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From gymnast Dipa Karmakar wowing the world with her near-perfect Produnova vault to PV Sindhu and Sakshi Malik becoming the only Indian athletes to bag some metalware at the Olympics – 2016 was a year dominated by the unmatched achievements of the country’s sportswomen.
The last 12 months also saw 18-year-old golfer Aditi Ashok rewrite history in her rookie year. And an ever-improving women’s hockey team made it to the Olympics after a long wait of 36 years in 2016.
Here’s taking a look at five teams/athletes who made 2016 the year of the Indian sportswoman.
When India sent a record contingent of over 100 athletes to the Olympics this August, the nation had high hopes of bringing home at least ten medals, if not more.
After losing in the quarters, Sakshi used the repechage to her advantage. The Haryana grappler bounced back to win the bronze medal bout, beating Kyrgyzstan’s Aisuluu Tynybekova.
Even as she won the semifinals of the women’s singles badminton event at Rio, PV Sindhu had already broken two records. In a thrilling finale, the Hyderabad girl went down fighting to then world number one Carolina Marin. But Sindhu came home a winner – and as the first Indian woman to scoop up a silver medal at the Olympics.
In 2014, she became the first Indian woman gymnast to bag a medal (a bronze) in the Commonwealth Games. But 2016 proved to be Dipa Karmakar’s golden year. The diminutive Tripura girl booked a berth for the Rio Games, becoming the first Indian woman gymnast to qualify for the Olympics.
In the run-up Rio, Dipa refused financial assistance and the chance to train in a country of her choice. Yet, the 22-year-old finished fourth at the prestigious event. And she also managed to grab worldwide recognition, by performing the extremely risky Produnova vault with startling ease.
Dipa became the darling of the country overnight and was rewarded for her outstanding performance along with Rio medallists. In August, she was conferred with the Khel Ratna. After the Games, an optimistic Dipa said she was eyeing a gold in Tokyo 2020.
From the onset to the end of the golf season, 2016 was a massively successful year for Aditi Ashok. On 1 January, the 18-year-old turned professional. And by August, she had made it to the Rio Olympics as the sole female golfer from India.
But it was only when she tied 7th after the second round of the women’s individual event that people sat up and took notice. Aditi, who had qualified based on her IGF World Rankings, eventually finished 41st. But her gritty performance helped draw a lot of eyeballs to Indian golf.
The teen wonder ended the season tied third in the Omega Dubai Ladies Masters, and also secured the Rookie of the Year honours on the Ladies European Tour.
Two massive Bollywood blockbusters – Aamir Khan-starrer Dangal and Sultan – thrust women’s wrestling in India into the limelight. R Madhavan’s Saala Khadoos, on the other hand, focused on the struggles of a woman boxer.
Sultan featured Anushka Sharma as an international-level wrestler who eventually chose motherhood over a career in sports. Saala Khadoos portrayed an underdog’s quest to victory in the boxing ring.
Dangal, on the other hand, is a biopic of Mahavir Singh Phogat and his daughters, the now-iconic wrestlers Geeta and Babita. The siblings, coming from patriarchal Haryana, smashed social taboos to scale great heights in women’s wrestling.
A team that had long been crippled by lack of international exposure, the Indian hockey women’s squad travelled the world this year. And, in the process, taking on some of the best in the business. In 2016, the team also qualified for the Olympics after 36 years under the able guidance of Australian coach Neil Hawgood.
But it wasn’t a fairytale for the team from then on. Long-time captain Ritu Rani was dropped from the squad owing to her poor performance and attitude problems. And the women didn’t even win a single game at Rio. Nonetheless, they came back a more confident side.
They may not have won too many trophies this year, but their growth and evolution made 2016 a crucial year for the Indian women’s hockey team.
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