Key Points

Indian athletes excelled at the Asian Athletics Championships, securing a total of 24 medals. Sachin Yadav impressed in his first international outing, bagging a silver in javelin with a personal best throw of 85.16 meters. Animesh Kujur also made headlines by winning a bronze in the 200m, setting a new national record in the process. This strong performance placed India second in the overall standings, just behind China.

Key Points: Sachin Yadav and Animesh Kujur Shine in Asian Athletics

  • Sachin Yadav wins javelin silver with personal best 85.16m
  • Animesh Kujur makes history with 200m bronze
  • India secures second place with 24 medal haul
  • China tops medal tally, Japan follows third
4 min read

Asian Athletics: Sachin gets silver with PB, Animesh wins bronze as India end with 24 medals (ld)

Sachin Yadav's silver and Animesh Kujur's bronze lead India to 24 medals at Asian Athletics.

"The Asian championships are a good learning experience. - Sachin Yadav"

Gumi

, May 31: Javelin thrower Sachin Yadav achieved a personal best in his maiden international event while sprinter Animesh Kujur bagged a bronze as the Indian athletes fought hard and gave a good account of themselves on the concluding day of the 26th Asian Athletics Championships here on Saturday in the South Korean City of Gumi.

Their efforts took the overall medal tally to 24 to finish, which ensured the country finished in second place in the final standings behind China.

Of the 24 medals, eight gold, 10 silver, and six bronze medals. China topped the table chart with 26 medals, including 15 gold, eight silver, and three bronze medals. Japan, with 24 medals, four of them gold, was third in the medal tally.

All eyes on the final day of the continental competition were on the men's javelin throw. Sachin Yadav, on his international debut, recorded a personal and season best of 85.16m to win the silver medal behind Pakistan’s Olympic champion Arshad Nadeem (86.40m).

On his missing the automatic qualification mark of 85.50m for the September 13 to 21 Tokyo World Athletics Championships, Yadav said, the Asian championships are a good learning experience, and he will get back to chalk out plans for his next competition. “I missed vital training sessions due to ankle and shoulder niggle which hampered my preparation for the Asian meet,” Yadav added. “I should be able to recover the lost ground in the coming weeks to achieve my goal of earning a ticket to Worlds in my next competition.”

Yadav said he was focused on giving his best in his first international meet. “I always focus on my performance during competition and don’t look at the results of other competitors,” the Asian silver medallist said. Earlier in February at the Uttarakhand National Games, Yadav won gold with a distance of 84.39m.

The final day also saw Animesh Kujur sprinting to glory in the men's 200m. A false start by a Chinese sprinter didn’t upset the Indian sprinter's strategy to win a medal in the 200m.

On his way to winning bronze, Kujur clocked 20.32 seconds to better his own national record of 20.40 seconds set in a domestic meet in Kochi in April. “The start was not so good. But good curve running enabled me to earn a medal in the Asian meet,” Kujur said in the post-race interaction.

The Indian quartet of Srabani Nanda, SS Sneha, Abhinaya Rajarajan, and Nithya Gandhe clocked 43.86 seconds to win silver in the women’s 4x100m relay. China took home gold while Thailand won bronze.

Distance runner Parul Chaudhary added a second silver to her kitty on Saturday. The winner of silver in the women’s 3,000m steeplechase added a 5000m silver medal to her collection on Saturday.

Middle-distance runner Pooja also added an 800m bronze to her kitty. She had won a 1500m silver in the competition. Vithya Ramraj also won bronze in the women’s 400m hurdles. She clocked 56.46 seconds. However, Jyothi Yarraji and Nithya Gandhe weren’t successful in winning medals in the women’s 200m.

Results (Day 5):

Men: 200m: Towa Uzawa (Japan) 20.12 seconds, Abdulaziz Abdu A (Saudi Arabia) 20.31 seconds, Animesh Kujur (India) 20.32 seconds.

800m: Ebrahim Alzofairi (Kuwait) 1:44.59, Ali Amirian (Iran) 1:44.97, Abubaker H Abdalla (Qatar) 1:45.20, Krishan Kumar (India 7th) 1:48.72, Anu Kumar (India 8th)1:58.04.

Javelin throw: Arshad Nadeem (Pakistan) 86.40m, Sachin Yadav (India) 85.16m, Yuta Sakiyama (Japan) 83.75m, Yashvir Singh (India 5th 82.57m.

Women:

200m: Chen Yujie (China) 22.97 seconds, Veronica Shanti Pereira (Singapore) 22.98 seconds, Li Yuting (China) 23.23 seconds, Jyothi Yarraji (India 5th) 23.47 seconds, Nithya Gandhe (India 7th) 23.90 seconds.

800m: Wu Hongjiao (China)2:00.08, Rin Kubo (Japan) 2:00.42, Pooja (India) 2:01.89, Twinkle Chaudhary (India 4th) 2:03.33.

5,000m: Norah Jeruto Tanui (Kazakhstan) 14:58.71, Parul Chaudhary (India) 15:15.33, Yuma Yamamoto (Japan) 15:16.86, Sanjivani Jadhav (India 5th) 15:36.40.

400m hurdles: Mo Jiadie (China) 55.31 seconds, Oluwakemi Mujidat Adekoya 55.32 seconds, Vithya Ramraj (India) 56.46 seconds, Anu R (India 7th) 57.46 seconds.

4x100m relay: China 43.28 seconds, India (Srabani Nanda, SS Sneha, Abhinaya Rajarajan, Nithya Gandhe) 43.86 seconds, Thailand 44.26 seconds.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
What a performance by our athletes! Sachin's silver in javelin on his international debut is phenomenal. Just 1.24m behind Olympic champion Arshad Nadeem shows we're closing the gap with Pakistan in this event. 🇮🇳 The future looks bright!
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Priya M.
So proud of our women athletes! Silver in 4x100m relay and multiple medals by Parul Chaudhary shows how Indian women are dominating track events. But why aren't we getting more golds? Need better training facilities and nutrition programs.
A
Amit S.
Animesh Kujur breaking his own national record twice in two months is incredible! 200m in 20.32s is world-class timing. If we can develop more sprinters like him, India can challenge Jamaica and USA someday. Keep going champ! 💪
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Sunita R.
Second place behind China with 24 medals is a huge achievement! But we must analyze why China got 15 golds while we got only 8. Their sports system is more scientific. We need to learn from them without copying completely.
V
Vikram J.
Sachin's performance shows the depth of talent in India. Just imagine what he can do with proper injury management and training! Government should provide these athletes with best physios and coaches. No more "niggle" excuses please!
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Neha T.
So happy for Pooja winning bronze in 800m after her 1500m silver! Multi-event athletes are rare in India. She deserves more recognition like our cricketers get. When will we have athletics stars with similar brand value? 🏃‍♀️

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