05 June,2023 08:46 PM IST | Suhl | mid-day online correspondent
Representational Image (Pic: Istock)
Dhanush Srikanth gave India their third gold of the competition so far on Monday after winning the men's 10m air rifle event in the ISSF Junior World Cup in Suhl, Germany.
Dhanush posted 249.4 in the 24-shot final to leave silver winning Swede, Pontus Kallin, a clear 1.3 points behind in a clinical display. Frenchman Romain Aufrere won the bronze. India also picked up a bronze in the skeet mixed team competition, when Harmehar Lally and Sanjana Sood defeated their Swedish opponents David Jonsson and Felicia Ros in a shoot-off.
The country now leads the medal tally with three gold, one silver and two bronze, ahead of the USA who have two gold and one silver thus far. Late in the day, the women's 10m air rifle final is also scheduled.
Three Indians made the final of the junior men's 10m air rifle. Besides Dhanush, who qualified sixth with a score of 628.4, Pratham Bhadana finished above him in fifth with 628.7. Abhinav Shaw, who won the air rifle mixed team gold on Sunday, also grabbed the eighth and final spot with a score of 626.7.
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However, Abhinav bowed out in seventh, while Pratham missed out on a medal with a fourth-place finish. Dhanush, though, was in a different league in the final and led from the start, going from strength to strength, giving none of his opponents a chance.
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There were two Indian teams in the skeet mixed team event. The pair of Ritu Raj Bundela and Raiza Dhillon finished seventh in qualifying with a score of 134.
Harmehar Lally and Sanjana Sood, the second pair, made the bronze-medal match cut with a fourth-place finish and a combined effort of 136 out of 150 targets.
There, they faced the Swedish pair of David Jonsson and Felicia Ros who finished third with a score of 137.
It was an intense battle for the bronze medal and after 48 targets per team, both were tied at 37 a piece, leading to a shoot-off. While both the men hit their first shoot-off targets, Felicia missed one of her doubles and Sanjana took full advantage, nailing hers for a well-earned bronze.
(With PTI inputs)