"WADA has appealed against the NADA (National Anti-Doping Agency) clearance in Court of Arbitration (CAS). Now the hearing is on and the IOA Secretary General (Rajeev Mehta) is there with WADA officials," Indian contingent's chef-de-mission Rakesh Gupta told PTI.
If CAS upholds WADA's appeal Narsingh, who is scheduled to fight in the 74kg freestyle category on August 19, will not only be able to take part in the Games here but could also face a career-threatening four-year ban.
Ten days of action have failed to bring India, that won a record six medals in London four years ago, a single podium finish and there's growing desperation to end this poor run.
India's campaign now has been reduced to three disciplines - track and field, badminton and wrestling - after the flop show put up by the contingent in other sports.
And adding to the miserable run was the news that some of its contingent members were served only "peanuts" at a dinner party organised by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports here on Independence Day, after having skipped dinner at the Games Village.
Now Sindhu is the person the country will look upto later today to provide the spark as she faces a formidable opponent in world no. 2 and London Games silver medallist, Wang Yihan, for a place in the semifinals and a step closer to the podium.
bronze-medallist Sindhu advanced to the last eight of women's singles by notching up a dominating 21-13 21-15 win in 40 minutes over Chinese Taipei's Tai Tzu Ying yesterday should serve as a good morale boost against the formidable Yihan.
The head to head record is 2-4 for Sindhu with the Indian winning their last encounter in the Denmark Open last year.
Srikanth also showed his class when he upset higher ranked Danish rival Jan Jorgensen to become the second man from India to enter the last eight in badminton after Parupalli Kashyap in the 2012 London Games.
Greco-Roman wrestler Hardeep Singh was the other Indian in action today while the freestyle event, to start later, could see three men and as many women in fray.
Among them is London Games bronze winner Yogeshwar Dutt, who will take to the mat on the last day of the Games - August 21 - and Narsingh who would take part in his event on August 19, provided CAS turns down WADA's appeal a day before his opening bout.
Away from these two disciplines, track and field is the only other arena left for India to strike it rich but the depth and quality of the top athletes is such that they carry very slim chances of winning a medal.
Thus far, barring Lalita Babar in women's 3000m steeplechase, it has been a dismal show by the athletes with many of them not even approaching the mark which had earned them qualification for Rio.
It has been a gradual improvement since 1996 when tennis player Leander Paes provided the country with its first individual Olympic medal after 1952 Helsinki by winning a bronze in men's singles.
The bronze medal by woman weightlifter Karnam Malleswari in Sydney 2000 was followed by shooter Rajyawardhan Singh Rathore's silver winning effort in Athens 2004.
These were forerunners to Abhinav Bindra becoming the first and only Indian individual gold medal winner in 2008 Beijing where wrestler Sushil Kumar and boxer Vijender Singh also won bronze medals.
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