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 Forgotten Olympics heroes - Jaipal Singh, Dhyan Chand



Besides a string of gold medals in hockey, India's record in the Olympics
has been, to put it mildly, pedestrian. There are a few names that
invariably pop up when discussing India at the Olympics — hockey wizard
Dhyan Chand, the so-near-yet-so-far experiences of Milkha Singh and P T Usha
and the more recent medal winners such as Rajyavardhan Rathore and Leander
Paes.



But if you rummage through India's dismal history at the Games, there are
some remarkable stories that stand out. Of players who excelled on the
playing field — and sometimes off it — and are now largely forgotten.



Perhaps the most remarkable of these Olympians is Jaipal Singh, the captain
of the hockey team that won India its first Olympic gold medal — several
years before Independence — in the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics. Born in a remote
village in what is now Jharkhand, Jaipal was taken to England by the English
principal of his school in Ranchi. After two terms at a college in
Canterbury, Jaipal joined St John's College, Oxford, where he made a name
for himself as an ace defender in the university's hockey team. When he was
chosen to play for India, Jaipal was a probationer in the Indian Civil
Service. The decision to captain India, however, meant taking leave from the
India Office in London. "I did not get leave! I decided to defy the ruling
and take the consequences," he writes in his autobiography.



The Indian team, which included Dhyan Chand, would go on to win the Olympic
gold medal convincingly. But by a twist of fate Jaipal did not play in the
final. Dhyan Chand later said, "It is still a mystery to me why Jaipal
Singh, after ably captaining us in England, and in two of the three matches
in the Olympic Games, suddenly left us. I have heard many stories, but so
far I have not had the truth." Jaipal himself did not throw any light on his
sudden withdrawal. He merely says in his autobiography that on his return to
London from the Olympics, Lord Irwin, Viceroy of India, congratulated him
personally.



Jaipal's story does not end there. After the Games, he was told he would
have to stay one more year in England because he had taken unauthorised
leave. He immediately quit the ICS. After various jobs that took him from
Calcutta to Ghana to Bikaner, Jaipal returned to Ranchi. There, he took a
decision that changed the trajectory of his life. In 1939, along with a few
others he formed the Adivasi Mahasabha which sowed the seeds for a separate
Jharkhand. A Constituent Assembly member and a four-time MP, Jaipal remained
till his death in 1970 an eloquent defender of Adivasi rights.



If Jaipal was part of India's first tryst with hockey glory, there was
another athlete — Norman Pritchard — who had already won two medals in the
1900 Paris Games. Born in 1875 in Calcutta to an English couple, he studied
in St Xavier's School. Pritchard was a name to reckon with in the Calcutta
maidan , winning the 100-yard dash for seven consecutive years.



Pritchard's participation in the Olympics happened almost by chance. During
a visit to London in 1900 he took part in and won the London Athletic Club's
Challenge Cup for the 440-yard hurdles. Within a week he was competing
against international athletes at the AAA Championship. Pritchard came
second in the 120-yard hurdles and was chosen for the Paris Olympics.
Pritchard competed in five events and won silver medals in the 200m sprint
and 200m hurdles.



There is, however, a dispute over whether Pritchard represented India in
Paris. Though the International Olympic Committee credited his medals to
India, the athletics statistics book of the 2004 Olympics said he
represented Britain. This was after an article appeared in the Journal of
Olympic History arguing that Pritchard had represented Great Britain.



As for Pritchard, he returned to Calcutta after the Olympics and served as
secretary of the Indian Football Association for two years. Later, he left
for America and made a career in Hollywood, starring in silent films under
the name of Norman Trevor alongside stars such as Cary Grant, Clara Bow and
Ronald Colman. Legend has it that he died penniless in 1929.



There are two sportsmen worth recalling in the years immediately following
Independence. In the 1948 London Olympics, a teenage triple jumper from
Bangalore, Henry Rebello, was considered a sure medal prospect. With the
best jump worldwide in 1948 — 50 feet 2 inches at a national meet in Lucknow
— he was the favourite for the event. Rebello followed it with a 52-ft
one-and-half-inches jump, a few inches short of the world record, a
fortnight before the Games. But on D-day, he faltered.



As Rebello has recounted in an interview to sports journalist Gulu Ezekiel,
he committed two fateful mistakes that drizzly and cold afternoon in London.
One, he did not warm up before his jump; two, he went flat out in his first
jump itself. The result was a torn hamstring as Rebello launched into his
jump. He landed in a heap in the pit, his medal dreams in tatters. His
misfortune was partially rectified by K D Jadhav, who won independent
India's first individual medal in 1952 — a bronze in bantamweight wrestling.




These pioneer Olympians are now mere names in the record books. But for a
nation starved of Olympic glory, they serve as reminders of athletic
achievement in the face of formidable odds.



http://jharkhand-sports.blogspot.com/2008/08/forgotten-olympics-heroes-jaipal-singh.html


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