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Paris 2024: ‘By getting to the Olympics, Vinesh is a winner already’

Bajrang and Sakshi, who were also part of the protest against former WFI chief, back her to come back with a medal from Paris

Updated on: Aug 06, 2024 06:32 am IST
By Shantanu Srivastava
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New Delhi: Sometime in December last year, days after Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh-backed Sanjay Singh faction swept the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) elections, Bajrang Punia, Sakshi Malik, and Vinesh Phogat met at Sakshi’s Delhi home, not too far from where the trio had staged a protest earlier that year. Sakshi had announced her retirement in an emotional press conference by then, Bajrang had returned his Padma Shri, and Vinesh had forfeited her Khel Ratna and Arjuna Awards. The mood, to put it mildly, was sullen.

Wrestlers Bajrang Punia, Anshu Malik, Vinesh Phogat and Sakshi Malik along with others during the sit-in protest, in January. (AFP)

“We were tired and broken, we had no idea what to do next. The mood. as we sat to discuss the future of our struggle, wasn’t great” recalled Sakshi. In the course of the deliberation, it became clear that Vinesh still nurtured the desire for the Olympics glory. She had been to the Games twice but had to contend with a quarter-final finish on both tries. Her career boasted of successes at Commonwealth and Asian Games and two World Championships medals, but that missing Olympic medal gnawed at her.

“She said she wanted to give it a shot. She believed she still had enough time to do it, and me and Bajrang were more than happy to support her,” Malik adds. Antim Panghal had already won a quota in Vinesh’s pet 53kg class, so the 29-year-old decided to drop to the 50kg class.

“The build-up has been far from ideal, but I back her to come home with a medal,” says Bajrang, back in Sonepat after a short stint in the US.

“Vinesh is a winner. In my opinion, she is already a medallist. Her struggle is worth more than any medal,” adds the four-time Worlds medallist. “I spoke to her over the weekend and she is in great mental space. Her knee is also fine and she is maintaining the weight nicely.”

Still, competing in the lowest weight division won’t be a cakewalk. The younger, slippery wrestlers, particularly the Japanese, will be tough to get past but Vinesh, who has camped in Hungary with coach Woller Akos in the run-up to Paris, will draw some confidence from her triumph -- albeit in a depleted field -- at Grand Prix of Spain last month.

In the more competitive field at the Budapest Ranking Series in June, Vinesh lost her quarter-final to China’s Jiang Zhu. In Paris, she will open her campaign against defending champion and four-time world champion Yui Susaki. The Japanese legend has never been beaten internationally, and her three career losses have come against compatriot Irie Yuki in various national trials.

“In our sport, a day lost in training sets us back by 7-10 days. You can well imagine how hard Vinesh has had to work to get here. She is in a very tough division but I back her to get a medal. She has enough experience to help her,” Bajrang says.

“A lot of people want her to fail. She has copped a lot of online abuse and trolling. Mentally, she was put under immense pressure. But whenever she is pushed to the brink, Vinesh pushes back harder. She thrives when the going gets tough.”

On her part, Vinesh believes she has already fought her toughest bout. “I feel our fight against the system was the toughest bout of my life. An Olympic medal will be a nice addition but nothing comes close to the protest,” she had told HT after qualifying for the Olympics. Bout of her life done, now for some action on the mat.

 
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