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India's best ever Asian Games medals tally, is thanks to Indian athletics coming of age

Nearly a third (23) of India's 71 medals at the 2023 Asian Games so far have come from track and field events.

October 04, 2023 / 12:57 IST
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Parul Chaudhary overtook Japan's Ririka Hironaka in the last 50 m to win gold in the Women's 5000m at the Hangzhou Asian Games on October 3, 2023. (Photo via X/@Media_SAI)

Even before the superstar Neeraj Chopra takes the field, Indian athletes have recorded their best-ever haul at the Asian Games with some breathtaking performances.

On October 3, Parul Chaudhary ran the race of her life. At Hangzhou’s Olympic stadium, the 28-year-old distance runner from Uttar Pradesh was an embodiment of self-belief and calmness, and showed just how well she could execute race tactics as she added a historic gold—India’s first in Asian Games history—in the women’s 5000m.


The race began at a fast pace, and Chaudhary comfortably placed herself in the fourth position, the runners in a cluster, led by Japan’s Ririka Hironaka. By the time the second 1000m came up, Bahrain’s Edao Bontu was in the lead, jostling with Hiranaka, even as the pace dropped further. But Chaudhary was not interested in these tussles, content to remain just behind the leaders, running with perfect rhythm, her muscles relaxed, and breathing easy. By the time the final couple of laps came around, other runners were visibly tiring, falling off the pace, the cluster broken up into groups of one or two runners graphed along the track.

Now Hironaka was in the lead, straining to maintain it, and Chaudhary was second by a good distance, but still running with the same easy rhythm, the same focused stride. So far, good but predictable running from the Indian national record holder for a predictable podium finish. But this is where it all changed dramatically. The Japanese runner, on the final bend, gave her final surge, speeding up and widening the lead with Chaudhary. The Indian runner picked up pace, but at a more even rate, still holding her nerves, still strictly running the plan. With just under 100m to the finish line, Hironaka, fatigued by her already-executed final kick, began to slow rapidly. This is what Chaudhary was waiting for—but did she have a kick to offer at this late stage of a gruelling race?

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Yes, and how—Chaudhary surged past Hironaka at full tilt in the last 50m, shocking the Japanese and the spectators, everyone but herself, as she swept to the Women's 5000m gold, just a day after she had claimed the 3000m Steeplechase silver behind world champion Mutile Yavi of Bahrain.

“I was so tired last night after the steeplechase,” Chaudhary said, “that I hardly slept. But somehow in the morning my body was full of energy and my mind was calm, I was thinking only of getting the gold in 5000m. I already had a silver, now I wanted a gold.”