Niranjan Mukundan
Personal information | |||||||||
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Birth name | Niranjan Mukundan | ||||||||
Born | Bangalore, Karnataka | 4 September 1994||||||||
Alma mater | Jain University, Bangalore | ||||||||
Sport | |||||||||
Country | India | ||||||||
Event(s) | Butterfly, Freestyle | ||||||||
Coached by | John Christopher, Miguel Lopez Alvarado | ||||||||
Medal record
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Niranjan Mukundan (born 4 September 1994) is an Indian para-swimmer. He was crowned as the Junior World Champion in the year 2015.
Early years
[edit]Niranjan was born in Bangalore with spina bifida; he has an incomplete development of the spinal cord and clubbed feet. With the support of his parents, he started learning swimming and progressed very quickly. Niranjan attended the Jain University in Bangalore for higher education.
Career
[edit]Early career
[edit]Niranjan claimed the silver medal twice in 50m butterfly at the Paralympic nationals in Mumbai, 2004–2005 and Kolkata, 2005–2006.[1] At the state aquatic championships in Bangalore he won silver medal in 2007 and bronze in 2009 in water polo.[2]
Later career
[edit]2012 was a fruitful year for Niranjan, at the national swimming championship in Chennai, he won three gold medals, one silver in swimming and one bronze in water polo.[3] Niranjan won his first international medal, a bronze in 200m freestyle at the IDM German Swimming Championship in Berlin.[4]
In 2013 he won more international medals at the IWAS World Junior Games in Puerto Rico, clinching two silver in 100m freestyle and butterfly along with two bronze medals in 100m backstroke and 50m freestyle.[5] He soon became world number 17.[6] At the 13th para national swimming championship in Bangalore, he won one gold, a silver and two bronze medals.
At the 2014 IWAS World Junior Games in Stoke Mandeville, U.K. Niranjan won a whopping eight medals, three gold, two silver and three bronze.[7]
On 1 November 2015, he won the state's prestigious Kannada Rajyotsava Prashasti. He also received the National Award (best sportsman with disability) for his exceptional achievement in the field of sports, at Vigyan Bhavan, Delhi. He won 10 medals (7 gold and 3 silver) in the World Junior Games held at Stadskanaal, Netherlands and was also crowned as the Junior World Champion.
At the 2016 IWAS Junior World Games in Prague, Czech Republic, Niranjan won eight more medals, also three gold, two silver and three bronze. He was honoured to have delivered the athletes' oath in front of his fellow competitors.[8]
Personal
[edit]Niranjan hails from a middle-class family from Bangalore. His father used to work as independent consultant and mother works in a corporate company. Born with a medical condition called spina bifida and with clubbed feet, he underwent as many as sixteen surgeries. He was advised by the doctors to undergo swimming to strengthen his leg muscles. His mother took him to the swimming club in Jayanagar, Bangalore and it is here that coach John Christopher spotted and promised to turn him into an international level swimmer.
Awards and recognition
[edit]- 2016 – Ekalavya Award[9]
- 2015 – National Award for Best Sports-person of the Year by Government of India[10]
- 2015 – Achiever's Award from Dr. Chenraj Roychand, founding chairman, The JGI Group[11]
References
[edit]- ^ Tapasya Mitra Mazumder (14 August 2014). "Disability is no bar". Bangalore Mirror.
- ^ "32 rods in legs, swims like a champ". Bangalore Mirror. 11 July 2010.
- ^ a b "Interview with national swimming champion Niranjan Mukundan: "I personally believe that I am not less than anyone in this world"". sportskeeda.com. 24 June 2013.
- ^ "26th IDM German Swimming Championship" (PDF) (in German). 2012.
- ^ "Conquering disability to emerge as international swimmer". Enrada. 22 August 2013.
- ^ "The story of Niranjan Mukundan - Indian para-swimmer". sportskeeda.com. 18 July 2015.
- ^ "World Championships Results" (PDF). IWAS. 7 August 2014.
- ^ "IWAS World Games: Bengaluru para swimmer Niranjan Mukundan wins eight medals". FirstPost. Press Trust of India. 5 July 2016.
- ^ Agencies (11 May 2016). "15 sportspersons presented Ekalavya awards". The Hindu. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
- ^ Agencies (13 January 2016). "Para Swimmer Eyes Golden Quadrilateral". The New Indian Express. Archived from the original on 3 June 2016. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
- ^ Blog (29 January 2016). "Niranjan Mukundan, fighting against the odds". Admin. Retrieved 12 May 2016.
External links
[edit]- Blog, Jain University
- Finding Tadpoles
- "Disability is no bar", Bangalore Mirror
- 1994 births
- Paralympic swimmers for India
- Living people
- Sportspeople with club feet
- Swimmers from Bengaluru
- People with spina bifida
- Recipients of the Rajyotsava Award 2015
- Swimmers at the 2020 Summer Paralympics
- Swimmers at the 2022 Commonwealth Games
- Commonwealth Games competitors for India
- 21st-century Indian people