News APP

NewsApp (Free)

Read news as it happens
Download NewsApp

Available on  gplay

This article was first published 9 years ago
Home  » Sports » Maheswary wins maiden Nat'l Games gold with new meet record

Maheswary wins maiden Nat'l Games gold with new meet record

Source: PTI
February 12, 2015 17:52 IST
Get Rediff News in your Inbox:

Former Asian champion Renjith Maheswary nabbed his maiden National Games gold with a new meet record in triple jump as previous marks continued to tumble like nine pins in the athletics arena on the penultimate day of competitions in the 35th edition in Thiruvananthapuram.

But what remained unchallenged was the Services Sports Control Board's (SSCB) domination on the medals table as they remained on top with a tally of 131 (81 gold, 23 silver and 27 bronze so far).

Hosts Kerala displaced Haryana from the second spot owing to a strong athletics performance to total 119 (34 gold, 37 silver and 48 bronze). Haryana took the third spot with 33 gold, 37 silver and 119 bronze.

The track and field events proved to be the most enthralling yet again for a packed house.

Former Commonwealth Games bronze-medallist Renjith got over the disappointment of disqualification in men's long jump by shattering the meet record in triple jump for a gold medal and a berth in the World Championships.

The 29-year-old, who won bronze medals in the past two National Games, cleared 16.66m to better the 16.62m record set by Arpinder Singh in the 2011 Games.

"I am very happy with how I performed and it has helped me put behind the bad memories of the last one year, especially the Arjuna awards controversy," Renjith said after the race, referring to the Arjuna award, which was withdrawn from him owing to a doping suspension in the past.

"I have also qualified for the World Championships (scheduled from August 22 to 30 in Beijing) and I am looking to resurrect myself. I was aiming to better the meet record and it is very satisfying to have done that," added the athlete who announced that he would retire after the 2016 Rio Olympics.

The silver went to defending champion Arpinder (16.41m), while the bronze was clinched by SSCB's Rakesh Babu (16.29m).

There was a massive upset in the men's 400m hurdles when former Asian Games gold-medallist and the national and meet record holder Joseph Abraham was disqualified for a false start, leading to the crowning of a new champion in SSCB's Durgesh Kumar, much to the disappointment of home fans. Durgesh could not breach the meet record but nabbed the top honours with a timing of 50.66sec. Another SSCB man, M Ramachandran took the silver after clocking 50.93sec, while the bronze was taken by Tamil Nadu's Binauaquito Thyagarajan (51.74sec).

Abraham's disqualification was a massive disappointment for hosts Kerala, who were banking on him for a sure-shot gold. But Anu Raghavan ensured that the capacity crowd had something to celebrate when she notched up the 400m women's hurdles gold medal. Anu clocked 58.63sec to finish ahead of Haryana's Santosh Kumari (59.63sec) and Kerala's VV Jisha (1:00.93sec).

The first track and field event of the day was the women's 100m hurdles and a new meet record was set when Tamil Nadu's G Gayathry completed the race in 13.66sec to beat the previous mark of 13.81sec created by Anuradha Biswal in 2002. Karnataka's Meghna Shetty (13.89sec) and Tamil Nadu's Deepika (13.96) ended up with silver and bronze medal, respectively.

The men's 110m hurdles meet record was also breached and it was hardly a surprise that it was SSCB's Siddhant Thingaliya who did the honours. Thingaliya, the reigning national champion and also the national record holder, clocked 13.83sec to beat the 14.10sec mark set by Gurpreet Singh in 2001.

Image: Renjith Maheswary

Photograph: Christopher Lee/Getty Images

Get Rediff News in your Inbox:
Source: PTI© Copyright 2024 PTI. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PTI content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent.

India In Australia 2024-2025