يحاول ذهب - حر
The mixed zone: the rawest place in sport
October 28, 2023
|Mint Mumbai
Sport works at various speeds. It takes four-and-a-half seconds for Neeraj Chopra's javelin to fly takes four-and-a-half seconds for 88.88m in Hangzhou last month. Then it takes over 20 minutes for him to walk the roughly 30m of the media mixed zone. The TV guys are hogging him, the print guys are swearing, Chopra is smiling. He's a gentle hero with a word for everyone.
A metal barrier separates us from him, across which are thrust a tangle of arms holding phones. Words are recorded, emotion makes for interesting listening. When the Singapore sprinter, Shanti Pereira, wins the 200m, she cries at the mixed zone and there are tiny portions of the recording where all you hear is silence and a choked voice.
Footballers disappear post-match into tunnels. Cricketers trudge into pavilions. Silence is a superstar prerogative.
Lionel Messi, for years, said little. Roger Federer charmed in multiple languages but so many stars find shelter behind sterilised quotes in press releases and one-sided posts on Instagram. But at a major Games, at the mixed zone, all athletes are revealed. Every one, from medalled god to 45th-place finisher, has to walk past a line of barricades after an event. There is no hiding.
Even in sportswriting, a hierarchy is in place. Access is doled out on the basis of influence and circulation figures. But on this classist planet, the mixed zone is a democratic place. Like sport itself, everyone has a chance. Every journalist, irrespective of the reach of their paper, can request an athlete to stop for a chat.
Not everyone does, but most do. At the Olympics, Michael Phelps would. In Hangzhou, Mutaz Barshim, probably the finest high jumper ever, kept stopping for groups of reporters, a rangy evangelist for defeating gravity.
هذه القصة من طبعة October 28, 2023 من Mint Mumbai.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من Mint Mumbai
Mint Mumbai
Chip crunch hits laptops, budget smartphones
Prices of budget smartphones and laptops in India have risen by almost 10% and a further increase may be on the anvil next year.
2 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Space startup Agnikul raises ₹150 crore
Aerospace startup Agnikul has raised ₹150 crore in a Series C round, two people familiar with the matter told Mint, after its earlier plan to raise up to $50 million failed to draw sufficient investor interest.
1 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
It's a new day for labour
Four consolidated codes advance equal pay for women, gig worker protection, gratuity after a year, health checks
5 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Global giants press for PLIs on aerospace components
Airbus, Boeing, Pratt & Whitney seek production-linked incentives like the one for drones
3 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Digital gold stumbles, ETFs sniff opportunity
Fund houses are promoting gold ETFs as secure, regulated, transparent
2 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
When the music played
For all the years it was central to entertainment and information, the television was called \"the idiot box\", and a good vs bad debate continues to swirl around it long after many have cut cable and switched to streaming.
1 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Gratuity and benefits to soar for millions of employees
The government on Friday implemented four new labour codes, marking the biggest overhaul of workers’ laws in decades.
2 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Rising stars of mixed-doubles table tennis
Diya Chitale and Manush Shah are the first Indians to qualify for the WTT Finals
4 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
THE AGE OF MT
In the 1990s and 2000s, MTV changed Indian pop forever through innovative programming and VJs who gained their own fandom. When did it stop experimenting?
7 mins
November 22, 2025
Mint Mumbai
Behind strong Q2 show, a shallow recovery
India Inc’s September-quarter print was shaped by small- and mid-cap outperformance, and sector-specific boosts for oil marketing companies, cement and consumption niches rather than a broad-based demand upturn.
3 mins
November 22, 2025
Translate
Change font size

