Tag: U-23 National Championships

  • Once a medical school aspirant, Sherin is now lengthy soar champion

    When 20-year-old Sherin Abdul Gaffoor took up lengthy soar she didn’t harbour desires of constructing it large within the sport. She hoped medals would higher her possibilities of getting admission in a medical school by the sports activities quota. But Sherin didn’t know at the moment her tryst with athletics would change the course of her future, together with plans to change into a physician.
    The Chennai jumper bagged gold on the Under 23 National Championship in Delhi on Tuesday with a formidable leap of 6.45m to complete forward of Sandra Babu (6.29m) and Pooja Saini (6.22m).
    Sherin acquired so concerned within the sport that she felt taking over a demanding course like MBBS might hamper her athletics profession. She satisfied her mother and father to permit her to change to engineering as an alternative.

    Chennai jumper Sherin Abdul Gaffoor bagged gold on the Under 23 National Championship in Delhi on Tuesday with a formidable leap of 6.45m pic.twitter.com/DiWK3cQa7O
    — Express Sports (@IExpressSports) September 29, 2021
    “When I told my parents they were really unhappy. After lots of arguments they were finally okay with ‘at least’ an engineering degree,” Sherin says.But only one week into her engineering course, Sherin realised that she must make one other course correction.The packed school schedule hampered her coaching routine. Sherin’s priorities had been clear. The shiny pupil determined to stop only one week into her course to take up sociology at M.O.P Vaishnav College in Chennai.
    But her mother and father initially stated ‘nothing doing’.
    “My parents wouldn’t let me settle for an arts course. I had to literally beg. I am not kidding, my father is right there and you can ask (Father nods). I said please allow me to quit engineering and focus on my sport. It took a while but they realised how desperately I wanted this and finally agreed but reluctantly,” Sherin says.
    Sherin’s mother and father have all the time had excessive expectations from her over-achieving daughter. Before discovering her real love in athletics, at her mother and father’ insistence, she tried her palms on the piano, drums, violin, guitar and even Bharatnatyam.

    “Long jump is an emotion,” Sherin places it poetically. “When you stand at the start of the runway it’s like a mental battle between you and the pit. During the jump I go into a different zone, I forget about everything around me for a while. The feeling is surreal,” Sherin says.
    Long soar, which began off as a method to enhance her greater training prospects, has become a ardour. “I am not a great jumper right now. I have a lot of areas to improve on. The biggest hindrance at the moment is not having a full-time coach to guide me. It makes a lot of difference,” she says.
    Sherin used to coach at an academy run by coach P Nagarajan, who’s now arrested following sexual harassment allegations by a few of his trainees.
    Friends off the sphere
    Sherin has been taking steering from her seniors on the JLN Stadium in Chennai. For the Delhi meet she travelled together with her mates and fellow trainees Nandhini and Aishwarya, who bagged the 100m hurdles silver and triple soar bronze respectively.

    During Sherin’s remaining, Nandhini and Aishwarya had been sending jump-by-jump clips to their seniors in Chennai and relayed the suggestions to their buddy.
    “Our seniors from Chennai told us what changes to make and then we explained it to Sherin, that helped her a lot,” says Nandhini. On Wednesday, throughout Aishwarya’s triple soar finals, Sherin took over the digicam.
    “We are really close and have each others’ back all the time. We not only train together but also go to the same college,” says Nandhini.
    Sherin, who can be a gifted dancer, was actually happy to see coach Bobby George together with his wards on the meet. But the teen says she hasn’t been in a position to muster the braveness to go up and have a chat with Bobby who had coached Anju to the 2003 World Championships bronze medal.
    “He’s such a big coach, I feel very nervous to approach him. He has been on the circuit for so long and there is nothing that he doesn’t know about jumps. I was just about to say hello to him but he got busy with something,” Sherin says.
    When Sherin was informed Bobby had one thing to say about her, she was eager to know what he had stated. “She’s very consistent,” Bobby had stated. That was sufficient to convey a shiny smile to Sherin’s face.