Commonwealth Games bronze medallist Shankar on discovering high jump by chance and why he could move away from it
Bronze medallist India's Tejaswin Shankar celebrates during the medal ceremony for the men's high jump athletics event at the Alexander Stadium, in Birmingham on day six of the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, central England; Image: Ben Stansall / AFP
Before he took on the big guns in the Commonwealth Games (CWG), high jumper Tejaswin Shankar fought an equally tense battle in the month leading up to it—against the Athletics Federation of India (AFI), challenging in court his omission from the CWG squad. Shankar had earlier been left out of the contingent as he achieved qualification at a meet in the US, where he studies and trains, and failed to participate in the AFI-mandated national championships in Chennai.
Even as the Delhi high court cleared his participation, the organisers refused to include him past the deadline, and the imbroglio was resolved following a meeting with the chef de mission just five days prior to the Games. Shankar says he could have let it go and waited for the next CWG four years later, but he wanted to push for what’s rightfully his. And it all came together in the end as he ended up with the bronze in high jump, becoming the first Indian to win a CWG medal in the sport. In a chat with Forbes India, the 24-year-old, who now works with Deloitte in the US, breaks down his processes, and how he manages to wear multiple hats. Edited excerpts:
You were playing cricket when in school, and looking to get into fast bowling. How did you shift to athletics?
Athletics isn’t something that I wanted to do to begin with. Probably fate drifted me towards the sport. When I was playing cricket, one of my school coaches who had just joined that year came and wanted me to try athletics. The way he convinced me was he said ‘you are tall and fit’, so he probably saw something in me. But then he said, “In order to get better in cricket you have to be physically ready to make that jump from under-14 to state level, where as an under-16, you have to compete with under-20 guys.†So, I just ventured into athletics one day and over the course of time I didn’t really have the ambitions of becoming an athlete. I started because it was fun, and then I started to do well. By the time I got into my third year, I was able to break the national record. That was a shock to me and got me to start taking it a bit more seriously than a pastime.
Was there a particular event that told you that you were good enough to take it up in the long term?
This was in 2016 in the Open national championships where I jumped 2.22m. My personal best before that was 2.15-2.17m. So, that was a big 5-6 cm jump, which is pretty significant in high jump. In November that year I jumped 2.26 m where I broke the national record. Around that time I began to have thoughts that I am done with education and I need to focus on sport full-time. But my mom had other plans [laughs].