×
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

Mirabai wanted to be an archer first

Last Updated 23 April 2018, 10:35 IST

An obsession with being "neat, tidy and stylish" almost led her to archery, says world champion and Commonwealth Games gold-medallist weightlifter Mirabai Chanu, who feels a chance meeting with her eventual coach changed her career plans.

As a 13-year-old girl from a poor family at the nondescript Nongpok Kakching village, around 20km from Manipur's capital Imphal, Mirabai decided early in her life that she would earn fame as a sportsperson.

"All my brothers and cousins play football but they would come back home dirty after a day's play. I wanted to play a sport which is neat and clean. At first, I wanted to be an archer as they are neat and clean and stylish," Mirabai told PTI in an interview.

"They just stand and shoot. So one day, I and my cousin went to SAI Centre at Khuman Lampak in Imphal. But I could not meet any archer as there was no archery training that day," she recalled.

"Then at that time I saw some clippings of Kunjarani Devi's exploits in the international arena and that influenced me to take up to weightlifting. So after a few days, me and my cousin again went to the weightlifting training centre and luckily I met (former international weightlifter and current coach) Anita Chanu and she initiated me into the sport," said Mirabai, now 23.

Mirabai had to toil hard at that young age to adjust her training to her school schedule.

"I had to reach the training centre every day at 6 am and change bus twice from my village in a 22km journey. It was tough initially but I adjusted. Also, I consider myself a strong girl. When I grew up I did stuff like wood cutting at nearby hills, bringing them up by myself and then fetching water from nearby ponds in milk powder cans," said Mirabai, who is currently training at NIS Patiala.

She was also told by her coach Anita to bring a bamboo trunk along for training, something that she built herself. "She told me to bring bamboo trunks to be used as barbells for technique training. In weightlifting, you have to start with technique training, building body strength comes later."

Mirabai, who is currently a Chief Ticket Inspector in the Indian Railways, rose to become a world-class weightlifter steadily.

From a total lift of 170kg for a silver in the 2014 CWG in Glasgow, she came up with 186kg to win gold in the 2016 Senior Nationals after a disappointing show at Rio Olympics.

She won the Commonwealth Championships gold in Australia in July last year with a total lift of 189 kg (85+104) and then went on to become only the second Indian after Karnam Malleswari to win a gold at the World Championships in the USA in November last year with a total lift of 194kg (85+109).

Mirabai bettered it at the Gold Coast CWG to 196kg (86kg+110kg) and she is now aiming to lift over 200kg at the Asian Games later this year which she says, will be done by improving her hand and leg movement coordination during jerk lifts.

"All top competitors in Asian Games will be there in Olympics and if I win gold in Asian Games I will have the confidence to win gold in Olympics also. But to do that, I cannot remain at 196kg," she said.

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 23 April 2018, 10:27 IST)

Follow us on

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT