New Delhi:Training tirelessly, staying away from family and maintaining a strict diet for five years finally culminated in the moment Mirabai Chanu had been desperately waiting for -- standing atop the Olympic podium but it almost didn't happen.
The postponement of the Tokyo Games and a break in training due to the COVID-19 lockdown last year brought with it a shoulder issue for the weightlifter that could have led to a completely different result, something Chanu had been worried about.
"When I started training after the lockdown, my back started getting tight and my right shoulder had some issue. It was not an injury but it would get tight while lifting heavy weight," Chanu told PTI in an interview after returning to an enthusiastic welcome for her 49kg category silver at the Tokyo Games.
"It happened because I had stopped training during the lockdown and my body," she added.
Chanu had been confined to the National Institute of Sports (NIS) in Patiala when a nationwide lockdown was announced last year to curb the COVID-19 pandemic.
Resuming training after months of staying inside her room, Chanu developed the shoulder issue. This severely affected her performance in snatch, one of the two events in weightlifting. To rectify it, she flew to the US to get treatment last year.
Working with Dr. Aaron Horschig, a former weightlifter turned physical therapist and strength and conditioning coach, immensely benefited her as she won a bronze at the Asian Championship with a world record clean and jerk lift of 119kg in April.
"That's why we planned to go to US. That helped me a lot and I was able to create a world record in Asian Championship."
She again flew to the US for a 50-day camp ahead of the Tokyo Games.
At the Tokyo Games, the 26-year-old brought cheers to over a billion people as she clinched the silver medal with an effort of 204kg (87kg+115kg) in the women's 49kg category.
"The US physiotherapist worked with me. I have a muscle imbalance. Whenever I lifted a heavy load I used to be in pain. She would make me do some exercises. That benefited me a lot."
The imbalance was not the first hurdle Chanu had to face in the run up to the Tokyo Games.