Woman provide triple delight: Punam, Manu and Manika lead a golden day at CWG

Press Trust of India  |  Gold Coast 

From to to to hockey, women formed the core of India's stupendous day three at the 21st where a 16-year-old delivered a record-shattering shooting gold medal and the team shocked fancied defending champions to clinch the top honours for the first time in the event.

Another high point of the day was a 35-year-old M C advancing to the medal rounds in what is her first and probably last appearance at the Games.

held on to their fourth position in the medals tally, having claimed seven gold, two silver and three bronze medals so far.

From the shooting ranges in to the arena here, it was all about women today. And starting it all was Manu Bhaker, the teen sensation from Haryana, who shot down the Games record and the gold medal in the 10m air pistol event.

A distant silver-medallist in the event also happened to be a woman -- Heena Sidhu.

Shooting is an uncomplicated sport, take aim and shoot. That's why it's important not to think too much. If you think too much, then it becomes complex, explained Bhaker as she analysed her brilliant performance.

In the arena of the Carrara and Leisure Center, Punam Yadav (69kg) pulled off a personal best of 222kg (110kg+122kg) to improve the bronze she had won in the 2014 edition to add another gold to India's haul.

The women's team showed tremendous grit to stun Olympic champions England in its third pool match in what can only be described as a morale-soaring 2-1 victory, which took them closer to a semifinal berth.

And in the evening, the women's team of Manika Batra, and did what was not at all expected of them, beat defending champions 3-1 for a historic maiden gold.

On the court, remained in brutally good form and guided to a 3-1 triumph over in the mixed team event. The top seeds will be up against in the summit clash tomorrow.

Adding a dash of bronze to the collection was Thakur (94kg), who lifted a total of 351kg (159kg+192kg) on a day when Papua New Guinea's broke the Commonwealth as well as the Games record in clean and jerk for a total lift of 370kg (154kg+216kg).

Yadav and Thakur's haul took India's overall medal tally to five gold, a silver and two bronze medals so far, a performance made special by the fact that most of them nursed varying niggles and did not have access to a full-time physio owing to an accreditation goof-up for which none has taken responsibility so far.

In shooting, let slip a golden opportunity to settle for a bronze medal in the 10m air rifle event where finished sixth after breaking the Games record in qualification.

In the ring, made the semifinals with a sound thrashing of Scotland's her victory assuring the Indian contingent of its first CWG medal at the ongoing edition. Among the men, world bronze-medallist Vikas Krishan (75kg) advanced to the quarterfinals.

"This will be my first medal and I am happy to achieve that but gold is what I'm after," declared after her win.

The high-profile competition also got underway at the Carrara complex and had a fairly decent day with finishing fourth in the women's 20km event.

In track and field events, shot-putter Tejinder Singh made the finals, while topped his 400m heat to book a slot in the semifinals.

The men's team, meanwhile, continued to be slightly off and had to work hard for a 4-3 win over in their second pool B match. They had yesterday settled for a disappointing 2-2 draw with a sloppy Pakistan, the equalising goal from the rivals coming in the final seven seconds of the match.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, April 08 2018. 18:20 IST