Paris Olympics: Third medal not to be for Manu Bhaker, but determined shooter has raised the bar for Indian sports | Sport-others News
Jaspal Rana shares a nugget that offers a glimpse into the stubborn mindset of an athlete who hates rejection.Sauntering at the Athletes Village a couple of days ago, Manu Bhaker spotted a goat in the fields and offered it a plum. “The goat just walked away in the other direction, not accepting the fruit,” Rana, a former world champion who is Manu’s coach, said.
On Friday, Manu returned to the same spot and sat under the harsh Chateauroux sun at the same spot for hours with a plum in her hand, waiting for the goat to reappear. “She felt rejected,” Rana said.
The Olympics, Manu felt, had rejected her the same way. In Tokyo, the pol shooter was made to feel she didn’t belong to this big stage. She came to Paris with a vengeance and will take home two bronze medals.
🥹🥹🥹
Manu Bhaker – A daughter the whole nation is proud off! 🇮🇳
Catch #Paris2024 LIVE on #Sports18 & stream FREE on #JioCinema 👈#OlympicsOnJioCinema #OlympicsOnSports18 #JioCinemaSports #Cheer4Bharat #Shooting #ManuBhaker pic.twitter.com/3lSeX5RGOC
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A horic third, on Saturday in the 25m pol, wasn’t to be.
Millimeters separated Manu and her bid to venture into territory previously considered unthinkable in India’s Olympic hory – winning three medals at the same Olympics. In a best-of-five shoot-off to stay in contention for a medal, Manu hit the target three times while Hungary’s Veronika Major, the eventual bronze medall, had one more.
The week that must have felt like a dream ended cruelly. Like all athletes who come close to the podium but fall agonisingly short, Manu did not know how to feel about the fourth place she managed. “At least, it’s better than not reaching the final,” she said.
A pacifying way for Manu — already a league of her own after becoming the first sportsperson in independent India to win two medals at the same Games — to look at the result would be that she is now a part of another l of Indian legends, dubious as it may be, who finished fourth at the Olympic Games. But like Aditi Ashok said in Tokyo, it’s not a l athletes aspire to be a part of. “It’s not a great feeling, I’ll be honest,” Manu admitted.
You made India Proud! 🇮🇳
breaking a 12-year Olympic drought in her sport 🫶🏻
becoming the first to win multiple medals for independent India in a single edition! ❤️
Thank you Manu Bhaker! 🫶🏻#OlympicsOnJioCinema #OlympicsOnSports18 #JioCinemaSports #Cheer4Bharat… pic.twitter.com/SdcHxOErGM
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For the first time this week, Manu looked nervous on the firing line and sounded unsure outside it. Did she feel the pressure of winning a third medal, the twin bronze medall was asked. “Err,” she paused. “Erm… pressure? Let me think…”
Her brain, she finally muttered, “had gone blank” at that moment after the match. And her right hand was bruised; turned purple and blue with the constant lifting of the weapon, holding it in a way that can’t be comfortable. She flaunts it as proudly as the medals.
These gashes do not hurt her. But the exhaustion of a heady week finally seemed to be taking its toll and the enormity of what she has achieved was finally sinking in.
Leading light
Until now, Manu has held India’s campaign together. If not for her, India’s tally at these Olympics would perhaps have been stuck at only one bronze medal.
And like Abhinav Bindra, Sushil Kumar, PV Sindhu and Neeraj Chopra before her, she has set a new bar for what would be considered path-breaking at an Olympics – more than two individual medals, or at least two of a better colour. Her medals will have an impact on the aspirational levels of Indian athletes at an Olympics, as shuttler Satwiksairaj Rankireddy had pointed out.
Even at a personal level, Manu is bracing for what lies ahead following a life-changing week. How can life ever be normal again for a 22-year-old political science student who has two Olympic medals, with brands lining up and who had a casual tete-a-tete with the Prime Miner?
Pinpoint accuracy 🤝 Manu Bhaker
Watch her in action LIVE NOW on #Sports18 & stream for free on #JioCinemahttps://t.co/96yi8q3Qxj#OlympicsOnJioCinema #OlympicsOnSports18 #JioCinemaSports #ManuBhaker #Shooting pic.twitter.com/EDXQ5w80Oq
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“I don’t have an answer to this right now,” she said. “But I will try to remain my own self. Just be myself.”
That would mean being a girl who loves to cook, sketch, play the violin, ride horses and do what any other normal 22-year-old would. And start a Sunday morning with a ‘long, peaceful session of yoga and meditation and play some good music.’
“Arijit Singh… oh ho ho ho,” she gasps. “Diljit Dosanjh, too! Tomorrow, I won’t be in a rush, so I can do that.”
Paris is on her mind now, be there, enjoy normal Village life and maybe, just maybe, be India’s flag-bearer at next Sunday’s closing ceremony. That prospect lights up her eyes.
But one of the first things she hoped to do was write down all her learnings from this week in her journal. The journal, which has all her scores and the raw, unfiltered thoughts, won’t lie when she returns to the range after the expected hullabaloo on her return to Delhi. It’ll also serve as both remembrance and motivation. Like it did from Tokyo to Paris.
“One thing different that was very prominent with my performances and behaviour was confidence. In Tokyo, I was not confident at all. I was kind of scared with everything,” Manu said. “This time, I feel much more confident and mature.”
The journal will also remind her of unfinished business from this campaign. “The fourth-place finish is only going to motivate me,” she said. Two medals she might have, but Manu isn’t one to take failure lightly.
Even if it’s something as mundane as feeding a goat, which she insed, was a ‘battle she won.’ “Not just a plum, I fed the goat a banana too!” she said. “I had to wait, but I did it.”
This was true even for her remarkable Olympics campaign.