Pullela Gopichand

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Pullela Gopichand (born 16 November 1973) is an Indian former badminton player. Currently, he is the Chief National Coach for the India national badminton team.[1] He won the All England Open Badminton Championships in 2001,[2] becoming the second Indian to achieve this feat after Prakash Padukone.[3][4] He runs the Gopichand Badminton Academy.[4] He received the Arjuna Award in 1999, the Khel Ratna Award (highest sporting honor in India) in 2001, the Dronacharya Award in 2009 and the Padma Bhushan – India's third highest civilian award – in 2014.[5][6] He is the only Indian coach to win the "Honorable Mention" by the International Olympic Committee at the 2019 Coaches Lifetime Achievement Awards.[7]

Early life

Pullela Gopichand was born on 16 November 1973 near Chirala Town to Pullela Subash Chandra and Pullela Subbaravamma, in Prakasam district, Andhra Pradesh.[8] Initially, he was interested in playing cricket, but his elder brother encouraged him to take up badminton instead.[8] His family settled in Nizamabad for a while. He did his schooling in St. Paul's High School, Hyderabad. He joined A. V. College, Hyderabad and graduated in public administration. He was the captain of the Indian combined universities badminton team in 1990 and 1991.

Playing career

Pullela was mainly coached by S. M. Arif. He is also trained under Prakash Padukone, and Ganguly Prasad at the SAI Bangalore.[9][10] Pullela won his first National Badminton Championship title in 1996, and went on to win the title five times in a row, until 2000. He won two gold medals and one silver medal at the Indian national games, 1998, held at Imphal. At the international level, he represented India in 3 Thomas Cup tournaments. In 1996, he won a gold in the SAARC badminton tournament at Vijayawada and defended his crown in the next games held at Colombo in 1997. At the 1998 Commonwealth Games, he won a silver in the team event and a bronze in men's singles.

In 1999, he won the Toulouse Open Championship in France and the Scottish Open Championship in Scotland. He also emerged as the winner at the Asian satellite tournament held at Hyderabad in the same year, and lost in the final match of the German Grand Prix Championship.

In 2001, he won the All England Open Badminton Championships at Birmingham. He defeated then world number one Peter Gade in the semi-finals before defeating Chen Hong of China to lift the trophy.[11] He became the second Indian to achieve the feat after Prakash Padukone, who won in 1980.[12]

Achievements

Asian Championships

Men's singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
2000 Istora Senayan, Jakarta, Indonesia Template:Flagicon Taufik Hidayat 4–15, 12–15 Bronze Bronze

Commonwealth Games

Men's singles

Year Venue Opponent Score Result
1998 Kuala Lumpur Badminton Stadium, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Template:Flagicon Wong Choong Hann 1–15, 11–15 Bronze Bronze

IBF World Grand Prix

The World Badminton Grand Prix sanctioned by International Badminton Federation (IBF) from 1983 to 2006.

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
1997 India Open Template:Flagicon Hariyanto Arbi 4–15, 7–15[13] Script error: No such module "sort". Runner-up
1999 French Open Template:Flagicon Chen Gang 8–15, 15–10, 10–15[14] Script error: No such module "sort". Runner-up
1999 German Open Template:Flagicon Xia Xuanze 3–15, 15–13, 4–15[15] Script error: No such module "sort". Runner-up
2001 All England Open Template:Flagicon Chen Hong 15–12, 15–6[16] Script error: No such module "sort". Winner

IBF International

Men's singles

Year Tournament Opponent Score Result
1999 Le Volant d'Or de Toulouse Template:Flagicon Richard Vaughan 15–13, 14–15, 15–6[17] Script error: No such module "sort". Winner
1999 Scottish Open Template:Flagicon Siddharth Jain 15–7, 15–10[18] Script error: No such module "sort". Winner
1999 India International Template:Flagicon Ajit Wijetilek 15–6, 15–13[19] Script error: No such module "sort". Winner
2004 India Asian Satellite Template:Flagicon J. B. S. Vidyadhar 15–6, 15–1[20] Script error: No such module "sort". Winner

Coaching career

File:Badminton Player Srikanth Kidambi along with Pullela Gopichand calling on the Minister of State for Youth Affairs and Sports (IC), Water Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation, Shri Vijay Goel, in New Delhi.jpg
Pullela (left) and Kidambi Srikanth (middle) with the Minister of Sports and Youth Affairs Vijay Goel, c. 2017.

After retiring from his playing career, Pullela founded the Gopichand Badminton Academy in 2008 after reportedly mortgaging his own house.[21] Nimmagadda Prasad, a renowned industrialist, donated Template:Indian rupee50 million ({{INRConvert/Expression error: Unrecognized punctuation character "[".|50|6||USD|year=2005}}) on a condition that his academy win a medal for India at the Olympics in badminton.[22] The academy produced several badminton players including Saina Nehwal, P. V. Sindhu, Sai Praneeth, Parupalli Kashyap, Srikanth Kidambi, Arundhati Pantawane, Gurusai Datt, and Arun Vishnu.[23] Saina Nehwal went on to win the bronze medal at the 2012 Summer Olympics, while P. V. Sindhu went on to win the silver medal at the 2016 Summer Olympics,[24] the bronze medal at the pandemic-hit 2020 Summer Olympics,[25] and also became the first Indian to win the gold medal at the BWF World Championships. Pullela also served as the official Indian Olympic Badminton Team coach at the 2016 Rio Olympics held in Brazil.[21]

Contributions to Indian athletics

In 2003, Pullela started promoting running through a 10K run Foundation by arranging the annual run also conducting training programmes for budding athletes. To help some of the poorer athletes, he arranged weekly runs and giving cash prizes to participants. He tied up with National Athletics Coach Nagpuri Ramesh to train and mentor these budding athletes. He also tied up with the Mytrah Group, a renewable energy company and started the Gopichand-Mytrah Foundation. The foundation identifies talented athletes and trains them, along with providing them with accommodation, food and transportation.[26][27]

The efforts have been successful with a number of their athletes earning national and international medals, like Deepthi Jeevanji (World record holder in the 400m T20 category), Nandini Agasara (Bronze medalist in the Heptathlon event of the 2022 Asian Games), Rangali Swathi, Kunja Rajitha (400m Gold Medalist in Indian Youth Games 2022).[28][26]

Awards and honours

File:The well-known Badminton player Shri Pullela Gopi Chand receives the Padma Shri award from the President Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam in New Delhi on March 28, 2005.jpg
Pullela (left) is awarded the Padma Shri by President A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, c. 2005.

Rewards for Coaching the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics silver medallist P. V. Sindhu

Personal life

Pullela married fellow badminton player P. V. V. Lakshmi on 5 June 2002.[34] They have two children, daughter Gayatri Gopichand, who is a women's doubles badminton player, and son Vishnu.

In Dec 2020, he launched guided meditation sessions for athletes named "Dhyana for Sports" in the App Dhyana. The sessions have been designed by him based on his experience training athletes. He is also the Director of Dhyana.[35] Dhyana, in collaboration with Heartfulness Institute, was the official meditation partner of the Indian Olympic Association’s (IOA) for Tokyo 2020 Olympic games.[36]

References

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External links

Template:Padma Shri Award Recipients in Sports Template:Footer All England Open Championships Badminton Singles Men Template:Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Awardees Template:PadmaBhushanAwardRecipients 2010–19 Template:Badminton in India

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