A country with more than one billion people is waiting expectantly for a historic medal, knowing that it is within reach, which is an unprecedented sensation in the track and field competitions of the Tokyo Olympics. Neeraj makes expectations soar. He has done this in the past, and the absence of Polish Marcin Krukowski and current world champion Keshorn Wolcott and Rio Olympic silver medalist Julius Yego makes Nilaghi the most popular player. The 23-year-old Panipat player Haryana is known for keeping the Junior World Record and the 2018 Junior World Championship. He has won the 2018 Asian Games gold medal and the Asian Games gold medal winner.
The Commonwealth Council won a gold medal in 2018. 2024. Tokyo Olympics. The young javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra has recently become one of India’s brightest track and field stars. Chopra became the focus of attention with his impressive gold medal at the 2016 World Youth Championship in Poland. In May 2019, Nilaj’s throwing arm underwent elbow surgery. He missed the IAAF World Championships, Diamond League, and Asian Championships during his recovery. He is expected to participate in the national championships at the end of 2019, but the Athletics Federation of India (AFI) did not allow him to participate in the competition, which in turn gave him more time to recover.
Like all athletes in the world, Chopra also missed more than a year of high-quality competitions due to the Covid-19 pandemic. But he broke his national record in March this year, throwing 88.07 meters in Patiala, which is also his best throw this season. He studied at the DAV Academy in Chandigarh. In 2016, he was appointed as a junior officer in the Indian Army as Naib Subedar. He currently holds the rank of Subedar. In March last year, Neeraj donated 200,000 rupees to the PM Cares Fund to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic. Neeraj Chopra became the second Indian to win a personal gold medal at the Saturday Olympics, and he defeated the field by a long distance.
Won the country’s first medal in the track and field games. The son of a 23-year-old farmer from Kandra village near Panipat, Haryana, cast 87.58 million meters for the second time in the final, shocking the track and field world and ending India’s 100-year Olympic track and field medal waiting. Chopra won the country’s seventh medal and a first gold medal in these Olympics and became a masterpiece of India’s individual gold medalist along with the archer Abinaf Bindra (2008 Beijing Olympics). With this, the country surpassed the best award of six medals previously won at the 2012 London Olympics. Neeraj Chopra will board the Indian flag at the closing ceremony of the Tokyo Olympics.
Neeraj Chopra threw the javelin out of 87.03m in his first throw and raised it to 87.58m, but could not go further. Chopra made four legal throws of 87.03m, 87.58m, 76.79m, and 84.24, and his fourth and fifth throws were disqualified, but his second throw was much better than the others, enough for India to keep the gold medal. Neeraj dominated the javelin final, just as he threw the 86.65m javelin for the first time in the qualifying round to advance to the final.