Sharad Kumar (born 1 March 1992) is an Indian para high jumper and a former world no. 1. He qualified to represent India at the 2024 Summer Paralympics in Paris.[5]
He then went on to represent India in the 2020 Tokyo Paralympics where he won bronze medal. He also represented India in the 2024 Paris Paralympics where he won a silver medal.
Early life and background
Sharad Kumar was born on 1 March 1992 in motipur Muzaffarpur, Bihar.[1][2] At the age of two, he suffered paralysis of his left leg after taking spurious polio medicine at a local eradication drive.[2][6] Sharad studied at St. Paul's School (Darjeeling) where he started high jump in Class 7. He broke school and district records competing against able-bodied athletes.[7] For further studies, he moved to Delhi, where he studied his Plus Two at Modern School and graduated in Political Science from Kirori Mal College. Post Graduation in Politics with Specialization in International relations from Jawaharlal Nehru University.[2][8] He is supported by GoSports Foundation through the Para Champions Programme.
Career
Sharad made his international debut in 2010 at the Asian Para Games in Guangzhou.[2] In January 2012, he jumped 1.64m, thus qualifying for the 2012 Paralympics. In April 2012, with a jump of 1.75m at the Malaysian Open Para athletics championship, he became world no. 1 at the age of 19.
However he missed the London Paralympics after testing positive for a banned drug.[8] He made his comeback in the 2014 Asian Para Games, where he won gold by clearing 1.80m, breaking a 12-year Asian Games record and also regained the World No. 1 spot.[4] He participated in the Rio Paralympics 2016, finishing at sixth position with a best of 1.77m. He started training under Mr. Satyanarayana, National Para Athletics Coach since March 2015.[9] He won Silver in 2017 World ParaAthletics Championships with a jump of 1.84m.
He won Gold Medal in 2018 Para Asían Games Jakarta setting a new Game Record and Continental Record by jumping 1.90m.
^Deepika Das (9 November 2014). "Jumping on a high road". Deccan Chronicle. Archived from the original on 11 October 2016. Retrieved 13 September 2016.