Abhinav Bindra

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Date of Birth: 28.9.1982, Event: Air Rifle 10m
 
Date of Birth: 28.9.1982, Event: Air Rifle 10m
  
Youngest Indian participant at the 2000 Olympic Games.
+
-Youngest Indian participant at the 2000 Olympic Games.
  
Won six gold medals at various international meets in 2001.
+
-Won six gold medals at various international meets in 2001.
  
At the 2004 Olympic Games, he broke the Olympic record but failed to win a medal.
+
-At the 2004 Olympic Games, he broke the Olympic record but failed to win a medal.
  
Arjuna awardee in 2001 and the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award for the year 2001-2002.
+
-Arjuna awardee in 2001 and the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award for the year 2001-2002.
  
First coach: Lt Col J S Dhillon.
+
-First coach: Lt Col J S Dhillon.
  
Holds an MBA. He is the CEO of Abhinav Futuristics, a PC games peripherals distributor based in Chandigarh.
+
-Holds an MBA. He is the CEO of Abhinav Futuristics, a PC games peripherals distributor based in Chandigarh.
  
Studied at the Doon School, Dehradun till 10th standard and then left for St Stephen’s school, Chandigarh to pursue shooting.
+
-Studied at the Doon School, Dehradun till 10th standard and then left for St Stephen’s school, Chandigarh to pursue shooting.
  
MEDALS WON
+
''' MEDALS WON '''
  
Olympic Games, Beijing 2008 - Gold
+
-Olympic Games, Beijing 2008 - Gold
  
ISSF World Shooting Championships, Zagreb 2006 - Gold
+
-ISSF World Shooting Championships, Zagreb 2006 - Gold
  
Commonwealth Games, Manchester 2002 - Silver, Gold (in pairs event)
+
-Commonwealth Games, Manchester 2002 - Silver, Gold (in pairs event)
  
Commonwealth Games, Melbourne 2006 - Bronze, Gold (in pairs event)
+
-Commonwealth Games, Melbourne 2006 - Bronze, Gold (in pairs event)
  
Asian Shooting Championship in 2007 - gold (team)
+
-Asian Shooting Championship in 2007 - gold (team)
  
Asian Airgun Championship at Nanjing, 2008 - silver
+
-Asian Airgun Championship at Nanjing, 2008 - silver
  
RIFLING THROUGH
+
''' RIFLING THROUGH '''
  
 
Abhinav Bindra has been competing on the shooting circuit for more than 10 years now. The champion takes stock of the hits and the misses
 
Abhinav Bindra has been competing on the shooting circuit for more than 10 years now. The champion takes stock of the hits and the misses
  
1995-96:
+
1995-96: In his first year of shooting, he became the district champion and went on to win six gold in the Punjab State Shooting meet. it was an important stepping stone.
 
+
the In my shooting first year circuit on I became the district champ. I went on to win six gold in the Punjab State Shooting meet. it was an important stepping stone.
+
  
 
1997-98: Shooting 594 at the National trials and beating the favourites Army team. It was a big moment for him to represent India at the Commonwealth Games in Malaysia. He also attended the national camp at Bangalore.
 
1997-98: Shooting 594 at the National trials and beating the favourites Army team. It was a big moment for him to represent India at the Commonwealth Games in Malaysia. He also attended the national camp at Bangalore.

Revision as of 23:38, 28 June 2015

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

A profile

From the archives of "The Times of India" : 2008

Abhinav Bindra hit the bull’s eye in the 10m air-rifle to become the first Indian ever to win an individual gold in the Olympic Games

Date of Birth: 28.9.1982, Event: Air Rifle 10m

-Youngest Indian participant at the 2000 Olympic Games.

-Won six gold medals at various international meets in 2001.

-At the 2004 Olympic Games, he broke the Olympic record but failed to win a medal.

-Arjuna awardee in 2001 and the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award for the year 2001-2002.

-First coach: Lt Col J S Dhillon.

-Holds an MBA. He is the CEO of Abhinav Futuristics, a PC games peripherals distributor based in Chandigarh.

-Studied at the Doon School, Dehradun till 10th standard and then left for St Stephen’s school, Chandigarh to pursue shooting.

MEDALS WON

-Olympic Games, Beijing 2008 - Gold

-ISSF World Shooting Championships, Zagreb 2006 - Gold

-Commonwealth Games, Manchester 2002 - Silver, Gold (in pairs event)

-Commonwealth Games, Melbourne 2006 - Bronze, Gold (in pairs event)

-Asian Shooting Championship in 2007 - gold (team)

-Asian Airgun Championship at Nanjing, 2008 - silver

RIFLING THROUGH

Abhinav Bindra has been competing on the shooting circuit for more than 10 years now. The champion takes stock of the hits and the misses

1995-96: In his first year of shooting, he became the district champion and went on to win six gold in the Punjab State Shooting meet. it was an important stepping stone.

1997-98: Shooting 594 at the National trials and beating the favourites Army team. It was a big moment for him to represent India at the Commonwealth Games in Malaysia. He also attended the national camp at Bangalore.

1999: Became the national champion and established a new record of 594. In India it was a big deal that time to get a score in excess of 590. He also won a gold and silver at SAF Games at Kathmandu.

2000: At the Munich World Cup, he scored 596 to break the world record. Till then nobody had heard about rifle shooters from India.

2001: Won the Arjuna Award, established a word record in Luxembourg and won the gold medal. It won him the Khel Ratna.

2002: Won medal in CWG, Manchester. The fifth place finish at the World Cup in Atlanta was very satisfying.

2003: One of the first times I scored best . The perfect 600 in Colorado. He shot an impressive 704 and won the gold in the Sportland NRW Cup at Dortmund. Won the bronze in Munich to become the first Indian to obtain a quota place for Athens 2004.

2004: In Colorado he shot 600/600 again after doing the same in 2003.

2005: Championship he won the National and missing the previous Nationals due to Olympics.

2006: Commonwealth got him a lot of joy.

2007: After he returned missing to the almost circuit a year due to back injury, finished ninth in Milan World Cup and came eighth in the World Cup Finals held in Bangkok.

India’s first individual Olympic gold

August 12, 2008 From the archives of “The Times of India”

Alok Sinha | TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Golden Eye, or The Man With The Golden Gun. 26-year-old Abhinav Bindra of Chandigarh hit bullseye in Beijing, giving us our first-ever individual Olympic gold. Boom Boom Bindra’s fired up a nation’s imagination and given Indian sport a desperately needed shot in the arm

The final shot from Abhinav Bindra’s rifle may not have been heard outside the packed hall in the Beijing Shooting Range Complex. But its bang was loud enough to lift the spirits of a billion-plus Indians back home. No individual gold has mattered so much to so many people in the history of Olympics.

It was a medal for Abhinav; it was redemption for India. Never again will anyone be able to point a smug, sardonic finger and say: ‘‘No Indian is good enough to win an individual Olympic gold.’’

Hockey’s eight gold medals notwithstanding, the last coming 28 years ago, this is the first time that an Indian has won an individual gold since modern Olympics started in 1896. There is no greater joy than listening to the sound of the national anthem on the world’s biggest stage.

The joy was also spurred by the improbable nature of the triumph. The script of the men’s 10m air rifle final might have been penned by Alfred Hitchcock himself. Bindra, who qualified for the final with the fourth-best score of 596, looked calm and assured when the call for the first shot came. The first shot — 10.7. He started with a bang and that set the tone for the 10-shot final. He followed it up with a 10.3. After the third shot, a 10.4, he had moved from No. 3 to No. 2. Then, Bindra slowly ate into the lead of Finland’s Henri Hakkinen and went ahead after the 7th shot with 10.6.


This is the fifth individual Olympic medal for India. Khashaba Dadasaheb Jadhav won the first, a bronze in wrestling at the Helsinki Games in 1952. After a long gap, Leander Paes won the tennis bronze in Atlanta Games in 1996.

Then, Karnam Malleswari won a weightlifting bronze in 2000 in Sydney and Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore raised the bar, winning a silver in Athens in 2004.

Comeback

FOR A YEAR, HE COULDN’T LIFT A RIFLE

Aritra Mukhopadhyay | TNN

FROM THE ARCHIVES OF ‘‘THE TIMES OF INDIA’’: 2008

Chandigarh:Even as a kid, Abhinav Bindra’s buddies say, he was different. The boy was reticent, but not unfriendly. No one could quite put a finger on him. He seemed to have a secret core that nobody could reach out to. And as the bespectacled boy (with minus 4 power in both eyes) took to the shooting range, there was a steely determination that even his closest friends couldn’t fathom.

This last attribute was perhaps what pulled Abhinav back from the brink. Since 2006, he had been down and out for months with a career-threatening spinal injury caused due to ligament overstretching in the lumbodorsal region.

All those months, Abhinav could barely pick up his 5kg rifle, let alone shoot with it. ‘‘Less than perfect shooting technique, lack of trained doctors and micronutrient deficiency can result in some of the common shooting sports injuries,’’ says Dr Amit Bhattacharjee, who accompanied Bindra to Zagreb and Beijing.

So bad was the injury that many were writing him off after he dropped out of the Doha Asian Games in December 2006. But Abhinav wasn’t one to give up. He was diligent in his physiotherapy. He took up a thorough rehabilitation programme that helped reduce the strain on his spine and made some technical changes for a better posture.

So, while the world had lost its focus on Abhinav, the shooter himself was completely focused on his recovery. And training. First at his private airconditioned shooting range, and then, in Germany under coach Gaby. The champion was quietly waiting for his moment — with patience and determination.

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