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Exclusion of shooting from CWG 2022 is a huge setback for India, says Abhinav Bindra

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Abhinav Bindra has opined that dropping shooting from 2022 Commonwealth Games will be a huge setback for India, especially for the country's young shooters. Birmingham, which is set to host CWG 2022, has earlier expressed its inability to host shooting events due to logistics problem.

India’s only individual Olympic gold medallist Abhinav Bindra looks concerned over the exclusion of shooting from the Commonwealth game 2022, which might affect young shooters from India. While attending a felicitation ceremony of India’s Olympic Medalists in New Delhi, Bindra told the media that himself, as a shooter, can exactly assess how this decision put a hindrance in the preparation of shooters.

“No doubt, it will be a huge setback for the country and our shooters. It will hit hard on the up and coming shooters," Bindra analysed at the event organised by Indian Olympic Association.

"Shooting is an optional sport and they (Birmingham organisers) say they don't have the facilities to host shooting events. Had Durban (South Africa) hosted the 2022 CWG, shooting would have been there," said the star shooter.

Durban was decided as the host for 2022 CWG but it later expressed its inability to host the Games due to financial problems. The Commonwealth Games Federation later awarded the 2022 CWG to Birmingham and following that the Birmingham Organising Committee decided to exclude shooting from the 2022 Games, citing logistical issues. The news hit hard to the Indians after their shooters performed more than anticipation in the recently concluded Gold Coast Games, bagged as many as 16 medals, seven of them have been gold.

Shooting, though an optional sport at the CWG, has been played in every edition since Kingston 1966, except once in Edinburgh in 1970. A few days back, National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) president Raninder Singh had called for India's boycott of the 2022 CWG if shooting was not reinstated, but Indian Olympic Association(IOA) president Narinder Batra yesterday termed it as going a "bit too extreme". 

"Raninder is free to make his statements. There are a lot of things related to government. We will certainly pick up the issue of shooting not being there in the 2022 CWG but it does not start or end with not participating. A nation boycotting, I think he is going a bit too extreme," said Batra at a press conference in the presence of International Olympic Committee chief Thomas Bach.

Meanwhile, several old hockey stars, who have won Olympic gold medals during India’s prime days in Hockey including the legendary Balbir Singh senior, turned up for the felicitation ceremony. But most of the non-hockey Olympic medallists skipped the event.

Besides Bindra, current sports minister and 2004 Athens Olympics silver medallist Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore was also felicitated by Bach. 2008 Beijing Olympics bronze medallist boxer Vijender Singh turned up for a brief period and left immediately after being felicitated by the IOC chief.

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