Reference Text
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Saurabh
Chaudhary,
all
of
16,
has
achieved
one
of
Indian
sports'
most
remarkable
feats
when
he
shot
his
way
to
a
gold
in
the
10
metre
air
pistol
event
at
the
Jakarta
Palembang
Asian
Games.
For
sure,
India
has
recorded
success
at
all
levels
in
shooting.
But
this
time
a
rank
outsider
came
into
the
Asian
Games
and
held
his
nerve
in
a
nail
biting
contest,
where
other
competitors
included
a
South
Korean
Olympic
gold
medallist,
stars
from
China's
sports
assembly
line
and
a
Japanese
legend.
He
appeared
nerveless
at
the
crunch,
a
phenomenon
rarely
seen
in
Indian
sport.
Chaudhary's
gold
will
go
down
as
a
milestone
for
its
sheer
unexpectedness
and
the
odds
that
had
to
be
overcome.
Another
aspect
which
stands
out
is
that
Chaudhary
and
Abhishek
Verma,
who
won
bronze
in
the
10
metre
air
pistol
event,
are
civilians
in
a
sport
where
the
Indian
army
has
contributed
many
winners.
One
reason
for
the
new
wave
of
winners
from
rural
and
small
town
India
is
that
former
sportspersons,
in
conjunction
with
private
philanthrophists,
have
begun
to
invest
in
providing
finishing
touches
to
potential
champions.
These
not
for
profit
organisations
complement
state
funding
and
the
combined
impact
has
begun
to
translate
into
medals,
as
compared
to
an
earlier
era
when
many
first
rate
sportspeople
fell
marginally
short.
The
achievement
of
Saurabh
Chaudhary
is
not
just
a
milestone.
It
also
signals
backend
changes
in
Indian
sports
architecture
are
producing
results.
In
recent
times
a
violent
fringe
which
neither
fears
police
nor
has
respect
for
the
law
has
been
unduly
emboldened.
However,
India
cannot
afford
its
own
contingent
of
'non
state
actors'.
Lives
and
freedoms
are
at
stake,
not
to
mention
that
providing
security
to
citizens
is
the
first
function
and
duty
of
a
modern
state.
Saurabh
Chaudhary,
all
of
16,
has
achieved
one
of
Indian
sports'
most
remarkable
feats
when
he
shot
his
way
to
a
gold
in
the
10
metre
air
pistol
event
at
the
Jakarta
Palembang
Asian
Games.
For
sure,
India
has
recorded
success
at
all
levels
in
shooting.
But
this
time
a
rank
outsider
came
into
the
Asian
Games
and
held
his
nerve
in
a
nail
biting
contest,
where
other
competitors
included
a
South
Korean
Olympic
gold
medallist,
stars
from
China's
sports
assembly
line
and
a
Japanese
legend.
He
appeared
nerveless
at
the
crunch,
a
phenomenon
rarely
seen
in
Indian
sport.
Chaudhary's
gold
will
go
down
as
a
milestone
for
its
sheer
unexpectedness
and
the
odds
that
had
to
be
overcome.
Another
aspect
which
stands
out
is
that
Chaudhary
and
Abhishek
Verma,
who
won
bronze
in
the
10
metre
air
pistol
event,
are
civilians
in
a
sport
where
the
Indian
army
has
contributed
many
winners.
One