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    Hurdler Dharun Ayyasamy eyes medal at Asian Championships

    Brimming with confidence after winning a silver at the Asian Games, India's 400m hurdler Dharun Ayyasamy has set his eyes on winning a medal at the Asian Championships next year.

    Hurdler Dharun Ayyasamy eyes medal at Asian Championships
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    Hurdler Dharun Ayyasamy

    New Delhi

    "My next immediate target is to win a medal at Asian championship. I don't know what medal it would be but I'm confident of returning with a medal. Also there is World Championship (also in Qatar) and I want to do well in that also," said Dharun who had clocked 48.96 seconds in Jakarta.

    "I am targeting 48.50 next year. If I can do that and keep improving and produce 48.2 or 48.1 in 2020 Olympics, it will be good enough to get into the final. In track and field, getting into the final is a big achievement. So that is the target now," said the 21-year-old, who hails from a village called Ravuthampalayam in Tiruppur district in Tamil Nadu.

    Dharun lost his father to tuberculosis when he was eight years old. He was in class IV then. It was his mother, a school teacher, who supported him and his sister, once a budding volleyball player, with a meagre salary of Rs 14,000.

    "I don't know where I would have been if it was not for my mother. She always gave me the freedom to follow my dreams. I am trying for a job. Now I have a few offers from Army, Navy and Railways but nothing is confirmed yet," said Dharun, a TY Human Resources student at Alva's College of Arts at Moodabidri in Karnataka.

    Talking about his Asian Games silver, Dharun said: "After qualification round I felt confident. I was in second position. Before the final, I was targeting the bronze. I knew beating the Qatar runner will be difficult and also there was a Japanese who would run below 49 sec, but during the race I had a lot of energy and I managed to get silver."

    Dharun, who represented his state in kho-kho before switching to athletics, burst onto the national scene when he won the 400m hurdles gold at the 2016 South Asian Games in Guwahati with a time of 50.54 seconds. He was a part of the Rio Olympics 4x400 relay team.

    His journey to Asian Games silver has been a tough one.

    "After the Olympics, I was injured for a year. It was a shin bone injury and then six months I had to go through rehabilitation. It was difficult to make a comeback," said Dharun.

    Ahead of the Asian Games in May, Dharun was in Poland for a five-week training exposure tour but he injured himself there.

    "After reaching Poland, I had a hamstring injury after a week. I took rest for 10 days but there was still pain when I stated training. So I told my coach that I need to take 20 days rest and ran straight in competition," said Dharun, who created a new meet record at the National Inter-State Athletics Championship in June in Guwahati.

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