NEW DELHI: Pursuing a largely unrewarding Olympic sport in a cricket-obsessed country requires adjustments but Indian heptathlete Swapna Barman has taken it to a new level — squeezing six toes in each shoe designed for five.
Born with six toes in each foot, the 18-year-old from a poor family in Jalpaiguri in the east Indian state of West Bengal has been forced to run, jump and throw wearing shoes that have affected more than aiding her performance.
"Even after all these years, it still hurts every time I put my shoes on," said Swapna. "It's worse during the running events. I try to adjust but my toes curl under pressure."
Her lamentation sounds almost an anachronism in an era when athletes are trying to get the best out of modern sports science and would not compromise on the sports equipments they use.
She paused when asked if she tried customised shoes.
"I did try a pair from a local manufacturer. It did not last two days."
Coach Subhash Sarkar, who discovered her and remains her greatest motivation, explains what a reticent Swapna would not.
"She is not a star athlete for whom Adidas or Nike will design special shoes with precise pressure points, perfect grip and other specifications," Sarkar said. "They'll do that for a star who will tweet a picture and sales would immediately soar.
"We did try some local manufacturers but those were really substandard. The grip was poor and the pressure points were all wrong."
Swapna, currently sweating it out at the Sports Authority of India (SAI) centre in Patiala, has naturally been left with no other choice but to train with the pain and that's not the only problem plaguing the Asian Games-bound athlete.
Even the regular shoes are a luxury for the teenager whose father is paralysed and elder brother a daily wager.
She needs seven pair of shoes for a heptathlon meet and that means around US$930 (RM2,968), calculates Sarkar.
"She has got proper shoes for shot put and 800 metres but I'm afraid she may have to compete in other events wearing substandard locally made shoes."
Some local manufacturers have offered to design special shoes for her but Sarkar says excellence needs more than just goodwill.
"I have respect for their emotions but honestly a lot of science and technology go into the making of modern sports footwear and they are not really known for that," said Sarkar. Reuters