Only days remain for 2023 to slip into history. A time then for a quick look back on how things fared for India in the field of sports. It was a year in which sports lovers would vouch was significant for the most part, for the kind of performances witnessed. Performances are what matters, and 2023 had enough moments of that to give the feeling that Indian sportspersons were now ready for greater deeds in the seasons ahead. It used to be said, at least in the field of football, that it was time for the sleeping giant to wake up, particularly after seeing India’s domination in the sport in the earlier years disappearing in Asia. Though that ‘wake up’ has not strictly happened, flashes here and there always raise promise or hopes of better days ahead. However, in many other sporting arenas, perhaps, things have begun to look a touch inspiring.

None provided the spark more than this marvel of a six-footer from Haryana, Neeraj Chopra. In a matter of two or three years, this 25-year-old Javelin exponent from Haryana has transformed the outlook of an Indian sportsperson’s mental make-up in major sporting events in the world with his jaw-dropping performances. Inspiration is what he exuded through his confidence for the others to pick up it would seem. Consider this: Neeraj became the world champion in the year, the first Asian to achieve this feat, adding to his Olympic champion tag. In addition, he is an Asian Games champion after he retained the gold in the Asian Games, Hangzhou. Further, he is the Commonwealth Games champion…the list can go on and will get stretched before he finally decides to lay down his spear!

What was equally significant about Neeraj’s success in the world championship was that he had done enough to inspire two other Indians, Kishore Jena and D P Manu, into focus. Both had 84m plus throws with the javelin to finish fifth and sixth respectively, in the worlds, but more importantly, they have shown that they were well on to the path of their champion colleague. Jena it must be mentioned grabbed the silver in the Asian Games. Talk of inspiration, and did he not lift the morale of the entire Indian contingent, not just for the Asian Games in Hangzhou but the Para Asian Games that followed! At both events, India surpassed expectations with a record medals haul. At the Asian Games, athletics produced a boom with fresh names or newer gold medallists coming to the fore, like Anu Rani (women’s javelin), Parul Choudhary (women’s 5000 m), Tajinderpal Singh Toor (Men’s shot put) and Avinash Sable (Men’s 3000m steeplechase) aside from the men’s 4 x 400 quartet (Muhammad Anas, Amoj Jacob, Muhammad Ajmal and Rajesh Ramesh). In all, athletics had added 29 medals to the overall tally. Add to all these, the shooters, archers, wrestlers and, of course, cricketers, and yes, the success of the men’s hockey team, and the picture of everything positive was complete.
Indeed, there was much focus on men’s hockey, not just because this was a sport which was the source of all joy in the years past, both at the Olympics and Asian Games, but India had been lagging thereafter and was just about showing signs of coming back. Under the South African coach, Craig Fulton, the Indian team had earlier to the Asian Games pocketed the Asian Champions Trophy in Chennai with an impressive outing. The gained confidence there saw them overwhelm Japan for the gold in Hangzhou and in the process regain the supremacy in this sport in Asia after a gap of eight years. What is more, India, by virtue of the win in the final, also earned a berth for the Paris Olympics next year.

Mention has to be made of the sprightly pair Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty, the badminton stars in their own right. Badminton had seen the emergence of singles players in the past, the most recent being P.V. Sindhu in the women’s and Prannoy among others in the men’s, but Satwik and Chirag seized the focus with some grandstand shows in the year. The gold medal in Hangzhou was the first ever by an Indian pair in this continental meet. The pair had earlier won the Badminton Asia Championships, again a first for India, and what is more the year’s show saw them take the number 1 spot in the BWF ranking in October. Yet for all this, sadly, they could not find themselves in the year-end BWF World Tour finals, an event for the top eight rankers. Satwik and Chirag are no 10 in the Tour rankings and thus slipped out of contention. With no other Indian in this event, this was the first time since 2010 that the country was unrepresented in this major Tour programme. The failing notwithstanding, the doubles pair still had done enough in the year to win plaudits and make the country proud.

The year also witnessed the emergence of fresh women’s Grand Masters in chess. R. Vaishali, sister of R. Praggnanandhaa, who is already a Grand Master, is now the 84th GM in India and only the third woman to earn that. What is more this success had come for Vaishali after a 12-year gap. Koneru Humpy and Harika Dronavalli had become GMs earlier. Added interest is that Vaishali and her brother, the first brother-sister GM siblings in the history of the sport, have already qualified for the Candidates tournament, which decides the challenger for the current world champions in the men’s and women’s sections respectively. So, 2024 could bring bigger news!

The year could have witnessed further happy tidings, but of all the sports, it was cricket which disappointed. The Cricket World Cup hosted by India turned awry for the home team at the final hurdle against Australia, whom it had beaten in the league earlier. With ten wins on the trot, India had looked the overwhelming title-favourite, but as they say, there is many a slip between the cup and the lip. Suffice it to say, India crashed out. Disappointment for the myriad followers could not have been bigger.


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Year 2023, a mixed bag for Indian sports

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26.12.2023

Only days remain for 2023 to slip into history. A time then for a quick look back on how things fared for India in the field of sports. It was a year in which sports lovers would vouch was significant for the most part, for the kind of performances witnessed. Performances are what matters, and 2023 had enough moments of that to give the feeling that Indian sportspersons were now ready for greater deeds in the seasons ahead. It used to be said, at least in the field of football, that it was time for the sleeping giant to wake up, particularly after seeing India’s domination in the sport in the earlier years disappearing in Asia. Though that ‘wake up’ has not strictly happened, flashes here and there always raise promise or hopes of better days ahead. However, in many other sporting arenas, perhaps, things have begun to look a touch inspiring.

None provided the spark more than this marvel of a six-footer from Haryana, Neeraj Chopra. In a matter of two or three years, this 25-year-old Javelin exponent from Haryana has transformed the outlook of an Indian sportsperson’s mental make-up in major sporting events in the world with his jaw-dropping performances. Inspiration is what he exuded through his confidence for the others to pick up it would seem. Consider this: Neeraj became the world champion in the year, the first Asian to achieve this feat, adding to his Olympic champion tag. In addition, he is an Asian Games champion after he retained the gold in the Asian Games, Hangzhou. Further, he is the Commonwealth Games champion…the list can go on and will get stretched........

© Mathrubhumi English


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