
PUNE, Oct 28: Two triumphs did the Tricolour proud this year. One, thousands of feet above sea level. The other on water, in a distant land.
The Kargil victory brought a tear to the eye and a lump in the throat. The other national success, obscure and incognito, executed again by our heroes in olive green, was stirring in its own way.
Not many know that the country broke new sporting ground earlier this month in Naganuma, Japan, where our rowers qualified for the Olympics for the first-time ever 8212; the open coxless pair of Surender Singh and Johnson Xavier sealing a spot at the quadrennial Games in that event by snatching the silver medal.
In addition, three team silvers and a bronze leading to a total individual haul of 19 medals 8212; ten silvers, two bronzes 8212; despite trying conditions and financial handicaps, spoke of fortitude that complied with the Kargil spirit. Wielding oars instead of rifles, our rowers who trained at the College of Military Engineering CME, Khadki, did the nation proud and retained India8217;s prominent position on the international rowing map. Braving temperatures as low as seven degrees centigrade, rough waters and and coping with inferior equipment that contrasted that used by perennial champions Japan, the jawans who trained under College of Engineering and Rafting Association CERA ensured that India8217;s lofty, though little known, reputation in the sport remained intact.
Manager of the 14-member squad, Colonel K R Chakravati, also served as cox member of crew who steers boats. The colonel, who added to the bronze he won at the 1985 Asian Championships in Hong Kong, experiences mixed feelings. Joy over India8217;s best-ever international display. Sorrow at virtual ignoring of his rowers8217; feat by the media.
8220;We could do with some media support,8221; Chakravati said. 8220;Rowing needs encouragement, keeping in mind the nation8217;s exemplary performance in the last decade during which we have never returned home empty-handed.8221;
But Chakravati remains on even keel. Entry to next year8217;s Sydney Olympics is exhilarating. He presents the rowing communities8217; modest though realistic aims, saying: 8220;A medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympics is remote. But we aim for one at the 2004 Games.8221;
8220;Our presence at the Olympics will be an enriching experience,8221; Chakravati adds. 8220;Our rowers are bound to imbibe vital nuances from global powerhouses 8211; Germany, Britain, Australia and the United States 8211; to add to the lessons learnt from Asian forces such as China, Japan and South Korea.8221;
Kargil vs Naganuma
The 14 rowers who scripted unprecedented success for the country at the Asian Championships could well have been defending strategic heights in Kargil instead of fighting currents in a gruelling stretch of water in Naganuma, Japan.
Thanks to a delicately executed strategy by the CME, the oarsmen could have done both 8212; if it had come to that.
Cox and manager of the side, Col K R Chakravati explains: 8220;The jawans were put on 12-hour alert in June-July and kept in readiness for action, if required.8221;
Happily, the men now back home, could pursue their training schedule here in Pune, although it meant administrative difficulties in terms of finance, reveals Col P K Uberoi, also a member of the coaching committee in the Rowing Federation of India.
The camp, originally planned in Chandigarh was aborted, Uberoi explained. The Sports Authority of India SAI washed its hands off financing the camp, once the venue was moved to Pune, the colonel added. Although SAI have agreed in principle to underwrite the cost of training, the money has not been forthcoming.
The CME came to the rescue financing and running the camp. Rigorous training at the waters of the National Defence Academy NDA lake at Khadakwasla gave way to the Mula river when the monsoons intensified.