HomeSportsOlympics 2024Paris Olympics: India’s archers need to buck history of mental frailty in knockout rounds
Trending Topics

Paris Olympics: India’s archers need to buck history of mental frailty in knockout rounds

Ahead of the individual events starting on Tuesday afternoon, this mental frailty under pressure is the biggest concern, and it's up to Bommadevara, Ankita, Bhajan and Deepika to somehow rewrite that narrative over the coming days.

July 30, 2024 / 16:38 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
India's Ankita Bhakat in action at Paris Olympics
India's Ankita Bhakat in action at Paris Olympics (X)

The stars couldn’t have aligned any better for India’s men’s and women’s archery teams. Ahead of the elimination rounds, their strong performances in qualifying had opened up easier pathways to the semi-final and possible medals. The men had finished third, with Dhiraj Bommadevara finishing fourth in the individual rankings. Turkey, the quarterfinal opponents, had Mete Gazoz, the 2020 Olympic champion, in their ranks, but had finished 21 points behind India in qualifying. South Korea, Chinese Taipei and Japan, the three medallists from Tokyo, were all on the other side of the draw.

But with a semi-final place and a first archery medal up for grabs, India fell apart. Gazoz shot four 10s in his eight arrows, the same as Berkim Tumer, their second-ranked archer. Abdullah Yildirmis, who had finished a lowly 58th in the individual qualification, put together three 10s and five 9s. Bommadevara’s scores included two 7s, an 8 and only two 10s. Tarundeep Rai, at his fourth Olympics, had three 8s and a lone 10. Only Pravin Jadhav, with four 10s and three 9s, performed to potential.

Story continues below Advertisement

Paris Olympics: Dismal India pinned by Turkey in archery quarterfinal

To illustrate just how badly India underperformed, look at the scores that South Korea, eventual gold medallists, produced in the knockout rounds. In the 6-0 thrashing of Japan in the quarterfinal, 11 of their 18 arrows were perfect 10s. In the semifinal against China, when they shot their worst, they still had eight 10s out of 18. In the final against France, the hosts who shot brilliantly themselves, they reeled off an astonishing 14 10s in 18 arrows. Across the three matches (54 arrows), they had just four scores of 8.