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Friday, 13 July 2018

World U20 Championships - Hima Das Create a History, Wins India's First Ever Gold In Track

Sprinter Hima Das scripted history by becoming the first Indian woman athlete to win a gold at the world level. (in the women's 400m final race)

The 18-year-old Hima Das, a pre-tournament favourite, clocked 51.46 second to win the gold, which triggered a wild celebration at the Indian camp. This was though not her personal best as she had clocked 51.13 last month in Guwahti at the National Inter State Championships.

No woman before Hima Das has won a gold medal in a World Championship at any level.

She is also the first Indian to have won a gold in a track event at the world level.

Tense on the starting block, Hima started slow and trailed on the home stretch, but her blazing run in the final 80m, where she overtook three rivals, saw her clocking 51.46 seconds.

Romania's Andrea Miklos took the silver in 52.07 seconds while Taylor Manson of USA was third in 52.28 seconds.

"I am very happy to win the gold in the World Junior championships. I want to thank all the Indians back home and also those, who were here cheering me. It was very encouraging to have this kind of support," she said after the race.

In Guwahati, her coach Nipon Das says he wasn't worried when Hima wasn't among the top three at the final curve. "Her race begins in the final 80 meters. Her progress just shows how much potential she has.

Hima Das from Dhing village in Assam's Nagaon distrist, now joins the illustrious company of star javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra, who won a gold in Poland in the last edition in 2016 in a world record effort.


In fact, Hima Das is the first Indian track athlete to have won a medal in the history of this competition.

The other medal winners are -- Seema Punia (bronze in discus in 2002) and Navjeet Kaur Dhillon (bronze in discus in 2014).

From Assam's Rice Fields to Winning Gold:
Hima Das started off with football, kicking the ball with boys in the mud pits next to the rice fields. She was then advised by a local coach to take up athletics.

Soon, the teenager was spotted by Nipon, an athletics coach with the Directorate of Sports and Youth Welfare, during an inter-district meet.

"She was wearing cheap spikes but she won gold in the 100 and 200. She ran like the wind. I hadn't seen such a talent in ages," Nipon says.

The coach asked Hima to shift to Guwahati, 140 km from her village, and convinced the youngster that she had a future in athletics. Her parents, Ronjit and Jomali Das, were initially reluctant to let the youngest of six children leave, but with Nipon not ready to hear a no, they relented.

Nipon arranged for Hima to stay in a rented accommodation near the Sarusajai Sports Complex. He eventually convinced officials to induct her into the state academy, which specialised in boxing and football.

"There was no separate wing for athletics but the officials were open to Hima being part of the academy after seeing her performances. Assam is not known to produce runners," he says.

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