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Village girl’s golden run goes on at Mumbai Marathon

January 22, 2014 02:33 am | Updated May 13, 2016 11:14 am IST - Mumbai:

Lalita Babar.

Lalita Babar, 25, bought her first pair of shoes after she was prevented from running barefoot at a national track event in 2005. She went to a local shoe store in Satara district, where she was born and raised. Unaware of the brands that fellow athletes used, she bought a regular pair which cost her Rs.1,200 and pinched her pocket.

“I hadn’t even heard of Adidas, Puma and Reebok. I still remember those shoes. They were of a local company called Pama. It was much later that I started buying branded shoes fit for running,” said Ms. Babar who successfully completed a hat-trick of titles at the Mumbai Marathon on Sunday. She also set a new course record among Indian women athletes by clocking 2:50:31. Her demeanour a day after, however, personified humility and poise, as she answered congratulatory calls and messages. She wants to use the prize money to sponsor her youngest brother’s education.

Born to farmer parents in the drought-ridden Maan taluka of Satara district, Lalita has not been a stranger to hardship. But her parents tried to shield her from everything that could come in the way of her budding career in sport. “If there were days my parents went hungry so that my stamina wasn’t compromised upon, I did not know,” said Ms. Babar, the oldest of four siblings.

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Her tryst with running started at a young age when she ran to school, which was four kilometres away. “From the beginning, I was drawn to sport. Initially, I played kho-kho but then wanted to do individual sport. I would enjoy running to and from school. My parents are simple people who didn’t understand much about sport. But it was my father’s brother who encouraged me and started training me,” she said.

Ms. Babar started athletics in school and moved on to district, State and national levels. She won her first gold at the under-20 nationals in Pune in 2005. That’s when she got a job offer at the Indian Railways as a ticket checker. “A steady job meant a steady income to send back home,” said Ms. Babar, who has been training at the Bangalore national camp since 2006. For this year, she has her eyes set on the Commonwealth and Asian games.

Her younger sister Jayashree, who works as a constable in the Mumbai Railways, said Ms. Babar had always been a source of inspiration. “When I think of my sister, I see her running in my mind. Watching her, I got interested in sport too. I participate in all the competitions organised by the Police Force,” she said.

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Her parents’ work at the farm and their rather impoverished condition don’t let them travel to watch their daughter win accolades and medals across the world. “But they make it a point to watch me on television. My mother has kept a file with all the newspaper cuttings. I get to go home only once in one-and-a-half years or so and stay just for a couple of days. When I go, I try to spend time with my family but everyone from the village wants to meet me,” Ms. Babar said.

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