Two medals don’t total win

Two medals don’t total win
x
Highlights

Shuttler PV Sindhu, wrestler Sakshi Malik and gymnast Dipa Karmakar were nameless non-entities. Just a part of the Indian contingent to the Rio de Janeiro Olympics 2016.

Shuttler PV Sindhu, wrestler Sakshi Malik and gymnast Dipa Karmakar were nameless non-entities. Just a part of the Indian contingent to the Rio de Janeiro Olympics 2016. Till a silver and bronze medals and fourth ranking changed their life forever, paved their future in gold, brought glory to India and re-wrote the rules of how we will always view these Games.

A billion-strong nation came out like termites out of the woodwork to toast and sing paeans over India’s daughters ‘Smashing Sakshi, Sindhu, Dipa.’ But in the delirious cacophony of congratulations perhaps not many noticed that these three young lasses reflect ‘Yuva Bharat’ have struggled and clawed to reach where they are. By sheer grit and determination, believing in themselves, their never-say-die attitude, living their dreams and turning them into reality.

Today, as the Central and various State governments open their coffers and dole out awards running into crores has anyone pondered to pause and think. What are they celebrating? That it took India 68 years to come this far? Where was the government, federation heavyweights and sports officials’ when these sportspersons needed them most? Are we rejoicing that these victories are no thanks to the Government and the Indian Olympic Association (IOA)? Or, that despite all adversities these sportsmen did India proud?

Think. Pusarla Venkata Sindhu would travel 56 km every day, leaving home at 4 am riding pillion on her father's scooter, to get to ex-badminton champion Gopichand’s training centre in Hyderabad. Or the flat-footed Dipa Karmakar from Agartala who mastered the ‘deadly’ Produnova vault on a handspring with duct-tape, scooter parts and a little bit of spit. And Haryana’s Sakshi Malik from Mokhra village who began her training in wrestling as a 12-year-old in a region where the sport was ‘not for girls’.

Lalita Shivaji Babar, only the third Indian woman to make it to an athletics final in an Olympic Games – she ran the 3000 m steeplechase and the first to qualify since PT Usha in 1984, began running barefoot as a child to faraway wells to fetch water, realizing that winning races brought in precious prize money that could be used to help her impoverished 17-plus family in Maharashtra's drought-prone Satara district. And golfer Aditi Ashok.

This is not all. The authorities leave athletes to fend for themselves, with the meagre support of families and coaches, although many of India’s best sports people hail from underprivileged sections of society compared to other countries which have higher regard for their athletes financially and culturally.

Adding insult to injury, sportspersons were meted out shoddy treatment at a dinner hosted by the Sports Ministry in Rio. Instead of Indian delicacies they were treated to peanuts! Why? The officials were too busy tending to the needs of Sports Minister Vijay Goel and his ‘Selfie’ mania. Olympics after Olympics the story is the same. This has been going on shamelessly, primarily because of the total failure of sports management system, leading to bad planning. Scandalously, various stadiums built for the Commonwealth Games in 2010 across the country are locked for sportsperson but are opened for non-sporting events.

Arguably, when our various sports federations are controlled by netas and babus what else can one expect? They exist on five star consumerism and vested interest. Ambitious people with powerful connections who have little to contribute to sports, but have everything to gain. Massage their inflated egos, make money and distribute patronage.

They take a battalion of their high-flying socialites to international sporting does as cheer-leaders. While sportsmen languish in dormitories with a stipend of a mere US $25 a day, a Haryana Minister spent Rs 1 crore for his Rio trip. Finally, the million dollar question? How is the government going to pull out the country from this sports morass? For starters keep politicians and bureaucrats out of sports and its federations.

It is plain that rescuing sport from the Octopus-like grip of vested interests, pathetic management, bad planning deceit and money across the country will be a long and painful process. In sum, India desperately needs: healthy sport. Will we clean bowl sports or will we play it to the hilt? Else, reconcile to being spoil sports!

By Poonam I Kaushish

Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS