Neeraj Chopra Sets Off Javelin Frenzy Among Youngsters, Surge In Demand For Training
New Delhi: Neeraj Chopra’s historic gold at the Tokyo Olympics has triggered a javelin craze in the country. It has also given a fillip to the whole industry of sports, which includes the academies, coaches and manufacturers.
For once, the focus in India has shifted from cricket.
There is a rush for new enrollments at Delhi’s Chhatrasal Stadium academy and it goes without saying that most are for training in javelin throw. An Olympian told The Indian Express (TIE) that he is getting “at least half-a-dozen text messages every day” from beginners asking about coaches. And retailers are shipping in more equipment.
The Athletics Federation of India (AFI) is moving to give the sport an extra push. AFI has announced that each state unit will hold an annual javelin competition every August 7, the day Chopra won India’s first-ever track and field gold at the Olympics. Talks are also on for an exchange programme with Finland, one of the traditional powerhouses of the sport, TIE reported.
At the Chhatrasal Stadium, famous for its wrestling akhara, coach Raman Jha told TIE 40 new students have enrolled for javelin over the past two months. “In my 12 years as a coach, I have not seen this kind of interest. After the Olympics, a few of the younger runners asked me if they could switch to javelin. I also get a lot of calls every day from young athletes and their parents, saying they would like to enrol for javelin,” Jha said
Sunil Goswami, a former national javelin champion who trains children at Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi, said the “javelin craze” isn’t limited to the capital region.
“I have friends who are coaches from across the country and they tell me almost everyone wants to take up javelin after Neeraj’s gold. Children from the outskirts of the city turn up at the stadium and request me to train them. There are tennis players, runners and gymnasts who come up to me and say they want to take up javelin,” Goswami told TIE.
Sports equipment manufacturers have never seen such a demand for javelin with Amentum Sports, an Indore-based company seeing “at least a three-fold increase” in sales since August. Jitender Singh, a partner with Amentum, said the demand for budget javelins, within the range of Rs 10,000, has gone up significantly.
“Things have changed after the Olympics. We are getting calls from all over the country. We have high-end javelins, which cost over Rs 1 lakh too, but at the moment the budget javelins are in huge demand. We also have a few customers who went for a cheaper model earlier and now want to try a better one,” Singh told TIE.
Ashutosh Bhalla, director, Vinex Sports, a supplier of javelins to AFI, expects demand to rise next season.
In Delhi, gymnast Arun Kumar, 20, is among those who took up javelin recently. Watching the national anthem play with Chopra on the medals podium in Tokyo prompted Arun to make his own javelin.
“I found a nice bamboo stick and fixed a pointed piece of metal at the end. I tried throwing it early in the morning at the local park. All my throws went wide,” he says. Once he corrected his release angle with a little help from YouTube videos, Arun bought himself an entry-level javelin and headed to Delhi’s Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium for formal coaching.
But is India prepared for the newfound craze?
According to coach Goswami, the key to producing champions will be the quality of coaching as javelin is a highly technical sport. “We have a handful of javelin coaches in the country. Most of them are former athletes or senior athletes who train juniors. A lot of change has to take place. Kids showing interest is just the beginning,” he said.
Senior coach Sunita Rai has the last word. She told TIE, “We witnessed a rise in interest in athletics after Delhi hosted the 2010 Commonwealth Games. But the current javelin craze is unprecedented… nothing happens overnight though, Neeraj is a special talent.”
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