The Olympics: India (2016)

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=The complete Indian results=
 
=The complete Indian results=
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The Indpaedia team has been '''updating''' this page '''after every few minutes, ''' soon after an Indian sportsperson at Rio achieves a result, negative or positive, to ensure that India’s online, national encylopædia is a record of the '''complete results, ''' arranged in the chronological order.
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And there HAVE been some positive results, too, leading to the quarter-, semi- and even the finals themselves, even if India has not got a medal so far.
 
==800m (Men)==
 
==800m (Men)==
 
'''Jinson Johnson''' finished fifth in men's 800m Round 1 with a timing of 1:47.27, and '''failed '''to qualify for semi-finals
 
'''Jinson Johnson''' finished fifth in men's 800m Round 1 with a timing of 1:47.27, and '''failed '''to qualify for semi-finals

Revision as of 15:16, 12 August 2016

True, India did not do well at Rio in terms of medals. However, by 2016 Indian sports lovers (except some like well-beyond-retirement-age sports-ignorant hacks like Shobhaa De) had matured and saw promise in the number of Indians who made it to the Top 16.
For once Amul’s cartoon was out of touch with the national mood. And to write ‘India pick yourselves up’ instead of, say, let us Olympick ‘ourselves’ revealed an elitism, and a disowning of the nation.
True, most of our Olympians are not among the world’s best. However, churlish Indian critics and spectators like septuagenarian gossip columnist Shobhaa De, who wrote the above after just 5 days of the Olympics, are among the world’s worst followers of sports. They have no idea of what sportsmanship is and understand medals alone. They only discourage and demoralise sportspersons.
Not only Olympians, most lay Indians condemned this senior citizen whose own magazine Stardust was a world leader in—ignorance. It informed readers things like that Gulzar wooed Raakhee with Shakespeare’s novels. (Maybe great-grandaunty Shobhaa knew what Oxford scholars did not.)
A hack who cannot spell a monosyllabic word as simple as haath correctly has the nerve to criticise a squad from which around a dozen reached the world's Top 16 in their respective fields.
Graphic courtesy The Times of India

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content. Indpaedia will try to update the results at least once a day, sometimes after every few hours.

Contents

2016 Rio

The 2016 Olympic Games were held in Rio de Janeiro

The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Anas, Johnson, Ankit
graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Dutee, Sarabani, Nirmala
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Renjith, Vikas, the Marathon Team
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Tintu, Sudha, Lalita
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Manish, Gurmeet, Ganapathi, Sandeep (walking)
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Women’s Shot Put (Manpreet); Marathon team; 20km race walking team.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
4x400m relay teams, men and women.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Women’s archery team. Deepika is shown above.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Archery: Deepika and Atanu
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Boxing: Shiv, Manoj, Vikas
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Dipa Karmakar.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Rowing: Dattu Bhokanal.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Golf: Lahiri, Chawrasia, Aditi Ashok
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Judo (men), Weightlifting, Swimming.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Sania and Rohan, mixed doubles.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Tennis: Leander, Sania, Bopanna, Prarthana
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Table tennis: Achanta, Soumyajit, Mouma, Manika
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Shooting (Men): Bindra
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio.
Shooting (Men): Gagan Narang.
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Men): Chain Singh
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Men): Jitu Rai, PN Prakash
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Men): Gurpreet Singh
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Men): Manavjit Singh Sandhu, Mairaj Ahmed Khan
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Women): Apurvi Chandela, Ayonika Paul
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’
The personal best of Indians competing at the 2016 Olympics in Rio, compared with what it took to get a Bronze medal at the London Olympics.
Shooting (Women): Heena Sidhu
Graphic: ‘‘The Times of India’’

Size of contingent: 118

Note: 120 Indians qualified. Sprinter Dharambir Singh and shot-putter Inderjeet Singh were told to stay back after being caught in the dope net. Finally,118 Indians made it.

The Times of India, Jun 27 2016

A unique century was scored. It didn't come in a cricket game, but had Team India written all over it. The country's contingent to the Rio Olympics swelled to over 100 -the largest ever for the quadrennial event. The milestone was reached when quarter-miler Mohammad Anas, sprinter Srabani Nanada, long jumper Ankit Sharma and archer Atanu Das clinched Rio berths.

Participating in a qualifying event in Poland, Anas made the grade by clocking 45.40 seconds in the men 400m to equal the qualification mark and win gold in the Poland National Athletics Championships. The 21-year-old also smashed his own national mark of 45.44s. “This has to be the best moment in my career.It hasn't sunk in yet that I'm going to the Olympics,“ the Kerala runner gushed. At the Kosanov Memorial Meet in Almaty , Kazakhstan, Odisha sprinter Srabani Nanda won a qualification in the 200m race. Almaty was the scene of Dutee Chand's history-making women's 100m qualification a day earlier. Completing a rare double for India, Srabani clocked 23.07 secs, a good 0.13 seconds off the Olympic qualifying mark of 23.20, and win bronze at Almaty.Rachita Mistry was the last Indian woman to qualify for the women's 200m, at the Sydney Olympics 16 years ago.

Not to be outdone, Morena boy Ankit Sharma smashed the existing long jump national record with 8.19m to win the gold in Almaty and also ensure his passage to Rio. Ankit had earlier leapt to 8.17m, better than the qualifying standard of 8.15m.

Elsewhere on Sunday, archer Atanu Das was selected for the men's recurve event following trials in Bengaluru.

With the Indian track and field numbers already reaching an impressive 23, the Indian contingent could further increase in the coming weeks with more athletes likely to find them selves in the fray. The boxing team could see three more qualifying at the final Venezuela meet next month. In aquatics, five swimmers have already made the B cut, while the last qualifier in Hong Kong next month to determine how many swimmers go or whether India is awarded a wild card.

Despite the 32 hockey players ¬ both men and women squads ¬ forming the regular feature at the Olympics, the Indian Olympic contingent this time would be the largest-ever. While the London Olympics four years ago saw a 83-strong Indian contingent, in April, the then sports minister Sarbananda Sonowal told the Parliament in April, that the ministry had forecast a team of around 90 athletes, with 10-plus medals being targeted.

Yet, in what can dampen the ministry's forecasts of a bullish medal tally, according to projections by Infostrada, leading sports database providers and forecasters, India would end up at No.46th in the medals tally, with only one gold (mixed doubles tennis) and three bronze (women's archery , team; Shiva Thapa in boxing and Jitu Rai in pistol shooting) to show for its 100-plus presence at Rio.

2016, Rio: The August 2016 form of India’s finest

Rio Olympics: India's realistic medal chances

Adapted from Jamie Alter | TNN | The Times of India Aug 2, 2016

Shooting

Abhinav Bindra 2008 gold medallist: Form in August 2016: indifferent.

Gagan Narang 2012 bronze medallist: Form in August 2016: indifferent.

Jitu Rai, age 29. Form in August 2016: No 2 in the world in the 50m pistol event. In August 2016, ranked 3rd in both 50m pistol and 10m air pistol, the 28-year-old has won two golds, three silvers and one bronze in the World Cups, an Asian and Commonwealth gold and besides an Asian Games gold.

Manavjit Singh Sandhu, age 39. Represented India in the 2004, 2008 and 2012 Olympics. Has won at every major tournament.

Heena Sidhu Holds the Finals World Record in the 10m air pistol.

Archery

Deepika Kumari, age 22. From Ranchi World No 1 in 2012. Form in August 2016: 12th in the world. Equalled world record 686/720 at the World Cup in Shanghai earlier in 2016.

Atanu Das, Form in August 2016: 22nd. In the world.

Badminton

Saina Nehwal: Rio--her third Olympics. Former world No 1. Won her second Australian Open title in June 2016. BUT in 2016, she lost to Tai Tzu-ying of Chinese Taipei, Spain's Carolina Marin and China's Li Xuerui, the Olympics champion, in Super Series events. Saina battled injuries in 2016. She was the London Olympics bronze-medallist: bagged the singles bronze after her Chinese opponent Xin Wang withdrew with injury in London

PV Sindhu won two World Championship bronze medals in 2013 and 2014.

Gymnastics

Dipa Karmakar, age 22. Won bronze at the 2015 Asian Gymnastics Championships and reached the final of the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships in 2016, both being firsts for an Indian.At the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games she became one of only five gymnasts across the world to successfully attempt the dangerous Produvona vault. Only two of her Rio adversaries have attempted the Produnova - Yamilet Pena of the Dominican Republic and Egyptian Fadwa Mahmoud - but neither has topped Dipa's highest score in the world, 15.300. She had an edge in the Produnova - a double frontal vault - with a difficulty rating of 7.0.

Wrestling

The eight-member squad - for the first time - wasrepre sented in all three formats - Men's freestyle, Female wrestling and Greco-Roman.

After Geeta Phogat became the first woman wrestler in an Olympics in London, the family saw two representations in cousins Vinesh and (48kg) Babita Kumari (53kg) who joined Sakshi Malik (58kg) to make it three in the ring.

Having defeated the 2014 World Championships silver-medallist Iwona Matkowska en route to sealing an Olympic qualification with a gold medal, Vinesh was in good form.

Boxing

Inside the boxing ring, a squad of three carried India's hopes. For a discipline, that had a record eight entries in 2012, in 2016 it was represented with three men in the ring.

Of the three, the highest hopes were from the duo of Shiva Thapa (56kg) and Vikas Krishan (75kg), both of whom were World Championship bronze-medallists and were ranked sixth in the world.

The senior-most member of the team, Manoj Kumar (64kg), was the 2010 Commonwealth Games champion.

Controversies before the 2016 Olympics

Manuja Veerappa, Shrivathsa Sridhar and Maxin Mathew The Times of India Aug 02 2016


There have been controversies aplenty in the run-up to the Olympics. Sports enthusiasts were kept guessing which tennis combines would eventually go to Rio and then there was the Sushil-Narsingh fiasco. TOI looks at the upheavals, jostles and discrimination...

Narsingh Vs Sushil

A Grappling Affair

Narsingh Pancham Yadav is going to Rio, but what made bigger headlines over the last few months was an embarrassing dope-tainted saga of rivalry and sabotage featuring the country's most decorated Olympic wrestler, Sushil Kumar, and his medal-hungry, determined protégé from Varanasi.

What began as a long-drawn fight albeit outside the ring for the sole 74kg berth for the Rio Olympics transpired into national shame when Narsingh testing positive for an anabolic steroid just weeks before the quadrennial sporting extravaganza.

He cried conspiracy and a young wrestler was arrested for spiking his food at the SAI centre in Sonepat, where Narsingh was being given police protection after it emerged that there were threats to his life. Fingers were pointed at Sushil and his supporters for their alleged involvement, the former's tweet `Respect had to be earned, not demanded' right after Narsingh's failed test adding to the suspicions.

Sushil staked his claim to Rio based on his Beijing bronze and London silver medals while Narsingh rightfully earned his berth with the 2015 World Championships bronze. After his demands for a trial were rejected by Narsingh and the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI), Sushil gathered up support on social media and among his well-wishers. He even dragged the issue to the Delhi High Court, but eventually had to resign to his fate. He lost again when the WFI chose the unheard Parveen Rana as Narsingh's replacement, quashing his hopes of a fourth successive Olympics.

But amidst this brouhaha, the biggest defeat has been for wrestling and its eight-member squad for Rio. Having established his innocence, it is likely that this doping scandal could have an adverse effect on Narsingh's hopes for a medal at Rio, given the immense mental pressure and lack of preparation he had to endure over the last few weeks.

The Indian Tennis Saga

Indian tennis proved that some lessons are never learnt, as aftershocks of the selection row that played out ahead of the 2012 London Games threatened to drag the sport to farcical depths ahead of Rio 2016. Four years on, it felt like Indian tennis' longest double-fault waiting to happen.

Sania Mirza, by virtue of her world No. 1 ranking in women's doubles, earned a spot in the mixed doubles draw in Rio. The Hyderabadi rightfully put her foot down, opting to play with Rohan Bopanna ­ another automatic entrant, thanks to his top-10 doubles ranking on the ATP Tour ­ with whom she enjoys a good rapport.

However, men's doubles proved the bone of contention again as Bopanna identified youngster Saketh Myneni as his preferred choice. With veteran Paes' dreams of a seventh Olympics hinging solely on Bopanna, the AITA selection committee overruled the decision to forge a temporary truce between the two players.

Back in 2012, Leander Paes, then a top-10 player, wished to partner Bopanna only for the Kodava lad to refuse and insist on teaming up with his regular teammate on the ATP Tour, Mahesh Bhupathi. The Bengaluru duo got their wish after immense pressure and Paes, forced to play with the inexperienced Vishnu Vardhan, was offered the chance to play with the in-form Sania who was less than pleased with the entire situation. Sania ultimately felt like bait for Paes while Bhupathi ­ with whom she had won the French Open ahead of the Games ­ was denied a genuine shot at the mixed doubles title.

Bopanna and Paes are still a strong combine and India's best bet in men's doubles and the duo will have to work out their differences, at least for now. While not much is expected of Sania and her talented young partner Prarthana Thombare in women's doubles, her understanding with Bopanna could prove to be India's best medal chance.

THE TALE OF TWO CAPTAINS

Ritu Rani

The Indian women's hockey team will make an Olympic appearance after 36 years but one person who can't bear to watch it even on television is former skipper Ritu Rani. The 24-year-old's inspirational leadership led the team into the Games but was unceremoniously dumped from the final squad days before the team was officially announced. She was accused of having attitude issues and lack of fitness in the build up to the event.

Although there were rumours of Ritu's differences with the team management for the past few months, it took a turn for the worse after her engagement to Punjabi singer Harsh Sharma in June. Ritu alleged she was treated unfairly and wasn't given a chance to defend herself.

While no player can take her place in an Olympic squad for granted, the people at the helm could have handled the situation sans the drama.

Sardar Singh

A week before the team was to leave for Rio, Sardar Singh cut a lonely figure amidst the infectiously enthusiastic bunch of Indian players. Goalkeeper PR Sreejesh was named captain in place of Sardar, a move which was expected but clearly did not go down well with the 30-year-old.

But in the run-up to the quadrennial extravaganza Sardar was indented in controversies. In February this year, a former England U-19 player accused Sardar of “rape and then criminal intimidation“. The woman of Indian origin filed a complaint with the Ludhiana police commissioner claiming she was in a relationship with Sardar for four years and they were engaged in 2014 but he refused to marry her. She even accused him of mental, physical and emotional torture.

When the controversy broke out, Sardar refuted the charges. Hockey India chose to stay out of it, saying it was a private affair between two individuals. But the sword hung heavy on Sardar as he was `rested' for the Champions Trophy held in London, where the woman's family hails from. The midfielder was retained in the team but his captaincy was taken away.

Salman Khan

No Goodwill Over Salman Role

The Indian Olympic Association's appointment of Salman Khan, film actor as the goodwill ambassador for the Indian Rio-bound contingent received mixed views and created ripples in the sports fraternity. While some said Salman's presence will popularize the Games, many touted it as the Bollywood superstar's gimmick to promote his movie Sultan.Sprint legend Milkha Singh and Olympic wrestler Yogeshwar Dutt were among the few fiercely against his appointment.“India has produced so many sportspersons who have given their sweat and blood for the country like PT Usha, Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, Ajit Pal and so many others. One of these could have been made a goodwill ambassador. What was the need to import a person from Bollywood?“ Milkha had asked.

Dutee's Gender Struggle

Dutee Chand's qualification for Rio has been one of Indian sport's most remarkable comebacks. Fighting social stigma and a discriminatory system, the pint-sized sprinter braved great hurdles to realize her Olympic dream. Two years ago, Dutee was dropped from the Indian Commonwealth Games squad for failing a hormone test, with the Athletics Federation of India ruling that hyperandrogenism -a condition which produces higher levels of testosterone in women -made her ineligible to compete as a female athlete.Stung by the accusation, Dutee was ostracized by her own friends and fellow sportspersons, some even refusing to share a room with her. Inspired by South African sprinter Caster Semenya, who had a similar decision against her overturned, Dutee successfully appealed to Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) in Lausanne against the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) and the International Association of Athletics Federations' (IAAF) stand on hyperandrogenism. CAS suspended the regulations for two years, asking IAAF to produce evidence on whether sportspersons with hyperandrogenism have advantageous performance levels, thereby making Dutee eligible to compete again.

Controversies at Rio

Minister Vijay Goel's pass in danger of cancellation

Over-enthusiastic assistants pushing people out of the way of an approaching politician is commonplace enough in India to qualify as a cliche. But this same behaviour seems to have brought India's Sports Minister Vijay Goel to the brink of embarrassment at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. The organisers have now threatened to cancel the minister's pass to visit the venues. The minister's posse reportedly were "aggressive and rude" with the organizing staff on multiple occasions.

The warning that Goel's pass could be revoked came from Sarah Peterson, the continental manager for the Rio 2016 Organizing Committee, in a letter to Indian Chef-de-Mission Rakesh Gupta.

"We have had multiple reports of your minister for sports trying to enter accredited areas at venues with unaccredited individuals. When the staff try to explain that this is not allowed, they report that the people with the minister have become aggressive and rude and sometimes push past our staff," Peterson said in a letter to Gupta.

"As you can understand, this type of behaviour is not acceptable. Despite previous warnings, it would seem that even today the same incident occurred at the Rio Olympic Arena (Gymnastics venue) and Carioca Arena 3," she added.


"Should our protocol team be made aware of further examples of this type of behaviour, the accreditation of your Minister for Sports will be cancelled and his privileges at the Olympic Games withdrawn. We trust you will pass on this message urgently," Peterson concluded.

However, Indian officials dismissed the issue as being disproportionately blown up. One pain point was after the Jwala Gutta - Ashwini Ponnappa duo's match against Japan. "The minister was invited by the team to interact with the players. He went down to the field of play inadvertently, not knowing that he needed a field of play special pass. However, the moment it was brought to his notice he left the field and met with the players outside," said Rakesh Gupta.

"On another occasion, he took the special pass and only then met the players. It is unfortunate that a non-issue is being made an issue without any reason," Gupta added. (Aug 11, 2016)

Paes- Bopanna: rumour of rift

A day before the Olympics inaugural there was much speculation about Paes' absence. Where is he? Why is he not at the Games Village? Has he refused to share an apartment with Rohan Bopanna?

Soon, pictures of Bopanna training with Nenad Zimonjic of Croatia and Max Mirnyi of Belarus did the rounds, adding further grist to the rumour mill.

Some TV channels and websites recalled the strained relations between Bopanna and Paes in the past. Leander's father, Dr Vece Paes, defended his son, saying he couldn't understand “what the fuss was all about.“

Eventually , the buzz about Paes' delay settled after Martina Hingis tweeted a picture of the two at Rio airport. It could not be confirmed by The Times of India whether Paes had indeed made his own living arrangements, but the fact is, it is not obligatory for athletes to stay in the Village. In fact, sev eral prefer to keep away from the Village and its distractions. They travel with their entourage, live with the support cast and join practice sessions whenever scheduled.

As for Leander's travel schedule to Rio, his father Dr Vece Paes said the 1996 Olympic singles bronze-medallist was “on his way“ to Rio from the US and was only “half a day“ behind his scheduled arrival.

While Bopanna travelled to Rio after playing in the Montreal Masters last week, Paes played the first three ties for Washington Kastles in the World Team Tennis before taking the flight to Brazil.

Dr Paes defended his son, saying he couldn't understand “what the fuss was all about.“

He pointed out that the practice of doubles players landing at the venue two days before the event was nothing new. “There have been so many instances when Leander and Mahesh (Bhupathi) reached a Davis Cup venue on Wednesday, attended the draw ceremony and practised on Thursday and Friday before playing their match on Saturday . These are professional players and don't take long to adjust.“

To make things worse, Leander Paes was not assigned room in games village The Times of India Sanjeev Kumar | Aug 5, 2016

Speaking exclusively to Navbharat Times , the seven-time Olympian, who arrived in Rio de Janeiro Thursday evening, said he was extremely disappointed with the treatment dished out to him.

Because he was granted no room, Paes reportedly had to change in the Chef De Mission Rakesh Gupta's room. India's non-playing captain/coach Zeeshan Ali supported Paes and asserted that the tennis player never said that he would not live in the village.

Paes however, on arriving, practiced late in the evening with Zeeshan for an hour for a potential match on Saturday, August 6.

Earlier, Paes, who is to partner Rohan Bopanna in the doubles event, arrived late in Brazil, forcing his doubles partner to train with Sania Mirza and Serbia's Nenad Zimonjic instead. A leading news agency had even reported that Paes had informed the Indian Olympic Association that he doesn't wish to share a flat with Bopanna at the Olympic Village due to friction between the two.

Furthermore, he had agreed to arrive in Rio along with the rest of the players on Monday, August 1, but was instead competing in World Team Tennis tournament being held in Washington, New York. ALOK SINHA Aug 05 2016 : The Times of India (Delhi) Paes' late arrival in Rio sets tongues wagging DadRubbishes Talk Of Rift With Bopanna

Men's hockey team misses opening ceremony

Indian men's hockey team to skip Olympic opening ceremony, PTI | Aug 5, 2016


The Indian men's hockey team had to skip the opening ceremony of the Olympic Games, officially in order to keep fresh for its Group B lung-opener against Ireland scheduled on Saturday.

However, the women's team participated in the ceremony.

"We have a match tomorrow, so we don't want to drain the players since the ceremony will go on for long," Hockey India President Narinder Batra told PTI.

But sources in the team said the side has decided to skip the ceremony due to the lack of official kit for the ceremony.

"The kit that was handed to the players has not fit most of them. The players didn't have the time to check the fittings since they reached Rio quite late and were given the kit on the day they started their trip," a source said.

The complete Indian results

The Indpaedia team has been updating this page after every few minutes, soon after an Indian sportsperson at Rio achieves a result, negative or positive, to ensure that India’s online, national encylopædia is a record of the complete results, arranged in the chronological order.

And there HAVE been some positive results, too, leading to the quarter-, semi- and even the finals themselves, even if India has not got a medal so far.

800m (Men)

Jinson Johnson finished fifth in men's 800m Round 1 with a timing of 1:47.27, and failed to qualify for semi-finals

Archery (Men)

SUMMARY: India ended yet another medal-less campaign in archery at the Games


Atanu Das bounced back from a poor start in his maiden Olympics to finish fifth in the qualification round.Lying a lowly 10th after first 36 arrows, the 24-year-old Kolkata lad turned it around in style in the final set of 36 arrows by shooting 23 perfect 10s including 10 closest to the centre to finish fifth with 683 out of the possible 720. Leading the qualification round was two-time World champion Kim Woojin who shot 700, for a world record on the opening day of the XXXI Olympiad. Das had troubled Woojin in the World Cup Stage 3 in Antalya earlier in June 2016 where he led the Korean heavyweight 4-0 before losing 5-6 for the individual bronze medal. Das's promising finish also meant he was ahead of London 2012 silver medalist Takaharu Furukuwa. (Rio Olympics: Archer Atanu finishes impressive 5th in ranking round, PTI | Aug 5, 2016)

Men's Individual 1/32 Eliminations: India's Atanu Das beat Jitbahadur Muktan of Nepal 29-26, 29-24 and 30-26 to reach Round of 32

Atanu Das let slip crucial chances in his men's individual recurve pre-quarterfinal to lose and bow out of contention. Shooting amid heavy rain, Atanu went down 4-6 to World No.8 Lee Seung-Yun, who had already helped South Korea win the team gold at the event. It was not a bad performance by the Indian but he did seem to lose his nerve on a couple of occasions and missed out on capitalising on positions of strength. Atanu responded quite well with three successive 10s of his own to unnerve Lee and draw level in the match by taking the second set 30-28.The third set ended up being a tie before Lee nosed ahead by grabbing the fourth set.In the decisive fifth set, Atanu and Lee were tied 19-19 after the first two shots. Lee managed a 9 off his final arrow and Atanu needed to go one better to take the match into a shoot-off. But Atanu could only strike a 9, which was enough to tie the fifth set 28-28 but insufficient to save the match, the disappointed Indian could only rue the missed chances even as the exulted Korean celebrated his narrow escape. (PTI)

Archery (Women)

Deepika Kumari and Bombayla Devi qualified for the Round of 32 after finishing 20th and 24th, respectively, in the archery women's individual ranking round at the Rio Olympics, while Laxmirani missed out on qualification after finishing 43rd. Deepika Kumari scored 53 in the final round to finish 20th with 640 points. Bombayla Devi finished 24th with 638. Laxmirani Majhi finished with 614 points to finish 43rd. (NDTV)

India qualified for the pre-quarterfinals of the team event in 7th position with a total of 1892 points.

The Indian women's archery team (Deepika Kumari, Laxmirani Majhi, Bombayla Devi) held their nerve to beat Colombia 5-3 in the pre-quarterfinals at the Rio Olympics. They thus sealed their maiden entry into the quarter-finals, to face Russia. The Indian team clinched the first set with a close 52-51 margin. The Colombian team bounced back to win the second set 50-49. A Colombian archer shot a bizarre three-point shot in the final set to hand India victory.

Indian women missed the archery SFs by two points. India lost the quarter-final against Russia in a shootout Needing a 10-pointer in the last shot to win the tie, Deepika managed 8. India's women's archery teamcame within two points of making the semi-finals of the team event of the 2016 Rio Olympics but ended up losing 23-25 in the shootout against Russia. Against Russia, India shot 28 in their first three arrows with Deepika hitting 10, but then stumbled to lose the first set 48-55. The second was better, with Bombayla and Laxmirani hitting 10s and Deepika nine securing victory 53-52. Bombayla hit 9 Laxmirani erred with 6 and Deepika's shot resulted in 9 more. Bombayla's second 10-pointer was followed by a close 9 from Laxmirani and then Deepika added 9 more. That gave India the third set 53-50. The fourth set saw the Russians shoot a total of 28, which was followed by 8 from Bombayla, 7 from Laxmirani and 9 from Deepika to trail by four points. Russia edged the set 55-53 to make it 4-4 overall. (The Times of India)

Laxmirani Majhi was eliminated from the women's individual archery event at the Rio Olympics on Monday, losing 1-7 to Slovakia's Alexandra Longova. Majhi lost the first two sets of her event, drew the third and then lost the final. Majhi started off her round with an 8-pointer but struggled for consistency thereafter. Longova bossed the first two sets with some excellent shots, including a 10-pointer. (The Times of India)

Bombayla Devi (ranked 69th) entered the Round of 16 of the women's individual archery event , beating her opponents in the Round of 64 and Round of 32 by 6-2 margins. In the Round of 64 she beat Austrian archer Laurence Baldauff 6-2. In the Round of 32 she beat the world No 10, Taipei's Lin Shin-Chia, by the same margin.

In the individual event, Deepika, ranked 12th in the world, beat Georgia's Kristine Esebua 6-4 in her match, shooting a total of eight bulls eyes to enter the Round of 32 where she met Italian Guendalina Sartori hardly 15 minutes later. Deepikawent past her adversary 6-2 to contest her place in the pre-quarters later (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 10, 2016)

In the individual women's pre-quarters (Round of 16) both Indians were eliminated:

i) Deepika Kumari was no match for the world No 2 (Chinese Taipeir's Ya-Ting Tan), who beat her 28-27, 29-26 and 30-27

ii) Bombayla Devi struggled against Mexico's Alejandra Valencia and lost the first, third and fourth sets 26-28, 27-28 and 25-3 respectively. The only set she won was the second, 26-23. Unlike yesterday, when she hit eight 10-pointers, in the pre-quarters Bombayla hit just two. (Rio Olympics: Archers Deepika Kumari, Bombayla Devi exit TNN | Aug 11, 2016)

Badminton

Sindhu marked the start with a facile win in the women's individual competition. She brushed aside her opponent Laura Sarosi of Hungary 21-8, 21-9, starting off on a superb note and managing to hold onto the advantage.

Saina started her campaign on a resounding note, defeating Brazil's Lohaynny Vicente’s challenge 21-17, 21-17 in straight games in the Group G match.

Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa lost their Group A match to Japan's Misaki Matsutomo and Ayaka Takahashi 15-21, 10-21. The No 1 seeds wrapped up the win in just 38 minutes

Sumeeth Reddy and Manu Atri were beaten by Indonesia's Hendra Setiawan and Mohammad Ashan 21-18 (in 18 minutes), 21-13 (in 14 minutes). (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 11, 2016 The Times of India)

Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnapa lost 16-21, 21-16, 17-21 against the Dutch pair of Selena Piek and Eefje Muskens in the preliminaries.

Boxing

Former Asian Games gold medallist 24-year-old Vikas Krishan (75kg) gave a perfect start to India's boxing campaign in the Olympics, beating American Olympic debutant Charles Conwell 3-0 in his opening contest to enter the pre-quarterfinals. Vikas used his right straights and uppercuts to good effect in the first three minutes. Although the judges were divided in awarding the second round to the former World Championships bronze-medallist, Vikas had done enough to secure himself the handy lead going into the final round. The final round ended up being tied between the two boxers but Vikas emerged triumphant on the back of his strong showing in the first two rounds. (PTI | Aug 10, 2016)

Former Commonwealth Games gold-medallist Manoj Kumar (64kg) stunned former-Olympic bronze-medallist Evaldas Petrauskas in a fiercely-contested opening bout to enter the pre-quarterfinals. Manoj prevailed 2-1 in the hard-fought battle in which he had to hold his ground against the intense aggression displayed by Lithuanian Petrauskas in all three rounds. (PTI)

Shiva Thapa, a former world No 3, was beaten 0-3 by Cuba's Robeisy Ramirez in the men's bantamweight 56kg competition. (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 11, 2016 The Times of India

Gymnastics

Indian Dipa Karmakar scripted history as she became the first Indian to make the cut for the individual vault finals+ in her debut Olympic Games after finishing 8th in the qualifying round here. Dipa managed to perform her much-appreciated 'Produnova' vault cleanly to secure 14.850 points after two attempts Dipa had ended sixth after the third of five sub-divisions. She dropped to 8th eventually when Canadian Shallon Olsen's terrific effort of 14.950 rejigged the overall standings. Dipa secured 7.000 on difficulty and 8.1 on execution in her first attempt. (PTI)

For details see Dipa Karmakar

Hockey (Men)

Men's hockey (group match): India beat Ireland 3-2. India had sealed their first hockey win at the Olympics in 12 years. The last one came in 2004 in Athens against South Korea, a match remembered for the two minutes Dhanraj Pillay got to play in his farewell game. What was encouraging for India was the fact that all the three goals came through penalty corners. Raghunath struck in the first quarter and Rupinderpal Singh got a brace, scoring in the second and fourth quarters. The Indians looked slug gish in the beginning but settled down after Raghunath's strike. (ALOK SINHA The Times of India)

India lost to Germany 1-2 after putting up a good fight against the two-time defending champions. India had equalised via Rupinder Pal's strike in the 23rd minute. India with one win and one loss remained in the third position in Group B with three points. (The Times of India)

India men’s hockey team beat Argentina 2-1 in their third Pool B encounter at the Olympic Hockey Centre to climb to the second spot [later, joint top] in the standing with two wins to their name. Manipur’s Chinglensana Kangujam scored the opening goal for India in the eight minute and the lead was doubled in the third quarter by another Manipuri player – Kothajit Khadangbam. The win also marked the first time since 2000 India won two group matches at the Olympics. (The Times of India)

India progressed to the men's hockey quarter-finals for the first time since 1980 Moscow Games, even after a 1-2 defeat to the world No 2, Netherlands, at the Olympic Hockey Centre in Deodoro Park in their fourth group match. After the completion of round four, Indian team is at third spot in the standings with six points, four points behind leaders the Netherlands and Germany and a point ahead of Argentina. India booked the knock-out spot, since fifth placed Ireland won't be able to overtake them anymore with just a game left in the group stage. A goal-less first half - during which India's defensive line was exceptional - was followed by goals conceded in the 32nd and 54th minutes, leading up to a frenetic last few seconds during which India missed five penalty corner chances to draw level with the Dutch. (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 11, 2016, The Times of India)

Hockey (Women)

India women's team played out a 2-2 draw against Japan India conceded two goals in the first two quarters, but came back well in the third scoring two goals. Both goals came via the penalty corner with Rani Rampal opening the account for India and Lilima Minz finding the equalizer. Savita kept India alive. Japan had a fantastic chance to seal the game. 4 times Savita Poonia, India's goalkeeper, made the save and she keeps India alive

India lost 0-3 to Great Britain

Then, after briefly keeping the 3rd ranked Australians at bay, 13th ranked India allowed goals in the 35th and 36th minute to eventually lose 1-6. Anuradha Thokchom scored the Indian goal.

Judo

Avtar Singh lost to the Olympic Refugee Team's Popole Misenga in round one of the men's 90kg Round of 32. (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 10, 2016)

Rowing

Rowing (Men's single scull heats) - Dattu Baban Bokhanal - Qualified for QF

Dattu Baban Bhokanal finished fourth in the quarter-finals of the men's single sculls to be out of medal reckoning in the Rio Olympic Games on Tuesday.

Bhokanal clocked 6:59.89 to cover a distance of 2000m, little more than six seconds behind the third and last qualifier from the quarter-final 4, Natan Wegrzycki-Szymczyk (6:53.52) from Poland.

Armyman Bhokanal, whose ailing mother is an Intensive Care Unit of a hospital in India, had clocked 7:21.67s in the Heats.


He commenced strongly and was second going past the 500metre mark but then gradually slowed down to lose his chance of advancing. (PTI)

Shooting (men)

Abhinav Bindra mounted a stunning recovery to qualify for the finals of the men's 10m air rifle qualification event with the slimmest of margins, to finish seventh. Bindra shot 625.7 (a series of 104.3, 104.4, 105.9, 103.8, 102.1 and 105.2) Bindra recovered from a jittery start to break into the top ten at the start of the third series of six, then as high as second place, before eventually holding onto a top-eight finish to qualify for the final. Gagan Narang squandered a brilliant start (he was briefly at second position), to exit the event, finished 23rd with 621.7 (105.03, 104.5, 102.1, 103.4, 101.6 and 104.8).( Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 8, 2016)

Abhinav Bindra finished 4th in the 10m Air Rifle final. In his last appearance on the Olympic stage, which was his third final in five attempts, Abhinav Bindra came within 0.1 of winning a second medal at the pinnacle of world sport. In the end, he bowed out of the competition at fourth place in the final of the men's 10m air rifle with a cumulative score of 163.8. (The Times of India)

Jitu Rai qualified for the finals impressively. He fired his way to 580 points with sequence of 96 in the first two series followed by 98, 96, 96 and 98. Later, he shot 22 X to finish sixth out of 46 competitors in the qualification round. However, he was way off the mark in the men's 10m Air Pistol final, finishing a lowly eighth to bow out of the competition in the Rio Olympics. He shot an overall 78.7 to finish eighth in the field of eight finalists to become the first shooter to crash out of the final round. (PTI)

Gurpreet Singh - Eliminated in the first round. Gurpreet Singh ended 20th in a field of 46 shooters and exited early.

Men's Trap Manavjit Sandhu finished Day 1 of Qualifications at 16th position scoring 68 out of 75 shots. First-time Olympian Kynan Chenai was 19th, shooting 67 out of 75 Manavjit Sandhu made a great start, shooting down the first 23 birds with ease, and was top of the leaderboard when he lost concentration. He missed the last two birds to finish the series at 2325. The second series started with two early misses, but he recovered to again manage a 23 and stay in 13th spot. In the final series, Sandhu needed at least a 24 to qualify, but could manage only 22. The other Indian in the fray in trap, Kynan Chenai, started with a 22, then shot a 23 to stay alive. But he shot a 22 again and that was it. Alok Sinha Aug 08 2016 : The Times of India (Delhi)

Jitu Rai crashed out of his pet 50m event without making the final. Jitu started the 50m pistol qualification with 91 and fired 95 in the second series He showed rare signs of nerve going into the sixth and final series of ten shots in the qualification round and was way off the mark to end up overall 12th with a total of 554 out of 600. (PTI | Aug 10, 2016)

Pistol shooter Prakash Nanjappa finished 25th out of 41 shooters with 547. (PTI | Aug 10, 2016)

Gagan Narang failed to qualify for the 50m Rifle Prone event and signed off 13th with a total score of 623.1. He was placed as high as 4th at one stage. However, he lost the advantage by shooting his poorest in the final sixth and final series, which yielded him his lowest score of 102.4. Narang's series break-up stood at 104.7, 104.4, 104.6, 103.0, 104.0, 102.4.

Chain Singh failed to qualify for the 50m Rifle Prone event and was 36th with a score of 619.6 in the qualification round. Singh never seemed to be in the reckoning after losing the plot in his second and fourth series, which fetched him scores of 101 and 102.4. His subsequent efforts at salvaging the situation could not save him from a free-fall on the leaderboard. Singh shot a series of 104.1, 101.0, 104.4, 102.4, 103.9, 103.8.

Shooting (women)

Shooting (women's 10m air rifle) - Apurvi Chandela, Ayonika Paul - Failed to qualify Chandela finished 34th with a score of 411.6 while Ayonika ended at 43rd place with a final score of 407.

Former world No 1 Heena Sidhu became the fourth Indian shooter to be eliminated in the qualification round of their respective events, finishing 14th in the 10m women's air pistol event.

In her second and final shooting event, former world No 1 Heena Sidhu shot a series of 95, 95 and 96 to end the precision round of the women's 25m air pistol event with 286 points at the Olympic Shooting Centre. This ensured that Heena entered the rapid round, where she scored 290 and finished at 28th to exit the Games. (Vineet Ramakrishnan | TNN | Aug 9, 2016)

Shot put

Manpreet Kaur scored 16.76 with her third throw, and failed to make the qualifying mark of 18.40

Swimming

Shivani Kataria began her campaign by finishing second in the women's 200m freestyle event heats, clocking 2:09:30 but eventually ended at 41st, thus exiting the competition.

Sajan Prakash, with a time of 1.59.37, came in fourth in the men's 200m butterfly heats and overall was 28th. (Jamie Alter The Times of India )

Table Tennis

Table Tennis (women's singles) –

Mouma Das - Eliminated in round 1

Manika Batra - Eliminated in round 1

Men: In his first round match, Soumyajit Ghosh lost to Thailand's Tanviriyavechakul Padasak 8-11, 6-11, 14-12, 6-11, 11-13 India's campaign in table tennis ended following the first round losses of Achanta Sharath Kamal and Soumyajit Ghosh. The 34-year-old Sharath, competing in his third Olympics, lost to Romanian Adrian Crisan 1-4 (8-11, 12-14, 11-9, 6-11, 8-11). World No.73 Sharath fought hard but his 36-year-old rival was up to the challenge. Ghosh, playing in his s e c o n d c o n s e c u t ive Games, lost 1-4 (8-11, 6-11, 14-12, 6-11, 11-13) to Tanviriyavechakul Padasak of Thailand (PTI)

Tennis

Men's doubles

Tennis (men's doubles) - Leander Paes & Rohan Bopanna - Eliminated in round 1

It took all of an hour and 24 minutes. Afterwards, Rohan Bopanna squinted into the sun, and Leander Paes held forth in the only way he can, about the hurt and lack of respect he felt from a certain section of the media. Of course, he added that the Polish team of Lukasz Kubot and Marcin Matkowski -who dumped them 6-4, 7-6 on Saturday -were “hot“.What he didn't say was that before Saturday's first-round match, he and Bopanna had only played together as India's men's doubles team for less than ten days -five to six days in Chandigarh for the Davis Cup last month, according to coach Zeeshan Ali, and just one day here in Rio. (SIDDHARTH SAXENAThe Times of India}

Women's doubles

None gave world No.1 Sania Mirza a chance in women's doubles as her partner Prarthana Thombare is ranked a lowly 192nd.The Indians did go down in the first round, but not before giving the experienced Chinese pair of Shuai Zhang and Shuai Peng a tough fight. It took Zhang and Peng 2 hours and 44 minutes to squeeze out a 7-6 (8-6), 5-7, 7-5 victory. (PTI)

Weightlifting

Men

Sathish Sivalingam, finished fourth in the final of the men's 77kg category, and exited the Games. (Jamie Alter | TNN | Aug 10, 2016)

Women

Saikhom Mirabai Chanu put up a highly disappointing performance as she could not get an overall total in women's 48kg after failing to lift the entry weight in any of her three attempts in clean & jerk section. In a field of 12 lifters, she was one of two who did not finish her event. (PTI)

See also

The Olympics: India (1900-2012)

The Olympics: India (2016)

Archery: India

Asian Athletics Championships: South Asia’s performance

Athletics: India

Boxing: India

Hockey: India

Women's hockey: India

Shooting: India

Wrestling: India

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