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This is an archive article published on November 20, 2010

From turbulent Tigris to a podium finish

His boat was virtually a stranger as an ally in his quest for an Asian Games medal.

His boat was virtually a stranger as an ally in his quest for an Asian Games medal,but Iraqi Haeider Hamarasheid says he enjoyed sculling on calm,still waters as Iraq picked its first medal at Guangzhou. Training on a running-water course of the Tigris river back home and using a rented boat for the Games here,Haeider’s bronze medal finish in the Men’s Singles Sculls propelled a series of celebrations back home even as he readied to treat his team mates to a feast in the Athletes Village.

The Arab Rowing Championship winner hadn’t thought it possible a few years ago,though he continued to train at his sparsely equipped boat club. “The water’s running there,and not a still lake,and I end up training with and against the current and only on a distance of 700-800 metres one way,” he says. “Plus Iraqis can’t bring in their boats here. So I rented a Chinese boat like I’d done at the Beijing Olympics. But the medal has come and it’s very important for all individual sportsmen from Iraq,” he adds.

The 27-year-old reckons a better boat would have put him in closer contention. “Both your Indian and the Taipei guys have Europe-made boats,the Indian’s is German and the other’s from Italy. It makes a difference of at least 6-7 seconds,” says the 6’3” tall man,who finished almost 6 seconds behind Takhar.

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India’s second gold-medal race thus,had an Iraqi audience added to the Indian billion. “Everyone was watching the race on TV. It means a lot to all the sportsmen from Iraq — knowing they can do it too,” he adds.

The enthusiast who started rowing 6 years ago,after 5 summers in a kayak along the Tigris hopes to take his sport to the next level in coming years. “I used to be a body builder once,and when the war happened,and bombings started,I’d completely stopped training. That’s when I went back to body building and improved on my strength,” he says.

“Now I lead the perfect rower’s life,” he smiles. A ride on the bicycle for 12-13 minutes,and he’s at the river banks and at the smallish boat-club where he trains for hours on end all by himself,at others aided by his coach. “I want to take Iraqi rowing further,” Haeider says,even as their first Asiad medal gets scribbled on the sandy banks of the Tigris — Iraq’s first of the 2010 edition.

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