Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow
(2x4+1x4=12 marks)
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 times 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 hand-
wringing, 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 strateay 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 South 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. They
have the facilities and programmes in place. They are bound to win. So goes
the argument and acceptance.
This logic should be probed further. Olympics medals are won by people
between the ages of 15 to 29, with a few exceptions on either side of this age
band. I looked at the number of medal wins in relation to the population in the
age group 15 to 29 in each country, for which data is available. This was
juxtaposed with medals won, to calculate the numbers of medals won perlakh
of population in this age group. The story changes dramatically.
(a) What was the result of Olympics?
(b) How can India stand at a strong position in Olympics?
(c) How do the other countries dominate in Olympics?
(d) What are the short comings for the poor position in Olympics?
(e) Identify the word which means the same as a plan of action'(Para2)
0 discourse (1) wringing
(II) complain
(iv) strategy
Identify the word which means the same as 'carry out (Para2)
01 strategy
(1) execute
(11) grumbles (iv) diligently
(9) Identify the word which means the same as 'suggested'.(Para3)
(0) implied
(ii) established
(i) dominate
(iv) explained
(h) Identify the word which means the same as
'investigated".(Para4)
() exception
(1) juxtaposed
(i) calculate
(iv) probed
Answers
Answer:
Read the following passage and answer the questions that follow
(2x4+1x4=12 marks)
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 times 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 hand-
wringing, 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 strateay 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 South 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. They
have the facilities and programmes in place. They are bound to win. So goes
the argument and acceptance.
This logic should be probed further. Olympics medals are won by people
between the ages of 15 to 29, with a few exceptions on either side of this age
band. I looked at the number of medal wins in relation to the population in the
age group 15 to 29 in each country, for which data is available. This was
juxtaposed with medals won, to calculate the numbers of medals won perlakh
of population in this age group. The story changes dramatically.
(a) What was the result of Olympics?
(b) How can India stand at a strong position in Olympics?
(c) How do the other countries dominate in Olympics?
(d) What are the short comings for the poor position in Olympics?
(e) Identify the word which means the same as a plan of action'(Para2)
0 discourse (1) wringing
(II) complain
(iv) strategy
Identify the word which means the same as 'carry out (Para2)
01 strategy
(1) execute
(11) grumbles (iv) diligently
(9) Identify the word which means the same as 'suggested'.(Para3)
(0) implied
(ii) established
(i) dominate
(iv) explained
(h) Identify the word which means the same as
'investigated".(Para4)
() exception
(1) juxtaposed
(i) calculate
(iv) probed