NEW DELHI, Aug 29: India’s first ever individual Olympic gold medallist on Friday seized the rare chance to edit a major newspaper by lashing out at the country’s sports officials and coaches.

Abhinav Bindra, who took gold at the Beijing Olympics by winning the 10m Air Rifle title, said there was no “no magic solution” to make the underperforming country a sporting power.

“Indian athletes have no respect for most officials,” the bespectacled 26-year-old told the Times of India, a leading national broadsheet that invited the shooter to edit Friday’s edition.

“They have to be on good terms with officials because one needs to survive. But most officials, and many of the so-called coaches who travel with the teams, know nothing about the sport.

“The athletes don’t talk about this because their careers are at stake. And the officials unfortunately don’t care.”

Bindra revealed he had to pay for his own ticket to Beijing from his shooting base in Germany because the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) refused to cough up.

“Though part of the expense of my training in Germany was funded by the government, the IOA refused to give me a ticket from Germany to China,” he said.

“They said I had to first come back to India and I could get a ticket from here.”

Asked if officials had changed their attitude after his gold medal success, Bindra quipped: “I suddenly have many more coaches now.”

India returned from Beijing with their best ever haul of a gold and two bronze medals, but Bindra was emphatic the tally would not hit double figures at the London Games in 2012.

“If we want to get to double digits, we need to target 2016 and start working from today,” he said. Bindra also took a swipe at the country’s cricket-obsessed media, saying Olympic sports did not get the publicity they deserved.

“Why not just rename the sports pages ‘cricket pages’?,” he asked.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Risky slope
Updated 17 Dec, 2024

Risky slope

Inflation likely to see an upward trajectory once high base effect tapers off.
Digital ID bill
Updated 17 Dec, 2024

Digital ID bill

Without privacy safeguards, a centralised digital ID system could be misused for surveillance.
Dangerous revisionism
17 Dec, 2024

Dangerous revisionism

THE ongoing campaign by Sangh Parivar fanatics in India questioning the origins of mosques and other Muslim holy...
Remembering APS
Updated 16 Dec, 2024

Remembering APS

Ten years later, the state must fully commit itself to implementing NAP if Pakistan is to be rid of terrorism and fanaticism.
Cricket momentum
16 Dec, 2024

Cricket momentum

A WASHOUT at The Wanderers saw Pakistan avoid a series whitewash but they will go into the One-day International...
Grievous trade
16 Dec, 2024

Grievous trade

THE UN’s Global Report on Trafficking in Persons 2024 is a sobering account of how the commodification of humans...