Kiran Baliyan, 1st Indian to win shot put medal at the Asian Games in 72 years  

Kiran Baliyan

Bronze medallist India's Kiran Baliyan poses for photographs during the presentation ceremony of the women's shot put event PTI photo

Hangzhou: Kiran Baliyan became the first Indian woman to win an Asian Games medal in shot put event in 72 years as she picked up a bronze on the opening day of competitions here Friday. It was also India’s first medal in athletics in the current edition of the Asian Games.

The 24-year-old Kiran Baliyan hurled the iron ball to a distance of 17.36m in her third attempt for her best effort of the day to open India’s medal account in athletics. Baliyan, thus, became only the second Indian to win a medal in women’s shot put in Asian Games after Barbara Webster, an Anglo-Indian from then Bombay, won a bronze in the inaugural edition in New Delhi in 1951.

Baliyan has a season’s as well as personal best of 17.92m which she had produced while finishing second in the Indian Grand Prix 5 in Chandigarh September 10.

“I did not know the history (first Indian woman shot putter to win an Asian Games medal after 1951). My focus was to produce my best performance. I could not do that and I am not happy with my performance. But I won a medal, so I am very happy,” Baliyan said later. Baliyan, daughter of a traffic police head constable in Meerut, was an accidental shot putter as her name was entered in a junior tournament by mistake nine years ago.

The other Indian in the fray, Manpreet Kaur finished fifth with a best throw of 16.25m.

In women’s 400m race, Himanshi Malik ran an excruciatingly slow race for the second time in less than three weeks as she finished fifth in her heat and failed to qualify for the finals.

The 21-year-old Malik clocked 57.82 seconds in heat number three, even worse than the 57.59 second effort at the Indian Grand Prix 5 in Chandigarh.

The other Indian in the fray, Aishwraya Mishra qualified for the final round after finishing second in heat number one with a season’s best time of 52.73 seconds.

In the men’s 400m, Muhammed Ajmal qualified for the finals after finishing second in his heat with a time of 45.76 seconds while Muhammed Anas Yahiya failed to make the grade after clocking 46.29 for a third-place finish in his heat. The first two in each heat and the next two fastest across the three heats advance to the final.

In the women’s hammer throw final, Tanya Chaudhary and Rachna Kumari finished seventh and ninth with performances of 60.50m and 58.13m respectively.

 

 

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