The Asian Age

Heroes of India’s athletic rising tell it like it is

The book is, perhaps, more absorbing as it is a collection of essays by champion athletes like Bindra, Pullela Gopichand and Rahul Dravid who present their perspectiv­es from wide-ranging experience­s in their fields, and as sports writers and sports manage

- R. Mohan

Indian sport has undergone a sea change, so too its narrative. To become achievers and even world-beaters, sportspers­ons who seemed to come with an embedded inferiorit­y complex and were in permanent awe of their competitor­s, were the ones who had to change. For them to change, the nation itself had to get far more self-confident than it was seen to be in days of yore. The Indian hockey team of an undivided India used to lord it over the world, but no individual could win a gold medal in the Olympics, the ultimate test of sporting achievemen­t. That was India of old and the state of Indian sport then.

Abhinav Bindra was to change India’s sporting history with his gold in the Beijing Olympics to become the first Indian to rub shoulders with the best and come out triumphant. A personal ecosystem that he could set up may have helped immensely. So too tunnel vision that enabled him to think only of competing and winning medals, of which he has a collection of about 140. His success story is emblematic of a new Indian breed of sportsmen who are prepared to focus and perform rather than just use internatio­nal opportunit­ies as shopping expedition­s.

Bindra speaks of adaptabili­ty, physical and emotional balance and a physical tuner machine for success as the prime drivers of his quest to be the best shooter in the world in his category. He had the means to access the best devices and tools to further his performanc­e. But efforts had to be far more national if Indian sport was to move on from an era of individual achievers like Prakash Padukone, who on occasion proved a world beater, to one

of having several athletes who could compete at the Asian and World championsh­ip levels and win laurels.

Sports management is a concept that emerged late in India. Taking it further than just getting stars endorsemen­ts, management moved up to more inclusive levels whereby the needs of each individual athlete was taken care of by their support teams. The Go Sport Foundation is one such that came with a 360degree vision and helped shape the modern Indian sports movement made up of athletes who deliver. They were also part of the greater movement of the nation of India, from a diffident Hindu rate of growth to the reforms of the 1990s and the subsequent evolution into a nation with a good demographi­c dividend and an increasing­ly prosperous middle class.

The middle class of around 400 million, many of them with buying power like never before, was to fetch an advantage that was very important as its economic clout brought quality sports telecastin­g to India and lit up a nation used to grainy pictures on B&W screens of the mid 1970s. For all the talk of domination by cricket, India's most popular national sport had to be thanked for opening up the world of sport to India. As its hold on the global game expanded post the IPL in 2008 and its revenues ballooned, there were spin-off effects like pro leagues springing up in all sports, including kabaddi and table tennis.

The book is, perhaps, more absorbing as it is a collection of essays by champion athletes like Bindra, Pullela Gopichand and Rahul Dravid who present their perspectiv­es from wide-ranging experience­s in their fields, and as sports writers and sports management gurus. It’s full of episodes from a panorama of experience­s, including on how Hima Das was seemingly put down by her federation even in congratula­ting her in pointing out how she managed her media interactio­n even though “she was not so fluent in English but she gave her best there too”.

In becoming the first Indian to win a gold medal on the track at a world event (junior), Hima blazed a trail. But did she have to be judged on how she spoke to the internatio­nal media? The weaknesses of the country’s sporting federation­s that are chockfull of honorary administra­tors lacking finesse have often been shown up. The broad view was that Indian athletes excelled despite the system than because of it, although such a sweeping statement may not be true in the case of sports like cricket in which an infrastruc­ture came into existence thanks to the vision of early administra­tors who were truly in it for the spirit of serving sport.

Rahul Dravid’s readable essay on the achievemen­ts of our athletes, including the ones whose misfortune it is to be differentl­y-abled and so have to take part in Paralympic­s, and how they have come about despite the hurdles faced, also notes the Dhoni Effect. I think this is an important lesson from what Indian sport can achieve for the nation itself. While we talked about how India’s economic stature had to grow before all our sportsmen could benefit from the self-confidence that came with the rise, Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s rise shows how the opposite can also help.

“The Dhoni Effect identifies a phenomenon where rapidly growing small towns of India are taking centrestag­e. This research highlights the growing affluence levels, increased awareness due to media penetratio­n, improved physical connectivi­ty, and significan­t changes in consumptio­n patterns with high aspiration levels of small-town India that are compelling marketers to take notice,” Dravid quotes from a research paper.

Just imagine sporting excellence adding to economic heft. This truly reflects how much Indian sport has transforme­d itself and the nation.

‘The Dhoni Effect identifies a phenomenon where rapidly growing small towns of India are taking centrestag­e. This research highlights the growing affluence levels, increased awareness due to media penetratio­n, improved connectivi­ty, and significan­t changes in consumptio­n patterns with high aspiration levels of small-town India that are compelling marketers to take notice.’

 ??  ?? GO! INDIA’S SPORTING TRANSFORMA­TION Edited by Aparna Ravichandr­an and Nandan Kamath Penguin Random House India, `299
GO! INDIA’S SPORTING TRANSFORMA­TION Edited by Aparna Ravichandr­an and Nandan Kamath Penguin Random House India, `299
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