Anu Raghavan plans to move court over Rio relay team omission

July 18, 2016 01:47 am | Updated October 18, 2016 01:11 pm IST - KOCHI:

Anu Raghavan.

Anu Raghavan.

She has a dope-tainted past, keeps ducking competitions and may often be slower than her rivals but one gets the feeling that Ashwini Akkunji is the Athletics Federation of India’s ‘golden girl’.

The former Asian Games 400m hurdles champion and a member of the gold-winning Indian women’s mile relay team at the 2010 Commonwealth Games and Asian Games was slapped with a two-year ban after the country’s biggest doping scandal in 2011.

But even during the ban period, the Sports Authority of India allowed Ashwini and a few other banned athletes to train at NIS, Patiala. And when the ban ended in 2013, the AFI tried its best to offer Ashwini a swift return to competition and had planned to include her in the 4x400m relay team for the Asian Championship in Pune that year.

The federation was breaking a few rules, for the entries for the championship had closed a lot earlier, and the entry was turned down by the competition’s technical delegate from Japan who made it clear that clearing additional entries would be violating the world body IAAF and Asian body AAA rules.

Favouring Ashwini

Now, despite Kerala’s Anu Raghavan producing far better timings in the individual 400m, Ashwini has been included in the six-member Indian mile relay team for the Rio Olympics while the former does not find a place.

Anu, a member of the relay team at last year’s World Championship in Beijing and the Asian meet in Wuhan, has run four sub-54s races this season while Ashwini has just two, the last in an unofficial trial race held alongside the National inter-State meet in Hyderabad recently.

Miffed with the unfair treatment, Anu left the National camp in Bengaluru on Saturday and has returned to her home in Kerala. She now plans to move the Kerala High Court against the federation.

Anu has been in fine form this season and has come up with some of the best times of her career, including a personal best 53.54s at the Federation Cup in New Delhi in late-April, behind Kerala’s Anilda Thomas, Asian silver medallist M.R. Poovamma and international Jauna Murmu. Ashwini did not take part in the meet.

A few days before that, Anu had beaten Karnataka’s Ashwini in the first Indian Grand Prix in New Delhi and again in Poland National Championship at Bydgoszcz late last month.

The only occasions she had run slower than Ashwini was at the Sprint and Relays Cup in Erzurum, where Anu ran in weaker race ‘B’, and in the unofficial trial race in Hyderabad held alongside the National inter-State meet recently.

Ashwini was included in the national camp and in the squad to train in Turkey and Poland without having competed in a single race last season. Anu had run more than 10 races last season including in 400m hurdles where she finished fourth in the Asian championships in a personal best 57.79s.

While Anu has been faster than Ashwini (season best 53.70 at the trial race in Hyderabad) this season, a top AFI official said the team’s coach Yuri Ogorodnik preferred the Karnataka athlete to Anu. “Yuri said that Ashwini was a better relay runner than Anu,” said the official.

Yuri was the coach when Ashwini and five other Indian relay runners were suspended for doping in 2011. None of the top four women’s 4x400 relay runners this season have come from the ‘Yuri stable.’

Anu Raghavan v Ashwini Akkunji:Indian GP 1 (Delhi): Anu 54.3 (3rd), Aswini 55.2 (7th); Indian GP 2 (Patiala): Anu DNS, Aswini 54.81 (5th); Federation Cup (Delhi): Anu 53.54 (4th, PB), Aswini DNS; Sprint & Relays Cup (Erzurum, Turkey): Anu 55.18 (race ‘B’), Aswini 54.68 (race ‘A’); Poland Nationals (Bydgoszcz): Anu 53.72 (4th), Aswini 53.98 (5th). National inter-State (Hyderabad, trial race): Anu 53.78 (3rd), Aswini 53.70 (1st); Indian GP IV (Bengaluru): Anu 53.88 (4th), Aswini DNS.

DNS: Did Not Start

0 / 0
Sign in to unlock member-only benefits!
  • Access 10 free stories every month
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign-up/manage your newsletter subscriptions with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early access to discounts & offers on our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide by our community guidelines for posting your comments.

We have migrated to a new commenting platform. If you are already a registered user of The Hindu and logged in, you may continue to engage with our articles. If you do not have an account please register and login to post comments. Users can access their older comments by logging into their accounts on Vuukle.