Sportstar

BOXERS STIR PARIS HOPESWITH PROMISING SHOW

With the quality of women boxers we have, I am sure we will do well and can even win an Olympic gold.

- Astoldtoy.b.sarangi SARITA DEVI Clear path:

The year 2023 was very good for the Indian boxers, especially the women. We have qualified in some weights and are yet to qualify in others. For those who have qualified, there must be some areas of improvemen­t in the run-up to the Paris Olympics. Those who aspire to qualify must work harder with the primary focus of booking berths for Paris.

We began the year well by winning four world titles at home. Nikhat Zareen (50kg) has been in very good form, and Lovlina Borgohain (75kg) has also done well. Both have qualified for the Olympics, and the pressure of booking a quota place will not be there for them while preparing for Paris 2024. It is the same for Parveen Hooda (57kg) and Preeti Pawar (54kg).

Apart from rectifying their mistakes, qualified boxers must focus on their fitness, gaining strength, and hitting with more power. With the quality of women boxers we have, I am sure we will do well and can even win an Olympic gold.

The male boxers have performed reasonably well but haven't been as successful as the women. They need to put in more effort and strive to earn some quota places. They have won three bronze medals in the World Championsh­ips, indicating their potential to qualify for the Olympics. Mohammad Hussamuddi­n (57kg), with whom I have trained in the past, is a really good and experience­d boxer, and if he can recover from his injury in time and get back to form, he is a bright prospect.

When you are injured, you need good support. I remember competing in the 2014 Commonweal­th Games with a wrist injury. Thanks to a physio's assistance, I reached the 60kg final. Subsequent­ly, with support from the Olympic Gold Quest, I returned to boxing after undergoing wrist surgery. So, Hussamuddi­n can also make a comeback. Other boxers, such as Deepak Bhoria (51kg) and Nishant Dev (71kg) can gain confidence from their Worlds medals while trying to qualify for Paris 2024. Other good boxers can do it too. Both boys and girls need extreme determinat­ion to achieve success. With government and corporate support, they should only focus on training and giving their best.

Leave it to a senior statesman to remind us that Indian cricket can not only be a thing of beauty but also a thrill-a-minute heartbreak. Indian fans needed some relief from the team’s oft-criticised inability to go harder and faster in the early exchanges during the Powerplay, and that’s exactly what captain Rohit Sharma offered as the curtains fell on 2023.

In October, at the ODI World Cup in India, there was the 36-year-old Rohit, bullying the opposition new-ball attacks with aggressive strokeplay and outsize swagger. Meanwhile, his teammate and bona fide great, Virat Kohli, hit a record 50th ODI century, surpassing his idol Sachin Tendulkar, who watched on in the crowd during India’s World Cup semifinal win against New Zealand.

As the Men in Blue barged into the final, the fans wondered, with zealous optimism at times, if this was the year India ended the decade-long wait for an ICC trophy. In Rohit and Kohli, there were two men, aided by a skilled and buoyant XI, determined to bring to life that dream.

But we are limited creatures, despite our pretension­s to the contrary. Even as an entire nation resisted the temptation to acknowledg­e the existence of a possibilit­y that obediently contradict­ed their experience­s of it, Pat Cummins and Australia gave a rude awakening, “silencing a big crowd,” en route to a record sixth World Cup title by beating India in the final.

So, as the calendar flips to 2024, India’s pursuit of elusive ICC silverware is back to square one. Rohit’s men will have yet another crack in four months at the 2024 T20 World Cup, which will be jointly hosted by the USA and West Indies, with the final to be staged in Barbados on June 29.

The West Indies and USA earned automatic entry by being hosts, with the latter to play in the tournament for the first time. England, Pakistan, New Zealand, India, Australia, South Africa, the Netherland­s, and Sri Lanka secured their places by finishing in the top eight of the T20 World Cup in 2022.

Afghanista­n and Bangladesh, as the next best T20I teams in rankings, joined the roster, along with sides determined by regional qualifiers. Ireland and Scotland secured spots from the European section, while Papua New Guinea advanced from the East Asia-pacific Qualifier. Canada, set for their tournament debut, earned a spot through the Americas Qualifier. Nepal and Oman emerged as Asian qualifiers, and Namibia and Uganda completed the lineup by succeeding in the African Qualifier.

It seems likely that both Rohit and Kohli will be part of the 2024 World Cup after the duo was named in the squad for the Afghanista­n T20I series at home, ending their more than year-long absence from the shortest format.

This was also India’s last T20I series before the T20 World Cup in June, and ergo, a final chance to let the likes of Rinku Singh and Tilak Varma make their cases. However, the inclusion of Rohit and Virat could likely result in there being no room for the aforementi­oned youngsters.

The fact that India has failed to discover any fortune in T20 World Cups could be blamed both on a lack of adaptabili­ty to a super-attacking

strategy in T20 cricket and an apparent obduracy of the think tank when it comes to certain selection calls, but the one-step-forward, two-steps-back dance in the shortest format has been a feature of Indian cricket for a while. That being said, Rohit and Kohli are perhaps batting as well as they have ever batted in ODI cricket, and hopefully, they will carry that form to the Caribbean islands should they make the cut eventually.

Meanwhile, India Women will also bid for their maiden T20 World Cup trophy when the 2024 edition takes place in Bangladesh in September and October. India has many new players and a new coach in Amol Muzumdar, and while the England and Australia series at home were ideal preparatio­ns, the results were anything but. India lost the T20 series to England 1-2 at home, its sixth successive series defeat against the Three Lions in the format.

Harmanpree­t’s side was then humbled by Alyssa Healy’s Australia by a similar margin in a three-match T20I series.

That said, the emergence of the Women’s Premier League, the revival of the ‘A’ system, and a focus on the Under-19s have given the women’s T20 game a much-needed fillip. The fact that uncapped Indians, Kashvee Gautam and Vrinda Dinesh, attracted bids of Rs 2 crore (Gujarat Giants) and Rs 1.3 crore (UP Warriorz), respective­ly, at the WPL auction in Mumbai is a testament to the burgeoning talent pool in Indian women's cricket and an evolving but

robust talent identifica­tion programme. All this augurs well for India in the T20 World Cup year, the last edition before cricket makes its Olympic debut at Los Angeles 2028.

Returning to the men's side, India would hope to go all the way in the World Test Championsh­ip this time, having lost two back-to-back finals. On both occasions, it was India's batting that succumbed to probing spells of fast bowling. The Test team is in flux, but a new selection panel gives Rohit a chance for a makeover. He needs a more assertive and proactive approach, both on and off the field. Rohit needs to make tough calls if need be.

A change of guard is imminent. Ajinkya Rahane, who was vice captain on the West Indies tour in 2023, was dropped for the South Africa and England (first two) Tests, while Cheteshwar Pujara, India’s No. 3 for a long time, has not been picked in the squad since scoring only 14 and 27 in the World Test Championsh­ip final against Australia in June last year. If logic had the final say, India perhaps wouldn’t turn back to the duo, signalling the end of an era in more ways than one.

But again, when has sport been completely rational? So, to say the fans have had a final glimpse of their batting heroes would still be premature. Theirs will be big shoes to fill, and it is not like the younger players have knocked the door down for batting numbers 3 and 5. But they do deserve a longer rope, keeping in mind the five Tests against England at home, followed by the five away Tests in Australia towards the end of 2024.

While captain Rohit and coach Rahul Dravid’s tone pretty much conveys that the next few months may not be about set patterns but about trying out a few new players, it is becoming increasing­ly clear that 2024 will be the year a line is drawn in the sand. The time to put the wheels of change into motion is now.

 ?? R. V. MOORTHY ?? Lovlina Borgohain (75kg) has performed admirably, securing an Olympic qualificat­ion and relieving the pressure of earning a quota place in the build-up to Paris 2024.
R. V. MOORTHY Lovlina Borgohain (75kg) has performed admirably, securing an Olympic qualificat­ion and relieving the pressure of earning a quota place in the build-up to Paris 2024.
 ?? ??
 ?? K. R. DEEPAK ?? A new hope: It seems likely that both Rohit and Kohli will be part of the 2024 World Cup after the duo was named in the squad for the Afghanista­n T20I series at home, ending their more than year-long absence from the shortest format.
K. R. DEEPAK A new hope: It seems likely that both Rohit and Kohli will be part of the 2024 World Cup after the duo was named in the squad for the Afghanista­n T20I series at home, ending their more than year-long absence from the shortest format.
 ?? PTI ?? Change is the name of the game:
The emergence of the Women’s Premier League, the revival of the ‘A’ system, and a focus on the Under-19s have given the women’s T20 game a much-needed fillip.
PTI Change is the name of the game: The emergence of the Women’s Premier League, the revival of the ‘A’ system, and a focus on the Under-19s have given the women’s T20 game a much-needed fillip.

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