Mirroring Paan Singh Tomar story, Morena runner wins silver at Ranchi nat’ls
Bhopal: Nearly five decades after the legend of Paan Singh Tomar, an Indian Army soldier who went on to distinguish himself in track and field sport and even represented his country in the Asian Games before a cruel twist of fate turned him into the ring leader of a gang of dacoits in the Chambal ravines, was etched in India’s sporting lore, a similar story rooted in poverty, grit and sporting escape has unfolded in Madhya Pradesh’s Morena.
Adding to its long list of athletes who took to sport to break out of invisible shackles like poverty and hunger, Morena has produced another long‑distance runner whose incredible story retraces the familiar themes.
Vinod Singh, 21, clinched silver in the 5,000 m event at the National Athletics Championships in Ranchi on Monday, announcing himself as one of the country’s top long distance runners.
Like Paan Singh, Vinod’s sporting journey began with a simple and practical motive: better nourishment and recognition.
The youngest of five siblings who was drafted into the Indian Navy last year as a Petty Officer (PO), Vinod hails from a farming family in Morena. His father cultivates just about 2–2.5 bighas of land and supplements the household income by working on others’ fields.
Vinod would go on daily runs, pushing his physical limits and testing his endurance with the intention of joining the Army.
However, two years ago he switched tracks after joining the Madhya Pradesh Athletics Academy, where a structured training regimen and steady diet altered his career trajectory.
“Joining the academy transformed my life. With a structured diet and the chance to concentrate fully on my sport, I went on to win many medals at national and international events over the last two years,” Vinod told TOI.
“People compare my journey to that of Paan Singh Tomar because I entered sports with the same purpose that Paan Singh had,” the 21-year-old said, adding, “Athletics gave me better food, focus and a future.”
Paan Singh’s achievements in the battlefield in the 1950s and 60s, and his later life as a feared dacoit in the 1970s and 80s, were dictated, in part, by the same economic pressures that shaped Vinod’s choices: limited means at home and sport as a route to dignity and sustenance.
However, unlike Tomar’s tragic turn to banditry, Vinod’s destiny remains firmly entrenched in competitive sport.
His coaches at the Madhya Pradesh Academy credited the 21-year-old’s disciplined training regimen and daily mileage for his rapid progress. “He is fully committed to chasing down his goals. He is in a good space to accomplish many more sporting feats in future,” his coach Sandeep Singh told TOI.
For Morena, his silver medal is more than a podium finish: it is a reminder that the same soil that once produced a controversial figure can now churn out athletes who convert life struggles into building blocks for sporting success.
Vinod Singh, 21, clinched silver in the 5,000 m event at the National Athletics Championships in Ranchi on Monday, announcing himself as one of the country’s top long distance runners.
Like Paan Singh, Vinod’s sporting journey began with a simple and practical motive: better nourishment and recognition.
The youngest of five siblings who was drafted into the Indian Navy last year as a Petty Officer (PO), Vinod hails from a farming family in Morena. His father cultivates just about 2–2.5 bighas of land and supplements the household income by working on others’ fields.
Vinod would go on daily runs, pushing his physical limits and testing his endurance with the intention of joining the Army.
However, two years ago he switched tracks after joining the Madhya Pradesh Athletics Academy, where a structured training regimen and steady diet altered his career trajectory.
“People compare my journey to that of Paan Singh Tomar because I entered sports with the same purpose that Paan Singh had,” the 21-year-old said, adding, “Athletics gave me better food, focus and a future.”
Paan Singh’s achievements in the battlefield in the 1950s and 60s, and his later life as a feared dacoit in the 1970s and 80s, were dictated, in part, by the same economic pressures that shaped Vinod’s choices: limited means at home and sport as a route to dignity and sustenance.
However, unlike Tomar’s tragic turn to banditry, Vinod’s destiny remains firmly entrenched in competitive sport.
His coaches at the Madhya Pradesh Academy credited the 21-year-old’s disciplined training regimen and daily mileage for his rapid progress. “He is fully committed to chasing down his goals. He is in a good space to accomplish many more sporting feats in future,” his coach Sandeep Singh told TOI.
For Morena, his silver medal is more than a podium finish: it is a reminder that the same soil that once produced a controversial figure can now churn out athletes who convert life struggles into building blocks for sporting success.
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