So near yet so far: Lakshya, skeet shooters fall short of historic medals
Lakshya Sen squandered a game's advantage to lose 21-13 16-21 11-21 in a 71-minute clash
PTI
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"I had my chances in the second set and could have definitely done better. But credit to him, he played a really good game," said Lakshya Sen. PHOTO: PTI
Paris/Chateauroux, 5 Aug
It was a day of near misses as
Lakshya Sen's steely resolve finally wilted in the high-pressure bronze
playoff, an unexpected skeet medal in shooting slipped away after a promising
start, while a podium hope in wrestling was left in tears, adding to India's
mounting heartbreaks in the Olympic Games.
Sen, hoping to become India's first
male shuttler to win an Olympic medal, was expected to come out trumps against
Malyasia's world no.7 Lee Zii Jia. But it was not meant to be as he squandered
a game's advantage to lose 21-13 16-21 11-21 in a 71-minute clash.
Around the time the 22-year-old
crumbled under pressure in Paris, some 300km away in Chateauroux's shooting
range, Maheshwari Chauhan and Anant Jeet Singh Naruka lost by a solitary point
to China in the skeet mixed team event, settling for the fourth spot. Maheshwari
and Naruka shot 43 to finish fourth behind China's Yiting Jiang and Jianlin Lyu
(44) in a thrilling match for the bronze medal.
It all started with a fired-up Sen,
who looked like an unstoppable force in the opening game. But then Lee became
an immovable force in the second game, going on a nine-point streak that
completely changed the complexion of the match.
"I had my chances in the
second set and could have definitely done better. But credit to him, he played
a really good game. I think at the moment I'm just not able to think
right," a crestfallen Sen said after the match. "I came well prepared
for this match as well. It has been quite a tough week overall. But yeah, the
fatigue kept on building. But I mean, I was ready to give my 100 per cent in
this match."
There was more agony in store for
India when grappler Nisha Dahiya was left sobbing in acute pain after she lost
her quarterfinal bout to North Korea's Pak Sol Gum 8-10 in the women's 68 kg
freestyle category. Leading 8-1 at one stage with just over 90 seconds left,
Nisha sustained a serious injury on her right hand, which left her in agonising
pain as she wept inconsolably.
Following a medical break, she
didn't have any strength left in her right hand and it became a cakewalk for
the North Korean, who showed her ruthless streak to get a leg-hold and nine
straight points.
With 10 seconds left, the scoreline
was 8-8 but the writing was on the wall as the Haryana woman surrendered in the
dying moments.
Women's TT team advances to quarters
It wasn't all doom and gloom though
with the women's table tennis team of Manika Batra, Sreeja Akula and Archana
Kamath beating higher-ranked Romania to enter the quarterfinals.
Leading 2-0, India saw Romania
fight back to draw level at 2-2 but in the decider, Manika delivered for her
side. Sreeja and Archana started the proceedings with a 11-9 12-10 11-7 win
over Adina Diaconu and Elizabeta Samara in a doubles match.
Manika made short work of
higher-ranked Bernadette Szocs in a 11-5 11-7 11-7 victory as India took a
comfortable 2-0 lead in the tie against their fourth-seeded opponents. India
are seeded 11th in the competition. In the second singles match however, things
did not go in India's favour as Sreeja went down 2-3 (11-8 4-11 11-7 6-11 8-11)
to European champion Samara after winning the first game.
Sreeja's defeat paved the way for a
face-off between Archana and Bernadette, in which the latter prevailed. Manika
then blanked Adina 3-0 (11-5 11-9 11-9) to seal the tie in India's favour.
India will be up against either the
USA or Germany in the quarter-finals.
Despite the underwhelming show on
Monday, India will have plenty to look forward on Tuesday.
Hockey team eyes first final since 1980
Having displayed nerves of steel to
be within touching distance of a second successive Olympic medal, the Indian
hockey team will fancy its chances against familiar foe and reigning world
champion Germany in the semifinal, hoping to better the bronze that it claimed
in the Tokyo edition.
India won last of their eight
Olympic gold medals way back in the 1980 Moscow Games. A semifinal win will
ensure at least a silver for India, which they last won in the 1960 Rome
edition.
Veteran goalkeeper PR Sreejesh,
playing his final international tournament, seems to have saved his best for
the last leg of his career and made save after save, including two in a penalty
shoot-out, to seal India's second consecutive Olympic semifinal spot against
Britain on Sunday.
The team will be without key
defender Amit Rohidas, who has been handed a one-match suspension after being red-carded
against Britain for a dangerous maneuver with his stick.
Neeraj Chopra begins campaign
A man of many firsts in Indian
athletics, Neeraj Chopra would be eyeing another piece of history with his
javelin when he takes aim at his second Olympics amid expectations of a golden
finish yet again.
His fabled consistency would be
tested after a season that has seen him battle a nagging adductor niggle. He
would begin his quest on Tuesday with the qualifications round from where the
Haryana lad is expected to make the finals on 8 August.
A top podium finish will make
Chopra only the fifth man in Olympics history to defend his title and the first
Indian to win two gold medals in an individual event in the multi-sporting
spectacle. Eric Lemming (Sweden; 1908 and 1912), Jonni Myyra (Finland; 1920 and
1924), Chopra's idol Jan Zelezny (Czech Republic; 1992, 1996 and 2000) and
Andreas Thorkildsen (Norway; 2004 and 2008) are the only ones to have defended
the men's javelin gold medals in the Olympics.
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