Little did the World know that a player making his first appearance in  the Olympics as a second fiddle to his senior pro would come four years  later to win an Olympic bronze for his country? Yes, such is the story  of India’s number 1 tennis star Leander Paes.
Paes appeared in  the Olympics for the first time in 1992 Barcelona pairing alongside the  much experienced Ramesh Krishnan. They went till the quarter-finals and  next year, Paes went a step better to clinch the bronze, thus becoming  the first Indian tennis star ever to do so. 
Freestyle wrestler,  KD Jadhav was the first Indian post independence to win an individual  medal. He won a bronze in 1952 Helsinki Games and it took 44 long years  for an Indian to win one individual medal again. And the best part was  that the medal saw him break the jinx and India won medals in all the  edition of the sporting extravaganza after that.
In 2000 Sydney  Games, weightlifter Karnam Malleswari won a bronze, which made her the  first Indian woman to win an Olympic medal. In Athens in 2004,  Rajyavardhan Rathore claimed silver in the men's double trap. In Beijing  in 2008, Abhinav Bindra shot to glory with gold in the 10M air rifle  event, becoming India's first individual gold medalist. The edition also  saw Vijender Singh win a bronze in boxing and Sushil Kumar doing the  same in wrestling.
Paes was 24 when he entered Atlanta and was  placed at 124 in the world rankings. But the way he started playing it  looked like he was a man on mission. He moved through the ranks killing  every giant that stood in defiance in front of him finally to fall prey  to the ‘Goliath’ of World tennis of that period Andre Agassi.
Playing  in his first match of the Games, he defeated World number 20 Richey  Renberg of America. Well luck was on his side in this match as the  American conceded the match due to an injury. But then he did made it  clear in his next match that he was not a pushover and defeated the   World number 74 Nicolas Periera by conceding just five games. 
Every  time he entered the court with a rejuvenated energy and a better  approach. In his third match he beat the World number 10 Swede Thomas  Enquist in straight sets. In the round of eight, he knocked out Renzo  Furlan in straight sets.
Now just a game away from the finals, he  was up against Andre Agassi. Agassi was not going through best of his  forms but then still had enough firepower to blow Paes away. But then no  one can claim that Paes surrendered meekly and he did put a fight to  scare before out 6-7, 3-6.
Next Paes was playing perhaps the most  important match of his career and in the play-offs for the bronze medal  play-offs he held on to his nerve to beat Fernando Meligeni  3-6, 6-2,  6-4. What makes the win even more special is that he played with a wrist  injury.
His win set the tone for India and the country which was  eluded of an Olympic medal for 44 years saw got onto the medal in all  the following editions.
						
												
						









