BUFFALO RACERS FROM INDIA ARE BEING COMPARED TO OLYMPIC ATHLETE AND JAMAICAN FORMER SPRINTER USAIN BOLT, BUT IS IT A FAIR COMPARISON?
If you were to Google “fastest runner in the world” today, the name Usain Bolt will inevitably appear on your screen. Considered to be the greatest sprinter of all time, Bolt made history in 2009, when he ran a distance of 100 meters in a record-setting time of 9.58 seconds. At just 23 years old, this Jamaican Olympic athlete became a worldwide sensation. So, it is sure to make headlines and get people talking when buffalo racers from India get compared to the undefeated champion of the track. Srinivas Gowda and Nishant Shetty, two Kambala jockeys from southern India, are said to have broken Bolt’s record when running with buffalos.
*While it might seem as though Gowda and Shetty have beaten Bolt’s record by a few milliseconds, experts have denied it based on some key factors.
While both Gowda and Shetty performed spectacularly, comparing them to Bolt may have been a little premature and even a bit silly simply because of the differences in the two sports. Bolt is a track-and-field legend and an Olympic star. He runs on synthetic tracks, wearing spiked shoes. Kambala, on the other hand, is a local sport that takes place on a wet, muddy field, and the participants run barefoot holding a rope that is tied to two buffalos. Many have argued that the racer gets momentum from the speed of the animals.
* Gowda became an overnight, online sensation when videos of him running through a muddy field with two buffalos went viral on social media. His record-breaking performance at the race made people compare him to Usain Bolt. A few days later, Shetty broke Gowda’s record.
Srinivasa Gowda, a 28-year-old construction worker from Karnataka, became famous overnight when videos of him participating in a local sport went viral online. The name of the sport is Kambala, and it means “paddy-growing mud field” when translated from the local Tulu language. This traditional south Indian sport is basically a buffalo race, where participants dash through a slushy paddy field with two buffaloes running in front of them. The participants have to cover a distance of 132 meters or 142 meters, and whoever does it the fastest, wins!
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