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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ISSF World Cup: Indian shooters renew quest for excellence | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Deprived of competition for more than a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, India’s phenomenal pistol and rifle shooters will renew their quest for excellence when the ISSF World Cup begins here from Friday.
In the first multi-nation Olympic sport event of this scale anywhere in the world amid the pandemic, India is fielding a strong 57-member squad, including the 15 quota holders for the Tokyo Olympics.
While it will be a first competitive outing for the pistol and rifle shooters in a world ravaged by the health crisis, those in skeet and trap events had participated in the Shotgun World Cup in Cairo, Egypt last month.
There is no dearth of proven performers in the Indian team and quite a few of them would look to use it as a testing ground before the Olympics, but the tournament assumes added significance for Anish Bhanwala.
For the 18-year-old from Karnal, a Commonwealth Games gold medallist, a good performance here would help him secure an Olympic quota and swell India’s already unprecedented tally to 16.
While speaking to the Indian shooters during the pre-tournament press conference on Wednesday, National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) president Raninder Singh mentioned about India’s prospects in men’s 25m rapid fire pistol, event in which Anish competes.
“We wish everyone all the very best and in particular, our men’s rapid fire pistol squad, where we have the opportunity to deliver the 16th Olympic quota to the country,” Raninder told reporters.
What could help Anish in his endeavour is his high world ranking and the qualifications of others ranked above him.
Anish is currently ranked 12th in the world. The ISSF could allot individual quota to the athlete who accumulates more ranking points by the May 31 deadline.
The tournament is more important for shooters looking to secure rank based points and subsequent quotas for the Tokyo Games.
On the first competition day, India will see participation from Divyansh Singh Panwar, Arjun Babuta and Deepak Kumar in the men’s 10m air rifle qualification. Pankaj Kumar and Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar will shoot in MQS (Minimum Qualification Score).
That will be followed by a world class lineup featuring the extremely talented Elavenil Valarivan, Anjum Moudgil and Apurvi Chandela (the first two Tokyo Games quota winners from India) in the women’s 10m air rifle competition.
Shriyanka Sadangi and Nisha Kanwar will be in the MQS.
The second competition day will be a star-studded affair as the likes of the sensational Manu Bhaker, Saurabh Chaudhary, Abhishek Verma and Yashaswini Singh Deswal will take to the range with an aim to add to the laurels they have won in recent years.
The qualifications and finals of both men’s and women’s 10m air pistol events will be held on Saturday, which could also see excellent shooters such as Elavenil, Anjum, Apurvi and Divyansh in action, provided they clear the qualification hurdles on the opening day of the combined world cup.
With the postponement of next month’s World Cup in Korea following pullouts by India and a few other countries due to its 14 mandatory hard quarantine for inbound travellers, the Tokyo-bound shooters don’t have a lot of tournaments to iron out their chinks before the Olympics.
Barring the tournament in the Indian capital, there is a combined world cup schedule in Baku, Azerbaijan from June 21 to July 2 and a shotgun world cup in Lonato, Italy from May 7-17.
The absence of shooting powerhouses China and Japan will be certainly felt but that will definitely not take away from the shooters the thrill of competing in one of the biggest tournaments in a long, long time.
A total of 294 athletes will be seen in action in the tournament with as many as 53 countries confirming their entries, including Korea, Singapore, USA, United Kingdom, Iran, Ukraine, France, Hungary, Italy, Thailand and Turkey.

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ISSF World Cup: After Covid-induced break, shooting returns | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: Sitting inside a conference room of the newly-built Sports Authority of India’s (SAI) residential facility at the Karni Singh Shooting Range (KSSR) here, India’s Tokyo Olympic-bound shooters looked a cheerful lot on Wednesday.
Though they had their masks on, their happiness at returning to the international competition arena for the first time in almost a year, was discernible.
Competition at the ISSF Combined World Cup for Rifle/Pistol/Shotgun will get underway on Friday at the KSSR amid strict social distancing and health hygiene protocols. The WC, which runs until March 29, will provide the Indian shooters a golden opportunity to test themselves against the world’s best before the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) announces the final contingent for the Tokyo Olympics.
As a shooter wins quota for the country, the final selection in some air pistol and rifle categories will be done based on the performance in the Delhi WC.
Skeet shooters (including Olympic quota holders Angad Bajwa and Mairaj Ahmad Khan) did recently get a chance to compete at the ISSF Shotgun World Cup in Cairo, Egypt (February 22-March 5). But for India’s much-fancied air rifle and pistol shooters, it will be the first opportunity in 16 months to compete in an international event. Their last outing was at the ISSF World Cup Final Rifle/Pistol in Putian, China (November 17-23, 2019), where Manu Bhaker, Divyansh Singh Panwar and Elavenil Valarivan had won a gold each.
For India and rest of the world, this will be the first multi-nation Olympic sporting event of this magnitude post the Covid-19 pandemic. A total of 53 nations represented by 294 athletes, including a 57-member Indian contingent, and 109 officials will be hosted by the NRAI.

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Shooting World Cup: Adapting to Tokyo Range won’t be a problem for us, says Manu Bhaker | More sports News – Times of India

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NEW DELHI: 2018 World Cup gold medalist, Manu Bhaker on Wednesday said that she is confident of doing well in the upcoming ISSF Shooting World Cup New Delhi.
Last month, the NRAI had announced a 57-member Indian team for the year’s first combined ISSF World Cup Rifle/Pistol/Shotgun stage, scheduled in New Delhi’s Dr Karni Singh Shooting range from March 18 to 29. The World Cup will see as many as 30 finals being held at an ISSF World Cup stage for the first time with the new team formats approved by the ISSF last year coming into play.
“After a very long time we will be having an international competition, I am looking forward to it. The past one year has been tough for everyone, not just the Indian athletes. We will see how we are able to perform, how we have been training and how we will be able to deliver, we can just hope for the best,” Bhaker told ANI.
Speaking about Tokyo Range and the windy conditions, Bhaker said: “Best part about India is that we have all seasons here, every sort of climate, temperature and environment. We have had all experience about the windy conditions and climate changes, I believe that it won’t be a problem for us.”
Talking about life inside a bio-bubble, Bhaker said: “I am working on my mental conditioning. In the beginning, it was a sort of challenge for all because I believe we never had so many restrictions in one go, you are restricted in everything, you can’t go outside of a room you are meant to be in the room alone.”
Earlier, Rajeev Bhatia, the secretary of the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI), had confirmed that spectators won’t be allowed in the upcoming ISSF Shooting World Cup.

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