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Global Indianstory Global Indian ExclusiveLakshya Sen: Rising badminton star on the path to greatness
  • Global Indian Exclusive
  • Indian Sportsperson

Lakshya Sen: Rising badminton star on the path to greatness

Compiled by: Team GI Youth

(August 8, 2024) The tension was palpable when a furious rally between Indian shuttler Lakshya Sen and Indonesian counterpart Jonathan Christie had the crowd on the edge of their seats at the Paris Olympics 2024. In the midst of the tense match, Lakshya delivered a moment of pure brilliance with a behind-the-back shot, creating a moment that could become legendary in badminton history. Executed with precision, the shot had the world gaping in awe of this Indian shuttler who made his Olympic debut.

When Lakshya began training at the Prakash Padukone Academy at the age of 12, little did he know that he would be representing India at the Paris Olympics 2024. The 22-year-old, sen-sational player, might have missed the chance to clinch a medal at the biggest sporting event but his run at Olympics is testament to his craft and dedication.

 

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Even Denmark’s Viktor Axelson, the reigning world number one in men’s singles, who played against Lakshya in semi-finals was all praise for the Almora boy. “Lakshya is an amazing player. He has shown in this Olympics that he is a very, very strong competitor and I am sure in four years from now, he will be one of the favourites to win the gold,” he said.

Badminton in his DNA

The Commonwealth Games champion, Lakshya Sen, seems to have badminton in his DNA. Growing up in the cantonment town of Almora in Uttarakhand, he developed a fascination for the game at an early age. He fondly recalls holding his grandfather’s hand at the tender age of five and accompanying him to the town’s only outdoor court. Lakshya’s grandfather, Chandra Lal Sen, was a well-known figure in Almora, often referred to as the grand old man of badminton. Chandra Lal first discovered badminton during his posting in Bahraich, near the Nepal border, where he quickly developed a passion for the sport and even competed in civil services tournaments. He later introduced the game to Almora, and his son, DK Sen, followed in his footsteps. When Lakshya was seven, he began training under his father’s guidance, who is regarded as a revolutionary coach in the field.

His training began with the multi-feed shuttle drill, a technique where the coach stands at the center of the opposite court and hits shuttles to different areas of the player’s court, forcing them to move rapidly from one corner to another. While most players typically start multi-feed drills later in their training, Lakshya began practicing them from the outset. His mother said in an interview that Lakshya had a childhood. “From age five, it has been badminton all the time. From 4.30 in the morning, even when it is bitterly cold, he was out training with his father.”

Lakshya Sen | Global Indian

Lakshya Sen

Sen’s early training laid a solid foundation, but a significant turning point came in 2013 when his father took him to the Prakash Padukone Academy. There, he trained under renowned coaches U Vimal Kumar and Prakash Padukone. This experience propelled Lakshya to the top of the junior circuit, ultimately becoming the World No. 1 junior player in 2017. Reflecting on his journey, the Global Indian said in an interview, “My grandfather was a badminton player, and my father is a coach. That’s how I got introduced to the sport. Once I started excelling in junior tournaments, I decided to pursue a career as a professional shuttler.”

The start of a promising career

Transitioning from a top junior player to a successful competitor in the senior circuit was not without its challenges for Lakshya, especially during his brief time at the academy run by Danish legend Morten Frost. However, the continuous focus on building his strength and stamina paid off. In 2018, he made a strong comeback by winning a bronze medal at the World Junior Championship, a gold at the Asian Juniors, and a gold in the mixed team event, as well as a silver in men’s singles at the Youth Olympic Games. These years of dedicated practice have helped him become a more patient player and have led to impressive results on the court.

“Compared to my junior days, I am a little more patient. Trying to rally more. I need to improve this more for sure, but there are a lot more things to learn, but from then to now, it is a difference in my game. That I make the effort to play better strokes from the back, not just go all out with smashes… trying to build up a point. In the senior circuit, everyone is fit and the shuttle keeps coming back. You have to play long rallies, long matches. Preparing for that, I have improved my fitness,” he said in an interview.

 

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In 2019, Lakshya Sen clinched his first BWF Tour title by winning the Dutch Open men’s singles, defeating Japan’s Yusuke Onodera. He also secured victory at the Scottish Open later that November. However, a pivotal moment in his career came in August 2021 when he participated in a two-week training session with Olympic champion Viktor Axelsen. During this time, Lakshya learned various training methods, including advanced strengthening and conditioning techniques. This experience proved to be a game-changer, setting him on the path to recent successes, including his triumph at the 2022 Commonwealth Games. Despite the high stakes, Lakshya remained calm and didn’t focus on the pressure of winning a medal. He maintained confidence in his abilities, which helped him excel on the big stage.

Lakshya’s sensational performances on the international stage led him to the Paris Olympics 2024. Although he delivered some great matches and became a household name, he fell short of clinching a medal. However, in this short span, he demonstrated to the world that he is a champion in the making. His journey has been marked by perseverance and remarkable growth, and while the Olympic medal eluded him this time, his potential and talent have clearly shown that his future in badminton is bright and promising.

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  • Badminton
  • Global Indian
  • Indian shuttler
  • Lakshya Sen
  • Paris Olympics 2024

Published on 08, Aug 2024

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" alt="Indian youth | Vayun Amula | Global Indian" width="694" height="520" /> Vayun Amula[/caption]

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Vayun found inspiration in his elder sister, Shrusti Amula, the founder of the non-profit, Rise N Shine Foundation, who earned the prestigious title of L’Oreal’s 'Woman of Worth' honouree this year. Witnessing her dedication and the significant impact his sister’s work was making, Vayun decided to become a part of the organisation himself.

[caption id="attachment_34020" align="aligncenter" width="683"]Indian youth | Vayun Amula | Global Indian One of Rise N Shine’s food collection drives[/caption]

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[caption id="attachment_34023" align="aligncenter" width="737"]Indian youth | Vayun Amula | Global Indian Vayun Amula with a friend[/caption]

In pursuit of STEM learning and problem-solving 

In the 2022 First Lego League innovation project, Vayun undertook research on a pressing issue involving cargo containers falling off cargo ships. Their investigation revealed a significant 40 percent slowdown at a California port in 2021 due to such incidents. To address this problem, Vayun and his team introduced a ground-breaking solution known as the ‘smart container’, which resolved multiple challenges. One of these challenges involved preserving products at a consistent temperature, achieved by incorporating smart heaters and coolers. The smart container was designed to also equip electromagnets and wind sensors. Vayun and his team’s exceptional prototype secured the first position at prestigious Innovation Project award.

In 2021, serving as the team leader, the youngster achieved a remarkable feat by securing the First Lego League Robert Design Award for his team. He had played a pivotal role in programming a robot to excel in the Robo Game. Additionally, his team was honoured with The Core Value Award, which recognises exceptional learning and teamwork. “Receiving the Core Values Award is a significant achievement in FLL, as it highlights not only a team's technical prowess but also its character and commitment to collaboration and ethical behaviour in the pursuit of STEM learning and problem-solving,” Vayun says.

Cricket, India and future goals  

A state level cricket player of Maryland, Vayun has been representing his state in the Mid-Atlantic region in U15 cricket matches. “My dad is a big fan of cricket and I was introduced to the cricket by him. He is my coach as well as my practice buddy,” he smiles.

[caption id="attachment_34021" align="aligncenter" width="474"]Indian youth | Vayun Amula | Global Indian Vayun Amula[/caption]

The native of Maryland, maintains a close connection with his place of origin, Mumbai. His software professional parents have reinforced the family’s ties with India through regular visits.

Despite excelling in sports, the youngster aspires to be a successful entrepreneur. "I want to establish a company that can consistently make a positive impact by assisting those in need," he signs off.

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Entrepreneur | Alishba Imran | Global Indian

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[caption id="attachment_37640" align="aligncenter" width="555"]Entrepreneur | Alishba Imran | Global Indian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau recognised Alishba for her work[/caption]

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Environmentalist | Berjis Driver | Global Indian

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;"> “Through my pursuits, I’ve always looked to make a positive impact on the world,” the 22-year-old said in an interview, reflecting on her journey from Greater Seattle where she was raised, to the halls of Princeton University, New Jersey.

In May, Archika graduated from Princeton University with a Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science, and is set to start the next chapter of her life in San Francisco as an Associate Product Manager on the Databricks Artificial Intelligence Platform.

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In 2018, she was one of 45 interns nationwide selected for the NASA SEES internship in Austin, Texas, where she developed a web application to aid flood response efforts in Texas. Later that summer, she supported research at the intersection of neuroscience and machine learning at the University of Washington. In 2019, she interned at Sensoria Health, a Redmond startup focused on wearable technologies.

Her achievements also include being a 2018 Congressional App Challenge winner, a 2019 Mars Generation Global 24 Under 24 STEM Leader, a 2020 Google Computer Science Summer Institute Scholar, and 2020 Coca-Cola Scholar. Additionally, Archika led TEDxYouth@Redmond as its 2019 president, founded her school’s Technology Student Association, and served as captain of its debate team.

[caption id="attachment_38272" align="aligncenter" width="506"]Indian Social Entrepreneur | Archika Dogra | Global Indian Archika Dogra as a keynote speaker at the EduData Summit[/caption]

After speaking at the 2019 World Innovation Summit for Education in Qatar, the Fast Company Innovation Festival in New York City, and the 2024 QS Quacquarelli Symonds Edudata Summit on artificial intelligence and education, she has become a strong advocate for the power of the youth narrative.

Discovering the charisma of technology

In 2017 Archika got an opportunity to attend an Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Outreach Summer Program called AI4ALL which was being conducted by computer scientists Olga Russakovsky and Fei-Fei Li, professors in the Computer Science Department at Stanford University and co-directors of Stanford’s Human-Centred AI Institute. “At AI4ALL, I had the opportunity to explore machine learning intersected with social good in very tangible ways, meet a community of dedicated and brilliant women, and grow under the mentorship of phenomenal faculty and researchers,” she shared.

The opportunity triggered in her a fascination for technology at a time when she was more inclined towards humanities.

Always driven by a desire to work for social good, the transformational programme made her realise that she could leverage technology to make a greater impact on the causes she cared about. With time her interest in STEM deepened.

[caption id="attachment_38273" align="aligncenter" width="744"]Indian Social Entrepreneur | Archika Dogra | Global Indian Archika Dogra at the AI4ALL programme in 2017[/caption]

Making a difference through Innoverge

Soon after, Archika laid the foundation of her nonprofit Innoverge that partners with community centres, schools and libraries to offer long-term STEM and humanities-focused programming for K-8 students.

“I started Innoverge after realising how much of a need there was not only in the diversity of who had access to a STEM education, but diversity in the way that STEM was being taught,” she said.

During her first experience with the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory Outreach Summer Program, AI4ALL, she was one of only two girls among 32 attendees. This stark disparity opened her eyes to the gender imbalance in the field and inspired her to start her nonprofit to address the issue.

Over time, her work gained momentum, inspiring young people in 14 countries to volunteer for the cause. Recognizing the impact of her efforts, organisations like Microsoft, Disney, AI4ALL, and Vital Voices have supported her work.

Innoverge conducts various initiatives both in-person and virtually, centred around the STEMxHumanities model. “At Innoverge, we integrate STEM fields with empathy, storytelling, leadership, ethics, and humanity by intentionally focusing on the intersection of STEM education with the humanities and social sciences. Our programming and workshops, range from CSxPolitics to NeurosciencexEthics,” shared the youngster.

 

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Contributions at Princeton

During her time at Princeton, Archika held multiple leadership roles, including serving as co-president of the Entrepreneurship Club and co-president of Princeton South Asian Theatrics. She enriched the broader university community through her mentorship with academic service. Additionally, she was the recruitment chair for the Orange Key tour guides, a member of the Undergraduate Student Government movies committee, and served as an accessibility notetaker.

Archika looks at the future with hope - where technology would uplift marginalised communities and level the playing field.

  • Follow Archika Dogra on LinkedIn
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Young Global Indians leading social change through innovation

(December 29, 2022) "The young do not know enough to be prudent, and therefore they attempt the impossible - and achieve it, generation after generation," remarked the American writer and novelist, Pearl S. Buck. Her words continue to ring true - young people are bringing their innovative spirit to tackle the world's problems. Global Indian looks at young innovators from India and the diaspora whose brilliance, innovation and empathy are creating ripples of positive change in an afflicted society. Global Indian takes you through some of the top young innovators of 2022. Zain Samdani [caption id="attachment_17918" align="aligncenter" width="426"] Zain Samdani[/caption] As a 15-year-old visiting India from Saudi Arabia, Zain Samdani had no idea that this family vacation was set to change the course of his life. A meeting with his partially paralysed distant maternal uncle left him “shocked.” In the era of technology, seeing his uncle dependent on others for every small thing was nothing short of a horror. That encounter nudged this robotics enthusiast and innovator to develop Neuro-ExoHeal, an exoskeletal hand rehabilitation device that utilises neuroplasticity and Azure technology to help patients with neurological damage recover faster at an affordable price. The innovation not only left Google CEO

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. A meeting with his partially paralysed distant maternal uncle left him “shocked.” In the era of technology, seeing his uncle dependent on others for every small thing was nothing short of a horror. That encounter nudged this robotics enthusiast and innovator to develop Neuro-ExoHeal, an exoskeletal hand rehabilitation device that utilises neuroplasticity and Azure technology to help patients with neurological damage recover faster at an affordable price. The innovation not only left Google CEO Sundar Pichai impressed but also made the 21-year-old win Microsoft 2022 Imagine Cup World Championship, considered the ‘Olympics of Technology,’ with more than 10,000 participants from 160 countries.

Siddhartha Mandala

He was 12 when the infamous Nirbhaya rape case shook the nation in 2012. People took to the streets asking for justice, and his mom was one among them. Curious about the protests and confused about the word ‘rape’, Siddharth Mandala joined his mom for one of the protests. After surfing the internet, he understood the gravity of the issue and decided to do everything in his capacity to prevent sexual assault. This awareness led to the birth of Electroshoe, a small badge that can be clipped onto any footwear, or worn as a ring or pendant and can be easily activated during any threatening situation by pressing. “It pulls out two sharp pointers, mimicking stun gun’s mechanism, and pierces through clothing, and even skin to electrocute the attacker,” explains Siddharth who took two years to build a working prototype; and another three years to create a market-friendly product by interviewing over 500 women across India and California.

[caption id="attachment_20860" align="aligncenter" width="467"]Innovator | Siddhartha Mandala | Global Indian Siddhartha Mandala[/caption]

Hari Srinivasan

Hari Srinivasan was first diagnosed with regressive autism at the age of three. From being a very active and social child, Hari suddenly became a crying, fussy baby who did not want to be around other kids. Some two decades later in 2022, Hari made history by becoming the University of California, Berkeley’s first non-speaking graduate with autism. And that is not all. With a 4.0 GPA, a major in psychology and minor in disability studies, Hari was also awarded the prestigious P.D. Soros Fellowship. The young graduate is now headed to Vanderbilt University for his PhD in neuroscience.

“There were several issues that my family and I faced due to my medical condition during the initial years. However, with the support of my family, I was able to break several stereotypes. Later, my faculty and peers at UC Berkeley helped me a lot on my journey," he said. The scholar, who is also a published poet, received the Paul & Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans. “I do have some time to come up with a research topic for my PhD,” Hari told Global Indian, adding, "My work will focus around the human nervous/sensory system. However, I am yet to narrow it down.”

[caption id="attachment_18246" align="aligncenter" width="560"]Hari Srinivasan | Scholar | Global Indian Hari Srinivasan[/caption]

Maya Burhanpurkar

Growing up as the climate crisis unfolds around them, young innovators around the world know that change lies with them. In 2013, on a trip to the Arctic, Canadian researcher Maya Burhanpurkar learned firsthand about the devastation being caused by climate change. "It struck me that the icebergs we were seeing could be some of the last anyone would ever see. And that it could be alarmingly soon," she told Global Indian. She got as much footage as she could of her surroundings, also interacting with the local community to learn how their lives had been impacted by the climate crisis. That resulted in 400 PPM, a documentary film with appearances by Canadian author Margaret Atwood, astronaut Chris Hadfield and the famed explorer Wade Davis.

As she watched her grandfather's condition deteriorate from Alzheimer's, a distraught young Maya wondered if she could help. She tested two drugs used in the early stages of Alzheimer's treatment on daphnia, a common species of waterfly. "“He was taking a lot of other drugs as well and I wanted to see how the cocktail was affecting his heart,” she explains. “I noticed the drugs regularised heart rate, whether it was high or low. I never followed it up in a more rigorous setting but it certainly was fascinating.”  The experiment fetched her the top place at the Canada-Wide Science Fair, at which she is a two-time winner.

[caption id="attachment_16083" align="aligncenter" width="520"] Maya Burhanpurkar[/caption]

Now a Rhodes Scholar, Maya has done cutting edge research at Harvard University, where she graduated summa cum laude with highest honours, collaborated with University of Toronto and the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory. She is the winner of the Gloria Barron Prize 2016.

 

 

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About Global Indian

Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

We are looking for role models, mentors and counselors who can help Indian youth who aspire to become Global Indians.

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