Shah Rukh Khan is reaping the rewards of playing it differently.
At a time, when the nation seems gripped by cricket, the actor has chosen to play coach of an Indian women's hockey team in the just-released Chak De! India.
A story of shame, disillusionment, and glory at last, has hit the right note critically. A tale of how we forget our heroes and continue to condemn accidentally-perceived villains.
It belongs to a soft-spoken man from
For a nation looking to make sense, the shocking result, after
'He was offered one lakh for every goal he let in,' said the Hindi edition of the now defunct newspaper Blitz, concluding that the Indian goalkeeper sold himself for seven lakh rupees.
There was no defence from Negi. His teammates, though Negi assures, stood by him, did not defend him either. The Indian hockey Federation, embarrassed by the whole situation, dropped the goalkeeper like a hot potato. The allegations were thus justified.
"Wherever I went people used to say, 'Oh! you are the one who took money'," recalls Negi.
He never again wore the
"I cannot tell you what I went through at that time. I was scared to go out of my house. I grew a beard so that people would not recognise me. My relatives would take me around and introduce me as a national goalkeeper, they did it all innocently not knowing how much it hurt me."
But the soft-spoken man lived with that hurt for 16 years, never once abandoning the game that was the cause of his downfall.
Then, one day, came a reprise came in the form of an offer to coach the Indian goalkeepers for the 1998 Asian Games. As fate would have it,
Negi then went on to help the women's hockey team win the gold medal in 2003 Afro-Asian Games.
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