Currently, Sreejesh and Pathak alternate between the four quarters of every match, as chief coach Craig Fulton looks to extract the best from both ’keepers
President Droupadi Murmu presents the Arjuna Award to Indian hockey goalkeeper Krishan Bahadur Pathak in New Delhi yesterday. Pic/PTI
India hockey goalkeeper Krishan Pathak, who received the Arjuna Award from President of India Droupadi Murmu at Rashtrapati Bhavan in New Delhi on Tuesday, believes the prestigious award could not have come at a better time.
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“It’s the start of the year, so this award will motivate me to do well at all the upcoming tournaments this year,” Pathak, 26, told mid-day over the phone from Delhi.
The wily custodian was born in Nepal before his family migrated to Punjab, where he picked up hockey and excelled in it. He rose to fame after brilliantly manning the post in India’s 2016 Junior World Cup win at Lucknow.
Since then, he has been a regular with the senior Indian team, playing the perfect understudy to veteran goalkeeper PR Sreejesh. Currently, Sreejesh and Pathak alternate between the four quarters of every match, as chief coach Craig Fulton looks to extract the best from both ’keepers.
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“This is a very important year for us [hockey players] as it’s an Olympic year. All our training programmes at the ongoing national camp in Bangalore have been aimed at excelling in this big quadrennial competition. [The Indian hockey team under then skipper Manpreet Singh won a historic bronze medal at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics after a gap of 40 years]. All our team discussions in the last few months have been about how we can change the colour of our Tokyo Olympic medal at the Paris Olympics [July 26 to August 11]. So, personally, this Arjuna Award is extra motivation for me to work harder to ensure we better the colour of that Olympic medal. I have no doubt we will achieve this,” added Pathak.