Swimming: India's Olympic hopeful
trio to train in Dubai
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[August 15, 2020]
By Amlan Chakraborty
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Three of India's
top swimmers will begin two months of training in Dubai next month,
sports officials said on Saturday, ending an agonising wait that
drove one of them to the verge of retirement ahead of next year's
Tokyo Olympics.
Six Indian swimmers had achieved the lower, or B, Olympic
qualification for the Tokyo Games before the COVID-19 pandemic
forced them out of the pool in March.
India has since allowed some sports facilities to reopen for
training, but pools remain closed, prompting freestyle swimmer
Virdhawal Khade to announce in June that he was considering
retirement.
That now looks unlikely after the Sports Authority of India (SAI)
announced Khade (50-metre freestyle), Srihari Nataraj (100-metre
backstroke) and Kushagra Rawat (400-metre freestyle) will train at
Dubai's Aqua Nation Swimming Academy from the first week of
September.
"This decision was taken ... as swimming pools in India are not yet
accessible as a safety measure due to the COVID-19 pandemic," it
said in a statement.
Among other B qualifiers, Sajan Prakash (200-metre butterfly) has
been training in Thailand, while the 800-metre freestyle duo of
Aryan Makhija and Advait Page began practice in the United States
earlier this month.
"The Dubai camp is for Olympic B qualifiers who are in India and
currently unable to train," Swimming Federation of India
secretary-general Monal Chokshi told Reuters.
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The Olympic rings are pictured in front of the International Olympic
Committee (IOC) headquarters during an online Executive Board
meeting amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) outbreak in
Lausanne, Switzerland, May 14, 2020. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File
Photo
"It will be a 60-day camp in Dubai, but if pools in India don't open
in 60 days, SAI might extend it."
Chokshi acknowledged swimmers close to securing the B qualification
would be disappointed after being left out of the Dubai camp.
"It is certainly a disappointment ... but one can understand that
sending a large group abroad is not feasible right now," Chokshi
said. "Hopefully by September, some activities will restart in
India, and they can train here."
(Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; Editing by William
Mallard)
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