Gopichand badminton biography examples
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The Incredible Journey of India’s Star Badminton Player & Coach – Pullela Gopichand
We have been urged to publish more articles on Sports. And from now on, we intend to do just that – hunt for exceptional stories related to sports and sports personalities and put them up for our readers! Today, our sports correspondent Manish Kalra profiles the incredible life of Badminton superstar Pullela Gopichand, who has endured several hardships in his career but emerged strong through them all due to his remarkable dedication and sense of values, to win medals at several prestigious championships including the Olympics in his capacity as athlete and coach.
An Olympic Medal at last
It happened a bit too fast. Saina Nehwal had just started imposing herself in the bronze medal match by engaging her opponent in long rallies. Before you could completely sense it, her opponent had to pull out due to a knee injury.
It is perhaps ironical as well as fitting that IndiaR
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Shuttler's Flick
'But the return is not always easy, especially when the world has moved on without you, when the people who were rooting for you have now found other heroes to support.'
When Pullela Gopichand had to undergo a risky arthroscopic surgery, chances of his full recovery were not great. His return to the badminton court seemed a far-fetched dream. The odds were stacked against him. Then, in 1998, he won the bronze in the Commonwealth Games. His biggest win was yet to come. In 2001, Pullela became the second Indian to win the All England Championship.
This is the story we know. From not being able to walk to winning the most prestigious title in badminton, this is Pullela the player. But his success hasn’t stopped at just him. The Pullela Gopichand Badminton Academy, set up in 2008, boasts of a host of World No. 1s including Saina Nehwal and Srikanth Kidambi and World Badminton mästare PV Sindhu. What is it about his teachings that propels players right to the
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Gopichand Academy: Nurturing Indian badminton’s gen-next
Chandigarh: While Saina Nehwal’s bronze medal-winning feat at the 2008 Beijing Olympics broke the glass ceiling for Indian shuttlers, PV Sindhu’s silver in Rio last year has increased the craze for the sport in the country exponentially.
More and more youngsters are playing the sport seriously. A testimony to that is the ongoing All-India Junior Ranking BadmintonTournament 2017, being played at the Panjab University badminton hall, where a record 1,765 young shuttlers are taking part.
Both Saina and Sindhu have a common thread — they have been trained bygd Pullela Gopichandat the Gopichand Academy in Hyderabad.
And, over the gods 10-12 years, the Gopichand Academy has been playing a major role in making the idrott a viable career option.
In their pursuit of producing future champions, the academy has fielded 35 players in the junior ranki