"In the London Olympics there were so many boxers and Vijender Singh gave Indian boxing a face (to be proud of). I am hopeful that more boxers will qualify for the Rio Games as some qualifiers are left (to make the grade)," said the 22-year-old boxer today after being felicitated by the NGO Olympic Gold Quest along with eight other Rio-bound sports persons.
"This is my second Olympics. I am totally focused and working really hard. The last four years have just flown and I have learnt a lot. I am looking forward to the Rio Games and I am pretty sure that we (Indian contingent) will bring more medals than in the last Olympics," said the Guwahati-born boxer.
Thapa is sad as he had to fight in the Asian qualifiers, where he won a silver, under world body AIBA's flag due to the absence of an elected national boxing federation currently.
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"I am happy my performance has not gone down too much.
Yes it has been up and down, but that happens to even a world champion," said Rai who is also supported by OGQ, which is co-founded by sports legends Prakash Padukone and Geet Sethi.
"The range is a bit different in that the 10M and 50M ranges are adjacent to one another and there was a lot of disturbance. The targets were also different," said Rai who stood sixth in the Rio event after making the finals.
Rai is now leaving for France to take part in an invitation event there from June 8-13 followed by the ISSF World Cup in Baku, Azerbaijan.
He did not single out anyone as the main threat in Rio.
"All are good competitors," said the Army man of Nepali origin.
Women shooters Heena Sidhu, taking part in her second Games like Thapa, and Apurvi Chandela too were confident of putting up a good show in Rio.
"It feels like it's my first Olympics. Two months to go and we are on the right track," said Heena, a former world no. 1 in 10m air pistol.
I don't want to delve into negativity regarding any selection process. Different federations have different selection processes. We (OGQ) are to support the efforts of the government and federations," said Sethi while refusing to be drawn into the Sushil Kumar-Narsingh Yadav controversy.
His view found support from Prakash, 1980 All England badminton Champion and OGQ director Niraj Bajaj, as well as hockey Olympian and member of the team that won the gold in the 1980 Moscow Games, M Somaiya.