Since 2015, the year he reached the legal age of shooting with firearms, Shardul Vihan has been having his breakfast, and often dinner, inside a car while travelling from Meerut to Delhi and back.
For three years, accompanied by a family friend of the Vihans, the double trap shooter has been undertaking a nearly 250km round trip to learn the basics of shooting, at a range tucked away in a corner of the national capital.
Aged 15, the Dr Karni Singh Shooting Range has been his second home, where he would have his lunch, and from where he emerged to become the youngest Indian shooter to win a medal at the Asian Games.
The silver in an event, which will not be a part of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, has prompted him to focus on trap. Shardul, whose father is into real estate, picked up a gun for the first time when he was nine.
In recent times, the number of Indian teenagers winning medals at the big stage has gone up exponentially, and Shardul is one of them.
Coming from the interiors of the country from not-so-economically sound background, the meteoric rise of young shooters is a statement of sorts.
Shooting, no longer, is restricted to the elites and the city goers, thanks to the success of teenagers such as Shardul, Saurabh Chaudhary, Manu Bhaker, Anish Bhanwala and Elavenil Valaviram.
They have also reduced the gulf with the seniors, and the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) happily acknowledges that the plethora of supremely talented fifteen-year-old, sixteen-year-olds and seventeen-year-olds has raised hopes of a successful outing at the 2020 Olympics.
"Manu, Saurabh, Mehuli, Elavenil, Anish, Lakshay and Shardul are just some of the names who have made their mark and I can assure you that there are at least 20 such youngsters who are shooting at the same level and you will hear about their performances soon," NRAI president Raninder Singh told PTI.
The federation's junior programme, with coaches like Jaspal Rana and Deepali Deshpande at the helm, has paid dividends.
Also involved in grooming the young talent, away from the national camps, are committed people like Gagan Narang and Joydeep Karmakar, who are giving back to the sport, to the delight of the shooting fraternity.
Raninder said, "The junior shooting programme has been an ongoing prime focus of the NRAI, especially over the last three years and will continue to be so. 51 per cent of our budget has been and will continue to be allotted for the same and you have already seen the results of the same.
"We will continue to have our former champions involved in developing youngsters, make them compete with seniors at the domestic level, fast track them into the senior side on the basis of scores and continue to give them the support, exposure and opportunities they deserve."
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