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Home  » Sports » Federations gear up for resumption amid lockdown relaxation

Federations gear up for resumption amid lockdown relaxation

Source: PTI   -  Edited By: Laxmi Negi
Last updated on: May 18, 2020 21:55 IST
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Shooting

IMAGE: NRAI president Raninder Singh sounded optimistic a day after the Ministry of Home Affairs guidelines permitted reopening of sports complexes and stadia. Photograph: SAI Media/Twitter

The shooting federation got busy firming up its plans, wary paddlers were asked to report for training while the boxing body was consulting team doctors to figure a way forward as Indian sports sought resumption amid relaxation in the continuing COVID-19 lockdown.

 

 

A day after the Ministry of Home Affairs allowed sports complexes and stadia to open without spectators, National Sports Federations were deliberating ways to facilitate training of at least the Olympic-bound athletes. The lockdown has been extended till May 31.

"I'm happy to inform sportspersons and all concerned that sports activities will be conducted in sports complexes and stadia strictly in accordance with MHA guidelines and that of the States in which they are situated," Sports Minister Kiren Rijiju tweeted.

Questions that dominated the discourse at federations were how would athletes be brought to training complexes amid travel restrictions and how testing for COVID-19 and quarantine be done for those who make it.

The body with most money, the BCCI, does not plan to organise training camps for its contracted players despite the clearance but will coordinate with state associations to resume practice at the local level in the fourth phase of the lockdown.

Others have, however, got thinking.

"I can say that training can start for a minimum of 13 weight categories. In each category, two wrestlers can join the camp," Wrestling Federation of India's Assistant Secretary Vinod Tomar said.

The wrestling camps are held in Lucknow and Sonepat centres of the Sports Authority of India (SAI).

The shooting federation said it was already working on a resumption plan given that the sport is individual and ensuring social distancing won't be an issue.

"We shall firm up plans to resume athlete training and competitions accordingly soon," National Rifle Association of India Raninder Singh said.

The Table Tennis Federation of India sought written consent from its top 16 players to join a training camp but the wary paddlers said they would prefer to wait a while.

Most players, including leading ones such as Sharath Kamal and G Sathiyan, said they were not comfortable travelling from their base in Chennai anytime soon amid the pandemic. TT camps are held at NIS Patiala, Sonepat and Kolkata.

But with flights still not permitted and the Railways conducting only limited operations, the logistical problems have also come to the fore.

"How will the top athletes join camps? They are at home right now. Even some coaches have gone home," said a boxing federation official.

"The boxers who join back will also have to be tested and then quarantine as well. I think nothing can resume before the lockdown officially ends," he added.

The federation officials spent the day conducting online meetings with doctors attached with the elite boxers to chalk out the medical protocol. Nine Indian boxers have qualified for the Olympics and they are the ones likely to resume training first.

According to the proposed Standard Operating Procedure formulated by SAI, no sparring would be allowed for contact sports for the time being.

"That's a given," said the federation official.

Hockey India has sent its training plan to SAI for approval. The Olympic-bound men's and women's teams have been based at SAI's Bengaluru centre since mid-March, when the lockdown first came into force. They have talked about being home sick but have largely coped well.

Others like the weightlifting body are continuing to wait for fresh instructions from the sports ministry, which has been vigorously advocating a resumption of training for elite athletes by the end of this month.

Elimination of low-ventilation change rooms, disinfection of training equipment after every use, and usage of gyms in shifts are some of the measures that the SAI has proposed to counter the COVID-19 threat once training resumes.

It has also suggested making the Arogya Setu app mandatory for all athletes and staff, strict social distancing at training venues, use of PPE kits by medical practitioners on duty, and stringent supervision of athletes' health. 

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Source: PTI  -  Edited By: Laxmi Negi© 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.

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