The strange story of how Anas lost his Asian Championships berth
The Hindu
The national record-holder was not a national camper when he ran the Federation Cup and the Inter-State Nationals
Muhammed Anas is the national record-holder in the quartermile and had helped India to the 4x400m mixed relay gold and the men’s relay silver at the 2018 Jakarta Asian Games.
The 28-year-old was also a bronze medallist in the Federation Cup, in Ranchi in mid-May, which was the Athletics Federation of India’s selection event for the Asian Championships which begin in Bangkok on Wednesday.
With that performance, Anas should have walked into the relay team for the Bangkok Asians.
But there was a hitch. Anas, the Asian Games 400m silver medallist, was not a national camper when he ran in the Federation Cup and the AFI has a policy that it would include only national campers in its relay teams for the majors.
He had left the national camp late last year and had been training under his old coach P.B. Jaikumar in Thiruvananthapuram.
That was probably why the AFI did not include Anas’ name in the original list for the Bangkok Asians before the June 11 deadline. But when the AFI announced its team 11 days later, on June 22, Anas’ name figured in the 54-member list and he was marked to run the men’s relay.
A few days before that, Anas had finished as the Indian winner of the 400m (Sri Lankan Kalinga Kumarage had finished first) at the Inter-State Nationals in Bhubaneswar and the AFI probably realised that his presence could do wonders to the relay team in Bangkok.
He has worn India’s blues, albeit in an Under-19 World Cup, with K.L. Rahul, Mayank Agarwal, Harshal Patel and Jaydev Unadkat as his teammates. He has proudly adorned the Lion’s Crest — the famed Mumbai cricket logo — in all three formats. He has played with Yuvraj Singh, against Virat Kohli and Rahul Dravid and has the likes of Rahul and Joe Root in his illustrious list of dismissals. He is also a software developer for an IT giant, based in California. Virtually every middle-class Indian over the last three decades at some stage dreams of being either a cricketer or an IT professional. Saurabh Netravalkar has been combining two dreams, even after relocating to USA to pursue academics at the prestigious Cornell University in 2015.