HomeSportsOlympics 2024Arshad Nadeem finally steps out of Neeraj Chopra’s shadow to smash Olympic record and win gold

Arshad Nadeem finally steps out of Neeraj Chopra’s shadow to smash Olympic record and win gold

Nadeem has his moment. And Chopra was one of the first to go and give him a congratulatory hug. Fortunately, both men share a warm relationship that isn’t coloured by any of the jingoism so often seen in both countries.

August 09, 2024 / 10:12 IST
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Arshad Nadeem finally steps out of Neeraj Chopra’s shadow to smash Olympic record and win gold (PTI Photo)
Arshad Nadeem finally steps out of Neeraj Chopra’s shadow to smash Olympic record and win gold (PTI Photo)

Two men, both pathbreakers for their respective nations, born within a year of each other, in places just 500km apart. But Arshad Nadeem, born in Mian Channu in Pakistani Punjab, had a problem. No matter how well he threw in other competitions and meets, when it came to the big occasion, Neeraj Chopra, his younger Indian rival, would always upstage him. It happened enough times to make people wonder whether the very sight of Chopra’s long mane and headband psyched Nadeem out a little. But in the magnificent surroundings of the Stade de France on Thursday night, Nadeem laid such theories to rest in emphatic fashion, putting together an astonishing series of throws that would have made Jan Zelezny – the Czech who was the greatest of them all – turn Pakistani-green with envy.

With the athletes out for the men’s 200m final during the first round of the javelin, Nadeem, the fourth to throw, found no rhythm at all. He stuttered through his run-up, stopped and went back to his starting position. With the clock winding down, he fouled. At that stage, the ghosts of so many near-misses might have troubled a lesser athlete. Not Nadeem. With his second throw, he ended the competition. He could scarcely believe his eyes as he followed the javelin’s arc once he released it. Long before it was measured, he probably knew that he would be taking Pakistan’s first athletics gold back home.

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When the distance flashed up on the screen, there was a collective gasp from over 80,000 people. Even Nadeem looked stunned, because 92.97m meant that he had shattered Andreas Thorkildsen’s Olympic record from Beijing (2008) by a whopping 2.40m. Even in a field of such incredible quality, every other man knew that it was over. The peerless Zelezny himself only once threw over 90m in an Olympic final, and that was 90.17 when he clinched his hat-trick gold in 2000.

Chopra had just one legal throw, itself a monstrous 89.45m – a season’s best for him – as he tried to respond to the gauntlet thrown down. But in somehow trying to go where he had never gone before, he kept fouling subsequent attempts. In truth, the fluency just wasn’t there, with his mind probably as frazzled as everyone else’s.