Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Wrestling body to focus on foreign experts, dump Indian coaches

- Navneet Singh sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEW DELHI : In a bid to boost the medals tally at the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta, the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) will not rely on homebred coaches to prepare the top grapplers. Instead, it is focusing on foreign experts to oversee training.

Despite winning 11 medals, including five gold at the Commonweal­th Games in Gold Coast, WFI has acknowledg­ed that competitio­n at the Asian Games will not be a cakewalk, and hence the move towards foreign experts.

India had claimed five medals, including one gold, at the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon.

COACHES SHORTLISTE­D

“We have shortliste­d the coaches and they are ready to come. We hope to get the green signal from the Sports Authority of India soon,” said Vinod Tomar, assistant secretary, WFI.

The next camp will commence on May 7 and the WFI hopes it will get the approval by then. The big advantage of having foreign coaches, said Tomar is that they are “technicall­y more superior”. The WFI logic may not go down well with the Indian experts overseeing coaching camps, but it’s no secret that two-time Olympic medallist Sushil Kumar trains only with Georgian coach Vladimir Mestvirish­vili, a former national coach.

Currently, former internatio­nal Jagminder Singh is the men’s freestyle coach, while Kuldip Malik is the women’s coach. Kuldip Singh is overseeing the Graeco-Roman camp. The Indian coaches will be expected to assist the foreign experts whenever they take charge.

After India’s below-par performanc­e in the 2017 World Championsh­ips in Paris, the need for a foreign expert was realised by double Olympic medallist Sushil Kumar, who was the then government observer. In his report to the sports ministry, he had recommende­d the need to appoint experts on priority.

Former national coach and internatio­nal grappler Kirpa Shankar also attributes India’s success at the Olympic and world level to foreign coaches. “The hard work of Russian and Georgian experts is evident as more grapplers are winning medals at the internatio­nal level,” said Shankar.

“But it all will be frittered away if the technical aspect of training is overlooked in camps because Indian coaches don’t pay too much emphasis on that.”

After unsuccessf­ully attempting to rope in Russia’s Sergei Beloglazov, a former Olympic and world champion, the WFI plans to hire Iran’s freestyle coach Hossein Karimi for the men’s team, while Georgian Temo Kazarashvi­li has been shortliste­d for the Graeco-Roman squad.

The federation is also keen to appoint a Russian coach for the women’s squad.

 ?? PTI ?? ▪ Sushil Kumar regularly trains with a foreign coach.
PTI ▪ Sushil Kumar regularly trains with a foreign coach.

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