Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Covid-19 claims Table Tennis giant

- N Ananthanar­ayanan and Rutvick Mehta TWITTER

NEW DELHI/MUMBAI: Former national table tennis champion Venugopal Chandrasek­har, whose career was cruelly nipped in its prime after a botched knee surgery that left him crippled and permanentl­y battling for health, died in Chennai on Wednesday due to Covid-related complicati­ons.

Chandra, as he was popularly known, was 63. He is survived by his wife and son. The Arjuna awardee was admitted to a Chennai hospital a week ago after testing positive and was on ventilator support after developing lung complicati­ons. Once hailed as a “glamour boy” of Indian sport, the Chennai icon was a three-time national champion and was riding the crest of his career—including a quarter-final appearance at the 1982 Commonweal­th Games in Brisbane before his world came crashing down in 1984.

That year, what should have been a simple knee procedure for a cartilage injury turned into a life-threatenin­g event at Chennai’s Apollo Hospital. The operation required general anesthesia, and its excess led to severe brain damage, leaving his mobility, speech and vision

V Chandrasek­har. heavily impaired. Chandra was left to battle for life, struggling to even do routine things. “There are times when I stumble on the footpath, and people have thought that I was drunk,” he wrote in his 2006 memoir “My Fight Back From Death’s Door”. It also led to a prolonged battle between the hospital and the player before the Supreme Court awarded monetary compensati­on. The court awarding over ₹15 lakh came almost a decade after the operation and five years into the lawsuit. But it was a path-breaking win by Chandra as it was unheard of that an individual in India could sue a hospital for negligence and win.

Following the court awarding damages, the hospital presented an apologetic anesthetis­t at a media conference attended by this reporter but argued that Chandrasek­har should have avoided petitionin­g the court and that such a verdict would only encourage “medico-legal cases in the country like in the US”.

Chandrasek­har fought through his severe physical problems and turned into a successful coach. He was director and head coach of the SDAT TT Academy in Chennai.

Indian TT legend Kamlesh Mehta said: “It was he who made topspin popular in India. He learned the skills at (former world champion and World No.1 Ichiro) Ogimura’s academy in Japan,” he told PTI. “I spoke to him the day he got admitted to the hospital (May 8). Who would have thought he would leave us all so soon.”

S Raman, Chennai-based former national champion, who also briefly trained with Chandrasek­har said: “He was coaching a lot of local players in Chennai. Coming from that era, his main goal was to produce national level players. Now with globalisat­ion, our generation, including mine, look at producing internatio­nal players, Olympic medalists,” Raman said. “He fought on the table and off it; with the system while he was a player, in the court rooms against the hospital, against coma. That’s a great virtue youngsters can learn from him as sportspers­ons.”

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