Yemeni mother comes to World Cup, without rifle and shooting gear | More sports News – Times of India

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Amal Mudhsh was upset after finishing last in the women’s 10m air rifle qualification round of the New Delhi World Cup on Friday. She wasn’t upset because she failed in her maiden appearance on the world stage. The shooter from Yemen was disappointed because she failed to do justice to all the hard work that went behind her participation.
Even after shooting for 10 years, the ‘achievements’ section in her information page on the ISSF website is blank, for she doesn’t have any medal to show her accomplishments. But if her struggle for participation could be quantified, she would be a sure-shot winner.
Amal doesn’t have a rifle of her own and before coming to Delhi, she had requested the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) to give her a rifle for the match. The NRAI asked Gagan Narang‘s academy Gun For Glory for the rifle and Amal got a Walther rifle for her training and match. She got her shooting jacket and trouser from the Qatar Shooting Association. Her travel expenses were borne by the Yemen Olympics Committee.
“My travel expenses were provided to me by the Yemen Olympic Committee. I am thankful to them for helping me with these expenses despite the situation that Yemen is going through. This is my first world event and my participation was possible because of the Indian shooting federation as they gave me the weapon, and the Qatari federation for lending me a shooting suit,” said Amal, who has earlier participated in the Asian level meets.
Amal is a researcher and has a master’s degree in social sciences. She is looking for an opportunity to prepare for a PhD. “My love for shooting is what pushed me to participate, but the war-like situation we have in Yemen is making it very difficult to train. My financial situation does not allow me to buy shooting equipment,” Amal, 35, mother of two, said.
While at the range, she tries to match her competitors by giving her all, but she is not as privileged as most of her opponents are. “The biggest difficulty I face is the lack of firing equipment. Given the situation that we have in the country – aerial bombings and armed conflicts – it is difficult to train,” Amal told TOI after her match.
“I hope to get a training camp before a tournament, and I would be grateful if I can get a personal weapon from any company. If this happens, God willing, I will achieve my targets in the sport,” she added.
Amal has two children, a girl and a boy. “I have left behind my daughter in Yemen but my son Amir, who is just nine months old, is here with me. Today he was with me at the range.”
Her first participation at a world event has given Amal hope. “My dream is to become a world champion, to participate in the Olympics and also obtain a doctorate in social sciences. I hope that the war in Yemen will end and peace will prevail in all countries,” she hoped.
“If I do not have the luck to fulfill my dreams, then I will work towards making my children world champions in shooting,” she said.

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Usman Chand, lone Pakistan shooter in World Cup, takes a trip down memory lane on his India visit | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Usman Chand is happy to be back in India after four years. He is the lone shooter from Pakistan participating in the skeet event of the ISSF Combined shooting World Cup, which began at the Karni Singh Shooting Range (KSSR) here on Friday. The last time the skeet specialist from Sialkot had visited this part of the neighbourhood, it was the World Cup Stage 1 in the Capital in 2017. But such long waits for an India visit weren’t always the case for him seven years ago.
The 36-year-old father of two beautiful daughters, Chand still vividly remembers his multiple visits to India via Wagah border on business visas to spend weekends with his local friends and commercial partners almost every month. The trips were largely about expanding his business interest in the country. The Chands are the suppliers of medical and surgical equipment, with Usman looking after the production segment.
“It was different 6-7 years ago. I would visit India via Wagah on weekends taking the expressway from my hometown Sialkot. I had a multiple-entry business visa. I would arrive by Thursday at Wagah, park my car over there and walk over to the Indian side. My business partners would then pick me up and take me to Jalandhar. On Thursdays, we would talk business and meet suppliers of surgical equipment. Then, over the weekend, we would party and explore the city. Sunday, I’ll return to Sialkot. On other occasions, the trips were about exploring this beautiful country. I have been to Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru, among other places. It never felt that I was in India. It always looked like I was driving or travelling in Sialkot or Lahore. Now, the waiting time to come to this part has only grown longer because of certain restrictions owing to the current political environment,” Chand said.
“You see, for coming to participate in the shooting World Cup, I had first taken an Emirates Airlines flight from Pakistan to Dubai and then spent 18 hours in layover there before taking a flight back from Dubai to reach the IGI Delhi the next day. Had things been normal, I would have taken a PIA flight from Lahore to reach Delhi. But for the Covid-19 situation. You can’t come from Wagah with your guns and ammunition for the tournament,” he stated.
Chand, however, is enjoying his current stay in India for the World Cup. A trip to Delhi has allowed him to meet his friends from the shooting fraternity after a gap of 16 months. “The last event I played was in Doha in 2019, after which, the coronavirus happened. This shooting meet is my first international competition in 16 months. It’s been a lovely experience so far. Like always, I am enjoying meeting my Indian shooting friends and enjoying the wonderful hospitality extended by the Indian federation. I would only like to see many such meetings between India and Pakistan shooters because we need to keep sports away from any kind of politics,” said Chand, who’s a first generation shooter in his family and had finished a creditable fifth in the men’s skeet competition at the 2018 Jakarta Asian Games.
Chand informed that he developed interest in the sport after watching his grandfather and father who were famous hunters in the region. Just like the father, Chand’s 10-year-old daughter, too, has taken a liking for shooting in women’s 10m air pistol. “In 2008, my father (Rahat Chand) took me to Islamabad to watch the shooting nationals. I was immediately hooked to the sport. In 2012, I participated in my first nationals in Islamabad and won all three gold medals in skeet, trap and double trap. It had happened for the first time in the history of the Pakistan shooting nationals that a single participant had won all three shotgun medals. Since then, there was no looking back except for a brief while in 2016-17 when I had decided to quit the sport to concentrate on my family business which was going through a difficult phase. But my father advised me to continue shooting and here I am with WC.”

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Shooting World Cup a chance to cement Olympic berth | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: The ISSF Combined Shooting World Cup, starting at the Karni Singh ranges here on Friday, holds much greater significance for the likes of Tokyo Olympic quota holders Apurvi Chandela, Anjum Moudgil, Chinki Yadav, Manu Bhaker and Aishwarya Singh Tomar, apart from the current world No. 1 in women’s 10m air rifle, Elavenil Valarivan.
The National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) will announce the official shooting contingent for the Tokyo Games after the ISSF WC, based on the performance of the shooters in the 10-day long event. With 15 shooters qualifying in air/rifle/shotgun categories, India has a record number of quotas for Tokyo – three more than at Rio 2016.
The NRAI is aiming for a possible 16th quota place in the 25m rapid fire pistol event with Anish Bhanwala, Vijayveer Sidhu and Gurpreet Singh in the fray. But only a gold medal can ensure ranking point quota.
There remains a strong possibility of some quota places being swapped and a name or two being dropped to accommodate others when the final list of Tokyo is finalised. In such a scenario, there would be added pressure on some of the quota holders to not only make the finals but finish on the podium as well.

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Shooting World Cup: Top shooter tests Covid positive; is asymptomatic | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: A leading shooter, who’s a three-time Olympian and multiple gold medallist at the ISSF World Cups, has tested positive for Covid-19 on the eve of the ISSF Combined Shooting World Cup, beginning here on Friday.
The shooter, who is currently ranked world number 2 in his event, is asymptomatic and has been shifted to Faridabad’s Sarvodaya Hospital and Research Centre, it’s been learned. The concerned Embassy office in the Capital has been informed about the shooter’s positive result.
The shooter, who’s a Tokyo Olympic quota holder, was informed about his positive report on Wednesday evening at his official team hotel – Taj Vivanta. He had been tested at the Indira Gandhi International (IGI) airport on early Tuesday morning upon his arrival from his country, but his test report was made available to him 42 hours later. As per rules, an RT-PCR test report has to be made available to the concerned within 24 hours of his/ her testing.
It’s been learned that the shooter was subjected to second round of testing at the team hotel on Thursday, as his event was to begin on Friday.
His second test has also come positive, which means his participation in the WC is over. The shooter, who was one of the finalists in his event at the 2016 Rio Olympics, had complained of spicy Indian food being served to him at the team hotel and wasn’t happy with the bio-secure bubble arrangements made by the WC’s Organising Committee (OC) at the five-star facility.
In fact, according to sources, he wasn’t allowed to collect fruits and dry fruits being sent by an Indian shooter friend from outside his hotel room owing to his positive report. The shooter, along with his team members, was holed up at the IGI airport for seven hours as they waited for the airport security officials to clear their ammunition.
There was no separate lane created for the foreign shooters as directed by the ISSF. The biosecure arrangement made for the shooters hasn’t been strictly followed as the birthday parties and marriage ceremonies are being hosted at the hotel lawns and halls and people could be seen roaming around freely without any restrictions.

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