Neeraj Chopra, Bajrang Punia, shooters - India's top medal prospects in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics
Many an Indian athlete has made a strong case for a good finish in the Games this year. Here’s a look at a few of the country's brightest podium and medal prospects in the Tokyo Olympics.
Published : Jul 19, 2021 19:12 IST
More than 120 members grace the contingent which is to represent India at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics later this month. India will compete in about 85 medal positions, with many an athlete making a strong case for a good finish in the Games this year. Here’s a look at the Indian athletes who are likely to manage a podium finish in Tokyo.
Weightlifting: Mirabai Chanu - Competing in the 49kg category, Chanu became the first Indian weightlifter to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics on the basis of placing second on the Absolute Ranking List issued by the International Weightlifting Federation, assisted by North Korea withdrawing from reckoning in the Olympics. This is not her first rodeo having competed in the 2016 Rio Olympics before. However, she did not complete her event as she failed to record a single successful lift in the clean and jerk category.
Mary Kom, one of India’s flagbearers in the Olympics this year, is another medal prospect for the country. With 19 international medals to her name, including an Olympic bronze in the 2012 London Games, she comes into the Tokyo Games with a silver medal at the Asian Boxing Championship and bronze at the Boxam International Boxing tournament. Given her experience and that she has called this her final Olympics, Mary will want to bow out of the biggest stage on a high. READ:
Shooting: Given India’s recent performances on the global stage, shooting is a promising discipline for India at Tokyo. Saurabh Chaudhary has been promising in the run-up to the Olympics with two medals in the 10m Air Pistol Individual events in the 2021 ISSF World Cup in New Delhi and Croatia. He has Manu Bhaker , youngest Indian to win a gold medal in the ISSF World Cup event, partnering him in the mixed event. The pair won silver in the team event in Croatia earlier this year and has enjoyed much success in the World Cups over the last few years.
Badminton: P V Sindhu: The Rio Olympics silver medallist will want to do one better this time in Tokyo, given her biggest competitor – Spain's Carolina Marin – has withdrawn due to injury. She won gold at the World Championships in 2019 but has struck a rough patch since. With the pandemic affecting tournaments available to prepare for Tokyo, Sindhu’s form has been a cause for concern. Sindhu, however, is a proven big match player and will hope to contribute to India’s medal tally in the Olympics. READ:
Archery: Deepika Kumari , the lone female archer to make the cut for the Tokyo Olympics, is coming off a hat-trick of gold medals in the recurve events at the Archery World Cup in Paris last month. Her recent success also saw her make it to the top of the rankings for the first time since Dola Banerjee in 2012. She will also compete alongside Pravin Jadhav, Atanu Das (whom she is married to) and Tarundeep Rai in the team event. If her recent form is anything to go by, Kumari is a strong medal contender in Tokyo this year.
Athletics: Neeraj Chopra: After missing the cut for the 2016 Rio Olympics, a then 18-year-old Neeraj Chopra bounced back with a gold medal in javelin at the IAAF World under-20 athletics championship in Poland, setting a world record of 86.48m, followed by gold medals at the 2018 Asian Games and Commonwealth Games. His Tokyo preparation took an early hit when a career-threatening elbow injury forced him out of action for most part of 2019. He returned to competition in early 2020, sealing his Tokyo 2020 quota before COVID-19 forced a global shutdown, introducing greater hassles in getting competition time.
In the run up to the Summer Games, Chopra bettered his own national record in javelin - 88.06m at the Asian Games in ‘18 - with an 88.07m throw at the Indian Grand Prix 3 in Patiala earlier this year. That one of his main competitors – Rio Olympics champion, Germany's Thomas Rohler – has withdrawn due to injury only betters his chances of finishing on the podium in Tokyo.Hockey: India Men: No one understands pressure quite like the India men’s hockey team, given that this side has won the nation 11 medals at the Olympics - eight golds, one silver and two bronzes. After failing to qualify for the Beijing Olympics, India finished 12th in London and 8th in 2016.
Wrestling: Bajrang Punia and Vinesh Phogat: Seven wrestlers have secured a spot in the Tokyo Olympics but the brightest medal prospects in the contingent are Bajrang and Vinesh. Bajrang secured his place in the Tokyo Olympics despite losing his semifinal bout against local favourite Daulet Niyazbekov under controversial circumstances at the World Wrestling Championships in Nur Sultan in 2019. He eventually won bronze, his second across editions in this competition. He tasted success earlier in the 2018 Asian Games and at two Asian Championships. Tokyo is Bajrang’s maiden Olympics and he will hope to begin this chapter of his career on a winning note.
Vinesh Phogat, competing in the 53 kg category, qualified for the 2020 Olympics after defeating World No. 1 Sarah Hildebrandt in the World Wrestling Championships in Nur-Sultan, Kazakhstan in September 2019. Her 8-2 win in the second repechage round secured her spot at the Tokyo Games, making her the first Indian to qualify for the Tokyo Games. A 2018 Asian Games gold medallist and a two-time Commonwealth Games medallist, this is Vinesh's second Olympic stint after a disappointing run at the Rio Games in 2016. Most recently, the 26-year-old bagged yet another gold medal at the Poland Open to strengthen her case.