Deccan Chronicle

To hell and back, Sajan heaves a big sigh of relief

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Jakarta, Aug 22: Indian swimmer Sajan Prakash has been to hell and back at the Asian Games, competing in Jakarta while family members went missing in severe flooding in his home country.

The 24-year-old became the first swimmer to reach last weekend’s 200 metres butterfly final despite the knowledge that five relatives had not been found and his family home in Kerala had been destroyed by floodwater. Prakash finished outside the medals in fifth, but his prayers were answered after an uncle called to inform him his family members had survived the devastatin­g floods in the southern Indian state that have killed more than 350 people. “I had trouble sleeping, thinking about my family,” Prakash said.

“I hadn’t heard from them because they were cut off from the (phone) network and not able to contact us,” he added.

“I was very nervous but my uncle called to say they’re all safe and everything is alright back home.”

Prakash’s mother Shantymol, who is based in the neighbouri­ng state of Tamil Nadu, initially kept news of the disaster from her son so he could concentrat­e on his performanc­es at the regional Olympics. But after finding out about the floods from friends, Prakash had to put his anxiety to one side despite losing contact his family members, with no word from Kerala for three days.

“I knew that the rain was getting worse (in Kerala) when I arrived in Jakarta but I didn’t know it was this bad,” Prakash said after Wednesday’s 100m fly heats.

“But that’s what we train for — to swim under pressure. If I think about it, I will screw up here. And if I screw up here, both are screwed. Either way I can’t help, I just have to focus on what I have to do.”

After becoming the first Indian swimmer to reach an Asian Games final in more than 30 years, Prakash clocked a national record of one minutes, 57.75 seconds — a distant 3.22 seconds behind Japanese winner Daiya Seto. Prakash, who swam for India at the 2016 Rio Olympics, insisted he never thought of quitting the Asian Games. — AFP

I prepared for this (Asian Games) for a long time and I didn’t want to screw it up by leaving midway through

SAJAN PRAKASH,

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