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Commonwealth Games all set to begin


Agencies

New Delhi, 03 October 2010: After months of uncertainty and controversies, the day of reckoning has arrived for the Commonwealth Games. The opening ceremony at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium here on Sunday, to be marked by a multi-crore cultural extravaganza, dance, music and fireworks, should boost the sagging spirits of the organisers and the common man alike.

 

With the tickets being priced high — lowest denomination at Rs. 1,000 — most of the Delhiites are resigned to their fate of watching the spectacle ‘live’ on television.

 

The 11-day Games, to be formally inaugurated jointly by President Pratibha Patil and Prince Charles at the 60,000-capacity stadium, should once again see the complete domination of Australia, though as the host India should fancy its chances better than ever before.

 

The inaugurations of multi-discipline games have become glitzier and costlier since the Los Angeles Olympics set the trend in 1984 while they are also being evaluated for the precision with which they are executed and the technological innovations that are brought in.

 

 

A Rs. 40-crore aerostat that will add to the ambience at the Nehru Stadium should provide additional novelty to the show on Sunday which has been developed and executed by a creative team headed by Bharat Bala and supported by Shyam Benegal and Prasoon Joshi, among others.

 

There is hope that the ceremony would help erase the embarrassment caused to the nation during the past fortnight when appalling dereliction shown by the authorities brought international focus on to the Games, the biggest sporting event in India after the 1982 Asian Games.

 

Some sheen would be missing from the Games because of the withdrawals by some of the top-ranked athletes, including world and Olympic sprint champion Usain Bolt of Jamaica. But there are a number of other world-beaters and world record holders to compensate their absence.

 

The inclusion of wrestling, archery and tennis should help India considerably to improve upon its medals tally of 50 including 22 gold medals at the 2006 Melbourne Games. There India had finished fourth.