Chandigarh, April 20: The seventh edition of the sports literary festival, PlayWrite, opened here at CII today, with noted sports journalist former Deputy Editor of The Hindu and Sportstar Vijay Lokapally delivering the keynote address.
Lokapally commended the growing trend among women to opt for sports and aspire for winning medals especially when the facilities and infrastructure are improving in the country.
Vivek Atray, co-founder of Playwrite, with Hardeep Chandpuri, remembered the late Novy Kapadia who mentored along with Lokapally to setup the platform for the celebrated sports achievers to come together and inspire the younger generation for making sports as a career.
Jitin Talwar, in his keynote speech said that many opportunities are opening for women in sports, which is a lifetime of learning to live in the moment, learn to accept defeat, and respect one’s opponents.
The first session, ‘Shooting for the Stars’ featured Avneet Sidhu, IPS, the AIG of Police and former Indian shooting champion from Punjab, as well as Olympian Shagun Chowdhary from Rajasthan, the first woman to qualify and represent India in the Olympics in Clay Pigeon Shooting, and holder of multiple Asian championship medals. .
Former sports journalist Saurabh Duggal skillfully brought out their struggles to excel in the sports despite the patriarchal social pressures, initial hiccups and journey of ups and downs with lack of sporting facilities in shooting, yet parental support helped them grow.
Shagun lamented the unfortunate politics in sports that keeps many budding sports people competing effectively in the national and international arena while Avneet pointed out that every sports person gives his/her best in the sports field, and there is always one crucial moment that can make or mar your performance in the field. Both sportswomen endorsed the need for the people to applaud every sports person who competes in the sports field.
Tennis or Pickleball session had professional tennis player Rashmi Mohan who represented India in 45-plus category and participated in ITF World Tennis Masters Tour in Portugal and world championships, while Neeraj Yashpaul, another professional tennis player and silver medalist at ‘Khelo India University Games’ at Odisha, explored the need for more youngsters opting for this highly competitive sport.
In conversation with Prasang Raheja, a legal professional, Rashmi spoke about the challenges of starting late in life in the game, but biggest hurdle had been the lack of support from professional bodies and the government. The need is to create a much-needed culture of sports in our country
Hardeep Chandpuri, publisher, radio personality and cofounder of Playwrite moderated the session on ‘Soccer in the Hinterland’ with Bahadurgarh football team’s technical director Rohit Parashar, former Indian coach and ex-chief of NIS, along with head coach Sudarshan Singh, and senior coach Vinay Joon who is also secretary of CBFC, explored the dimensions of the young players being identified at the grassroot level and groomed to excel.
Psychologist Simar Onkar underlined the importance of the hitherto ignored area of psychology in Indian sports. He said while there are coaches for fitness, diet, gym training, and the sport, the mental fitness is the most ignored area which needs to be understood and practiced by the sports people to stay mentally fit.