
Manu Bhaker Biography
On February 18, 2002, Manu Bhaker was born in Jhajjar, Haryana, a state well-known for producing boxers and wrestlers.
At a relatively early age, Manu Bhaker became the most successful Indian woman shooter in history, having won gold medals at the World Championships, Asian Games, Commonwealth Games, and Youth Olympic Games in addition to a bronze medal at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.
Manu Bhaker won a bronze medal in the women’s 10m air pistol event in Paris 2024, making history as the first Indian woman to win an Olympic medal in shooting.
It happened the day after she made history as the first female shooter to qualify for an individual Olympic final in twenty years.
Manu Bhaker had been denied a medal in the same event at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics due to a gun malfunction.
Manu Bhaker, India’s newest rising star, ascended through the ranks much faster as a youngster.
On February 18, 2002, Manu Bhaker was born in Jhajjar, Haryana, a state well-known for producing boxers and wrestlers.
Nonetheless, she excelled in school sports like boxing, tennis, and skating.
She also trained in a martial art called “thang ta,” where she won gold at the national level.
Then, at the age of 14, shortly after the Rio 2016 Olympics concluded, she made the snap decision to give shooting a try, and she immediately fell in love.
Manu Bhaker begged her father to acquire her a sports shooting pistol within a week so she could improve her skill.
Manu Bhaker would eventually win an Olympic medal thanks to the decision her ever-supportive father, Ram Kishan Bhaker, made when he bought her a rifle.
Olympian and former top shooter Heena Sidhu was taken aback by Manu Bhaker during the 2017 National Shooting Championships.
Manu defeated Sidhu’s record with a record-breaking score of 242.3 to win the 10m Air Pistol final.
After winning a silver medal at the 2017 Asian Junior Championships, she went on to proclaim her entrance on the big stage in style the following year with Manu Bhaker.
Manu Bhaker, making her debut at the ISSF World Cup in Guadalajara, Mexico, shattered the junior world record during the qualification stages, securing a spot in the women’s 10m air pistol final.
In the final, Manu Bhaker defeated Olympic champion Anna Korakaki, three-time ISSF World Cup medallist Celine Goberville, and hometown favorite Alejandra Zavala with a score of 237.5 to capture the gold medal on his debut.
She became the youngest Indian to win a gold medal at an ISSF World Cup at the age of sixteen.869 8153
In the 10m air pistol mixed team event, Manu Bhaker and Om Prakash Mitherval went on to win their second gold medal together.
While still qualified to compete, Bhaker went on to win gold in the 10m air pistol individual and mixed team events at the ISSF Junior World Cup.
A month later, Manu Bhaker won the gold in the women’s 10m air pistol event at the 2018 Commonwealth Games in Gold Coast, Australia, by setting a new CWG record.
She subsequently nearly missed out on a medal in the 25-meter pistol event but added another gold in the 10m air pistol at her second ISSF Junior World Cup, to go along with a bronze in the mixed team competition.
Manu Bhaker made history at the 2018 Youth Olympics Games in Buenos Aires, Argentina, despite not winning a medal at the 2018 Asian Games.
She became the first Indian shooter and the nation’s first female athlete to win a gold medal at the Youth Olympics when she won the gold in the 10m air pistol.
At the 2019 ISSF World Cup in New Delhi, the adolescent partnered with Saurabh Chaudhary, and their pair proved to be quite successful.
Manu Bhaker won the gold in both the individual and mixed team events at the World Cup final in China, while the pair took home the mixed team gold medals at all three of the ISSF World Cups in 2019.
Additionally, Manu Bhaker’s fourth-place showing at the 2019 Munich ISSF World Cup guaranteed him a spot in the Olympics in Tokyo 2020.
She also scored a bronze in the 25-meter air pistol and a gold and silver medal in the 10m air pistol at the 2021 ISSF World Cup in New Delhi, making her one of India’s medal favorites in the Tokyo Olympics.
But Manu’s Games debut did not go as expected.
During the 10m air pistol qualification, the teenager’s handgun broke, requiring Manu to leave the tournament to repair it.
After replacing the damaged part, Manu returned to the firing range. However, the beat had already been disrupted, and she had to hurry to finish the shots she had left.
The child performed admirably under duress, but not well enough to position her in the top eight and guarantee a spot in the championship.
Manu Bhaker paired with Saurabh Chaudhary, another teenager, in the mixed 10m pistol event, which was her following event.
Even though they won stage 1 of qualification, the two could only manage a seventh-place finish.
Manu Bhaker’s forgettable Olympic career came to an end in the 25m pistol, as she was unable to advance to the final.
Manu Bhaker won the junior shooting world championship in Lima shortly after Tokyo 2020, where she competed in the women’s 10m air pistol.
Since then, she has consistently placed second in the junior circuit.
Manu Bhaker won a bronze in the women’s 25-meter pistol at the 2023 ISSF World Cup series in Bhopal, but her lone individual senior victory came in the same event at the 2022 ISSF World Championships in Cairo and a gold at the 2023 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
The teenage shooter qualified for the Olympics in Paris 2024 for India after placing fifth at the Asian Shooting Championships 2023 in Changwon in the women’s 25-meter pistol event.
Manu Bhaker was chosen to compete in the women’s 25-meter pistol event, the mixed 10-meter air pistol team, and the 10-meter air pistol event at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.
Out of the 21 athletes on the Indian shooting team, she was the only one to compete in several individual events.
In the women’s 10m air pistol competition at the Paris 2024 Olympics, Manu Bhaker took home the bronze medal.
All things considered, this was India’s fifth shooting Olympic medal.
In the eight-woman final, Manu Bhaker finished third with a score of 221.7, only behind South Korea’s Yeji Kim, who defeated Bhaker by 0.1 points to go to the gold medal round, and Oh Ye Jin of the Republic of Korea, who won the gold medal with a new Olympic record of 243.2.

Manu Bhaker Wiki Profile
Born | 18 February 2002 (age 22) Goria, Jhajjar district, Haryana, India | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Height | 168 cm (5 ft 6 in) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Weight | 60 kg (132 lb) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Sport | Shooting | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Medal record
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Manu Bhaker Family
Manu Bhaker was born in the Haryanan village of Goria, in the Jhajjar district. Ram Kishan Bhaker, her father, is employed by the Merchant Navy as a chief engineer.
She excelled in boxing, tennis, skating, and Huyen langlon, a Manipuri martial art, till the age of 14. She won gold in these sports in the national games.

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