It sometimes takes a foreign sensibility to sharply feel the anomalies and blemishes of a nation. “In India, when you win, you are everything and when you lose, you are nothing,” said Sjoerd Marijne, the Dutch coach of the Indian women’s hockey team that made history in the Tokyo Olympics. The girls entered an Olympic semifinal for the first time and showed enormous fighting spirit to get there. PM Narendra Modi—whose government laid renewed emphasis on the ‘beti’ (girl child)—called up the hockey girls to console them for missing out on the bronze medal. When the Centre toasted India’s record seven medals at Tokyo 2020, women athletes like P.V. Sindhu, Mirabai Chanu, Lovlina Borgohain, Rani Rampal and Vinesh Phogat enjoyed the spotlight at the PM’s party on Independence Day. But many celebrated athletes of the Indian contingent were cast aside in the shadows. Leading up to the Games, the much-touted shooters and the archers were expected to lead the race towards India’s ‘double digits’ haul. Fifteen shooters and four archers, all world class, drew a blank in Tokyo.