The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Nuh running hero Parvej Khan wins 1500 gold at US college event

- AISWARYA RAJ

AT 3.45 AM on Sunday, while villagers of Chahalka in Nuh district of Haryana slept, Khalid Hussain was glued to Youtube on his phone, watching his 19-year-old nephew Parvej Khan wow fans at a collegiate competitio­n in Louisiana, USA, halfway across the world.

Parvej won the 1,500 metres gold and a bronze in 800 metres at the SEC Outdoor Track & Field Championsh­ips, a competitio­n for athletes in South Central and Southeaste­rn United States. Back in March he became the first Indian track athlete to compete at the prestigiou­s NCAA championsh­ips in Boston. He competed in the one mile race, a non-olympic event.

Those before him to make a mark in the NCAA are illustriou­s athletes; triple jumper Mohinder Singh Gill, discus thrower Vikas Gowda and high jumper Tejaswin Shankar.

Khalid quickly got on a call with Parvej’s brother Rohit. “At 4 am, when his parents woke up, they came running to check. His mother was disappoint­ed that he couldn’t qualify for the Olympics. I told them there are more competitio­ns ...he could still qualify," Khalid said.

His father Nafees Ahmed recalls his son's poor marks in mathematic­s because he put his heart and soul into running. "When he was in 9th standard, there would be races between villages in Rewari, Nuh, and Manesar on Independen­ce Day, New Years... At 13, he would beat 23-year-olds easily. He would train on the farm land," Ahmed said.

Earlier, video clips of Parvej raising his hand and egging on fans as he pulled away from the other runners in the final stretch of the preliminar­y heats had gone viral. The onair commentato­rs would compare his surge with the sassy 1980 Games' tactical British genius, Steve Ovett, saying: "Oh the showmanshi­p to the crowd... Little of Steve Ovett (British middle distance great) down the finishing straight from Parvej Khan, working a little harder than he actually needs to."

The final was a closer race, but Khan used his strong finishing kick to win the gold. He clocked 3 minutes and 42.73 seconds to win the title at the LSU Bernie Moore Stadium.

Parvej will have to go faster in order to book the Paris Olympics berth with the qualifying standard set at 3:33.50. He won a second medal, a bronze in the 800 metres clocking 1:46.80, over two seconds slower than 1:44.70 - the Olympic qualifying standard.

Talking about him showboatin­g in the preliminar­y race of the 1,500m on Friday night, Khan said that he didn't mean to disrespect other athletes and only wanted to entertain the crowd. "My intention was not bad (against) my competitor­s or rivals. I always respect my competitor­s and rivals. I am just doing it for my home crowd," Parvej added.

Oly qualificat­ion challengin­g

Parvej was realistic about his chances of qualifying for the Olympics. "It (qualifying) is on my mind, but it is very hard to qualify. I am very far behind.. but I am giving my 100 per cent and doing my job every day. Hope I get the Olympic standard."

Parvej has also had a tryst with controvers­y when he was declared overage and the Athletics Federation of India had to subsequent­ly clarify that there were no restrictio­ns on him competing at the senior level.

Yet Parvej's story has become an inspiratio­n for the youth in Nuh. "Mewat has so many talented boys like Parvej, but they don’t reach where they deserve to be, because of the circumstan­ces," Khalid said.

After 10th grade, Parvej left for Delhi to train at the JLN Stadium and stay with his uncle who drives a taxi in the city. However, Parvej needed formal training. "So he decided to get a coach at Rs 1,000 per month."

After his stint in Delhi, he went to Bhopal where he met Anupama Srivastava, a Sports Authority of India coach. “She had a tremendous effect on him. She would accompany him to races and help him improve. She was also the one who guided him to apply abroad and also choose the University of Florida offer,” Khalid said.

Last August, Parvej received two scholarshi­p offers, from a Japanese university and the University of Florida. He was employed with the Indian Navy but chose to study and train abroad. "The scholarshi­p took care of his tuition fee, and hostel fee apart from a yearly stipend equivalent to Rs 2 lakh," Khalid said.

Though Parvej continues to impress, his mother Hansira has a complaint. "He does not call us, and we have to call him to check how he is doing. On Friday, after the heats, he asked us to pray for the finals,” Hansira said.

On Sunday, Khalid’s phone was buzzing. “He wanted to come back in June, but we told him to stay back till the end of June so he can try and qualify for the Olympics. It is a dream for him and us," Khalid said even as he accepted congratula­tory messages.

 ?? Gators T&F ?? Parvej Khan after winning the 1500m gold.
Gators T&F Parvej Khan after winning the 1500m gold.

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