Category Archives: Famous Personalities of Kodagu / Coorg

Profile: SK Uthappa

Sport: Hockey
Position: Mid-field

About
SK Uthappa:

Belonging to the new breed of Indian hockey players who are both fearless and are adaptable on varying astro-turfs, Uthappa is an attacking mid-fielder who is on the move with passionate ease.

After stealing the show in the National championship in Bhopal, this player from Coorg has steadily worked his way to find a spot in the national team.

A well-build helps him in his game and his skill with the hockey stick has even had national coach Michael Nobbs rating him highly.

source: http://www.sports.ndtv.com / Home> Olympics 2012 / Friday, July 20th, 2012

Appachu Ranjan secures a berth after a long journey

The third-time MLA from Kodagu has risen through the ranks

Becoming a Minister is a big reward for Mandepanda Poovaiah Appachu Ranjan, the third time MLA from Kodagu — two times from the Somwarpet constituency and currently from Madikeri constituency. It has come only after treading an arduous path and rising through the ranks of the BJP.

Mr. Ranjan, perhaps, would not have had an inkling that he would be present one day to swear in as the Minister with his traditional Kodava costume – kupya , chale , peechekathi , and mandetuni . He would not have dreamt of this scenario when he was chosen as the president of the Sri Ganapathi Temple Management Committee at Madapur, a sleepy town in Somwarpet taluk of the district in the 70s.

After being active in public life as the member of the Kumbur School Development Management Committee, president of the Madapur VSSSN, correspondent of the Chennamma Junior College in Madapur, director of the Kodagu District Coffee Growers Society in Madikeri, member of the Kushalnagar APMC, he was formally elected as a mandal panchayat member.

Mr. Ranjan’s foray into politics came in 1980 when he was elected president of the BJP youth wing in Madapur. He occupied the post of the Somwarpet taluk BJP president from 1986 to 1991 and later served as the president of the Kodagu BJP unit from 1991 to 1995. It was during his tenure that the BJP stormed the Congress bastion in Kodagu to win all three Assembly segments, others being D.S. Madappa (Madikeri) and H.D. Basavaraj (Virajpet). Somwarpet constituency was done away with during the delimitation after which Kodagu was reduced to Madikeri and Virajpet constituencies.

Comeback

Mr. Ranjan won the Assembly elections for the first time from Somwarpet in 1984 serving till 1999. He won again for the second time from the same constituency in 1999 to stay till 2004. However, he lost to B.A. Jivijaya of the Congress (now with JD(S)) in the next election. Mr. Ranjan came back in the 2008 elections winning from Madikeri constituency.

He rose to prominence by being the Chairman of the Privilege Committee and Petition Committee of the legislature. He served as the Chairman of the Karnatake State Sports Authority in 2008 as also Karnataka Land Army Corporation Limited in the same year. Mr. Ranajn is a member of the State BJP Executive Committee.

A Bachelor of Arts graduate, he was born on September 11, 1957. Mr. Ranjan is known as a progressive agriculturist and coffee grower. He originally hails from Chembebellur village near Virajpet town in Kodagu and is married to Ponnamma. His first son Poovaiah is an engineer in the U.S. and second son Cariappa, a doctor, also in the U.S. Daughter Kshira is a dentist. Mr. Ranjan’s brothers too have identified themselves with the BJP prominently.

His immediate younger brother Shuja Kushalappa is the president of the Virajpet taluk Akrama-Sakrama Samiti while his youngest brother, M.P. Sunil Subramani is a prominent member of the State BJP Executive Committee.

Celebration

Expectedly, the BJP members burst crackers at the General K.S. Thimayya Circle in Madikeri on Thursday to celebrate the induction of Mr. Ranjan into the State Cabinet. Reports of celebrations have come in from other parts of the district.

The BJP workers feel elated that the BJP Government has finally found someone from Kodagu to handle the job of district in-charge Minister.

It had become a custom with the successive governments to depute a Minister from outside the district as the Kodagu District in-charge Minister.

source: http://www.TheHindu.com / Home> National> Karnataka / by Jeevan Chinnappa / Mysore, July 13th, 2012

Newbie Nidhi Subbaiah to croon

Post two Bollywood films, Nidhi Subbaiah is all set to sing for an album by a LA-based label

Looks like Nidhi Subbaiah is not just content with acting alongside Bollywood biggies like Akshay Kumar and Arjun Rampal. Now, she wants to sing too! Word is that the singer-actress is gearing up to lend her voice to an album being launched by a Los Angeles-based label.

Nidhi, who appeared in several Kannada films before making a move towards B-Town, says she was always into singing and is comfortable with both Western as well as Classical genres. She further revealed that the album will contain semi-classical songs.

“I was approached post an award function in Dubai. Turns out they have seen me perform before and want me to be part of their project. We are currently finalising the details and will get going soon,” says Nidhi. The Coorg-born Bollywood newbie apparently also found Rampal “way too good-looking” while shooting in Indore for their forthcoming film.

source: http://www.mid-day.com / Home> Entertainment> Bollywood / Mumbai, July 14th, 2012

Appachu Ranjan gets rousing welcome in Kodagu

Madikeri, Jul 13, 2012, DHNS :
Minister promises to work for development of region

Mandepanda Poovaiah Appachu Ranjan was accorded a warm welcome during his maiden visit to the district, after taking oath as a cabinet minister, in the newly formed Ministry under the leadership of Jagadeesh Shettar, on Friday.

The district administration and the district BJP workers welcomed him at forest gate at Cauvery bridge. Superintendent of Police Manjunath Annigeri, Zilla Panchayat CEO Anjanappa, Tahsildar Bhaskar and others welcomed him with flower bouquets.

Zilla Panchayat President Shantheyanda Ravi Kushalappa, BJP state committee member Sunil Subramani, District BJP unit president B D Manjunath, Town Panchayat president S P Charitha, BJP spokesperson Manu Muthappa, TP President V K Lokesh and others were present. He was taken out in a procession in open vehicle.

In Madikeri, he visited Sri Kote Mahaganapathy temple and offered a special pooja at the temple.
The Minister also garlanded the statues of Field Marshal K M Cariappa, Subedar Guddemane Appayya.

Speaking on the occasion, he said “I have understood the problems faced by the villagers through village stay programmes. I will give priority to the rural roads, drinking water and site for the siteless.”

He said “I have already expressed my opposition to the world heritage site tag on Western Ghats. In case of necessity, I will raise the issue in the cabinet meeting.” He said that he will work to the expectations of the people of the district.

He said “with the blessings of Goddess Cauvery, I have received a berth in the Ministry. In the 20:20 cricket match, 13 overs have been completed. There is five overs to be played.

I have to hit either boundary or six. I will work round the clock for the welfare of the people.” He later visited Ganapathy temple and offered prayers. The party workers had even burst crackers and distributed sweets in Kushalnagar.

The Minister was given welcome at Guddehosur, 7th Hosakote, Suntikoppa, Kodagarahalli. In Shanivarasanthe, a large number of supporters welcomed him at Kittur Rani Chennamma Circle.

source: http://www.DeccanHerald.com / Home> District / Madikeri, DHNS, July 13th, 2012

Another award for Aaranya Kaandam!

Director Thiagarajan Kumararaja’s Aaranya Kaandam, starring Ravi Krishna, Jackie Shroff, Sampath and Yasmin Ponnappa in the lead, has been awarded the Western Union Audience Award at the London Indian Film Festival held recently.
( A still from the film )
The director says, “I’m happy that the film has been recognised and loved by people from across the globe.”

Tell Kumararaja that the film, produced by S P Charan, has been sweeping awards at both national and international levels, and he shrugs, “I’m glad to have made this film.”

Quiz him on his next and he says, “I’m currently working on a couple of storylines and it will take time for me to zero in on one. I’m not in a hurry to start work on my next. But I can assure the audience that my next will be equally interesting and intriguing.”

source: http://www.articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / Home> Entertainment> Regional> Jackie Shroff / by V. Lakshmi, TNN / July 09th, 2012

‘Wearing braces for 10 years was a nightmare’

Every time, little Joshna visited her ailing great-grand uncle K.M. Cariappa in hospital, she would eye the bottle of candy by his bed. But the country’s first Field Marshal would stop her advances and agree to part with the treat on one condition.

“He insisted that I sing the national anthem for him. And each time, I obliged for the sake of the toffee,” says Joshna Chinappa, the 25-year-old pin-up girl of Indian squash.

As trivial as it may seem, this incident probably sowed the first seeds of national pride in the mind of the Coorg girl.

Joshna, like her illustrious ancestor, has done the country proud with her prowess in the glass court.

As she talks about her childhood sitting pretty in skinny jeans and a printed tee, I glance around the sparsely-furnished room. The first thing that catches the eye is a large, framed photograph of Joshna.

She strikes a starlet-like pose with oversized glares covering her eyes and open hair framing her longish face.

Next to the picture is a wooden and glass cabinet but I’m surprised to find no proud displays of her many trophies and shields.

The only other piece of furniture, apart from the chairs we sit on and a round coffee table, is a mattress, strewn with cushions, on the floor.

“We are renovating and so, most items have been packed in boxes,” Joshna’s mother says as she walks in and catches me surveying the room.

I spot a couple of broken racquets on the mattress even as Mrs. Chinappa attempts to clear the mess. Joshna looks slightly disturbed and asks her mum to throw the racquets away.

“I don’t want to see another broken racquet,” she says.

A little over two months ago, Joshna bounced back from a painful knee injury that kept her out of action for eight months, to help India win its first gold medal in the Asian Championship in Kuwait.

Weeks later, she went on to win her maiden Chennai Open tournament.

“It wasn’t easy. The first month after the surgery, I could barely walk. At one point, I wasn’t sure if I would ever be able to play again,” she says.

In August 2011, while playing in the Hamptons Open in New York, Joshna fell, tearing a ligament in her right knee.

But all that’s in the past now and if anything, she is glad to have had an experience that, she says, changed her outlook towards life. “The poet Alfred Tennyson said, ‘The shell must break before the bird can fly.’ I think the verse best describes my life at the moment,” says Joshna who idolises sprint queen P.T. Usha for her determination in the face of adversities.

‘Hated going to school’

Joshna’s entry into squash at the age of 10 was an excuse to get away from class tests and homework. “I hated going to school and decided the only way out was to take up active sports. But my mum would have none of it,” she says.

Her parents made sure she studied and got through school and college.

Joshna went on to do a Bachelor’s in English literature from Ethiraj College. “Of course, today I’m glad I earned a degree,” she smiles, and one can’t help but notice that her trademark braces are off. “I finally got them removed after 10 years. It was a nightmare,” she shudders.

Not a party animal anymore

A typical day for Joshna begins at 7.30 a.m. when she wakes up and heads for training.

This is followed by a workout at the gym session, breakfast, and later, lunch.

The second training session begins in the afternoon and the third, one later in the evening. “On most days, it is late in the night by the time I get home,” she says.

At the end of a long and tiring day, she prefers the company of solitude.

“I hole up in my bedroom with some music and nobody dare knock at my door,” she says with a near-menacing look in her eyes. She uses the time to surf the web and catch up on news from across the world. Seems like a pretty sober life for a young celebrity.

“I used to go out and party a lot until a few years ago. But I train a lot harder now than I used to. It is tiring and not worth the while to do anything else after spending so many hours working out during the day.”

Joshna is the youngest national champion in the country having clinched the senior title as a 14-year-old, a record unsurpassed by any Indian till date.

She has participated in numerous international tournaments and her passport is bursting at its seams.

Rice, rasam and pickle

And like most Indians, it is home-cooked food she misses the most when travelling. “I am extremely fond of south Indian cuisine, and cannot live without rice, rasam and mango pickle,” she says.

Though she is quite strict about her dietary intake, it is only human to indulge in the occasional binge. “Chocolates are my weakness and there’s nothing I like more than curling up with a bar of my favourite chocolate,” she says.

As independent and carefree as she sounds, Joshna is quite close to her family. She is especially fond of her younger brother who sneaks in an extensive ‘wishlist’ in her kitbag each time she goes abroad. “He is very shy and, I think, a little scared to ask too many things of me directly,” says the doting sister.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / Home> In School / by Julie Merin Varghese / Chennai, July 09th, 2012

Excited to be Olympics-bound: Ashwini Ponnappa

Hyderabad:
Badminton ace Ashwini Ponnappa, who will be among five shuttlers carrying India’s medal hopes at the London Olympics, is excited to be playing her first Olympics.

“I am very excited that for the first time I am going to the Olympics. Every sportsperson dreams of representing his or her nation at the Olympics. I am really happy that I have been given the opportunity to represent the country,” the 24-year-old athlete said.

Practising every morning and evening under the watchful eyes of coach Syed Mohammed Arif at the Lal Bahadur Shastri Indoor Stadium and under Edwin Iriawan at the Gopichand Academy at Gachibowli, Ashwini will be pairing with her senior, Jwala Gutta, in the women’s doubles.

The girl from Bangalore, settled here for last few years, is looking forward to giving her best, focussing on staying calm and relaxed.

“Both Jwala and I are working very hard. We are giving our best on court, making sure that we get everything right for the Olympics,” said the charming athlete.

The pair, which won the bronze medal at the World Championship last year and gold in the 2010 Commonwealth Games, currently ranks 19th in the world.

“Yeah. I am confident, but at the same time you can’t be overconfident. It really depends on how you go and play there. I know Jwala and I can get a medal. But in the end it entirely depends on how we go and play there. The important thing is that two of us are going early there and hope to start very well.”

The shuttlers will leave for London July 24. Ponnappa is satisfied with the time they would get to practise there before the mega event. “Too much time is also not good. We can train here and go.”

The courts in London are not new for Ashwini, who hopes to improve their performance over the last year’s World Championship.

“We had the World Championship in the same arena (Wembley) where we are going to have the Olympics badminton event. We got the bronze last time. I hope it will be a better medal this time. Firstly getting a medal but better than what we did last time in the World Championship.”

Asked whether there would be pressure of expectations, Ponappa said: “Pressure is bound to be there because everyone expects us to do well, but there is no time to think about that. All I am going to focus on is to just go there and play well.”

“There is no point in focussing on pressure. It will be better to focus on the game and how we are going to play.

“Irrespective of whom we have to play we are going to give our best. Hopefully we win each and every match,” she said while “hoping to have a good draw.”

On who would be the main opponents, Ashwini said one can’t underestimate anyone. “Everyone is going to work extra hard for the Olympics. Everyone is going to play really well. At the same time everyone is beatable.”

She admits the toughest challenge would come from the Chinese. “But even they are beatable. It depends on how we play and are mentally prepared,” Ashwini added.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / TOI Home> Olympics 2012 / by IANS / July 09th, 2012

Terror attacks spoilt our mood: MP Ganesh

The 1972 Munich Olympics was a good experience but also a sad one because of the terrorist attack on Israeli athletes. We were to play against Pakistan in the semifinals and there was a break of one day. But a lot happened in that one day. That incident spoilt our mood and it should never happen again because Olympics is an event that unites people and to win a medal is something great.

But apart from that tragic incident, I was a bit disappointed because India could not do well in the semifinals against Pakistan. We got 18 penalty corners but could not convert any. We lost that match.

Apart from the sad incidents, the Munich Olympics was also a great opportunity for us to meet some of the best athletes in the world. We met the American swimming great Mark Spitz, who got seven medals. BP Govinda and I are good friends and we used to sit together for breakfast and that gave us an opportunity to run into several top players.

The facilities at the Munich Games were also top class and it was supposed to be the best Olympics conducted till then. For instance, there was a very good information centre and any kind of data about any player could be accessed there. Taking part in the Olympics is something that is truly wonderful for any sportsperson.

—Former hockey forward MP Ganesh played in the 1972 Munich Olympics. He spoke to Vivek Phadnis

source: http://www.dnaindia.com / Daily News & Analysis / Home> Sport> Report / by Vivek Phadnis / Agency: DNA / Tuesday, July 03rd, 2012

Hockey: India beat France, 8-2


Lille (France):
Indian hockey team’s preparations for next month’s Olympic Games began on a confident note with a 8-2 route of France in the first of the two friendly matches here.
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After France scored first, SK Uthappa equalised for India while Sandeep Singh’s penalty corner strike gave India 2-1 lead. Gurvinder Singh Chandi made it 3-1 but France reduced the margin through a penalty corner variation just before the interval.
India added five more goals without reply in the second half. Two minutes after resumption, Shivendra Singh scored a field goal — a deflection off a VR Raghunath attempt — and backed it up with a second strike off a Gurbaj Singh pass within a minute.

Raghunath scored a penalty corner goal in the 40th minute to put India 6-2 ahead.Later, Sarvanjit Singh scored a field goal before Sandeep Singh, playing as centre forward, added a field goal to complete the rout.

source: http://www.daily.bhaskar.com / Home> Sports> Other Sports> News / PTI / Sunday, June 01st, 2012

Courting a sporty summer


All eyes this Olympics will be on Bengaluru hudugi and badminton ace Ashwini Ponnappa. Humility and girl-next-door qualities are what best describe her. Currently training in Hyderabad, Ashwini spends seven hours a day getting her act together. The 22-year-old’s affair with the racquet started when she was eight-years-old. She says, “The pressure I put on myself is more than what people put on me. Here is something I really enjoy and I just go on court and have fun.”

This passionate tennis pro’s parents and brother will be travelling with her to London. About her trip to London she says, “I am looking forward to going to the mega event and doing well. I would also like to catch other matches, particularly tennis and the athletics 100 metre dash. If we get some free time, we can go out and explore London.”

Jwala Gutta and Ashwini Ponnappa are currently number 14 in the world ranking in the women’s doubles category, after their victory at the 2010 Common Wealth Games and the World Championship last year. “I like listening and learning from Jwala. When we travel together, after the game we go shopping and discover places,” says Ashwini.

Ashwini admits she misses Bengaluru, but loves Hyderabad just as much. She says, “It’s a really nice place and the lifestyle is very different. The roads are really good in Hyderabad. Bengaluru is where my friends and cousins are and I really miss them.” She admits to being a spoilt child at home. She says, “After a game, it is nice to come home and talk to my family and get their opinion. I’ve never had to diet but with mom ensuring I eat healthy, I don’t have to worry about anything.”

Ashwini owes her success to her parents and coaches. She says, “I owe it to the coaches who have put in hard work to get me where I am. My folks sacrificed a lot and often took time off work for me.” Every sports person inspires this ambitious girl. “I tend to learn from everyone, for instance, I love how Roger Federer keeps his emotions within,” she says.

Her simplicity is so overwhelming that 10 minutes into the conversation, you get a feeling of chatting with a close friend. After the Olympics, she is looking forward to going on a long overdue holiday with friends. She says, “I love going out with my friends. I also like lazing around at home, watching TV and reading books. I watch movies when I am touring.” A romantic at heart, Ashwini adds, “I love romantic films and books. Once I have a really good book in hand, nothing can move me.”

About her frequent visits to Bengaluru, this girl with a sweet tooth says, “When I come I don’t even get time to breathe. I meet everyone and don’t miss out on the hot chocolate fudge at Corner House, Frescos, the Mississippi Mud pie at Shezan and all of Bengaluru’s other amazing dessert places.” After four years of staying in Hyderabad, Ashwini’s family is moving back to Bengaluru this August. She says, “I’m not sure where I’ll train.”

source: http://www.DeccanChronicle.com / Home> Tabloid> Bengaluru / by Khushali P. Madhwani , DC / June 27th, 2012