Harvinder Singh Reaches Historic Paralympics Final in Men’s Recurve Archery

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Harvinder Singh

PARIS, SEPT 04: Harvinder Singh, India’s first Paralympic medallist in archery, created history once again by becoming the first Indian archer to enter the Paralympic finals. In a thrilling men’s recurve open competition in Paris on Wednesday, the calm and composed archer overcame a 1-3 deficit to defeat Iran’s Mohammad Reza Arab Ameri 7-3, securing his spot in the final with four consecutive victories.

Tokyo Games bronze-winner Harvinder Singh became the first Indian archer to enter the Paralympic finals by securing four wins in a row in the men’s recurve open competition here on Wednesday.

Harvinder, the first Indian Paralympic medallist in archery, overturned a 1-3 deficit to triumph over Iran’s Mohammad Reza Arab Ameri 7-3.

The 33-year-old Indian, who lost to Kevin Mather of the USA in the Tokyo semifinals before securing a bronze, narrowly dropped the first set 25-26 and tied the second 27-27.

Maintaining his composure, Harvinder delivered splendid performances with successive 10s on his final arrows of the third and fourth sets, clinching them 27-25 and 26-24 to take a 5-3 lead.

Needing a set win in the final end to avoid a shoot-off, Harvinder faced a strong challenge from Ameri, who opened with an X (inner 10) and followed with an 8 to level the set at 18-18, setting up a tense final arrow.

Under pressure, Ameri faltered with a 7, allowing Harvinder to close out the match with an 8 and advance.

Harvinder dispatched world No. 9 Hector Julio Ramirez of Colombia 6-2 in the quarterfinals, having earlier eliminated Tseng Lung-Hui of Chinese Taipei 7-3 in the round of 32.

In the pre-quarters, he rallied from an initial set deficit to edge out Setiawan Setiawan of Indonesia 6-2.

In each of his victories, Harvinder showcased his resilience, consistently staging comebacks to stay in the hunt.

In recurve open class, archers shoot from a standing position at a distance of 70m at a 122cm target made up of 10 concentric circles, scoring from 10 points down to 1 point from the centre outwards.

Hailing from a family of farmers from Ajit Nagar in Haryana, Harvinder faced significant adversity early in life.

When he was just one and a half years old, he contracted dengue and due to the side effects of some injections administered to him, both his legs were left impaired.

Despite this early challenge, he found a passion for archery after getting inspiration from 2012 London Paralympics.

He made his debut at the 2017 Para Archery World Championship, finishing seventh.

A gold medal at the 2018 Jakarta Asian Para Games followed, and during the COVID-19 lockdown, his father turned their farm into an archery range to support his training.

Harvinder made history by winning India’s first ever archery medal — a bronze — at the Tokyo Paralympics three years ago.

Alongside his sporting success, he is pursuing a Ph.D in economics.

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