She is one of the best recognised faces in Indian sport.
She knows it pretty well but ace archer Deepika Kumari still carries
herself with a maturity beyond her age.
Having
achieved remarkable success in the international arena, and endured the
bitter experience of not reaching the desired goal at the London
Olympics, the 21-year-old has achieved a certain equanimity that is so
rare.
There was clear evidence of it as she trained
with a relaxed intensity, focusing on the target at 70 metres on which
there was no printed sheet, but only a small piece of guidance white
paper that she herself had pasted.
Even as she kept
training for the recurve section of the ongoing 36th National archery
championship, Deepika posed with an enviable number of her fans, with
admirable calm and cheer.
“It is the last competition
of the season. The National championship is important,’’ said Deepika,
willing to strike a conversation even as she was busy mending her bow
and arrows on Friday, for the challenge ahead.
In the
last edition of the National championship in Delhi, Deepika had
qualified on top but had failed to strike a medal. Olympian Laishram
Bombayla Devi took old ahead of Rimil Buruily in the Olympic round.
Deepika
did win the mixed team gold with Jayanta Talukdar and the team gold for
Jharkhand with Sitarani Tudu, Padyawati Sardar and Reena Kumari.
Of
course, Deepika has bigger goals ahead in the World Cup Final. She has
won the silver medal thrice from 2011 to 2013. “I am also waiting for
it,’’ she quips, when queried about the possibility of striking gold in
the World Cup Final to be staged in Mexico City on October 24 and 25.
On a more serious note, Deepika confides that she is happy with her training and calls it “very good preparation.”
Mangal
Singh Champia, the only Indian among the men to have qualified for the
Rio Olympics, had said every day was different. He was clear that there
was no guarantee of victory for anyone, and he, like the other archers,
was always trying to perform at the best.
“I don’t
know how I will perform. I am looking forward to the competition,” said
Deepika, who has qualified for Rio along with Buruily and Lakshmirani
Majhi by winning the team silver in the World Championship in
Copenhagen.
Most of the leading archers arrived in
the morning and had two sessions of training at the venue, a major hub
of sports for the talented kids in the area and maintained with
remarkable care and cleanliness.
No wonder Deepika
had to pose with many fans, as the people were quite knowledgeable about
her star status and the power of a bewitching smile.
With
the cream of archers in town, and quite sharp as well, as they have all
been in the National camp in Jamshedpur, it should be a cracker of a
competition over the next two days.
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