India shines at Paris Paralympics with historic wins
Seven of these 29 medals are gold, which is another first for the country that started to make its presence felt only in the 2016 edition, where it won four medals
PTI
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The sports ministry had 59 para-athletes in its Target Olympic Podium Scheme roster, 50 of whom qualified for Paris.PHOTO:PTI
Paris, 8 Sept
Differently-abled but exceptionally resolute, India's para-athletes would look back at their Paralympics campaign with pride as most of the established names lived up to expectations and many talented greenhorns made the big stage their own in a record-smashing medal haul of 29.
Seven of these 29 medals are gold, which is another first for the country that started to make its presence felt only in the 2016 edition, where it won four medals. TSeven of these 29 medals are gold, which is another first for the country that started to make its presence felt only in the 2016 edition, where it won four medals. The upswing in performance after that has
been meteoric with Tokyo yielding 19, a number that was surpassed this time.
Not to forget, a lot of medal-winning performances here were
record efforts and personal bests, demonstrating that the athletes have made
significant progress as far as their self-belief is concerned.
The 29 medals in five sports, including a whopping 17 at the
track and field events, have ensured that the country will end in the top 20 of
the mega-event that was once again dominated by China with over 200 medals.
India is still far away from becoming a force at the Olympic
level but the nation has certainly emerged as a force to be reckoned with in
the competition for the differently-abled.
The government did its bit with increased spending on
training, recovery and support staff. The sports ministry had 59 para-athletes
in its Target Olympic Podium Scheme roster, 50 of whom qualified for Paris.
Unexpected medals in track and judo
The contingent of 84 ensured plenty of firsts for India in
Paralympic history including medals in track events with sprinter Preethi Pal
winning a bronze in the women's 100m T35 and 200m T35 class.
T35 classification is meant for athletes who have
coordination impairments such as hypertonia, ataxia and athetosis. Preethi was
born with weak legs and it became progressively worse as she grew up.
Another first ever medal came via Kapil Parmar in Judo. He
made India proud by securing a bronze in the men's 60kg J1 class.
His was another story of remarkable resolve as the
24-year-old lifted himself from a life altering accident in his childhood when
he got electrocuted while playing in the fields of his village. Kapil was
forced to sell tea as well later in his life to make ends meet but he turned
things around and how.
Archery and club throw prop up India in medals tally
The likes of Harvinder Singh and Dharambir pushed India
considerably higher up the medals tally by securing path-breaking gold medals
in archery and club throw respectively.
Armless archer Sheetal Devi, who was born without arms, was
already a beacon of hope to millions but with her mixed team bronze, the
17-year-old gave her community another reason to never give up.
No wonder she became a crowd favourite in Paris as she left
everyone in awe using her legs instead of arms to hit the bulls' eye.
The crowd was left hugely disappointed as she narrowly lost
her 1/8 elimination contest in the singles event.
Days later, Harvinder kept his nerve under extreme pressure
to land the first ever gold for India in archery, also changing the colour of
his medal from the Tokyo edition where he won bronze.
In the club throw event, it was a rare one two finish for
India with Dharambir and Pranav Soorma ending up on the podium in the F51
class.
A tragic diving accident had Dharambir paralysed from waist
down but the Sonepat resident found much needed support from fellow para
athlete Amit Kumar Saroha who guided the latter in his darkest days.
Sumit Antil and Avani Lekhara defend titles
While plenty of firsts were registered, some of the Indian
athletes including javelin thrower Sumit Antil and shooter Avani Lekhara had
high expectations to meet, having won gold in Tokyo.
Sumit, whose left leg was amputated after an accident, broke
his own Paralympic record for a second successive javelin gold while
wheelchair-bound rifle shooter Lekhara dominated the field in the air rifle SH1
final.
A gold also came from the badminton court via Kumar Nitesh
who pipped Britain's Daniel Bethell in a thrilling final. Nitesh too lost his
leg after a train accident. He took to badminton while pursuing his graduation
from IIT-Mandi.
Going forward, India can aspire to finish in the top-10 if
it manages to create a pool of para swimmers too. Only one swimmer represented
the country in Paris.
Table toppers China won as many as 54 medals in swimming
including 20 gold.-PTI
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