From Bamboo Stick to Olympic Javelin Gold Medal, Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem Reflects on His Past 

Arshad Nadeem, Pakistan's first Olympic gold medalist athlete in the men's javelin, waves to people who gather to welcome him at his hometown in Mian Channu, Pakistan August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
Arshad Nadeem, Pakistan's first Olympic gold medalist athlete in the men's javelin, waves to people who gather to welcome him at his hometown in Mian Channu, Pakistan August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
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From Bamboo Stick to Olympic Javelin Gold Medal, Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem Reflects on His Past 

Arshad Nadeem, Pakistan's first Olympic gold medalist athlete in the men's javelin, waves to people who gather to welcome him at his hometown in Mian Channu, Pakistan August 11, 2024. (Reuters)
Arshad Nadeem, Pakistan's first Olympic gold medalist athlete in the men's javelin, waves to people who gather to welcome him at his hometown in Mian Channu, Pakistan August 11, 2024. (Reuters)

More than a decade after making a javelin from a bamboo stick in a small village in Pakistan's Punjab province, Arshad Nadeem stunned the world with his Olympic gold medal-winning throw at the Paris Games.

“I made that javelin myself in 2012,” Nadeem told ARY News television as he recalled his early days in a sport which is nowhere near in popularity to what cricket is in Pakistan.

Nadeem has been a sensation in Pakistan since he won gold at Paris on Aug. 8, beating his subcontinental rival Neeraj Chopra of India, who took silver.

The throw has earned Nadeem over $1 million — Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif has promised a sum of 150 million rupees ($538,000) and chief minister Punjab Mariam Nawaz handed him a check for 100 million rupees ($359,000) in his village last Tuesday.

Sindh chief minister Murad Ali Shah has also promised to give Nadeem 50 million rupees ($179,500).

In a cricket-loving country of 250 million, it was no surprise that Nadeem took up the bat and ball sport at a young age. It was only after his elder brother and father suggested that he try his hand at javelin or shot put that Nadeem forgot about cricket.

“(They) told me ‘try shot put or javelin because there’s a chance you might excel in an individual sport rather than team game like cricket,’” Nadeem said.

He hasn't looked back since.

Four years after he took up the javelin, Nadeem rose on the international scene when he won bronze at the South Asia Federation in the Indian city of Guwahati. It was at that event when Nadeem first met Chopra, who won gold.

Chopra also won gold at the Tokyo Olympics where Nadeem threw a distance of 84.62 meters to finish fifth.

“I started to train for Paris soon after Tokyo Olympics because I knew it, I can do something special for Pakistan,” Nadeem said in the TV interview aired Thursday.

Pakistan last won a gold medal at the Olympics in 1984 when its men’s field hockey team won in Los Angeles.

Pakistan was represented by only seven athletes at Paris, and after six of them failed to have any podium impact in swimming, track and shooting events, Nadeem said he was the sole hope of his country.

“I stopped watching social media two days before the qualifying round because I was the last hope of millions of Pakistanis back home,” Nadeem said.

He threw over 86 meters and qualified for the final round, but lost his run-up in the first throw and fouled. And then came his record-breaking throw of 92.97 meters in his second attempt.

“When he first came to me 12 years ago, I had a belief that one day he will go over the 90-meter mark,” said Nadeem’s initial coach Arshad Ahmed Saqi, who first sent Nadeem to a provincial level tournament in Lahore in 2012 from a small village of Mian Channu district in Punjab province.

Nadeem said he was “90 to 95%” sure after his second throw that he would win gold, but he kept on trying to go further in his remaining four attempts.

“I knew it I could do it,” Nadeem said. “Even my last throw was over 90 meters because I believed in myself. Hopefully one day I will break the world record.”

Back home his family was up late at night and overnight — due to the time difference with Paris — watching Nadeem live on television.

His wife Ayesha was also praying.

“I didn’t sleep for three nights,” said Ayesha. “I knew he could do it, and I didn’t stop praying for him.”



Top-Ranked Iga Swiatek, Jannik Sinner Advance in Cincinnati Open

Iga Swiatek of Poland serves during her match against Varvara Gracheva of France during Day 4 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center on August 14, 2024 in Mason, Ohio. (Getty Images via AFP)
Iga Swiatek of Poland serves during her match against Varvara Gracheva of France during Day 4 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center on August 14, 2024 in Mason, Ohio. (Getty Images via AFP)
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Top-Ranked Iga Swiatek, Jannik Sinner Advance in Cincinnati Open

Iga Swiatek of Poland serves during her match against Varvara Gracheva of France during Day 4 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center on August 14, 2024 in Mason, Ohio. (Getty Images via AFP)
Iga Swiatek of Poland serves during her match against Varvara Gracheva of France during Day 4 of the Cincinnati Open at the Lindner Family Tennis Center on August 14, 2024 in Mason, Ohio. (Getty Images via AFP)

Top-ranked Iga Swiatek survived in her return to hard courts Wednesday night in the Cincinnati Open, outlasting Varvara Gracheva 6-0, 6-7 (8), 6-2.

Playing for the first time since finishing third for Poland in the Paris Olympics on clay, Swiatek set up a third-round match against Marta Kostyuk — a 6-3, 7-5 winner over Lulu Sun.

“For sure, the transition is probably the hardest, from like the slowest surface to the fastest surface,” Swiatek said. “But that’s why I’m still happy with my performance, and looking forward to another match to kind of still do the grinding and implement what I was working on, but not really focusing on the results.”

Swiatek won her third straight French Open title in May and has six WTA Tour victories this season.

On the men’s side in the US Open tuneup event, top-ranked Jannik Sinner got past American Alex Michelsen 6-4, 7-5 in his first match.

In the late match, Jiri Lehecka upset fourth-seeded Daniil Medvedev 7-6 (2), 6-4.

Earlier in women's play, 17-year-old Mirra Andreeva beat 11th seeded Emma Navarro 6-2, 6-2. Andreeva was playing her first match since taking a silver medal in doubles in Paris.

“I just went out there, tried to show my best level, and tried to win a match, and I think I did it,” Andreeva said.

Andreeva will face 2016 Cincinnati champion Karolina Pliskova.

Toronto semifinalist Diana Shnaider of Russia, Andreeva’s doubles partner in Paris, beat Zhang Shuai 6-1, 6-4.

Sinner improved to 25-2 on hard courts this season and advanced to a third-round meeting with Australia’s Jordan Thompson. Sinner is trying to reach the quarterfinals in Cincinnati for the first time.

“I’m very happy to be in the next round,” the Italian star said. “For me this is a place where I used to struggle a lot in the past years, so let’s see what I can do this time.”

Thompson beat Sebastian Baez 6-2, 6-4.

Stefanos Tsitsipas, in his first tournament since announcing he would no longer be coached by his father, rallied to beat Jan-Lennard Struff 4-6, 6-4, 6-3.

Tsitsipas, the No. 9 seed, revealed that Apostolos Tsitsipas would no longer coach him after losing to Kei Nishikori in his first match last week in Montreal.