Narang emerges out of Bindra's shadow

30th July 2012 11:58 PM

Indian rifle shooter Gagan Narang finally came out of the shadow of his more illustrious compatriot Abhinav Bindra by winning an Olympics bronze medal in the men's 10 metre air rifle event at the London Games here Monday.

Narang has always said the Olympic medal was the one that was missing from his cabinet as he has won every shooting medal worth the name. He was 12th in Athens and was unlucky in Beijing as he finished ninth on a countback. It is an irony that Narang won the medal in the event in which defending champion Bindra couldn't event qualify for the decisive final round.

After Beijing, Narang had looked determined for an Olympics medal and worked hard for it. Every shot he took looked as if it was directed at the Royal Artillery Barracks, where he gave India its third medal from the ranges in as many Games.

Narang had taken to shooting as a pastime, not in pursuit of excellence. Perhaps he couldn't have imagined that one day his name would be in the honours list of Indian sports.

The handsome Air India executive's successful journey to the world of fame can largely be attributed to his strong mental make-up which helps him keep his cool and high levels of concentration whenever the going gets tough, say those who know him well.

The eligible bachelor from Begumpet in Hyderabad has been there or thereabouts at the top for some years and he is as well known in shooting circles as Bindra, though the latter received all the accolades thanks to his Beijing gold.

The roll of honour is unending: bronze at the 2010 World Championship, gold at the World Cup finals (2008), two World Cup golds (2006, 2009), three World Cup bronze (2008, 09, 10), silver (2007) and bronze (2012) in the Asian Championships and bronze (2006) and silver (2010) in the Asian Games. What a testimony it is to his immense talent and determination to excel! He is also the only Indian shooter to equal the world record of a perfect 600 in the qualifying round twice.

In fact, more than the medals and the records, it was Narang's victory over Bindra in the 10m air rifle event at the 2010 Commonwealth Games, equalling his own World record in the process, that stands out. With four gold medals, all with Games records, the genial 29-year-old Business Management graduate, became the country's pin-up boy after the New Delhi Games.

Call it destiny or what you will, Narang failed to come good where it mattered the most, failing to qualify for the final by a whisker at Beijing where he was favourite. Bindra made the final and the rest is history.

Narang had another heartbreak when he was not considered for the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna for three successive years and the distraught shooter nearly pulled out of the Commonwealth Games in disgust.

But the fighter in Narang persuaded him to let his guns talk - and how well they roared! He couldn't translate his Commonwealth Games success in the 2010 Asian Games that followed soon, but he still won the silver at Guangzhou.

Unlike others of his tribe, Narang also gave back something to the sport by starting an academy - Gun for Glory - at Shiv Chhatrapati Sports complex in Balewadi, Pune, to train the next generation of Indian shooters.

As his father said after his London triumph, Gagan is good for more.

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Comments(1)

I was Captain of Rifle-Shooting Team (.303) of Hindu College (DU) and also Senior Under Officer-cum- Cadet Adjutant of 8th Battalion, NCC (Senior Wing) comprising Hindu, Stephens and Kirorimal Colleges' students. Our Team won the Delhi State Championship in 1966 and the events were as under: i) 100-metre (lying down position) 30 rounds; ii) Rapid-fire (100-metre) 30 rounds; iii) 10 rounds (lying down position), then run to 400-metre line, lie down and fire another 10 rounds; move to 300 metres and fire another 10 from lying down position ... finally fire from 100 yards. There was no event for firing from a kneeling or standing position since .303 causes a big backward thrust. However, after joining the IAF, I used to fire from standing position and blast off a milkmaid-tin (its small spherical, not cylindrical, side facing me) at 30 yards. These rifles had no telescopic sights, and we possessed no binoculars. I wonder what we would have achieved if we had prepared for the Olympics!

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