Khelo India Youth Games: Srihari Nataraj rules the pool

The Karnataka youngster bags seven gold medals

January 16, 2019 10:54 pm | Updated 10:54 pm IST - PUNE

Aiming high: Srihari Nataraj, seen with his mother, is targeting a medal in the 2024 Olympic Games.

Aiming high: Srihari Nataraj, seen with his mother, is targeting a medal in the 2024 Olympic Games.

Srihari Nataraj likes to keep it short, be it in the pool, or in conversation. Yet, when it comes to winning gold medals, he does not hide a strong appetite.

For the thousands of athletes who compete in the Khelo India Youth Games, winning a gold may be a passport to better government support. For Srihari, who has already made an impact in the Youth Olympics in Buenos Aires and the Asian Games in Jakarta, seven gold medals from the Youth Games does not make him feel as if he was in seventh heaven.

In contrast, he wears the medals gently as he physically did on a special request from The Hindu .

“I wanted to do 25 seconds here,” said Srihari, who punched the water in a bit of disappointment when he saw the time on the clock after the 50m backstroke on the last day of swimming competitions.

The long wait between the races on the last day had perhaps robbed him of the energy and the intensity of focus, even though he improved on his own best time of 26.19 with 26.16 for the 50m backstroke.

Six golds from the last edition may not have changed his life much, and Srihari continues with his bid to improve his timings even as he tries to find a balance for studies.

“I will prepare for the Board exams now, and then get ready to qualify and compete in the World Championship,” said Srihari, who wound up the proceedings in the pool with the 100m freestyle gold.

For his long-term goal, Srihari does not hesitate to say, “to win a medal in the 2024 Olympics”.

That may sound far fetched at the moment, but Srihar will not spare anything in his capacity to live that dream.

Five individual and two relay golds from Srihari helped Karnataka top the medals table with 21 gold, 17 silver and 13 bronze. Delhi followed with 19 gold, 13 silver and 16 bronze. Host Maharashtra was pushed to the third place with 18 gold, 14 silver and 10 bronze, ahead of Tamil Nadu, which had seven gold, 12 silver and six bronze.

Delhi won the under-17 team championship with 242 points, ahead of Karnataka (201) and Maharashtra (145). Host Maharashtra topped the u-21 section with 192 points, ahead of Karnataka (187) and Delhi (108).

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