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Prakash Padukone unimpressed: ‘Maybe, the players are not working hard enough’ to win Olympic medals | Sport-others News

With only five days left for the closing ceremony of the Paris Olympics, India is staring at the possibility of returning with fewer medals than the seven won at the Tokyo Games. And Prakash Padukone isn’t amused.“Let’s be frank,” the badminton legend said. He has called for the players to ‘introspect’ and ask themselves whether they are ‘doing enough’ to win a medal at the Olympics. Sounding stern, he added that the players ‘cannot keep asking for more and more and more’ and urged the government and federations to be a ‘little firm’ with those who don’t deliver.
“Maybe, you know, the players are not working hard enough. Maybe, it is not enough to get a medal at the Olympics. So you (players) need to work also,” Padukone said after Lakshya Sen squandered an early advantage to lose his bronze-medal playoff on Monday.
India came to Paris feeling sanguine about their chances of a double-digit medal haul for the first time. But as the Olympics enters its 11th day, they stare at the embarrassment of not even matching the haul from the previous edition.
The 100-plus contingent has so far only won three medals — all of them bronze, and all in shooting. Out of those three, shooter Manu Bhaker has played a role in two, winning a medal each in the 10m air pol individual and team events.
While shooting delivered medals after back-to-back Olympic flops, sports like badminton, where India has won a medal in each of the last three Games, and boxing, which has fetched medals in three out of the last four editions, have drawn a blank. Other heavily-funded sports, like archery, have continued to disappoint.
Padukone isn’t impressed.
The 69-year-old speaks from a position of authority. Not just as a legend of Indian sport, but as someone who continues to be closely involved in adminration too. He runs a badminton academy, coaches top players, runs a high-performance centre in Bengaluru in partnership with Rahul Dravid, and is a co-founder of Olympic Gold Quest, a private body that supports India’s top athletes.
In touch with the ground reality, Padukone said it is ‘high time’ the players start taking responsibility and ‘go and deliver when it matters the most’.
Prakash Padukone and Lakshya Sen at the Tata Open India International challenge at CCI, Mumbai in 2017. (Express Photo Kevin D’Souza)
“You have a full sports science support team. Each of the players has their own physios, strength-and- conditioning trainers and nutritions. How much more can you do? I don’t think any other country… including the US and all, will have so much facilities.”
The federations, Padukone added, “need to focus more on the next line while you continue to support” (the current stars). “Like what China does. They don’t depend only on one. the time the one top player retires, they already have 4-5 of them in each of the events, focus on them and give them all the encouragement,” he said.
Future tense
After the Paris Olympics, India stares at an empty cupboard in women’s singles badminton and weightlifting, to name a couple of disciplines.
The responsibility to groom the next generation doesn’t fall on the federations alone, Padukone added. “A lot of top players have to show the way to younger gen,” he added, citing the example of how Sindhu has ‘done a lot’ for badminton; similarly others have done for shooting, wrestling and boxing.’
But for the current Olympics, he said the athletes “cannot blame the federations or the government” because “they have done whatever they can”.
Last month, The Indian Express reported that the government had spent Rs 72 crore under the Target Olympic Podium Scheme (TOPS) during the three-year Olympic cycle from Tokyo in Covid-hit 2021 to Paris. The money was spent on customised training programmes, with the athletes getting almost everything they wanted — from a big entourage to specialised coaches to hi-tech equipment.
India’s Lakshya Sen during the Men’s Singles Semifinal badminton match against Denmark’s Viktor Axelsen at the 2024 Summer Olympics, in Paris, France, Sunday, Aug. 4, 2024. (PTI Photo/Ravi Choudhary)
When asked if the players were pampered to such an extent that it affected their hunger to win, Padukone replied: “Maybe, to some extent. That (pampering) is also required. I hope the players also realise… when you ask for certain things, they also need to deliver. If they don’t deliver, then I think you need to be a little firm. Maybe the federation or the government can be. Let’s be frank.”
Padukone said he was “not happy” with Sen’s surrender to Malaysia’s Lee Zii Jia in his bronze-medal match after taking an early lead. “(Eventual gold medall Viktor) Axelsen might say he is the next best. But that’s not good enough,” he added. “Of course, he’s still young. He must realise it himself and not give it as an excuse. In terms of facilities, nobody can do anything more.”
With the Paris Olympics entering its home stretch, some of the big guns are about to take centre stage. On Tuesday, defending javelin throw gold medall Neeraj Chopra will make his first appearance at these Games. Later in the day, the hockey team will hope to continue its brave run when they face world champions Germany in the semifinals. After two Olympic heartbreaks, Vinesh Phogat hopes to be third-time lucky when she competes in her preliminary rounds. Her other wrestling teammates and weightlifter Mirabai Chanu, sweating over her fitness, will be in action later in the week.

These stars can still salvage India’s campaign but Padukone wants the authorities to start addressing key issues. On top of his l is ‘mind training’.
“Across sports, we don’t give enough attention to sports psychology, which is very important. Especially at the Olympics. (That is) One of the reasons probably why Manu Bhaker has done well despite not being a favourite.”
Ultimately, however, he held the athlete responsible. “Even the federation, the academies, can only do so much. We can provide everything we can. It’s not that we are expecting (too much)… they have beaten the same players in some other tournaments. (Only) when it comes to the Olympics, we are not able to…”

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