VITAL YEAR FOR INDIA’S OLYMPIC HOPEFULS
PV SINDHU AMONG ATHLETES WHO HOPE TO GET OVER RIO DISAPPOINTMENT
MUMBAI: The year 2019 is critical for those hoping to make it to the Tokyo Olympics as sportspersons in various sports and disciplines will try to clinch qualification. Though the qualifying programme in some sports started last year and some will be settled in 2020, grabbing an early ticket to the Japanese capital will give participants more time to prepare and put their best foot forward at the Olympics.
India’s Mission 2020 will thus take shape this year.
With many young stars taking centre stage, stakeholders in Indian sports have set the target of winning medals in the double digit at Tokyo — such hopes were dashed in 2016 Rio where India won only a silver and bronze. A serious medal quest can be mounted only if enough athletes qualify, especially in sports where India has improved by leaps and bounds in recent times.
Shooting, which has provided India four medals (one gold, two silver, one bronze), will set the ball rolling with the ISSF World Cup (rifle/pistol) in New Delhi from February 20-28. It offers 16 quota places (qualifying spots for the country).
India have already clinched two berths in women’s 10m air rifle through Anjum Moudgil and Apurvi Chandela, who qualified through last year’s World Championships in South Korea. They are still in the race for the other 14 berths. There will be more chances to qualify through the other World Cup stages and continental championships.
The qualifying process has started in hockey with the FIH Pro League – India are not competing in the series -- while three Hockey Series Finals will be held between April and June. Continental championships for Europe, South America, Oceania and Africa will also be held this year. The Indian teams will be hoping to make it to the qualifying tournaments, to be held in November, through the Hockey Series Finals.
Qualifying in wrestling, weightlifting, athletics, boxing and badminton too will gather pace in the next few months.
HIGH HOPES
India’s medals tally has steadily grown since 1996 when Leander Paes became the first individual medal winner since KD Jadhav’s wrestling bronze at Helsinki in 1952. Paes’ bronze was India’s first medal since 1980 when the men’s hockey team won the last of its eight gold medals. Four years later, weightlifter Karnam Malleswari won India’s lone medal (bronze) in Sydney and Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore bagged silver in double trap in Athens 2004.
Abhinav Bindra created history by winning India’s only individual gold medal to date at Beijing in 2008 where boxer Vijender Singh and wrestler Sushil Kumar bagged bronze. London 2012 proved India’s most successful Olympics as they won six medals. Though there was no gold, Sushil Kumar’s silver made him the first Indian to win two individual Olympic medals.
However, Rio proved a disappointment as only PV Sindhu (badminton silver) and Sakshi Malik (wrestling bronze) won medals.
GROWING NUMBERS
In all, 1,115 participants have represented India in 24 editions, with India winning 28 medals (nine gold). These include the two sil- ver sprinter Norman Pritchard won at Paris in 1900. Though it is not a tally fit for a nation of 120 billion people, there has been some improvement. One reason is that an increasing number of athletes are qualifying and not going through solidarity/hardship/tripartite quotas.
The aspirations of Indian athletes in sports like shooting, badminton, boxing and wrestling have gone up as many more youngsters feel they can win a medal. The government has introduced the Target Olympic Podium (TOP) scheme to select potential medal winners and provide them all assistance to succeed in the 2020 Olympics.