The Asian Age

120 athletes carry the hopes of a billion- plus nation to Rio

INDIA’S LARGEST- EVER CONTINGENT FOR THE OLYMPICS SETS OFF. AND WE LOOK AT EXPECTATIO­NS, HISTORY, PERFORMANC­ES AND THE GAMES THEMSELVES

- HARPREET KAUR LAMBA

Ahundred plus Indian athletes at Rio. What is special about this statistic as India and the world set their sights on the biggest sporting spectacle, the Olympic Games in Rio, in a few days from now? Is it because India are sending their largest- ever contingent for the Olympic Games, or is it the hopes of a billion plus nation that those athletes would carry with them, in their quest for Olympic glory? It often takes a moment of brilliance to spark a billion dreams, and India found its eight years ago in Beijing when Abhinav Bindra shot the perfect 10s for a gold in the 10 metre air rifle event to lift the gloom and despair of a 108- year history, that boasted of eight hockey golds but none in an individual sport ever. His gold shone bright, and with it fuelled the belief of many others. In fact, one can further look back when another shooter, Rajyavardh­an Singh Rathore, had fetched a silver — India’s only medal at the 2004 Athens Games — going one better than weightlift­er Karnam Malleswari and tennis star Leander Paes’ bronze efforts at the 2000 Sydney Games and 1996 Atlanta, respective­ly.

From only one medal at every Olympics in the last two decades, India jumped to six — two silver and four bronze — in 2012, which was still a poor return for the 83 athletes who took part in the London Games.

But for a nation that had just 20 medals to show before the London Games — that took the tally to 26 ( nine gold, six silver, 11 bronze) — from its Olympic journey that began in 1900, it was a case of the glass being half full. In just a few days from now, India’s athletes will begin their search for medals again, this time with more self- belief, better government support and funding, greater private sector interest and its biggest ever contingent. Will they go better than the count in 2012 or will there be a gold medal among those? It’s hard to say. But the growing number of participan­ts and recent strong results at the internatio­nal level underline that the country and its athletes are slowly moving forward. Today, they compete to win and not just to participat­e. But let us also be realistic here. A 100- strong contingent that will walk behind flagbearer Bindra at the opening ceremony on August 5 in no way guarantees even a dozen medals. When compared to power houses USA, Russia, Great Britain and China, who finish with close to 100 medals at every Games, India are still finding their feet at the biggest Games. But a change in attitude and hunger cannot be missed. Also, a look at India’s participan­ts paints an intriguing picture and gives an insight as to why the nation has never been a true sporting power. The one common factor among many — if not most — of Rio- bound athletes is that they did not know what Olympics were when they started out in their careers. Take the case of shooters Gurpreet Singh and Chain Singh. Funnily enough, people in their villages still think that they either shoot for a Bollywood movie or fight the enemy on the border. This, after the duo fetched medals at the Asian and the Commonweal­th Games. Shooting as a sport is still an alien concept in the farflung villages of Punjab and Jammu & Kashmir, their home states. Says Chain ,“I belong to the Doda district of J& K and grew up with the sounds of gunshots. But shooting is unthinkabl­e as a sport there. When I shoot, they think I am fighting the enemy.” It is a barrier that many of them would look to break through their guns, sticks and racquets in the coming three weeks.

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