The Bolt of buffalo? Indian jockey’s record wins national praise

The Bolt of buffalo? Indian jockey’s record wins national praise
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In this photo taken on January 31, 2020, Srinivas Gowda, 28, hailing from the Dakshina Kannada district runs alongside his buffalos during 'Kambala', the traditional buffalo racing event, held at Aikala village in Dakshina Kannada district about 30 kms from Mangalore. (AFP)
The Bolt of buffalo? Indian jockey’s record wins national praise
2 / 2
In this photo taken on January 31, 2020, Srinivas Gowda, 28, hailing from the Dakshina Kannada district runs alongside his buffalos during 'Kambala', the traditional buffalo racing event, held at Aikala village in Dakshina Kannada district about 30 kms from Mangalore. (AFP)
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Updated 17 February 2020
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The Bolt of buffalo? Indian jockey’s record wins national praise

The Bolt of buffalo? Indian jockey’s record wins national praise
  • Comparing Gowda’s performance with the Jamaican star’s record, commenters have assumed that the farmer would have run 100 meters in 9.55 seconds, which is 0.03 seconds faster than the Olympian’s feat

NEW DELHI: Indian sports authorities announced Saturday they will hold trials for a buffalo jockey whose record-setting performance in a traditional footrace has seen him compared to Usain Bolt.
On a track of muddy slush, Srinivas Gowda ran 142.50 meters in 13.62 seconds on January 31, setting a record in the traditional buffalo race known as Kambala held every year in southern Karnataka state.
The 28-year-old farmer has since become a sensation after people praised him on social media and compared him to retired Jamaican sprint superstar Bolt, who is the world’s fastest man for his record run of 100 meters in 9.58 seconds.
Comparing Gowda’s performance with the Jamaican star’s record, commenters have assumed that the farmer would have run 100 meters in 9.55 seconds, which is 0.03 seconds faster than the Olympian’s feat.
India’s junior sports minister Kiren Rijiju said that authorities have called Gowda to the capital New Delhi for trials under the country’s best coaches.
“Officials from Sports Authority of India (SAI) have contacted him. His rail ticket is done and he will reach SAI center on Monday. I will ensure top national coaches to conduct his trials properly,” Rijiju wrote on Twitter.
Many users have however cast doubts on his performance, considering the high standards of the Olympics and the help received from the buffaloes, who during the races are lashed together with ropes and outfitted with a plow while a participant matches their speed and controls them.
Gowda is a regular participant in the popular buffalo races held in the farming belts of the southern coastal state during the winter.
“I did not think I would run this fast. The buffaloes were quick and I followed them,” Gowda told reporters.
The sport was briefly banned following petitions by animal rights groups who decried it as cruel, but races resumed in 2017 under government orders.