“No, he’s (Hales) not (coming). They couldn’t get their business visas in time. I don’t know the exact ins and outs of it, but there was a complication…I think, what happened is that one of them (shooters) applied for a tourist visa, which was accepted,” former shooter Peter Wilson, personal coach of Hales in the Paris Games, told PTI.
“But, then, they were told that they had to apply for a business visa and there was, for whatever reason, a complication and it was either revoked and the rest were left pending and they just didn’t have the time for it to be processed,” added the legendary double-trap marksman who won a gold in the 2012 London Olympics.
Wilson, who had recently expressed his desire to coach the Indian trap team, said it was a huge setback for British shooters.
“Obviously, it’s a massive shame that they’re not competing. So, there were three (shooters), two in men’s trap, Hales and Matt Coward-Holley, and one in men’s skeet Ben Llewellin. Ben got a tourist visa but was then told by our federation that he should reapply for a business visa.
“He applied incorrectly and at that point he had left it too late; apparently he was refused… I don’t know why he was refused,” Wilson revealed. Asked if the National Rifle Association of India (NRAI) had provided these shooters details on the visa they should apply for, Wilson said, “I would assume so, but I think at the moment no one knows quite where the blame lies. “But it’s just a shame that of all the teams, we’ve not got the Great Britain team and the Olympic gold medallist here, so it’s a real shame.”
NRAI president Kalikesh Singh Deo said, “I think there was some confusion with the way they applied.”
Most of India’s Paris Games squad will compete at the World Cup. A prominent who would skip is double bronze-medallist Manu Bhaker, who is on a break after her exploits in the French capital.