<p>Paris: Inspired by the country's armed forces and cricket star Virat Kohli, a determined Kumar Nitesh sparkled with a gold medal on debut before javelin throw champion Sumit Antil joined India's para-badminton players in ensuring that the nation celebrated its best day at the ongoing Paralympic Games.</p><p>Thanks to their heroics, India remained on course for a record-breaking medal haul.</p><p>Nitesh, a 29-year-old engineering graduate from IIT-Mandi, who lost his left leg in a train accident back in 2009, won the top honours in the men's singles SL3 category, defeating Tokyo silver-medallist Daniel Bethell of Britain 21-14 18-21 23-21 in a gruelling final that lasted over an hour.</p><p>Later in the evening, Antil hogged the limelight with his exploits as he became the first Indian man to defend Paralympic title by winning the javelin throw F64 final with a Games record of 70.59m.</p><p>The 26-year-old world record holder from Sonipat in Haryana bettered his own earlier Paralympic best of 68.55m set in Tokyo while winning the gold three years ago.</p><p>His world record stands at 73.29m.</p><p>Antil is the second Indian overall after shooter Avani Lekhara to defend a Paralympic title.</p><p>F64 category is for athletes with problems in the lower limb(s), those competing with prosthesis or affected by leg length difference.</p>.Paralympics: Avani retains gold; Mona clinches bronze in historic 10m air rifle double for India. <p>Nitesh dazzles on court</p><p>================</p><p>Before Antil entered the scene, Nitesh's gold was icing on the cake on a day when India also clinched silver medals through discus thrower Yogesh Kathuniya (F56) and para-shuttlers Thulasimathi Murugesan (SU5) and Suhas Yathiraj (SL4), who had won a silver in the Tokyo Games as well. A bronze also came from a para-shuttler in Manisha Ramadass (SU5).</p><p>India also tasted success in archery after the duo of Sheetal Devi and Rakesh Kumar staged a remarkable comeback after the heartbreak in the semifinals to claim the bronze medal with a 156-155 win over Italy's Eleonora Sarti and Matteo Bonacina in mixed team compound open competition.</p><p>It is only the second time that India has won a medal in Paralympics in archery. Harvinder Singh bagged an individual bronze at the Tokyo edition of the Games three years ago.</p><p>Sheetal, 17, also became the first Indian woman to win an archery medal at the quadrennial showpiece.</p><p>The country found itself in the top-20, thanks to a haul of 14 medals so far. It is aiming to better the 19 medals achieved in Tokyo.</p><p>Nitesh's gold was the second of the ongoing Games after wheelchair-bound shooter Avani Lekhara's top finish in the women's 10m air rifle (SH1) event last week.</p><p>"I have lost in such situations against him and didn't want to make the same mistakes... I told myself I should keep fighting for each point. At 19-20 in decider also, I told myself to stay there and make him earn the point," Nitesh said of his rival, who had beaten him nine times in the past.</p><p>Nitesh, who aspired to follow in his father's footsteps and join the armed forces before the devastating accident left him despondent, was tenacity personified in his match against Bethell.</p><p>The Haryana lad, who competes with a prosthetic leg, was a footballer before the accident and was inspired to resume his sporting career as a shuttler after watching army veterans without limbs showing the spirit to carry on.</p><p>"I also admire Virat Kohli because the way he has converted himself into a fit athlete," the world number three told PTI before the final.</p><p>Silver linings for Kathuniya, Suhas and Murugesan</p><p>=================================</p><p>For discus thrower Yogesh Kathuniya it was a second consecutive Paralympic silver medal after a season's best effort of 42.22m.</p><p>The 27-year-old hurled the discus to the podium-clinching distance in his very first attempt to add to the silver he won in the Tokyo Paralympics three years ago.</p><p>The F-56 classification covers limb deficiency, leg length difference, impaired muscle power and impaired range of movement.</p><p>At the age of 9, Kathuniya developed the Guillain-Barre syndrome, a rare autoimmune condition which causes numbness, tingling and muscle weakness that can progress to paralysis.</p><p>He was bound to the wheelchair during his childhood but overcame the odds with the help of his mother Meena Devi, who learnt physiotherapy to help him regain muscle strength.</p><p>Shuttler Murugesan was competing in her maiden Paralympics and would go back happy after clinching a silver on debut. She lost 17-21 10-21 to China's defending champion Yang Qiuxia in the final.</p><p>Her classification covers upper limb impairment, which may or may not affect the playing hand.</p><p>The second-seeded Manisha, who lost to Murugesan in the semifinals, outplayed Danish third seed Cathrine Rosengren 21-12 21-8 to claim the bronze medal.</p><p>Later, top-seeded Suhas was outplayed by 9-21 13-21 by Frenchman Lucas Mazur in the SL4 men's singles final.</p><p>The SL4 classification covers impairment in lower limbs that hampers walking and running balance. Suhas was born with a congenital deformity in his left ankle that affects his balance.</p><p>In India's last badminton match, Nithya Sre Sivan won a bronze medal in the women's singles SH6 third-place playoff match, marking a historic day for Indian para badminton.</p><p>The 19-year-old Nithya comfortably beat Indonesia's Rina Marlina 21-14 21-6 to sign off on a winning note in her maiden appearance at the Games.</p>
<p>Paris: Inspired by the country's armed forces and cricket star Virat Kohli, a determined Kumar Nitesh sparkled with a gold medal on debut before javelin throw champion Sumit Antil joined India's para-badminton players in ensuring that the nation celebrated its best day at the ongoing Paralympic Games.</p><p>Thanks to their heroics, India remained on course for a record-breaking medal haul.</p><p>Nitesh, a 29-year-old engineering graduate from IIT-Mandi, who lost his left leg in a train accident back in 2009, won the top honours in the men's singles SL3 category, defeating Tokyo silver-medallist Daniel Bethell of Britain 21-14 18-21 23-21 in a gruelling final that lasted over an hour.</p><p>Later in the evening, Antil hogged the limelight with his exploits as he became the first Indian man to defend Paralympic title by winning the javelin throw F64 final with a Games record of 70.59m.</p><p>The 26-year-old world record holder from Sonipat in Haryana bettered his own earlier Paralympic best of 68.55m set in Tokyo while winning the gold three years ago.</p><p>His world record stands at 73.29m.</p><p>Antil is the second Indian overall after shooter Avani Lekhara to defend a Paralympic title.</p><p>F64 category is for athletes with problems in the lower limb(s), those competing with prosthesis or affected by leg length difference.</p>.Paralympics: Avani retains gold; Mona clinches bronze in historic 10m air rifle double for India. <p>Nitesh dazzles on court</p><p>================</p><p>Before Antil entered the scene, Nitesh's gold was icing on the cake on a day when India also clinched silver medals through discus thrower Yogesh Kathuniya (F56) and para-shuttlers Thulasimathi Murugesan (SU5) and Suhas Yathiraj (SL4), who had won a silver in the Tokyo Games as well. A bronze also came from a para-shuttler in Manisha Ramadass (SU5).</p><p>India also tasted success in archery after the duo of Sheetal Devi and Rakesh Kumar staged a remarkable comeback after the heartbreak in the semifinals to claim the bronze medal with a 156-155 win over Italy's Eleonora Sarti and Matteo Bonacina in mixed team compound open competition.</p><p>It is only the second time that India has won a medal in Paralympics in archery. Harvinder Singh bagged an individual bronze at the Tokyo edition of the Games three years ago.</p><p>Sheetal, 17, also became the first Indian woman to win an archery medal at the quadrennial showpiece.</p><p>The country found itself in the top-20, thanks to a haul of 14 medals so far. It is aiming to better the 19 medals achieved in Tokyo.</p><p>Nitesh's gold was the second of the ongoing Games after wheelchair-bound shooter Avani Lekhara's top finish in the women's 10m air rifle (SH1) event last week.</p><p>"I have lost in such situations against him and didn't want to make the same mistakes... I told myself I should keep fighting for each point. At 19-20 in decider also, I told myself to stay there and make him earn the point," Nitesh said of his rival, who had beaten him nine times in the past.</p><p>Nitesh, who aspired to follow in his father's footsteps and join the armed forces before the devastating accident left him despondent, was tenacity personified in his match against Bethell.</p><p>The Haryana lad, who competes with a prosthetic leg, was a footballer before the accident and was inspired to resume his sporting career as a shuttler after watching army veterans without limbs showing the spirit to carry on.</p><p>"I also admire Virat Kohli because the way he has converted himself into a fit athlete," the world number three told PTI before the final.</p><p>Silver linings for Kathuniya, Suhas and Murugesan</p><p>=================================</p><p>For discus thrower Yogesh Kathuniya it was a second consecutive Paralympic silver medal after a season's best effort of 42.22m.</p><p>The 27-year-old hurled the discus to the podium-clinching distance in his very first attempt to add to the silver he won in the Tokyo Paralympics three years ago.</p><p>The F-56 classification covers limb deficiency, leg length difference, impaired muscle power and impaired range of movement.</p><p>At the age of 9, Kathuniya developed the Guillain-Barre syndrome, a rare autoimmune condition which causes numbness, tingling and muscle weakness that can progress to paralysis.</p><p>He was bound to the wheelchair during his childhood but overcame the odds with the help of his mother Meena Devi, who learnt physiotherapy to help him regain muscle strength.</p><p>Shuttler Murugesan was competing in her maiden Paralympics and would go back happy after clinching a silver on debut. She lost 17-21 10-21 to China's defending champion Yang Qiuxia in the final.</p><p>Her classification covers upper limb impairment, which may or may not affect the playing hand.</p><p>The second-seeded Manisha, who lost to Murugesan in the semifinals, outplayed Danish third seed Cathrine Rosengren 21-12 21-8 to claim the bronze medal.</p><p>Later, top-seeded Suhas was outplayed by 9-21 13-21 by Frenchman Lucas Mazur in the SL4 men's singles final.</p><p>The SL4 classification covers impairment in lower limbs that hampers walking and running balance. Suhas was born with a congenital deformity in his left ankle that affects his balance.</p><p>In India's last badminton match, Nithya Sre Sivan won a bronze medal in the women's singles SH6 third-place playoff match, marking a historic day for Indian para badminton.</p><p>The 19-year-old Nithya comfortably beat Indonesia's Rina Marlina 21-14 21-6 to sign off on a winning note in her maiden appearance at the Games.</p>