Showing posts with label Olympic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Olympic. Show all posts

Saturday, 4 August 2012

Vijay wins silver for India at London Olympics

 
India's silver medal winner Vijay Kumar poses with his silver medal won in the men's 25m rapid fire pistol shooting event at the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Royal Artillery Barracks






LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 03: Vijay Kumar of India celebrates winning the silver medal in the Men's 50m Rifle Prone Shooting final on Day 7 of the London 2012 Olympic Games at The Royal Artillery Barracks on August 3, 2012 in London, England

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Olympics hockey: India suffer another reverse, lose 1-3 to Kiwis

 London, Aug 1 (IANS) New Zealand chalked up a 3-1 win over India who thus slid to their second defeat in as many matches in the Olympic men's hockey competition here Wednesday.

India, after a sensational start when Sandeep Singh converted a second minute penalty corner, faded away as the Kiwis came storming back with goals by Andrew Hayward (13th), Phillip Burrows (24th) and Nicolas Wilson (29th), and then nursed the lead to the end.It was a very disappointing performance by the Indians who just did not have the pace or power to overwhelm the Kiwis. Rather, age-old errors seemed to creep into India's game with badly positioned forwards inside the striking circle, over-dribbling and lack of variety in their attacks.

In the deep defence, too, the Indians looked a step slower than the Kiwis and, more often than not, struggled to get the ball away from the danger zone. So much so that for the second-half coach Michael Nobbs replaced captain and goalkeeper Bharat Chetri with Sreejesh, who justified the substitution with a couple of good saves.In contrast, the Black Sticks, who had beaten India 5-1 en route to winning the Azlan Shah Cup in Malaysia earlier this summer, appeared better organized in the midfield and deep defence while the forwards bided time for the long balls to counter attack.

In fact, the Kiwi defenders seemed to read the Indian attacks rather well and had enough men behind the ball to stall the rivals.India, who went down 2-3 to the Netherlands Monday, promised a lot in the opening minutes when they forced a penalty corner that Sandeep Singh converted, picking a brilliant angle and height to slot the drag-flick into the net.

However, the Kiwis kept their composure and gradually came back into the match while the Indians backpedalled at the first sign of counter-attack and provided a lot of space for the Black Sticks to make their moves.The Kiwis, who lost 0-2 to Korea in their opening game, accepted the invitation and began to attack in waves and forced two penalty corners, the second of which Hayward converted for the equaliser.

The Kiwis sustained the pressure and, with their forwards slipping through a rather porous Indian defence, it was only a matter of time before they scored. Another Hayward penalty corner attempt saw the ball deflecting on to defender Birendra Lakra's body off goalkeeper Bharat Chetri's stick resulting in a penalty stroke that Burrows converted.

The pattern continued and the Kiwis scored again on a counter-attack from the right wing as Wilson put Shea McAleese through and then was on hand to put home the return pass to put New Zealand 3-1 up.The Indians, apart from their opening spell, were hardly in the frame except during some sporadic raids that were easily repelled by a well-structured Kiwi defence.

The second-half was rather scrappy with the Kiwis more intent on pegging the opponents inside their own half while the Indians seemed to wilt under ceaseless pressure, unable to put together an effective attack.

Also, two yellow card suspensions in this session, first Sardar Singh for retaliation and Manpreet Singh for deliberate infringement, did not help India's cause while Sandeep Singh failed to convert two back-to-back penalty corners in the last quarter while Raghunath's attempt came off the post in the dying minutes.The Kiwis had a few chances to add to their first-half tally, notably three penalty corners, but Sreejesh brought off some fine saves to peg the score-line.

Olympics: BWF rejects India's appeal, Jwala-Ashwini out


London, Aug 2 (IANS): It was finally the end of the road for India's top women's doubles pair of Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa in the 2012 London Olympics after their appeal was shot down by the Badminton World Federation (BWF) here Wednesday.

The Indians had accused the Japanese pair of Mizuki Fujii and Reika Kakiiwa of "wanting to lose" a Olympic Games group match against the Chinese Taipei team. India's appeal of a re-look at the match came after the BWF suspended four female pairs for "not using one's best efforts to win a match".

The suspended pairs are Wang Xiaoli and Yu Yang of China; Greysia Polii and Meiliana Jauhari of Indonesia; Jung Kyung Eun and Kim Ha Na of South Korea; and Ha Jung Eun and Kim Min Jung, also of South Korea.

However, they were not from Group B, of which the Jwala and Ashwini were a part of. The Indians finished third in their group.

A disappointed Jwala said that they were not angry but disappointed.

"We are not angry, but disappointed. It was unfortunate. But we gave our best. Fixers should not be allowed to take part in the Olympics," said Jwala.

Ashwini told IANS that they had given their best.

"We have given our best and that is all we could do. Some things are not in our control," she added.

India coach Pullela Gopichand, a former All-England champion, said match-throwing does not stop there.

He claims that once China lost to Denmark in Group D Tuesday, Japan "wanted to be second" in Group B.

The No.4 seeds Fujii and Kakiiwa went down 19-21, 11-21 to the unseeded Cheng Wen Hsing and Chien Yu Chin of Chinese Taipei at the start of the afternoon session, and despite Gutta/Ponnappa winning against the Chinese Taipei pair and Singapore, the Indians failed to qualify.

"In Group B, (Chinese) Taipei had to and wanted to win, but Japan wanted to lose to be second in the group to avoid China," said Gopichand.

"We put in an appeal protest this morning and the BWF has come back saying they didn't find any bias or anything beyond the ordinary in the matches. We've filed an appeal to review that decision."

"Just because it's subtle and the crowd didn't make a noise, the TV didn't make a noise, doesn't mean it didn't happen. In this match only one team wanted to lose."

London Olympics chief organiser Sebastian Coe described the incidents as "depressing", saying "who wants to sit through something like that".

International Olympic Committee spokesman Mark Adams said that such incidents were "not acceptable".

Site Search