Showing posts with label Win. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Win. Show all posts

India and the Olympics

 India was never a serious contender at the Olympics for many years, except in Hockey. In fact, Sharad Joshi, a poet and humorist, had an act called Olympics, where he described Olympics as an event where Indian teams go, lose and get back. This was satire, but not too far off the mark. That was in the seventies or eighties.

Fortunately, we have a resurgent India, and we believe we can win. Some of our athletes have turned in performances that were world-class. Some won and some did not, but it's important that many came close, and some did win. I remember meeting P.T. Usha at Calicut, who had lost out on a medal by a fraction of a second. She started an academy for athletes, to train them for track and field events. 

The government also has got its act together, and for many events, various official organisations now offer professional coaching or training, to prepare selected competitors over a few years. Mental preparation may also be a part of it. Sindhu produced two medals after many years of being at it, and ups and downs. 

The self-belief is a major part of it, I think. All the best to the likes of Aditi Ashok (golfer who came fourth, but was second till day 3), Neeraj Chopra (Gold in Javelin), and all others who showed the way, and supported them. It can be done!

World Cup- Cricket, I Mean

Today is the anniversary of the first (Prudential) World cup win by India. Kapil Dev was the unlikely guy holding the cup instead of the West Indies or England captains. And what a series of matches it was!

I remember the thrill of watching some of them, the final included, on a TV set (UPTRON, for the brand-conscious), in our common room at the IIMB hostel. Some of the earlier matches I heard on radio because I was travelling for my summer internship with WIDIA at the time. I remember a lot of people played well in a team effort through the series. Roger Binny, Mohinder Amarnath, Sandeep Patil and Kapil himself being some of them.

The final was low-scoring. India put just 183 or so on the board. Then, Balwinder Singh Sandhu created magic by clean-bowling Gordon Greenidge with a beauty that swung onto the stumps. That started the fall in the finals. Kapil had a spectacular catch to get Richards. That was the final nail in the coffin for the West Indians. And the (East) Indians triumphed in style.

Places I Have Visited - A to Z

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