Uncelebrated / Celebrated Heroes of the fraternity
Posted: Tue Jun 08, 2010 4:35 pm
I am starting this new thread as kind of a knowledge base for us regarding the Uncelebrated / Celebrated Heroes of our shooting fraternity. The idea for this thread came after reading about the passing away of Mr. Dharmalingam. All members are requested to kindly add on to the entries so that we can know about the forgotten or still shining gems in our fraternity, people who have been responsible for the growth of our fraternity.
TenX, with your permission, I am copying what you had written about Mr. Dharmalingam and adding it here as the 1st of the series.
V Dharmalingam, affectionately known as Lingam Sir is the tall sturdy figure that every pistol shooter who has visited the 25 meter range in any Indian competition for the last almost two decades would have surely observed.
Hailing from a humble village called Bhelkurchy, near Salem, this gentleman was a driving force in the Naval team, and has trained many pistol shooters. He has always extended a courageous and assuring smile to everyone who needed any kind of assistance. His sturdy command is something that will echo shooters who has fired under his lane-command.
Mr. Lingam always showed what one would expect from a coach or an NRAI official, and was 'there' in every competition, rigidly working from dawn to dusk. Anyone who knew him will ascertain what a wonderful combination of training, humor and guidance this person gave. He has traveled around the globe mentoring the Indian team.
Regards
TenX, with your permission, I am copying what you had written about Mr. Dharmalingam and adding it here as the 1st of the series.
V Dharmalingam, affectionately known as Lingam Sir is the tall sturdy figure that every pistol shooter who has visited the 25 meter range in any Indian competition for the last almost two decades would have surely observed.
Hailing from a humble village called Bhelkurchy, near Salem, this gentleman was a driving force in the Naval team, and has trained many pistol shooters. He has always extended a courageous and assuring smile to everyone who needed any kind of assistance. His sturdy command is something that will echo shooters who has fired under his lane-command.
Mr. Lingam always showed what one would expect from a coach or an NRAI official, and was 'there' in every competition, rigidly working from dawn to dusk. Anyone who knew him will ascertain what a wonderful combination of training, humor and guidance this person gave. He has traveled around the globe mentoring the Indian team.
Regards