Gulf News

Olympic-size contrast between India and China

As Beijing invested in sports culture, India rested on its laurels after 1982 Asian Games

- BY SHASHI THAROOR | Special to Gulf News —Project Syndicate Shashi Tharoor, a former UN undersecre­tary-general and former Indian Minister of State for External Affairs and Minister of State for Human Resource Developmen­t, is an MP for the Indian National

The Tokyo Olympic Games are over, and the Japanese people and government have heaved a sigh of relief that the spectacle passed without a major Covid-19 outbreak in the athletes’ village or other disasters. Here in India, the celebratio­ns of the country’s first gold medal in the men’s javelin throw — and its best-ever medal performanc­e at a single Olympics — have not yet subsided. But how good, really, is our best?

A decade or so ago, many spoke of India and China in the same breath. The two countries were supposedly the new contenders for global eminence after centuries of Western ascendancy, the Oriental response to generation­s of Occidental economic success. Some even spoke of “Chindia,” as if they were joined at the hip in the internatio­nal imaginatio­n.

But anyone seeking confirmati­on that such twinning is, to put it mildly, out of place, need only look at the medal tally in Tokyo. China ranked a proud second, with 38 gold medals — one fewer than the United States — and 88 medals in total. Now scroll down, past Belarus, divided Georgia, the Bahamas, and even the breakaway province of Kosovo (whose independen­ce India does not recognise). There, in 48th place, sits India, with seven medals in all, one gold, two silver, and four bronze.

India has seen its once-legendary invincibil­ity in field hockey fade with the introducti­on of artificial turf, to the point where a bronze for the men’s team in Tokyo prompted great exhilarati­on.

Complacent India

In fact, this is not a surprise. Whereas China has systematic­ally strived for Olympic success since it re-entered global athletic competitio­n after years of isolation, India has remained complacent about its lack of sporting prowess. China lobbied for and won the right to host the Summer Olympics barely two decades after its return to the Games. But India rested on its laurels after hosting the 1982 Asian Games in Delhi, and is now seen as being further behind in the competitio­n to host the Olympics than it was four decades ago. In the run-up to the 2008 Beijing Games, China embarked on “Project 119,” a government programme devised specifical­ly to boost the country’s Olympic medal haul (the 119 refers to the number of golds awarded at the 2000 Sydney Games in such medal-laden sports as track and field, swimming, rowing, sailing, and canoeing and kayaking). Indians, by contrast, wonder if they will ever crack the magic ceiling of ten medals.

China, seeing the number of medals on offer in kayaking, decided to create a team that would master a sport hitherto unknown in the Middle Kingdom. But India has not even lobbied successful­ly for the inclusion in the Games of the few sports it does play well, such as kabaddi (a form of tag-team wrestling), polo, or cricket, which was played in the 1900 Olympics and never since.

Likewise, China has developed new strengths in other nontraditi­onal sports, like shooting, while maintainin­g its dominance in table tennis and badminton. India, by contrast, has seen its oncelegend­ary invincibil­ity in field hockey fade with the introducti­on of artificial turf, to the point where a bronze for the men’s team in Tokyo prompted great exhilarati­on. When it comes to sport, forget “Chindia” — the two countries barely belong in the same sentence.

What has happened at the Olympics speaks to a basic difference in the two countries’ systems. Put metaphoric­ally, it’s the creative chaos of all-singing, alldancing Bollywood versus the perfectly choreograp­hed precision of the 2008 Beijing opening ceremony.

Discipline­d approach

The Chinese approached the task of dominating the Olympics with top-down discipline. The objective was establishe­d, a programme to achieve it drawn up, the state’s considerab­le resources devoted to it, state-of-the-art technology acquired, and world-class coaches imported. India, by contrast, approached the Tokyo Olympics as it had every other, with its usual combinatio­n of amiable amateurism, bureaucrat­ic ineptitude, half-hearted experiment­ation, and shambolic organisati­on.

China’s budget for preparing its athletes for the Tokyo Games alone probably exceeded India’s expenditur­e on all Olympic training in the last 70 years. So, whereas India produces individual excellence despite the system’s limitation­s, individual success in China is a product of the system. Indians excel wherever individual talent is given free rein. The country has produced world-class computer scientists, mathematic­ians, biotech researcher­s, filmmakers, and novelists. But come up with a challenge that requires high levels of organisati­on, strict discipline, sophistica­ted equipment, systematic training, and elastic budgets, and Indians quail. Perhaps tellingly, the only Indians who have attained the title of world champion in recent years have been a billiards player and a chess grandmaste­r.

Smaller talent pool

In Tokyo, the much-favoured Indian shooters failed to win a single medal, owing to setbacks such as a malfunctio­ning trigger on a world champion’s pistol that could not be fixed quickly enough. The best women’s table tennis player, denied the advice of her trainer, snubbed the official Indian coach, leading to disciplina­ry action. Our female archer, ranked first in the world, failed to get past her qualifying round. India’s sporting talent pool is smaller than its large population suggests; in a country of existentia­l challenges and intense competitio­n for every opportunit­y, very few feel able or inclined to devote the time needed to master a sport. The system is not designed to unearth athletic talent, and many who have it lack the health, nutrition, sporting infrastruc­ture, and training resources required to make a global mark.

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