These young athletes created history in year 2019
These young athletes created history in year 2019
Share:

There is more than one person in the world, every player sees dreams of getting a name in the pages of history, but they are the only ones who have the passion to do something. With hard work, they not only get their destination but also create their own identity.

New chess kings: D Gukesh and Ramesh Babu Pragnananda of Tamil Nadu have emerged as the new kings of Indian chess. At the beginning of the year, Gukesh became the youngest Grand Master in the country and the second youngest in the world. He achieved this feat in 12 years, seven months, 17 days and broke the record of Praganananda (12 years, ten months) in June last year. The record of the world's youngest grandmaster is named after Sergey Karjakin of Ukraine (12 years, 7 months). At the same time, 14-year-old Pragnanand won the under-18 category title at the World Youth Chess Championship in October.

Indian archers won seven medals including one gold

Coleman: 23-year-old Christian Coleman of the US (9.76 seconds) stepped up to become the heir to veteran Ferrata runner Usain Bolt by winning the 100-meter world title. Although he missed the Bolt (9.58 seconds) record by 0.18 seconds, he became the fastest and all-time sixth dealer of the season, becoming the new dealer of speed. This is his first world title. He also won gold in the 4 x 100-meter relay. Now all eyes will be on his performance in the Tokyo Olympics.

Year Ender 2019: These Girls made the country proud at global level

Tejay: 23-year-old Tejjay Gayle of Jamaica did what no athlete could do before him. Tejaya, who participated in the World Championship for the first time, jumped 8.69 meters in the long jump and raised hopes for the future by giving the country the first gold in the field of athletics. This performance was the best in the last ten years and the tenth best performance in history.

Steve Smith raging at the umpire over dead ball

Praveen: 22-year-old Praveen Kumar of Rohtak, Haryana, won the world title in Wushu, giving the game a new identity. He became India's first male and second player to become world champion in the 28-year history of the championship held in the Philippines in October. Two years before that, Pooja Kadian became the first player in the country to win a gold medal.

Join NewsTrack Whatsapp group
Related News