Hangzhou Asian Games | 18 and counting: Indian shooting has its best ever medal count
The Hindu
India shooting adds 2 golds, 3 silvers to tally; Tomar, Palak win individual golds; Esha, Kusale take silvers; Tomar, Kusale miss out on gold due to low score.
The rifle hall at the Fuyang Yinhu Sports Centre was witness to the highs of ecstasy and the lows of disbelief in Indian shooting simultaneously on Friday even as the country added two golds and three silvers to its medals tally from the sport.
Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar took his personal tally to four with a gold and silver each in the rifle 50m 3-Position on the day, as shooting’s own tally went up to 18 medals so far in this edition — six gold, seven silver and five bronze — with two more days of action remaining, bettering the previous best of 14 medals in 2006 at Doha. Also adding two silvers to take her personal medal count to four was Esha Singh, taking the team and individual second spot, the latter behind compatriot Palak in the 10m air pistol as India finally got a 1-2 in shooting.
Four medals in your maiden Asian Games, including two gold, at the age of 22 would be a matter of pride for anyone. For Tomar, it was just reward for the efforts the youngster has put in over years. He took an individual silver with 459.7 points, having led to a team gold earlier in the day along with Swapnil Kusale and Akhil Sheoran for a new World Record total of 1769 points.
“We have been preparing for these competitions for a long time so it feels really nice. Coming here and winning medals, achieving my goals slowly, feels good. “Expectation se to zyada hi hai par jitni mehnat aur training ki hai, us hisab se thik hai (What I have achieved here is more than what I expected but considering the hard work and amount of training we did, not surprised),” a beaming Tomar told The Hindu.
Having started badly and struggling at 7th position in the initial stages, Tomar pulled himself up gradually, climbing the ranks through prone before going all out in the standing section to get himself into the medal bracket. At the other end Kusale, having been in the top-three all along and comfortably placed for a medal, shot a 7.6 on the 41st shot to drop from 1st to 5th – he still got a 10.5 and 10.1 in the next two shots but the damage was done -- and eventually be eliminated, finishing 4th behind China’s Jiaming Tian.
“I don’t remember, maybe years ago when I was just starting, never in competition,” a poker-faced Kusale said about shooting such a low score. “Feels bad, a lot, must have been some mistake by me only but I don’t know what happened. But it’s a game, will come back stronger the next time,” he added, bemused.
Tomar, meanwhile, admitted it wasn’t easy to recover from a bad start. “I don’t ususally shoot so badly,” he admitted sheepishly. “Kneeling went bad and both score and rank went low. I thought I will make up in prone but that also didn’t go too well. There was pressure, some doubts also because everyone else was doing well. Then I thought standing was left and I will do well in that, forgot everything and focussed on the target and managed to get through,” he explained.