Indian Sports in 2018: Kohli\, Mary Kom grab the headlines; new stars emerge

Indian Sports in 2018: Kohli, Mary Kom grab the headlines; new stars emerge

Whether it was the Commonwealth and the Asian Games or Youth Olympics, athletes pushed the boundaries and produced path-breaking performances

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

India's Virat Kohli bats during play on day two of the third cricket test between India and Australia in Melbourne, Australia, Thursday (Photo: PTI)
Kohli the batsman again ruled the roost, making his craft look ridiculously easy even on the most challenging tracks

continued to dominate the chatter with his batting and brashness, the indomitable M C Mary Kom rolled back the years like very few can and, month after month, Indian sports also found new and younger heroes to raise a toast to.

P V Sindhu's perseverance on the court, Neeraj Chopra's obsessive pursuit of perfection every time he hurled the javelin, and the teenage shooting stars who refused to take their eyes off the target, made 2018 a year in which highs easily outnumbered the lows for Indian sports.

There was a plethora of big-ticket sporting events this year and the country had lots to celebrate throughout. Whether it was the Commonwealth and or Youth Olympics, athletes pushed the boundaries and produced path-breaking performances.

There were the usual administrative mess-ups occasionally and odd cases of dope shame as well, but they couldn't make a dent to the overall sense of accomplishment.

On the field, the results weren't encouraging in and England but the batsman again ruled the roost, making his craft look ridiculously easy even on the most challenging tracks. It was only fitting that he was bestowed the nation's highest sporting honour -- the Khel Ratna.

For 'Kohli', however, it was far more challenging as he grappled to get the combinations right. But the team did find a degree of redemption against Australia by retaining the Border-Gavaskar Trophy to close the year on a high.

Of course, it came against an Australian team weakened by the absence of banned batting mainstays and The duo, along with Cameron Bancroft, combined for this year's biggest scandal -- the ball-tampering saga that forced a review of Australia's "win at all cost" culture.

The same Australia which had the world mesmerised by its near-perfect hosting of within weeks of the drama.

The Games were memorable for India too as the country logged its third-best ever medal haul, highlighted by a record-shattering show. Spearheading it was the diminutive world champion Mirabai Chanu, who later shared the Khel Ratna with

also found another prospective star in Jeremy Lalrinnunga after the 16-year-old claimed an unprecedented gold at Youth

It was a comeback of sorts for shooting, after their flop-show at

India's gold medal-winners at the CWG shooting range included a 16-year-old and a 15-year-old The shooters hit the bull's eye in the Asiad too and though Bhaker felt the of failure for the first time, new gold-winning stars emerged in 16-year-old and a 15-something Shardul Vihan.

Bhaker and Chaudhary also won gold medals at Youth

If shooting was about youngsters, became all about an ageing but incomparable superstar in Mary Kom. The 36-year-old mother-of-three, who is also a Parliamentarian, picked up four gold medals -- including a record sixth world title and the CWG top honours.

"There won't be another Mary Kom," she declared and one look at her predominantly golden cabinet of medals would be enough to silence anyone who thinks otherwise.

Then there was Sindhu. She lost five big finals, quietly took the criticism that labelled her a 'choker', but had the last laugh with a season-ending World Tour Finals title, beating world No.1 and familiar foe on her way to the summit clash.

Not to be left behind was The trailblazer started with a gold at CWG, picked up a bronze in Asian Games and began a new chapter in her personal life by marrying fellow shuttler P

On the mat, Vinesh Phogat became more than just a famous Phogat sister with gold medals at both the CWG and Asian Games and Bajrang Punia stepped out of the shadow of his mentor and London Olympics bronze-medallist Yogeshwar Dutt.

Punia won gold at CWG and Asiad before a silver at World Championships positioned him as the biggest star. However, double Olympic-medallist Sushil Kumar's stock fell due to a string of sub-par performances.

The big takeaway in was the rise of Manika Batra. The Delhiite claimed four medals, including two gold, in the CWG before combining with veteran for a historic mixed doubles bronze at the Asiad, where India delivered its best-ever medal haul.

Another star to make the year his own was Neeraj. The 21-year-old won

both the CWG and Asian Games with records to boot and is giving Indian athletics audacious Olympic medal hopes for 2020.

A sprint sensation also emerged in 18-year-old Hima Das, India's first ever woman track-and-field world champion at any level after her under-20 400m gold.

Away from the spotlight, it was business as usual for ace cueist as he added a 21st world title to his trophy cabinet.

A star rose on the course as well in Shubhankar Sharma, who won the Malaysia Open. He also bagged Order of Merit title and Rookie of the Year award.

There were disappointments too -- the men's team being the most prominent with no medal at CWG and an underwhelming third-place finish at Asiad.

CWG champion weightlifter Sanjita Chanu flunked a dope test.

And there was no end to the administrative mess that the BCCI has become.

However, none of the negatives was big enough to come in the way of a stronger India emerging on the competitive field.

Read our full coverage on year ender 2018
First Published: Sun, December 30 2018. 12:25 IST