Hindustan Times (East UP)

Lifter Chanu gets India off the mark

The 26-year-old from Manipur lifts 87kg in snatch and 115kg in clean and jerk to bag silver in the 49kg weight category

- Sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com PTI

TOKYO: A confident smile never leaving her face, Mirabai Chanu ended India’s over two-decade long wait for a weightlift­ing medal at the Olympics, clinching the 49kg category silver medal five years after leaving the same platform in tears following a disastrous debut.

With her historic triumph, she ensured that India was second on the medals tally for a brief while, a feat that has never been achieved before by the country. It was also the first time that India managed to win a medal on the opening day competitio­ns.

The diminutive iron lady from Manipur lifted a total of 202kg (87kg+115kg) to better Karnam Malleswari’s bronze in the 2000 Sydney Olympics. With this, she exorcised the ghosts of the 2016 Games where she had failed to log a single legitimate lift, leaving her shattered.

“I am very happy, I have been dreaming of this for the past five years. I am very proud of myself right now. I did try for gold but even silver is a great achievemen­t for me,” Chanu told reporters after her career-defining triumph for which she had been training in the US for past few months.

The 2016 experience was a watershed in her career and Chanu had spoken about how confused she had felt during her debut at the biggest stage. There was none of those nerves to be seen on Saturday, just a very composed and focussed athlete who knew she was destined for the podium.

“I am very happy to win the first medal for India at these Games. I don’t just belong to Manipur, I belong to the whole country,” she said in response to a query on what it meant for her as a Manipuri. “I would like to thank my coach Vijay Sharma andthe support staff for their continuous hard work, motivation and training,” she added.

Her smile shone the brightest during the entire performanc­e on Saturday but also hard to miss were the Olympic rings’ shaped earrings that she was sporting, which were a gift from her mother.

“I would like to thank my family, especially my mother for a lot of sacrifices and believing in me,” she said. The gold went to China’s Hou Zhihui with an effort of 210kg (94kg+116kg), who created Olympic records in all three categories (snatch, clean and jerk and Total). Aisah Windy Cantika of Indonesia took home the bronze with an effort of 194kg (84kg+110kg).

Considered her weakness in the run up to the marquee event, Chanu attempted 84kg in her first snatch attempt. The Manipuri took her time and cleanly heaved the barbell.

She lifted 87kg in her next attempt and raised the weight to 89kg, which was 1kg more than her personal best of 88kg that she had lifted at the national championsh­ip last year. However, she was unable to better her personal best and settled for 87kg in the snatch event only behind leader Zhihui, who created a new Olympic record with an effort of 94kg.

The Chinese lifter also holds the world mark (96kg) in the category. In the clean and jerk, world record holder Chanu lifted 110kg and 115kg in the first two attempts. However, she was unable to raise 117kg in her final attempt, which would have been an Olympic record but it was enough to fetch her a medal and open India’s account.

The diminutive Mannipuri broke down after realising that she has secured a medal and hugged head coach Vijay Sharma in jubiliatio­n. She later broke into a punjabi bhangra too to celebrate the historic podium finish. Delighted by her achievemen­t, not even a face mask could hide Chanu’s smile that spread ear to ear at the medal ceremony, where there was a bit of confusion among the winners.

As per Covid-19 protocols laid out for the Games, the winners were supposed to be social distanced and not pose for a group photograph as per the Games protocols.

But the three medallists congratula­ted each other and came together to get pictures clicked before being asked to distance by an official. An Olympic medal was long overdue for the Indian, who has proved her mettle as a fighter in the internatio­nal arena time and again.

Her cabinet includes a coveted world championsh­ip gold medal, two Commonweal­th Games medals—silver in 2014 and gold in 2018—and an Asian Championsh­ip bronze.

Lucky earrings

NEW DELHI: A historic silver medal and a radiant smile were not the only eye-catching things about Mirabai Chanu on Saturday in Tokyo, her gold earrings shaped like Olympic rings were as striking, a gift from her mother who sold her own jewellery for them five years ago.

The hope was that the earrings would bring her “good luck”. It didn’t happen in the Rio 2016 Games but Chanu made the little sacrifice count in Tokyo this morning and Saikhom Ongbi Tombi Leima has struggled to stop her tears from flowing ever since.

“I saw the earrings on TV, I gave them to her in 2016 before the (Rio) Olympics. I have made it for her from the gold pieces and savings I have so that it brings luck and success,” Leima told PTI from her home in Manipur where a considerab­le number of relatives, friends and wellwisher­s gathered to watch Chanu script history in Tokyo.

“I was in tears seeing it and also during the moment she won the medal. Her father (Saikhom Kriti Meitei) was also in tears. Tears of joy. All her hard work has led to the success.”

The Chanu household at Nongpok Kakching village, around 25km from state capital Imphal, visitors had been trickling in since Friday despite the curfew caused in part by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Chanu has six siblings, three sisters and two brothers.

“She had told us she will win gold or at least a medal. So, everybody was waiting for it to happen. Many of our relatives who lived far came last evening. They stayed overnight with us,” Chanu’s mother said.

 ??  ?? India's Mirabai Chanu in action during the women’s 49kg weightlift­ing event at the Tokyo Olympic Games in Tokyo on Saturday.
India's Mirabai Chanu in action during the women’s 49kg weightlift­ing event at the Tokyo Olympic Games in Tokyo on Saturday.

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