Monday, December 22, 2025
News

KIYG 2023: Assam's Pahi applies her Tezpur lake lessons to win Chennai pool

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

Chennai (Tamil Nadu) | January 30, 2024 12:53:35 PM IST
Far from the glittering waters of an Olympic-size pool, Pahi Borah learned to swim in a lake, and had to use makeshift bamboo arrangements to dive and somersault. But the talent and passion of the 14-year-old from Tezpur, Assam, has carried her seamlessly from a lake to the pool.

At the sixth Khelo India Youth Games in Chennai on Sunday, Pahi added the 200m breaststroke gold medal to the 100m breaststroke silver she had won a day ago.

Egged on by coach Partha Pratim Majumder from the sidelines, Pahi ended up shaving around three seconds from her previous personal best to clock 2:41.32 seconds in the 200m backstroke final.

When she delivered the news to her father, he told her, 'my daughter is blooming like a lotus in a lake.'

Pahi's father Hemanta, now a sub-inspector in the Sashastra Seema Bal and a former national-level swimmer, was determined to make his daughter a swimmer too. When Pahi was just two, he would throw her into the pool in Delhi, where he was then posted, to get her used to the water.

"Older men nearby would scold him about what he was doing to his daughter," Pahi said with a smile. "My mom would have tears in her eyes."

However, Hemanta's tactics helped Pahi get over her fear of water, and soon, she would become obsessed with swimming too.

With Hemanta's job being transferable, Pahi moved back to Tezpur along with her mother and younger brother. Now Tezpur did not have a proper pool. But that was not going to stop Pahi, even though conditions in the nearby lake were vastly different.

"The water is very heavy in the lake, and very light in the pool. But whatever I have learnt is in the lake," said Pahi.

Dibyajoti Hazarika was Pahi's coach then, and Hemanta would also pitch in to teach his daughter after managing to get a transfer to Tezpur. Pahi went on to win a medal at the sub-junior nationals, but her technique, forged in the lake, needed to be tweaked to make it work better in the pool.

She then applied for the Sports Authority of India-Glenmark Aquatic Foundation programme at the National Swimming Academy at Talkatora Stadium and was selected last May. She moved to Delhi, where coach Majumder has refined her technique.

"You need a combination of technique and capacity as a swimmer. It is said that a swimmer has to be tall to succeed. Not necessarily. Look at her," coach Majumder said, pointing to the short Pahi. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS ()
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SPORTS NEWS
Jio Institute and INSMA successfully con...
Uttarakhand CM Pushkar Singh Dhami inaug...
'Why doesn't the ICC pay for it?' Mitche...
3rd Test: Jacob Duffy's 5-fer seals Kiwi...
'Happy to execute my plan': Vaishnavi Sh...
Ashes: Jhye Richardson eye return to Aus...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
Telangana to set national benchmark in e...
'Opposition leaves no stone unturned to ...
'Gehlot government gave consent to this ...
Slight improvement in Delhi as air quali...
Surrendered naxalites being trained in h...
Delhi Airport alleged assault: 'Facts ar...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
6 Pakistani soldiers killed in mult... 
"I think he's still got that hunger... 
"Five arrested, four are Sangh Pari... 
Global Maitri Festival 2025: Celebr... 
Delhi Police Cyber Cell busts major... 
India-New Zealand FTA to boost expo... 
Narayana Health Successfully Conduc... 
India-New Zealand FTA signals coope...