Dipa rues missing out on CWG, vows to win medal at Asian Games

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

India's top gymnast today rued missing out on the upcoming due to but vowed to win a medal at later in the year. The 24-year-old was forced out of the Gold Coast CWG (April 4-15) owing to a she picked up last year. She underwent an Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) in April last year. Karmakar, the first Indian female gymnast to compete in where she finished a historic fourth in the women's vault at the 2016 Rio Games, said she has completed her rehabilitation and started training. "I am very sad that I am not going for Last time in the 2014 CWG in Glasgow, I won a bronze medal. If this did not happen, I would have taken part in Gold Coast also. Our (gymnastic team) performance would have been better this time," she said on the sidelines of a sponsorship announcement event of the "But happens in a sportsperson's life and we have to face it. My rehabilitation is over and I have started training for the Asian Games," said the girl. She said she was focussing on all four events -- vault, uneven bars, balance beam and floor -- but doing more practice on vault. "Once a gymnast learns something (Produnova), that will remain forever. But I am trying to learn other things also." Asked if she was feeling discomfort during training after a long lay-off, said, "Everything is going on well now. With the love of the people of this country, I hope to get medals in the international events. I don't want to finish fourth.

My focus is on " As of now, she is not planning for any other international event and would compete straight at (August 18 to September 2). Another young gymnast, became the first Indian to win an individual medal at the World Cup by clinching a bronze in the women's vault event in a couple of days back. said she was proud of Aruna's achievement. She said Aruna was her room partner and so was very close to her. "Since 2011 whenever Aruna was in the national camp with (Bisweshwar) Nandi sir and from 2014 to 2017 we train together and we were room partners. She was very close to me. Recently, she went for foreign training for one month. But the two vaults she did there in Melbourne, she had learnt it in under Nandi sir. "I feel very proud that my training and room partner won a bronze in a World Cup. She kept on telling me that she was working hard but not getting any result. I kept on telling her that one day or the other she will get the medal. I hope she wins a gold in Gold Coast," said had scripted history at the 2014 in Glasgow, becoming the first Indian woman to win a medal in at the mega-event by clinching a bronze. She also won a bronze in the 2015 Asian Championships.

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First Published: Mon, February 26 2018. 16:25 IST
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