HomeSportsOlympics 2024India’s disappointing campaign in Paris 2024 seeks solace from Neeraj Chopra in javelin final

India’s disappointing campaign in Paris 2024 seeks solace from Neeraj Chopra in javelin final

For India, it will mean a lot more if Neeraj does it again. It’s been a campaign marred with a slew of so-near-yet-so-far stories. From its biggest hope, the country expects nothing less than the best.

August 08, 2024 / 14:57 IST
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Paris: India's Neeraj Chopra during the Men's javelin throw qualification round at the 2024 Summer Olympics, in Paris. (PTI Photo)
Paris: India's Neeraj Chopra during the Men's javelin throw qualification round at the 2024 Summer Olympics, in Paris. (PTI Photo)

India’s underwhelming and soul-crushing Paris 2024 campaign is looking for some sort of redemption from its biggest hope. Minutes before midnight IST on Thursday, Neeraj Chopra will take part in the men’s javelin throw final and look to add to the gold medal he had won in the previous edition of the Olympic Games in Tokyo in 2021.

Having seen six fourth-place finishes already and Vinesh Phogat’s disqualification from women’s wrestling, the country is pinning hopes on the golden boy of Indian athletics. At 26, he has won everything that his discipline can offer and that itself is an unprecedented achievement in the history of Indian sports across disciplines.

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It’s well known that on a bad day, Neeraj settles for silver. Even in the qualifying competition in Paris, he topped the charts with a single throw and romped into the final. That throw of 89.34m was his season’s best and well ahead of the 88.63m posted by the second-placed Anderson Peters of Granada. Going by that, the form book and reputation, Neeraj starts as the favourite.

However, the final may just be a different challenge altogether. The average standard in men’s javelin in Paris has been high. Apart from Neeraj, there were four others who made it to the final with their first efforts. There were three more who threw above 86m. Other than Peters, Julian Weber of Germany (87.76) and Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem (86.59) will be among Neeraj’s closest competitors. And so will be Czechia’s Jakub Vadlejch (85.63), who finished second in Tokyo.