[caption id="attachment_15121" align="alignnone" width="580"]Leander-Paes---French-Open Leander Paes is all set to represent the country in a seventh Olympics at Rio.[/caption] Internet Desk: One of India’s all time greatest sportsman Leander Paes still cannot get behind the horrors of the Centennial Park bombing during the 1996 Atlanta Olympics. Paes, who is all set to represent the country for a record 7th time at the Rio Olympics says that surviving the Centennial Park bombing during the Games made him more determined to win the coveted medal. The 43 year old Paes has opened up about the harrowing experience he went through that day in a book titled My Olympic Journey which is co-authored by sports journalists Digvijay Singh Deo and Amit Bose. "My parents, my team and I were all inside the park when it happened. We were about 40 feet away and we were rattled by the vibrations. Chairs and tables had fallen all around us, and my ears were ringing. I struggled with my hearing for the next twenty-four hours. "... When I reached the entrance to the Village, the gate had shut. I pleaded with the guards to let me in and showed them my credentials. I told them my parents had gone home and public transport had been shut down. I had nowhere to go. The poor guards were only following orders not to allow anyone in and they asked me to find another gate that might be open. "I sprinted all the way to the next gate but got the same result. I kept running around for the next twenty minutes, going from one gate to the other, and it was probably at the fifth gate that I managed to literally beg the guard to let me in. I told him I had been at the park when the bomb went off, and he was really humble and sweet, and had the presence of mind to let an Olympic athlete in. "I slowly walked all the way back to my apartment block, gathering my thoughts and returning to the state of mind I had created for myself. I was very lucky to make it through Centennial Park that day, and I know there is a God above who has always showered his blessings on me all my life. " The harrowing experience says Paes made him all the more determined to win a medal at the Atlanta Olympics, which was the country’s first individual medal as well.