12 August,2024 07:45 AM IST | Paris | PTI
India’s PR Sreejesh with his bronze medal near the Eiffel Tower in Paris yesterday. Pic/PTI
Just-retired PR Sreejesh, who stood like a wall defending the goal for nearly two decades before bowing out on a high with a second Olympic hockey bronze medal here, believes India has talent aplenty to find a suitable replacement for him. Sreejesh, 36, stood rock solid in India's campaign at the Olympics and played a key role in their hard-fought 2-1 victory against Spain in the bronze-medal match.
Also Read: "It can only be a positive thing": Ricky Ponting on cricket's return to Olympics
"There won't be a vacuum. Someone will come in my place, for sure. All the sports are like that. Sachin Tendulkar was there and now there is Virat Kohli, and someone will take his place tomorrow. So, Sreejesh was there yesterday, but someone else will come and take his place tomorrow," the goalkeeping stalwart told PTI in an interview at the India House here. Sreejesh, who has been offered to take up a mentoring role in the Indian junior team set-up, said that all these years his life had revolved around hockey and now that he has retired, he doesn't know what he will do.
"It's like missing my life. I don't know anything other than hockey. From the first day I went to the camp in 2002 until now, I've been with them [teammates]. I don't know what all I will miss; maybe when I'm home, I will figure out. From morning, I'm out with them - training, gym, on the field - there is always a fun atmosphere. Pep talk, team meetings, you have to shout at them, even abuse them. The celebration days after a win or crying together after a loss, it's been my life. Maybe, we don't know what it's like to be outside," said the goalkeeper.
ALSO READ
Maharashtra: Ajit Pawar highlights high number of ministers; 'obviously, some are unhappy'
Some respite from intense cold wave in Kashmir amid sub-zero temperatures
India, Kuwait elevate ties to strategic partnership following PM Modi's talks with top Kuwaiti leadership
Congress protests against disposal of Union Carbide’s hazardous waste near Indore
ISRO to study how crops grow in space on PSLV-C60 mission
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever