Reigning Olympic, world and Asian champion and the World No. 1 javelin thrower on how he dug deep into mental resilience to win the gold at the World Athletics Championship, and his plans to build up to Paris 2024
Each year Forbes India sits down to thrash out its Showstoppers list, Neeraj Chopra gets the conversation started. If 2021 was his Olympic gold, and 2022 the marquee Diamond League, this year he became the first Indian athlete to win a gold at the World Athletics Championship (improving on his silver last year). Alongside, he also won the gold in the Asian Games and finished second in the finals of the Diamond League, winning its Doha and Lausanne legs en route.
The year 2024, of course, is the year of the Olympics, where Chopra goes in as the defending champion, shouldering the hopes of a billion Indians. The 26-year-old himself is quietly confident, as he tells Forbes India that his best is yet to come. After spending Diwali at home, he is now off to South Africa to resume training, where he’ll have the Games, beginning July 26, as the bird’s eye. But, before he spears in that perfect throw, the World No. 1 says he has something else to deal with: His expanding waistline.
Speaking at the RCB Innovation Lab x Leaders Meet: India, a two-day global sports conclave organised by IPL franchise RCB and sports event and media organisation Leaders In Sport, Chopra says, “Ghar mein ghee, churma, Diwali ki mithai, kuch zyada hi ho gaya. Abhi do-teen hafta training main isko ragdenge (I’ve binged on food while at home. Now, I have to shed the flab in the first few weeks of training).â€
Later, sitting down for a one-on-one with Forbes India, he shares how a resilient mindset has seen him through tough times, even as he outlines his plans for the next year. Edited excerpts:
Q. After 2021 and 2022, 2023 has also been spectacular for you. You won the World Athletics championship and the Asian Games gold, and came second in the Diamond League. What makes you so consistent year after year?