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How crowd-funding helped Nadeem win Pak first Olympic gold

Last updated on: August 09, 2024 14:00 IST

Paris Olympics champion and Pakistan Arshad Nadeem poses beside the screen displaying his new Olympic record after the javelin throw final on Thursday

IMAGE: Paris Olympics champion and Pakistan Arshad Nadeem poses beside the screen displaying his new Olympic record after the javelin throw final on Thursday. Photograph: Phil Noble/Reuters

Paris Olympics champion and Pakistan Arshad Nadeem poses beside the screen displaying his new Olympic record after the javelin throw final on Thursday

When Pakistan's national sports board was deciding who to finance among the seven athletes bound for Paris Olympics, only Arshad Nadeem and his coach were deemed good enough for funds.

Nadeem and his coach Salman Fayyaz Butt were the lucky ones to have their air tickets financed by PSB (Pakistan Sports Board).

On Thursday, the 27-year-old from Khanewal village in Punjab region repaid the faith with an Olympic record and country's first individual gold at the biggest sporting stage on the planet.

 

The son of a mason, the 6'3" Nadeem sent the spear to a distance of 92.97m, in a jaw-dropping performance to shatter the previous Olympic record of 90.57m and boss a field that also featured his good friend but fierce rival from across the border Neeraj Chopra, who had to be content with a silver medal despite a season's best performance of 89.45m.

In the last Olympics in Tokyo, the Indian star won gold for his country while Nadeem finished fifth in final standings.

Despite his career being hit by elbow, knee and back problems and burdened by the lack of top facilities and equipment available to athletes of other countries, Nadeem has already achieved a lot by getting the Pakistani people to closely follow his feats instead of cricket.

While Chopra, the defending champion, was among the most well looked after athletes in the field, Nadeem had seen a time when he didn't have funds to even buy a javelin for himself.

Nadeem had no major sponsorships and months before the Paris Games, he turned to social media to help replace his old javelin for training.

Few months back when Arshad appealed for authorities to replace his old javelin with a new one for his training, Chopra promptly supported Nadeem's case on social media.

"People have no idea how Arshad got to this place today. How his fellow villagers and relatives used to donate money so that he could travel to other cities for his training and events in his early days," his father Muhammad Ashraf told PTI after his qualification to the Olympics finals on Tuesday.

Pakistan sent a total of seven athletes to Paris and six of them failed to qualify for the finals of their respective events.

Nadeem has been putting in consistent performances over the years. He won a silver medal at the World Championship last year and also a gold in the Commonwealth Games 2022 with a 90.18m throw.

On Tuesday, August 6th, he qualified for the finals with a throw of 86.59m, bested by Chopra who produced a massive throw off 89.34 to qualify first.

Right after Nadeem qualified for the finals for the second successive Olympics, there was celebration at his house where his parents, brothers, wife and two children and fellow villagers raised slogans of Pakistan Zindabad. His parents also distributed sweets.

"If my son can bring home an Olympic medal for Pakistan it would be the proudest moment for us and everyone in this village," his father had said.

Well, he could now throw the biggest party of his life after what transpired in the French capital.

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