"Dream, Dream, Dream! Conduct these dreams into thoughts, and then transform them into action."
- Dr. A. P. J. Abdul Kalam
22 Aug 2025
On a crisp Wednesday in Shymkent, Kazakhstan, the shooting range bore witness to one of Indian shooting’s proudest moments. Anantjeet Singh Naruka, India’s skeet specialist and Olympian, fired his way into history by clinching the country’s first skeet gold medal at the Asian Shooting Championships 2025. With nerves of steel and precision in focus, Naruka shot a phenomenal 57 out of 60, edging past Kuwait’s Mansour Al-Rashidi, a former Asian Games champion, who managed 56. For Naruka, this wasn’t just a medal; it was redemption, a culmination of years of hard work, heartbreak, and resilience.
Naruka had come painfully close in the last edition of the Asian Championships in 2024, where he was forced to settle for silver after a narrow 57-56 defeat to Chinese Taipei’s Lee Meng-yuan. That loss, with the same scoreline, left a burning desire to return stronger. This time, with a packed gallery watching, Naruka ensured that history wouldn’t repeat itself. Each shot felt like settling old scores. When the final scoreboard flashed 57-56 in his favor, Naruka raised his shotgun high, a gesture that symbolized not just personal triumph but a historic leap for Indian shooting.
Anantjeet Singh Naruka, a 26-year-old from Rajasthan, has been synonymous with grit and determination in Indian shooting. Coming from a family that deeply values sports, Naruka’s journey began with local ranges, countless hours of practice, and the dream of representing India at the biggest stages. His appearance at the Paris 2024 Olympics, though not yielding a medal, was a turning point. It toughened him, taught him composure under pressure, and gave him the international experience that shone through in Shymkent. For Naruka, this gold was more than just a personal milestone. It was his first-ever individual Asian Championship gold medal, a medal that finally rewarded years of near-misses and quiet perseverance.
Men’s skeet is a shotgun shooting discipline where athletes aim to break small clay targets, often called clay pigeons, that are launched into the air at high speed from two fixed points known as the high house and low house. The shooters move across eight different stations arranged in a semicircle, facing targets that cross at varying heights and angles. This makes the event a true test of reflexes, precision, timing, and mental focus. Unlike rifle or pistol shooting, skeet requires instant reactions and the ability to anticipate the flight of fast-moving targets, making every shot both challenging and thrilling to watch.
The final in Shymkent was not just about medals; it was about reputation, legacy, and nerves. Facing Naruka was Mansour Al-Rashidi, a seasoned Kuwaiti shooter and Asian Games champion. The two exchanged blows shot for shot, with the tension peaking towards the final rounds. For Naruka, who had missed gold by the narrowest of margins a year earlier, every pull of the trigger carried emotional weight. When the dust settled and he emerged champion, it wasn’t just victory over Al-Rashidi—it was victory over self-doubt.
Qatar’s Ali Ahmed Al-Ishaq, who managed 43, settled for bronze, but the spotlight remained firmly on the thrilling India-Kuwait duel. Indian shooting has long been a powerhouse in air rifle and pistol events, producing stars like Abhinav Bindra, Gagan Narang, Manu Bhaker, and Saurabh Chaudhary. However, in shotgun events like skeet, the journey has been tougher. Naruka’s gold marks a watershed moment. It is the first senior Asian Championship gold for India in skeet, a discipline where consistency and mental strength often outweigh raw skill.
With the Asian Shooting Championships 2025 now behind him, Naruka’s focus will naturally shift towards the global stage. The World Championships in London and the upcoming Olympic cycle will be the real tests. But with gold in his pocket and confidence sky-high, Anantjeet Singh Naruka has already proved that he belongs among Asia’s elite. For Indian shooting, his win is more than a medal. It is a statement of intent, a promise of more glory to come, and a reminder that every historic journey begins with a single breakthrough.