Olympics-After tough pandemic, Patel thrilled to be India's first female
swimmer at Games
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[July 05, 2021]
By Amit Dave
AHMEDABAD (Reuters) - Maana Patel said
she was thrilled to become the first Indian female swimmer ever to
qualify for the Olympics, having faced pool closures and a harsh
lockdown as she prepared for the Tokyo Games during the COVID-19
pandemic.
Patel, 21, will compete in Tokyo in the women's 100m backstroke
after world governing body FINA approved her participation under the
universality quota following some strong performances in European
meets in the last three months.
"I am very, very thrilled," she told Reuters in the western Indian
city of Ahmedabad during a practice session.
"I am honoured and humbled to represent my country at the Olympics
this year. But I believe this is just the beginning for me and there
is a long way to go ... many more medals to win for India."
The universality quota allows one female and male participant each
from a country to take part in the Olympics, provided no other
swimmer from the same gender qualifies for the competition through
the normal process.
The pandemic swept the world's second-most populous nation last
year, leaving athletes in India stuck in a lengthy shutdown and then
the infections surged again in a devastating second wave in 2021.
Pools were shut down during the lockdown leaving the swimmers in a
lurch with their preparations hit for the Tokyo Games, which were
postponed by a year.
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Maana Patel, who qualified through
universality quota to become India's first female swimmer to
represent the country in the Olympics, gestures as she practises for
the Tokyo 2020 Olympics, in Ahmedabad, India, July 3, 2021. REUTERS/Amit
Dave
"Corona period was very difficult for
all of us, especially for swimmers because pools were shut for a
very long time and it was very difficult for us to train," she said.
"I kept myself fit by exercising at home, eating good food - clean,
healthy food, and kept a positive mindset by reading books."
She was the third Indian swimmer to qualify for the Tokyo Games
after men's athletes Srihari Nataraj and Sajan Prakash also made the
cut.
Patel won a gold medal at a meet in Uzbekistan in April and then
competed in Serbia and Italy. At the Belgrade meet, she set a new
national record and a personal best of one minute 03.77 seconds in
100m backstroke.
"When I was 13, I got the Indian best time in 150 and 250 metres
backstroke and from then there has been no looking back," she added.
(Writing by Sudipto Ganguly in Mumbai; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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