championsh­ips. So we are just one match away from a medal. It depends on the draw. Hopefully, we don’t meet China. Any other team is beatable. Against Japan, we had a very close match at the Asian Championsh­ips. Against Hong Kong and Korea, it’s always open.”

Unlike the CWG, there is no third/fourth place game at the Asian Games, so a spot in the semi-finals assures a medal. “There will be lot of pressure on other teams as they know India are doing well. We’re still the underdogs, but there will be pressure on opponents,” said the 2004 CWG gold medallist.

India took eight medals at the 2018 CWG, their bestever finish. Sharath pocketed three (men’s team gold, men’s singles bronze and men’s doubles silver with G. Sathiyan).

Whenever we are playing in Asia, China is the place to train despite adversitie­s as we get faster at the end of the day.” Achanta Sharath Kamal » India’s top paddler

Earn the recognitio­n

“We need to stand up to the expectatio­ns of CWG as we did exceedingl­y well there. So if we can continue our form at the Asian Games, more than individual­ly, the sport will benefit a lot. The sport in India will get the kind of recognitio­n which has been due for a very long time,” Sharath said.

The Indian squad will be headed to Chengdu (China) for a 10-day camp before the Games.

Sharath said although the paddlers hate going to that part of the world, they always return as faster players. “We hate having training camps in China,” he said. “The food is bad, everything is bad. But one thing which is good there is the practice system. They don’t teach you anything.

“They don’t want anybody to get better. But the only thing which is good is, even with weak players who we get (for) sparring, they have speed in the ball, body, foot work and their thought process. That is exactly the reason why we are going there.

“Whenever we are playing in Asia, China is the place to train despite adversitie­s as we get faster at the end of the day. There will be lot of multi-ball training which I think they are best at.

“So with multi-ball training, you can do a lot of correction­s to your technique, timing and it is the fitness part also.”

What are the areas Sharath feels the team needs to work on? “We cannot think on those lines. It’s too close now,” he said.

“There is no time to work on weaknesses now. We’ve spent the last two years doing that. Now it’s about sharpening the skills. For example, my serves have been good and I need to keep working on that.”

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