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Teen stars Manu Bhaker and Saurabh Chaudhary staged a remarkable comeback to claim the mixed 10m air pistol gold, providing a fitting finale to India's unprecedented dominance of the medal tally in the ISSF World Cup Rifle/Pistol stage in Rio.
Representing the other Indian team in the same event, Yashaswini Deswal and Abhishek Verma won the silver as the country picked up the maximum possible medals on the final day of the tournament.
India's final tally here stood at five gold, two silver and two bronze medals for a total of nine. No other country won more than one gold medal here.
World number one in women's 10M Air Rifle, Apurvi Chandela, partnered Deepak Kumar to win India its fourth gold medal on the concluding day of the event. The pair won the top medal in the mixed air rifle event.
Anjum Moudgil and Divyansh Singh Panwar representing India 2, who won the previous two World Cup editions of the same event, provided the icing on the cake with a bronze, as India continued to reach never before seen heights in Rifle and Pistol shooting.
In the air pistol final, the pair of Manu Bhaker and Saurabh Chaudhary prevailed over Yashaswini Singh Deswal and Abhishek Verma 17-15 in a nerve-wracking contest.
They were, at various stages of the final, down 3-9, then 7-13 and then finally 9-15 before winning the next four duels straight to stage a remarkable come-from-behind win.
The winning pair had earlier shot 394 out of 400 in round two of qualification, including a stunning 100 each in the final 10-shot series, to top the eight team round while Yashaswini and Abhishek, both fresh from their individual gold medal winning exploits in the competition earlier, came in second with 386.
Hungary and China 1 were left fighting for the bronze, which was won by the pair of Pang Wei and Jiang Riaxin of China.
Apurvi and Deepak blew away the Chinese pair of Yang Qian and Yu Haonan 16-6 in a one-sided final. India won eight of the 11 single-shot duels between the teams, where the combined score of one pair is compared to that of the other and the higher total awarded two points.
The first to 16 points wins and this is the format which will be used in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics.
Their total of 419.1 enabled them to get straight into the gold medal match where they found themselves against the Chinese pair who had come in second with 418.7.
Anjum and Divyansh shot 418.0 to lie fourth and qualified for the bronze medal match against the Hungarian pair of Eszter Meszaros and Peter Sidi, who shot 418.6 to finish third.
Anjum and Divyansh also won their bronze-medal match against the Hungarians with relative ease, chalking out a 16-10 result.
In the history of the ISSF World Cup before 2019, India had collected a total of 19 gold medals, only 11 being in the rifle and pistol disciplines while eight came from the shotgun discipline.
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