Daredevil Dipa targeting gold at 2020 Tokyo Olympics : The Tribune India

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Daredevil Dipa targeting gold at 2020 Tokyo Olympics

RIO DE JANEIRO: Path-breaking Indian gymnast Dipa Karmakar is not disappointed at missing out on a historic bronze in the vault final of the Rio Olympics here and instead is aiming for gold in the next edition in Tokyo.

Daredevil Dipa targeting gold at 2020 Tokyo Olympics

Dipa Karmakar performs on the vault during the artistic gymnastics women's apparatus final at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on August 14, 2016. AP/PTI



Rio de Janeiro, August 15

Path-breaking Indian gymnast Dipa Karmakar is not disappointed at missing out on a historic bronze in the vault final of the Rio Olympics here and instead is aiming for gold in the next edition in Tokyo.

“I never expected a medal from this Olympics but to have come fourth is very creditable. In boxing and wrestling, you get a bronze even when you finish fourth, but not for me. It was very close to medal. After four years, my target would be gold,” Dipa said brimming with confidence after her brilliant effort on Sunday.

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“For me this is my first Olympics. But I don’t need to be disappointed. I will give my best in Tokyo 2020,” she said.

“I’m fully satisfied with my performance. This is my highest score. But the medallists were better than me. Maybe, it was not my day,” a graceful Dipa said.

She said with some luck she could have got a medal. “It’s my bad luck that I missed the bronze by a few points. But no problem, I never expected the fourth-place finish in my first Olympics.

“I never expected a medal, honestly. My first target was to better my scores in the two vaults, and I succeeded in doing that. Whatever I had learnt, I managed to perform. There’s been no better score than this in the two vaults that I performed,” said the woman from Agartala.

The 23-year-old Dipa, who had become the first Indian woman gymnast to have qualified for the Olympics, scored an average of 15.066 points, a mere 0.15 less than the eventual bronze winner Giulia Steingruber (15.216) of Switzerland.

The gold went to American pre-event favourite Simone Biles (15.966) while reigning vault world champion Maria Paseka of Russia got the silver with an average of 15.253 points.

Dipa could have been in the reckoning for a medal had she not landed on her haunches in her risky ‘Produnova’ vault for which she is now known the world over. Dipa landed on her feet but then sat down and lost points.

She scored 15.266 from her ‘Produnova’ with 8.266 points for execution for a difficulty level of 7. The average of the two attempts gave her 15.066, a mere 0.15 difference with bronze winner Steingruber.

“This is my highest score in Produnova, I had 15.1 earlier. I am very happy with my vault. I gave my whole effort to bring a medal for my countrymen.”

Dipa went for the ‘Tsukahara’ in her first attempt in which she collected 14.866 points. She went for a difficulty level of 6 and got 8.855 for the execution.

Dipa also pointed out that to have competed at this level under her personal Indian coach Bishweshwar Nandi and without any foreign exposure was really a big achievement.

“Gymnastics is not that easy. We don’t have a foreign coach. We were able to achieve this through my coach and the SAI’s effort,” said the gymnast who stands at four feet and 11 inches.

“We have not got any foreign training. We got only three months to prepare for this. To have finished fourth competing against former Olympic champions is a creditable performance.

I think it’s a bigger achievement than even Simon Biles’, she’s consistently winning gold,” she said.

“Many thanks to my fellow Indians. I could achieve this only because of their prayers and best wishes,” she added.

On comparison with Milkha Singh and PT Usha, who had also finished fourth, she said, “I feel I am very small, and I’m also much younger. The day I get a gold medal in Olympics, I would see myself in the same league.”

“They are all great names. I’m nowhere close to them. I’m very small. I will just try my best to give a medal.”      Having missed bronze by a whisker would, however, earn her brickbats from her family members and coach Nandi, she admitted.

“Everyone else--my parents and coach--will be unhappy; their regret would have been much less had I finished fifth or sixth. “But why fourth, and miss a medal, they would ask...”

Nandi said Dipa’s landing could have been better. “She went a bit deep while landing. If she had landed with a perfect standing pose, then gold was there. First vault was, however, perfect.” PTI

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