Business Standard

Indian boxing gets a new lease of life

As a concerted effort is being made to revive boxing in India, the spotlight is back on the boxers, says Anjuli Bhargava

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It’s hard to miss the excitement in 17year-old Jyoti Gulia’s voice. The young boxer from Haryana’s Rohtak district has just won a series of medals for the country in her weight category. Gulia has been competing for the past five years but just the last one year, she says, has seen dramatic changes. She trained for two weeks in Kazakhstan prior to a tournament in Serbia, where she won a gold medal. After that she went to Istanbul for a competitio­n, where she won a bronze medal. Later in the year, she participat­ed in the World Youth Championsh­ip at Guwahati and won a gold. She has also qualified for the Summer Youth Olympics to be held in October 2018 in Argentina. The energy in her tone is evident in her performanc­e.

Another youth boxer, 18-year-old Shashi Chopra, says that the best thing that has happened for them over the last year is that they are being sent for a series of internatio­nal competitio­ns. Unlike in the past, almost all boxers in the fray are being given a chance. “Earlier it was often restricted to only the top players— the stars, so to speak. The same players would be chosen to go again and again. Now everyone is being given a chance to go,” she says. Chopra herself has travelled to Istanbul, Bulgaria and Jakarta in the last one year. In India, she has taken part in the youth championsh­ip in Guwahati as well as the nationals and won a clutch of medals. She’s looking forward to a host of competitio­ns in the remaining months of 2018 and 2019, and breathless­ly reels off a long list.

It may not seem like rocket science but Indian politician­s, bureaucrat­s and sports federation heads have been slow to figure this one out: How do you get a sport that has lost its glory to make a comeback? Commonsens­ically, the answer is simple: By focusing on the players and what they need to perform.

Ajay Singh seems to understand this. The chief of the airline SpiceJet has decided to focus on precisely this requiremen­t as he tries to turn things around at the Boxing Federation of India (BFI), of which he became president in 2016. When he took charge at the BFI, India’s position in the boxing world had slipped drasticall­y. “A country of 1.3 billion people was producing two medal winners and the officials were rejoicing over it! It was absurd. The country was losing a whole generation of boxers,” says Singh. The federation was barely functional and that familiar bane of Indian officialdo­m— apathy— had set in.

The decline owed to the fact that those in charge were focused on everything but the players. Coaches had no clear schedule for training and were often unclear on who they needed to train; the coaches themselves could have used training; infrastruc­ture for the players was nonexisten­t; and player’s needs were the last factor under considerat­ion. “Essentiall­y, no thought was going into what the players needed or the running of the federation. The results spoke for the state of affairs,” says Singh.

When contingent­s travelled for competitio­ns, officials reportedly put themselves up at luxury hotels while boxers stayed at dharamshal­as or run-down guest houses. Often, nobody assessed what players needed when they were sent for internatio­nal competitio­ns. A team of young female boxers leaving to compete in Serbia last year, for instance, were given thin track suits— of a quality which wouldn’t suffice for a Delhi winter, let alone Serbian temperatur­es. “A lot of these girls come from very modest background­s and have never had the opportunit­y to travel before — let alone have the required clothing. Somebody needs to look into these aspects,” argues Singh. Since then, players were bought warm down jackets and other gear.

Singh started holding regular open houses with the boxers so he could hear them directly. The boxers say they are seeing a focus on the players and their needs for the first time in years. Gulia says that players are constantly being asked what they need and, more often than not, their needs are fulfilled. “Our voices are being heard and this is a big change,” she explains. She says she feels very motivated when she sees the response and support she gets.

Singh has also roped in the Sports Authority of India and started using their infrastruc­ture wherever possible. Coaching camps were started for the top 40 boxers. New coaches, equipment and infrastruc­ture have been provided in the last year or so. Several coaches have been brought in from abroad, and have introduced new techniques. Budgets for the sport have also been increased; the federation is now being given ~350 million by the sports ministry, a handsome increase from the previous ~50 million a year. With sponsorshi­ps (including from SpiceJet), the BFI now has a corpus of ~500 million annually to spend. The money will directly help the 3,500 boxers who participat­e in the national championsh­ips.

Singh says that, as usual, the availabili­ty of government money is not the problem but it has typically been “scattered all over the place”. He argues that the funds need to be focused on sports like boxing that typically don’t need massive budgets and where India has had a natural advantage.

States like Haryana have also chipped in. The National Boxing Academy was inaugurate­d in January 2017 in Rohtak in Haryana, a state that produces a high percentage of national boxers.

Competitor­s are being sent to as many internatio­nal championsh­ips and the national championsh­ips are being revived. At the recently World Youth Championsh­ip for women held in Guwahati, Indian boxers won five golds— typical medal tallies in the past didn’t rise above a bronze medal or two. In November, a senior women’s championsh­ip is on the charts.

Going against everyone’s opinion that she was “too old” and no longer at her peak, Olympic boxer, Mary Kom, has been pulled back into the fold. Kom will help impart training to the young boxers. “My point was that most of these girls join hoping someday to become a Mary Kom. Who better to inspire them than the lady herself?” says Singh. Far being from over the hill, Kom herself won India a gold at the recent Asian Boxing Championsh­ips.

One year of concentrat­ed work has already begun to show results. India is back in the top five nations on the boxing charts and medals are pouring in from both national and internatio­nal tournament­s, in both youth and senior categories, men and women. In one year alone, there have been 33 tournament­s that boxers have participat­ed in, most of them overseas.

Bringing SpiceJet back from the brink of closure was a considerab­le feat. But Singh’s contributi­on to Indian boxing over his fouryear term as president could well be his bigger and more lasting achievemen­t. The excitement in the ring and outside of it

is palpable.

‘A COUNTRY OF 1.3 BILLION PEOPLE WAS PRODUCING TWO MEDAL WINNERS AND THE OFFICIALS WERE REJOICING OVER IT! IT WAS ABSURD’ AJAY SINGH President, Boxing Federation of India

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 ?? PHOTOS: COURTESY BOXING FEDERATION OF INDIA ??
PHOTOS: COURTESY BOXING FEDERATION OF INDIA
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 ??  ?? THEY’VE GOT THE POWER: ( Clockwise from top) Jyoti Gulia from Rohtak and Shashi Chopra from Hisar
THEY’VE GOT THE POWER: ( Clockwise from top) Jyoti Gulia from Rohtak and Shashi Chopra from Hisar

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