95-year-old Champion Athlete Bhagwani Devi Says 'Want to Keep Winning as Long as I am Alive'
95-year-old Champion Athlete Bhagwani Devi Says 'Want to Keep Winning as Long as I am Alive'
Bhagwani Devi clinched three gold medals at the World Masters Athletics Indoor Championship 2023 in 60m sprint, discus throw and shot put

Bhagwani Devi picked up the shot put for the first time at 94.

Up until then, she had lived a life of hardship and sorrow.

Born in Haryana’s Khedka village, Devi lost her son and husband before she turned 30. She was pregnant with their other son at the time. Four years later, her elder daughter died.

She decided not to remarry and worked long hours in the field to fend for her family. She also underwent a bypass surgery in 2007.

All the past sorrows turned to happiness when she embraced sports.

Within six months of taking up athletics in January 2022, when her grandson and coach Vikas Dagar gave her a shot put, Devi won three medals at the World Masters Championships (outdoors) in Finland last year.

She won gold in 100m and a bronze each in shot put and discus throw in the 90-94 age category. Soon, word spread about her achievement and people started calling her ‘Sprinter Dadi’.

Now, at 95, when people are barely able to walk, Devi is ‘sprinting’ towards her dream of bringing laurels for India.

Last week, she clinched three gold medals at the World Masters Athletics Indoor Championship 2023 in Torun, Poland in 60m sprint, discus throw and shot put.

Just being able to compete at international sporting meets at this age is a testament to the Najafgrah nonagenarian’s fitness and resilience as she continues to defy age. And, she doesn’t plan to stop any time soon.

“Aur jeetungi, jab take jeeungi tab tak jeetati hi jaaungi. (I will win more, till the time I’m alive I will keep winning medals),” she said on Tuesday after returning from Poland.

So how does she keep herself fit for competitions?

“Mere fitness ka raaz hai desi khaana, mera bypass ho rakha hai, chiknai nahi khaati. Dahi, doodh khaati hu. (I have had a bypass surgery so I don’t eat fat. I eat curd and milk.”

According to the championships’ website, Devi ran the 60m sprint in 36.59 seconds. She competed in the women’s 85-plus category (a combined event of W85 and W95) and she was the lone runner in the W95 category. Five other competitors of W85 also ran along with her and they were awarded separate gold, silver and bronze medals.

In shot put, Devi produced a best throw of 2.93 metres and she was the lone competitor in W95 category. Just like in 60m sprint, she took part in shot put in a combined W80-plus event along with competitors of W80, W85 and W90 categories.

Each of the sub-categories of W80, W85 and W90 — as well as W95 — were awarded medals.

In discus throw also, she was the lone participant in the W95 category and produced an effort of 4.67m. Just like in the other two events, she competed in a combined event of W80-plus discus throw along with participants of W80, W85 and W90.

“Her next target is the Asian Masters Championships in November in the Philippines. She will be competing for the first time in the Asian Championships and we are hoping to win gold medals there as well,” her coach Vikas, a para-athlete who has won medals in long jump and 100m for India in international meets, told PTI.

“After that, she will compete in the World Masters Championships (outdoors) in Sweden next year and we are hopeful she will do better than the gold and two bronze she won in Finland last year.”

Asked how he first thought his grandmother could compete in the international arena, Vikas said, “When she threw the shot put for the first time… because of the knowledge I had… I knew she would do great. I have played two Asian Games.”

He shared an anecdote about his grandmother’s desire to win the “yellow” medal all the time.

“Last year, when she broke the national and Asian record to win gold, at that time she had also won two bronze. When she won the first medal — a bronze — in shot put, she said, ‘yeh mere wala nahi hai’ (this is not mine) because she always won gold in the nationals. When she won gold later in the evening, she said ‘yes, this is my medal’.”

Devi walks six kilometres a day, five days a week, and undergoes technical training on Saturdays and Sundays.

“We cannot let her do too much training at this age. Her muscles will not allow it. As far as her diet is concerned, she eats everything prepared at home but avoids things which have lots of fat as she has had a bypass surgery,” Vikas said.

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