Thus ends India's campaign at the Rio Olympics 2016 with a solitary silver and a bronze medal. The trio of girls - Sindhu, Sakshi and Dipa have given the country a lot to rejoice through their superlative performances. Against the odds, they proved their mettle and showed that they could compete against the World's best and made India really proud. Srikanth's almost near attempt at giant slaying the all time great Lin Dan was phenomenal. Lalita Babbar's achievements were heartwarming and so were a few others. Pullela Gopichand was the true Dronacharya propelling 2 of his proteges Saina and Sindhu to back to back bronze and silver medals in London and Rio respectively. Considering there has been just 5 Indian woman who have won medals in the 120 year history of the Olympic games puts this achievements come to light all the more being the man instrumental behind both medals (man or woman) obtained in Badminton.
The moments of joy cannot however be looked at in isolation without touching upon the disappointments and which were plenty. Shooting which has been a much sought after medal winning sport fizzled off failing to seize opportunities. Sania and Bopanna should have surely won a tennis medal and it was heartbreaking to see the way they slipped in the semifinal despite being well in control. And not showing up in the bronze play-off accentuated it further. The Paes-Bopanna spat was ugly and it compounded with them getting knocked out in the first round. Hockey, the sport which India still rules by a country mile taking history into context getting dumped out in quarters was hard to take. Reaching this stage itself was being seen as a shot in the arm looking at previous performances but being a country who has been the greatest ever in this sport with a glorious haul of 8 golds,1 silver and 2 bronze, we are just chasing lost glory and falling short every time. The treatment meted out to Narsingh Yadav, a strong Olympic hope was outrageous and the flat showing in Wrestling was like the final nail in the coffin.
This was our largest contingent ever with over 100 participants and coming back with just 2 medals as opposed to London's 6 surely indicates we have gone retrograde. The medals and near medal feats came from unfancied stars which was a silver lining but there is no hiding the fact that on a panoptic view, this has been a rather low key performance by India barring a few who salvaged pride ensuring to keep the flag waving high.
This Rio performance cannot in anyway be undermined as an alibi but this needs to be taken as a cue and things need to be set right at the core grass root level. Also by providing better facilities and infrastructure and harnessing a greater sporting culture, India should hopefully be coming back with a much richer tally at Tokyo 2020.
The moments of joy cannot however be looked at in isolation without touching upon the disappointments and which were plenty. Shooting which has been a much sought after medal winning sport fizzled off failing to seize opportunities. Sania and Bopanna should have surely won a tennis medal and it was heartbreaking to see the way they slipped in the semifinal despite being well in control. And not showing up in the bronze play-off accentuated it further. The Paes-Bopanna spat was ugly and it compounded with them getting knocked out in the first round. Hockey, the sport which India still rules by a country mile taking history into context getting dumped out in quarters was hard to take. Reaching this stage itself was being seen as a shot in the arm looking at previous performances but being a country who has been the greatest ever in this sport with a glorious haul of 8 golds,1 silver and 2 bronze, we are just chasing lost glory and falling short every time. The treatment meted out to Narsingh Yadav, a strong Olympic hope was outrageous and the flat showing in Wrestling was like the final nail in the coffin.
This was our largest contingent ever with over 100 participants and coming back with just 2 medals as opposed to London's 6 surely indicates we have gone retrograde. The medals and near medal feats came from unfancied stars which was a silver lining but there is no hiding the fact that on a panoptic view, this has been a rather low key performance by India barring a few who salvaged pride ensuring to keep the flag waving high.
This Rio performance cannot in anyway be undermined as an alibi but this needs to be taken as a cue and things need to be set right at the core grass root level. Also by providing better facilities and infrastructure and harnessing a greater sporting culture, India should hopefully be coming back with a much richer tally at Tokyo 2020.
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