It has been a tumultuous week for Indian hockey as three stalwarts- Rupinder pal Singh, Birendra Lakra and SV Sunil announced their retirement from the sport. Indian men’s hockey captain Manpreet Singh had a mixed bag feeling after hearing about the retirements. Out of the three, he was most connected with Rupinder and called him ‘big brother’, so it will be tough for Manpreet to not have his guardian angel around from here on.
A start drag-flicker and a great defender, Rupinder has had a tremendous impact on Indian hockey. A two time Olympian who had a decade long career in hockey has left several footprints in the folklore of Indian hockey.
Manpreet who understood Rupinder’s role in this Bronze medal-winning team spoke after his retirement. He said, “We were together in Chandigarh, and he told me everything. I was also happy [knowing] that he is playing for so long and has left at such good momentum. But obviously as a friend and a little brother I was also sad that my big brother has retired from hockey.”
Rupinder made his debut back in 2010 and has seen Indian hockey transform in years. He has a vital cog in Graham Reid’s Bronze medal-winning side at the Tokyo Olympics as the Men in Blue created history by breaking a 41-year jinx at the Summer Games. Rupinder finished the Tokyo Olympics with four goals and was the second highest goalscorer for India.
“But somewhere inside I was delighted that after winning an Olympic medal, he decided to retire because it’s everyone’s dream to win a medal in the Olympics. And he achieved that dream and after that, he decided to retire,” the skipper revealed.
Shifting his focus, Manpreet highlighted how the Indian team needs to get back on their toes and should remain focused on winning gold at the Asian Games in 2022. A win at the showpiece event will help them in direct qualification to the Paris Olympics in 2024.
“Firstly we will aim to qualify for Paris 2024 in Asian Games 2022. If we do so then we will have time to prepare ourselves for the next Olympics. We are already practising for our camp which is starting next week.”
“We are focusing that when we return to camp, our fitness level remains good with all the sweets that we have eaten [post-Tokyo 2020 bronze],” Manpreet highlighted.
It will be interesting to see how young players step and fill that big hole in the defence. It will be a big challenge for any player to replace experienced leaders like Rupinder Pal Singh and Birendra Lakra at the back.
Former Indian batter Ambati Rayudu praised Shreyas Iyer’s batting performances amid the ongoing IPL 2026.… Read More
Former Indian batter Manoj Tiwary recalled asking Virat Kohli how he manages to stay so… Read More
Former Indian opener Kris Srikkanth criticised Rajasthan Royals skipper Riyan Parag after the inaugural champions… Read More
Sunrisers Hyderabad stand-in captain Ishan Kishan revealed there was some miscommunication with the bowlers when… Read More
Former Indian Test opener Aakash Chopra said Mumbai Indians' bowling looked pedestrian after the five-time… Read More
Former Indian fast bowler Zaheer Khan lavished praise on Rajat Patidar after Royal Challengers Bengaluru… Read More