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Mini Kapoor Posted: Aug 08, 2008 at 2235 hrs IST
The first gold on offer at the Olympics will once again be the women’s 10m air rifle. The Chinese contingent, expected through various projections to win the maximum number of gold medals this Summer Games, will be watching that event keenly. Local girl Du Li defends her title from Athens 2004.

For India too it’s an important event. Anjali Bhagwat will take aim to reverse the dashed hopes of her first two Olympics. (In Sydney 2000, she placed 8th in the event.) India has brought nine shooters to Beijing, including two women. And along with Bhagwat, Avneet Kaur Sidhu will also compete in two categories: 10m air rifle and 50m rifle 3 positions.

Shooting at the Olympics has extreme peculiarities. It is, amazingly, a sport to which separation of the men’s and women’s competition began in 1984, a movement completed as recently as 1996, according to The Complete Book of the Olympics by David Wallechinsky, a handbook updated every four years and which every second reporter appears to be carrying in this vast Media Press Centre.

Shooting also has a complicated way of keeping its records. According, once again, to the well-informed Mr Wallechinsky, “Every few years, someone conquers a target and achieves a perfect score. At this point, the officials of the International Shooting Union alter the target by decreasing the size of the bull’s eye and the rings. It is for this reason that the world records for various events sometimes go down instead of up.”

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But we are still not done with shooting’s complexities at the Olympics. As the Indian shooters will know only too well, Olympic records and world records are not to be uttered in the same breath. Olympic records, points out Sunny Thomas, manager for the Indian shooting squad, are inevitably less than world records. The tension, he says in the course of a long morning’s practice session, is just so high at the Olympics.

So it could be that while Bhagwat has been ranked first in the world once in the 10m air rifle, she has not yet been able to convert that experience into an Olympic medal. This time may be different, she says. “This is my third Olympics.”

Along with archery, shooting is a game of extreme concentration and calls for the capacity for focused stillness. It’s the kind of concentration, says Bhagwat, that cannot be maintained in “day-to-day” life. Yoga helps. So does...

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