The Asian Age

| THE ATHLETES YOU NEED TO WATCH OUT FOR

The Olympics are all about individual­s, although the medals table helps us assess a nation’s performanc­e. T. N. Raghu profiles a few stars who could take Rio by storm

-

ook out for this 19- yearold with an infectious smile. She has all the tools to set the gymnastics arena on fire. Even before her Olympic debut, Biles has secured her place as one of the best in the sport’s history. But she needs the Olympic seal of approval to cement her greatness. Biles is the first American to win 10 titles at the Worlds. The record haul includes three straight allround crowns, a feat no gymnast can boast of. The Ohio native is a sure- fire gold contender in floor, beam, vault and all- round in addition to the team event. Biles, whose ebullience is certain to win over the Olympic audience, has plans to use music from the film, Rio, in the floor exercise with a few samba steps to boot.

GSIMONE BILES ( Gymnast, USA) MO FARAH ( Athletics, Great Britain) reat champions have a knack for raising their game when the pressure to perform is at its zenith. Farah, with his famous kick on the home stretch intact, did the 5,000m and 10,000m double under the glare of the spotlight at home in London 2012. Two more golds in Rio will enshrine him in the pantheon of distance runners. Lasse Viren of Finland did accomplish the feat in 1972 and 1976 but he had always been under a doping cloud. Farah, who was born in Somalia before he emigrated to Britain as a child, can really thrill

Rio. KATIE LEDECKY ( Swimmer, USA) er slew of records suggests that she is born to swim. After nailing the 800m freestyle Olympic gold as a 15- year- old in 2012, Ledecky is on course for three individual medals in freestyle — 200m, 400m and 800m — at Rio. At the 2015 World Championsh­ips, Katie won gold in 200m, 400m and 800m without much sweat in addition to the non- Olympic event of 1,500m. With the American at the peak of her powers, the competitio­n in longer freestyle events would essentiall­y be for silver and bronze medals. Even Michael Phelps is in awe of Ledecky’s prowess in water. NEYMAR ( Footballer, Brazil)

If there is one Olympic participan­t who would be more popular than Jamaican sprint sensation Usain Bolt in Rio, it should be Neymar. An unquestion­able star at football’s spiritual home, Neymar has unfinished business. After the humiliatio­n of the 1- 7 rout against Germany in the semifinal of the 2014 World Cup, Brazil need the soothing balm of Olympic glory. Neymar, who escaped the German thrashing as a result of a back injury, has the onerous task of bringing smiles back on the faces of Brazilian fans. Also, Brazil, five- time world champions, have never won the Olympic gold and there isn’t a better place than the Maracana to end the drought. In team games, no gold would be more precious to Brazil.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India