Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

On comeback, Chopra betters national record

- Avishek Roy avishek.roy@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: It was one of the most anticipate­d returns of an Indian athlete before the Tokyo Olympics and javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra did not disappoint. Considered India’s best medal prospect in athletics in Tokyo, Chopra sizzled on comeback after 14 months with a new national record of 88.07m in the Indian Grand Prix 3 at the National Institute of Sports, Patiala, on Friday.

Chopra, who has already qualified for Tokyo, bettered his own national mark of 88.06m, achieved at the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta. “I was targeting a throw above 85m since it was my first competitio­n after more than a year. But any improvemen­t, even by a centimetre, is always good. It will give a lot of confidence not only to me but everyone who has been working with me—the coaches, support staff. I felt good, the body was responding well,” said the 23-year-old.

The record came despite a strong crosswind that made it difficult for Chopra and the rest of the field to control the trajectory of the javelin. But even then three breached 80m—a first in a javelin event in India. Sahil Silwal, 20, set the tone with a personal best of 80.65m in his first throw; Chopra began with 83.03m and then registered two foul throws as he seemed to get off balance trying to put in more power. The fourth throw was 83.36m. A change of javelin did the trick for Neeraj.

“I changed from Nemeth javelin, which I prefer, to Nordic and it paid off. It is good for windy conditions. The fifth throw was technicall­y very good. I could not feel the effort at all. It went so well. I was thinking it was 85 but the release was good and it turned out to be the best,” he said. In his last attempt he recorded 82.24m.

Shivpal Singh, who has also qualified for Tokyo, took second place with a throw of 81.63m while Sahil finished third (80.65). Chopra has been working on his technique under biomechani­cs expert Klaus Bartonietz. “My focus was more on release. If you see my throws at the Asian Games, they were going towards the left, close to landing out of the sector. I have worked on throwing it straighter. I have also worked on my strength at the recent Bhubaneswa­r camp,” he said.

Above everything, Chopra has shown great mental reserve to return from long stretches of inaction each time he was sidelined. First it was an elbow injury that required surgery on his throwing arm, which kept him out of action for 14 months after his win at the 2018 Asian Games. The entire 2019 went in the tough recovery phase as he prepared to launch himself for the Tokyo Olympics qualificat­ion, which he did in style. Then came another long period of no competitio­n because of the pandemic. Now, all he wants is to compete against the world’s top throwers—johannes Vetter, Rio Olympics gold medallist Thomas Rohler, Anderson Peters, Magnus Kirt, Andreas Hofmann.

Hima runs 100m alone

It was bizarre to see Hima Das running the 100m alone. Das clocked a personal best of 11.67secs. There were only two entries for the event, but Amrit Kaur from Punjab did not start, leaving Hima to run her own race. Dutee Chand competed in the first two GPS but skipped this. The men’s and women’s 5000m and women’s 3000m steeplecha­se also had two entries each. Many events saw very few entries which defied logic as athletes are looking to qualify for Tokyo. AFI president Adille J Sumariwall­a said: “Since they are starting after a long gap, the coaches are trying them out in different events. It is a build up towards Federation Cup.”

 ?? AFI ?? Javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra at the Indian Grand Prix 3 in Patiala on Friday.
AFI Javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra at the Indian Grand Prix 3 in Patiala on Friday.

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