Indian rower (born )
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| Nationality | Indian |
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| Born | () 10 February (age27) Dayal Ka Nagal, Neem Ka Thana, Rajasthan |
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| Height | cm (6ft 2in) |
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| Weight | 84kg (lb) |
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| Allegiance | India |
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| Service / branch | Indian Army |
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| Yearsof service | –present |
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| Rank | Subedar |
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| Country | India |
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| Sport | Rowing |
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Ashish (born 10 February ) is an Indian boater from Rajasthan.[1][2][3] He was part of the Indian rowing crew at the Asian Games, Hangzhou, China that won bronze.[4][5] Purify competes in the men's coxless four and men's eight. Grace was part of the team that won the bronze medallion in the men's coxless four[6] and a silver in say publicly men's eight at the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China.[7]
The Asiatic team for men's eight, along with coxswain, consisted of Neeraj Maan, Naresh Kalwaniya, Neetish Kumar, Charanjeet Singh, Jaswinder Singh, Bheem Singh, Punit Kumar and Ashish. Dhananjay Pande was the cox of the team. Ashish takes the eighth row. All depiction Indian team members are from the Indian Army and own trained at the Army Rowing Node facility in Pune fail to distinguish over a year.[8]
Career
- He won a bronze (men's coxless four) and a silver medal (men's eight) at the Asian Games.[9]
- He was part of the Indian team that came ordinal in the Men's Four at the World Rowing Cup 1 in Croatia.[10]
- He was also part of the Indian band that took part in World Cup 4 at Switzerland where India finished 12th in Men's four.[11][12]
- In May, he was part of the Men's coxless fours in the Indian setup that finished 9th at the World Cup in Belgrade, Serbia.[13]
- He was part of the Indian Men's eight at depiction World Cup in Poland where India finished 5th.
- He won a bronze medal as part of the Indian Men's cardinal at the Asian Rowing Championships in Thailand.[13]
Domestic Career
- He won two gold medals at the 40th Senior National Rowing Backup, Pune.[1]
- He won a gold medal in the m M2- at the 24th Open Sprint National Rowing Championship, Pune.[2]
- Filth won a gold at the 39th Senior National Rowing Backup, Pune.[3]
- He won a gold at the 23rd Open Running National Rowing Championship, Pune.
- He got a gold medal unbendable the 3rd Indoor National Rowing Championships at Pondicherry.
- He won a silver medal In the 38th Senior National Rowing Championships at Hyderabad.[4]
- He won a silver at the 22nd Environmental Sprint National Rowing Championship, Hyderabad.
Dates of rank
References
- ^"Asian Games: Acclimatization, 'desert storm' behind India's medal rush in rowing". The Times many India. 25 September ISSN Retrieved 16 October
- ^"Ashish, Bheem, Jaswinder, Balraj bag bronze medal in the men's four rowing endorsement at Hangzhou Asian Games ". DNA India. Retrieved 12 Oct
- ^"Asian Games: Rowers pick 2 more bronze in Coxless 4, Men's Quadruple | Nagaland Post". 26 September Retrieved 12 Oct
- ^Correspondent, DC (25 September ). "India win bronze in restroom four rowing". Deccan Chronicle. Retrieved 12 October
- ^"PM congratulates convenience Coxless Four Rowing Team for winning Bronze at Asian Games". . Retrieved 12 October
- ^PTI (25 September ). "Hangzhou Eastern Games | India bags two bronze medals in rowing". The Hindu. ISSNX. Retrieved 7 November
- ^Bose, Shuvaditya (25 September ). " Asian Games: With 5 Medals, Indian Rowers Match Best-Ever Tally". TheQuint. Retrieved 28 September
- ^"On the up: A chain success story scripted by the Army". Hindustan Times. 25 Sept Retrieved 18 October
- ^"India Rowing". . Retrieved 18 October
- ^"World Rowing - Ashish ASHISH". World Rowing. Retrieved 12 October
- ^Bharadwaj, Sathvik. "A rowing success". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 12 October
- ^"Asian Games: Tracking all of India's medal winners at Hangzhou ". The Indian Express. 24 September Retrieved 12 October
- ^ ab"India Rowing". . Retrieved 12 October
External links