English, asked by Rafaraheem, 5 months ago

One more Olympics has gone by. A total of 974 medals were won by 87
countries; 54 countries won at least one Gold. The U.S flew home with the best
medal tally of all time for that country with 121 medals. Notwithstanding the
individual brilliance and the face-saving medals of P.V.Sindhu and Sakshi
Malik, India's performance is the poorest among all big countries.
The discourse on this is an unhappy one: there has been a lot of handwringing,
blame on the Sports Ministry and sports administrators, complaints about lack
of facilities, grumbles about corruption being the villain, and so on. India says
the same things, once in four years, during and after every Olympics. It should
instead look for simple lessons, develop a strategy to win medals and execute it
diligently. No, I don't believe that India should be planning for the Olympics
scheduled eight or twelve years from now. While long-term thinking is good,
any leader will tell you that it is too slow. We should aim to win a lot more
medals in Tokyo in 2020. But how?
The final medals tally by country tells all sorts of stories. The top 22 countries
— those with a double —digit medals tally with a minimum of three gold
medals — took home a total of 702 medals, or 72 per cent of all medals. The
top ten suggests that only the established West (the U.S., Great Britain
Germany, France, Italy and Australia) along with Russia, Japan and S Juth
Korea will continue to dominate. The emergence of China is explained as "you
know the Chinese can dictate anything, so they are not comparable." It is often
implied that wealth and size are the reasons for the success of these countries​

Answers

Answered by aditya95250
1

Answer:

Pusarla Venkata Sindhu (born 5 July 1995) is an Indian professional badminton player. Having made her international debut in 2009, she rose to a career high ranking of no. 2 in April 2017. Over the course of her career, Pusarla has won medals at multiple tournaments including Olympics and on the BWF circuit including a gold at the 2019 World Championships. She is the first Indian to become the Badminton World Champion and the first Indian woman to earn an Olympic silver medal

Answered by kriti279
23

Answer:

vdydbdjknjwklabsb

Explanation:

mar doge kya???

uper wala answer correct hai

Similar questions
Math, 2 months ago