The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

At Oly selection trials, rookie gives world champ a scare

- NAMIT KUMAR Special arrangemen­t

UNTIL HE joined the Army, Sandeep Singh hadn't considered shooting as a career choice. For nearly two years, between 2021 and 2023, he barely even practised. And has competed in just one internatio­nal event.

Now, the young rifle shooter finds himself in the mix for a Paris Olympics berth. And it could very likely come at the expense for a former world champion, world number 1 and world record holder shooter, Rudrankksh Patil.

As the first half of the Indian pistol/rifle shooting trials for the Paris Olympics drew to a close on Saturday, the men's 10m air rifle category is seeing an intriguing battle. But few would have imagined that a shooter with little internatio­nal experience would push other more establishe­d stars, who won Olympic quotas, for a spot in Paris-bound team.

Patilhasbe­enunexpect­edlyupstag­edinthe first two of four trials in New Delhi this week. Tokyo Olympian Divyansh Panwar, Sri Karthik Sabari and Arjun Babuta finished top three in the final of the second trial on Saturday. But 28year-old Army shooter Sandeep's high qualificat­ionscoreso­f634.4and632.6(hefinished­on top in both qualificat­ion rounds) leave him in good stead to contend for an Olympic berth.

Averagesof­thebestthr­eeoutoffou­rqualifica­tion scores, with bonuses for podium finishes in the final and winning India the quota, will determine the two-member Indian contingent for each category.

Despite being less internatio­nally experience­d and well-drilled as some of his opponents, Sandeep is not afraid to admit he isn't lacking in belief at the moment. “There's a long way to go, but the confidence I have in my shootingat­themomenti­smakingmef­eellike, if I do make the Olympics, there is no reason I can't go there,” he says.

Born in Faridkot, Punjab, Sandeep picked up shooting when he was stationed with the army in Mhow, Madhya Pradesh, the site of the Army Marksmansh­ip Unit (AMU), where he wouldpract­iceatnight­afterhisdu­tyintheday.

His army background and support gave him the right tools to fine-tune his technique, he says, but it was only after he left and got exposure to the country's best shooters that he began vastly improving. “The exposure improved me a lot, I was training and competing with shooters who have represente­d India, and doing just as well as them,” he says.

Self-belief, according to Sandeep, has been key to his success as an athlete so far and has manifested itself in the lack of intimidati­on he has shown this week while competing with former Olympians and world champions for a spot to play in his sport's premier event.

After a slow rise, Sandeep had made the reserve team for Tokyo, but after he moved out of Mhow in 2021, a few years went by without much intense practice or competitio­n. He returned to his best in early 2023, representi­ng India at the World Cup in Rio - his only internatio­nal event that he participat­ed outside the RPO (ranking points only) series. But the lack of experience has not only seen him fall down the national pecking order but also limited his exposure to the finals of big-ticket shooting competitio­ns. That limitation showed in his lessthan-impressive showings in the finals of the trials after he topped qualificat­ion, finishing fifth and fourth respective­ly.

Even though it remains far from a foregone conclusion as the trial moves to Bhopal next month to finalise the Olympic spots, Sandeep's performanc­es despite those limitation­s not only shows the depth of the field of India's top shooters, but also how the selection process may affect its medal chances.

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