nikhat zareen ndtv sports – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net Stay Connected. Stay Informed. Thu, 01 Aug 2024 01:39:21 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://artifexnews.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/cropped-Artifex-Round-32x32.png nikhat zareen ndtv sports – Artifex.News https://artifexnews.net 32 32 India’s Full Schedule, Medal Events At Olympics 2024, Day 6: Badminton Knockouts Start, Swapnil Khusale In Shooting Final https://artifexnews.net/indias-schedule-medal-events-at-olympics-2024-day-6-badminton-knockouts-start-eye-on-swapnil-khusale-shooting-final-6232970/ Thu, 01 Aug 2024 01:39:21 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/indias-schedule-medal-events-at-olympics-2024-day-6-badminton-knockouts-start-eye-on-swapnil-khusale-shooting-final-6232970/ Read More “India’s Full Schedule, Medal Events At Olympics 2024, Day 6: Badminton Knockouts Start, Swapnil Khusale In Shooting Final” »

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India’s Schedule, Medal Events At Olympics 2024, Day 6: PV Sindhu© AFP




India’s Schedule, Medal Events At Olympics 2024, Day 6: It’s a big day for India at the Paris Olympics 2024 on Thursday. Badminton starts PV Sindhu, Lakshya Sen, and men’s doubles pair Satwiksairaj Rankireddy/Chirag Shetty will be competing. Also, India would hope for its third medal in shooting at the Paris Olympics as Swapnil Kusale gets down to action in the 50m rifle 3-positions final. Sift Kaur Samra and Anjum Moudgil will also be in action at Women’s 50m Rifle Three Positions (Qualification). Apart from that, boxer Nikhat Zareen will face China’s Yu Wu in the pre-quarter-finals of women’s flyweight boxing. The Indian hockey team will be in action too as they take on Belgium in a men’s Pool B match.  

ARCHERY 

Men’s Individual (1/32 eliminations)

Pravin Jadhav vs Kao Wenchao (China) – 2.31 pm 

Men’s Individual (1/16 Eliminations): 3.10 pm onwards 

ATHLETICS 

Men’s 20km Race Walk Final

Akshdeep, Vikash and Paramjeet Singh – 11am

Women’s 20m Race Walk Final

Priyanka Goswami – 12:50pm

BADMINTON

Men’s Singles Round of 16

Lakshya Sen, 12 pm onwards

Women’s Singles Round of 16

PV Sindhu, 12 pm onwards

Men’s Doubles Quarter-finals 

Chirag Shetty/Satwiksairaj Rankireddy 4:30pm 

BOXING 

Women’s Flyweight (Pre-quarterfinal)

Nikhat Zareen vs Yu Wu (China) – 2.30 pm

GOLF 

Men’s Individual Finals

Gaganjeet Bhullar and Shubhankar Sharma – 12.30 pm 

HOCKEY

India vs Belgium (Group stage): 1.30 pm

SAILING 

Men’s Dinghy Race 1: Vishnu Saravanan – 3.45pm 

Men’s Dinghy Race 2 : Vishnu Saravanan – After Race 1 

Women’s Dinghy Race 1: Nethra Kumanan – 7.05pm

Women’s Dinghy Race 2: Nethra Kumanan — After Race 1

SHOOTING 

Men’s 50m Rifle Three Positions (Medal round)

Swapnil Kusale – 1.00 pm 

Women’s 50m Rifle Three Positions (Qualification)

Sift Kaur Samra and Anjum Moudgil – 3.30 pm 

TABLE TENNIS

Women’s Singles (Quarterfinals): 1.30 pm onwards 

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All Eyes On Nikhat Zareen, Lovlina Borgohain As Boxers Open Olympic Campaign https://artifexnews.net/all-eyes-on-nikhat-zareen-lovlina-borgohain-as-boxers-open-olympic-campaign-6192013/ Fri, 26 Jul 2024 11:57:46 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/all-eyes-on-nikhat-zareen-lovlina-borgohain-as-boxers-open-olympic-campaign-6192013/ Read More “All Eyes On Nikhat Zareen, Lovlina Borgohain As Boxers Open Olympic Campaign” »

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World Championship medallists Nikhat Zareen, Lovlina Borgohain and Nishant Dev will wade through draws that are at best tricky in their quest to achieve India’s best Olympic medal tally in boxing when the competition kicks off in Paris on Saturday. Indian boxers have fetched three medals in the Olympics so far, all bronze. While Vijender Singh remains the only male to have achieved the feat back in the 2008 Beijing Games, women stars MC Mary Kom (London, 2012) and Borgohain (Tokyo, 2021) later added to the overall haul.

The six boxers in Paris were handed draws ranging from slippery to difficult on Thursday. Expectations are high from the group and two-time reigning world champion Zareen is at the forefront.

The 28-year-old has an uphill task ahead as three of the top medal contenders in the light-flyweight (50kg) division — China’s Wu Yu, Thailand’s Chuthamat Raksat and Uzbekistan’s Sabina Bobokulov — are in her half.

Zareen opens her campaign against Germany’s Maxi Klotzer on Sunday, following which she will meet top-seeded Asian Games and reigning flyweight world champion Wu.

If Zareen crosses this hurdle, she may meet either eighth-seeded Asian Games silver medallist Raksat or Bobokulova.

Both boxers have defeated the Indian recently. While Raksat got the better of Zareen at the Asian Games last year, Bobokulova beat her at the Strandja Memorial final in February.

But the tenacious Hyderabadi would be up for the challenge and if she gets through two rounds, she would become a favourite for gold.

The seasoned Amit Panghal (51kg) has had a rollercoaster of a ride this Olympic year — from not being the first choice in his weight class in the national team to making the cut for Paris in the one and only chance he got.

Time out from the national team deflated his confidence but he has unfinished business to address, having made a first-round exit in Tokyo.

Panghal has received a first-round bye and meets African Games champion, Zambia’s Patrick Chinyemba, who had lost to the Indian at the Commonwealth Games, in the round of 16.

He faces Asian Games silver medallist Thitisan Panmod of Thailand in the quarterfinals and could potentially meet Rio Olympics and reigning world champion Hassanboy Dusmatov from Uzbekistan or Tokyo bronze-winner Kazakh Saken Bibossinov in the semifinal.

The immensely talented Nishant, one of the most consistent performers in the Indian squad, has got the best draw. With a first round bye, the debutant will take on Ecuador’s Rodriguez Tenorio in the pre-quarters on Thursday.

If Nishant gets past Tenorio, he will meet Mexico’s Pan American Games champion Merco Verde in the quarterfinals. He may come up against top seed Sewon Okazawa of Japan in the semifinals.

Borgohain will be chasing history, to add to her 69kg bronze. The Assamese boxer, who has bulked up to 75kg, will clash with Norway’s Sunniva Hofstad in the first round.

However, Borgohain has a tough test waiting for her in the quarterfinal in the form of Chinsese Li Qian, the reigning Asian Games champion and also a two-time Olympic and world medallist.

Although Borgohain defeated Qian at the world event last year, she lost in the previous two meetings — Asian Games and the Czech Grand Prix.

A win in the quarters may pit Borgohain against either fifth-seeded world silver medallist Australian Caitlin Parker or Morocco’s heavyweight world champion Khadija El-Mardi.

Asian Games bronze medallist Preeti Pawar (54kg), competing in her debut Games, will fight with Vietnam’s Vo Thi Kim Anh in the first round. A win will take her to the round of 16 where world silver-medallist Yeni Arias of Colombia awaits her.

Another debutant Jaismine Lamboria, who has dropped from 60kg to 57kg just ahead of the final qualifier, has got perhaps the most difficult draw.

She takes on Tokyo silver-medallist, former world champion Nesthy Petecio of Philippines, in her opening bout. Should she win, Jaismine would be up against France’s European Games champion and world bronze winner Amina Zidani.

The boxing events at the Paris Games will take place at two venues. The early rounds will be held at the North Paris Arena while the iconic Stade Roland-Garros will host the semifinals and finals.

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Have Hit Energy-Saving Mode: Nikhat Zareen On Preparations For Olympic Debut https://artifexnews.net/have-hit-energy-saving-mode-nikhat-zareen-on-preparations-for-olympic-debut-5617731/ Wed, 08 May 2024 15:35:41 +0000 https://artifexnews.net/have-hit-energy-saving-mode-nikhat-zareen-on-preparations-for-olympic-debut-5617731/ Read More “Have Hit Energy-Saving Mode: Nikhat Zareen On Preparations For Olympic Debut” »

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A long-cherished Olympic debut just about three months away, two-time world champion boxer Nikhat Zareen has hit “energy-saving mode” ahead of her date with destiny. So, she is off social media, is embracing solitude, devouring sweets on her cheat days, and binge-watching Netflix magnum opus ‘Heeramandi’. Zareen, who is a medal favourite in the 50kg category, believes activities that might sound like leisure to many, are actually legitimate ways to ensure that she has a calm frame of mind ahead of the Games beginning in Paris on July 26.

“Honestly, the feeling that I am going to be an Olympian soon hasn’t sunk in yet. As days are passing, the nervousness is increasing. But I always train my brain to focus on a good performance,” she told PTI in an interview from Patiala.

The 27-year-old from Hyderabad is a former junior world champion. She won consecutive senior world titles in 2022 and 2023.

Her 2022 season was nothing short of sensational as she remained undefeated and she would be hoping to hit similar peak in Paris.

“Every competition brings with it a degree of nervousness. You have expectations from yourself and the people around you also have expectations. It all adds up to the overall weight you feel on your mind.

“You cope with it by working hard, keeping your focus and having a calm mind, basically not allow yourself to be distracted. So, I am off social media, and I also try to keep my distance from people in general,” she revealed.

“Basically, I have hit energy saving mode, indulge my sweet tooth on cheat days, do grocery shopping, listen to music, it helps me stay calm. Also, I watch movies or Netflix shows. I am watching ‘Heeramandi’ right now, it’s quite interesting,” she said.

A believer in destiny, Zareen said she could have been an Olympian in Tokyo itself. She had lost a bitter selection trial to six-time world champion M C Mary Kom, who went on to qualify for the Games.

“Everyone knowns how badly I wanted to go to Tokyo. But it wasn’t destined. The setback made me resolute. The day I qualified for Paris, I was so happy that it is difficult for me to describe. It was like one major dream coming true,” she said.

“But then it hit me that it’s just half the job done.” Olympic preparations are not always about merely training, as nutrition, and psychological readiness play a role too. The mental part of it becomes all the more significant in her sport, which is often described as lonely.

“But you have to fight your battles, you can sometime share your thoughts with with your support staff or team but end of the day, it’s you who has to fight inside the ring, you are alone there,” she said.

“You have to condition your mind to believe that ‘acche din aayenge’ (good days will come). That this is my journey and I have to endure,” she explained.

What helps is the fact that women’s boxing is fetching material incentives now, something which wasn’t the case when she started.

“Once Mary didi won that Olympic medal in 2012 (a bronze), people took women’s boxing seriously. I was among those who felt inspired. Boxing is not a sport that you can play for too long. Injury can happen anytime.

“But the fact that you are being rewarded so much for international performances, it’s making people push themselves to succeed. It’s good for the future,” she said.

Talking of future, the sport’s Olympic status continues to hang in balance due to the International Olympic Committee’s refusal to recognise the International Boxing Association over governance issues and alleged corruption.

Zareen said she is hopeful of a solution.

“These things are not in our hands. Obviously it feels bad but I hope things will improve and IOC and IBA will find a solution. I believe boxing will stay in the Olympics,” she asserted.

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