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Reuters
Reuters
Health
Amlan Chakraborty

Swimming - India's Khade ponders retirement over training uncertainty

FILE PHOTO: Swimming - Gold Coast 2018 Commonwealth Games - Men's 50m Butterfly - Heat 5 - Optus Aquatic Centre - Gold Coast, Australia - April 5, 2018. Virdhawal Khade of India competes. REUTERS/David Gray

The long wait to resume training during the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted top Indian swimmer Virdhawal Khade to consider retirement while other Olympic hopefuls have grown "restless", the country's swimming federation said on Monday.

Khade is among six Indian swimmers who had achieved the lower (B) Olympic qualification mark for the Tokyo Games before the pandemic forced them out of the pool in March.

India has since allowed some sports facilities to reopen for training purposes but pools and gyms remain shut.

"Might have to consider retiring from swimming," former Asian Games bronze medallist Khade, 28, said on Twitter.

"Almost three months since the swimmers in India entered the pool. If other competitive athletes can follow social distancing while training, competitive swimmers can do the same as well.

"I hope other Olympic swimming prospects don't consider retiring because of this."

The Swimming Federation of India (SFI) said it had approached the sports ministry, which will be guided by home ministry advice before swimmers are allowed back in the pool.

"That's where the bottleneck is," SFI secretary-general Monal Chokshi told Reuters.

"Virdhawal's statement is very saddening but that's reality."

"Of the six swimmers, only Sajan Prakash has managed to get back to training at Thanyapura (in Thailand). Remaining are getting restless.

"We're in constant touch with them but we can't give them any false assurance, because we don't have clarity ourselves training would resume."

The sports ministry was not immediately available for comment.

"If our swimmers have to go to Olympic qualifying events next year and have a fair chance of improving their timings, they need to get back to the pool soon," Chokshi added.

India extended its coronavirus lockdown until June 30 in high-risk zones but permitted restaurants, malls and religious buildings to reopen elsewhere from June 8.

"Let's be realistic. If you've opened up everything, then not allowing six athletes to train in one centre completely beats logic," added Chokshi.

(Reporting by Amlan Chakraborty in New Delhi; editing by Peter Rutherford)

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