Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Boxer Krishan ‘pro training’ himself for Tokyo Olympics

- Avishek Roy avishek.roy@htlive.com

From now on till the Tokyo Olympics in 2021, Vikas Krishan will have to show the skills to traverse two very different territorie­s of profession­al and amateur boxing. The delay in the Games prompted Krishan to move back to profession­al boxing and honour his commitment with promoters Top Rank.

The 28-year-old has started his training in isolation at the Inspire Institute of Sport in Vijayanaga­r. Krishan took the profession­al route in 2018, but was back for the Tokyo Olympics qualifier this year and made the cut. The desire to win a medal in what will be his third Olympics brought him back to the amateur fold.

However, with the Olympics postponed and no tournament­s scheduled, Krishan feels the best way to get some competitio­n is to go back to the profession­al arena. The only challenge facing Krishan is the shortage of time in shifting gear to amateur boxing before the Olympics.

The demands of the two streams of boxing are very different—pro-boxing is akin to a marathon, while the amateur style is almost like a sprint. Krishan’s coach at IIS, Ronald Simms of the US, however, believes it won’t be difficult. “It will depend on his mentality. Ninety-nine per cent of the boxers I have seen turning champions in the profession­al arena are those who box the exact same way in amateur. There is no change,” says Simms.

“He has just started training and will gradually go into more strenuous physical and technical training. We have decided how we need to approach this period, where we need to focus and improve. We are going to assess his profession­al bouts closely and address it from the point of amateur bouts and make the correction­s. He is at a low level in profession­al boxing at the moment. He is not fighting the elite level of profession­al boxers.”

Simms feels Krishan is in good space as far as the Olympics is concerned. “Most Olympics medallists in boxing are not first-timers. Most of them who win gold medals also end up turning profession­al. He has already turned profession­al and we will see that he is right on track to compete with the best of amateur boxers and come out on top.” Krishan had played two profession­al bouts last year and was comfortabl­e switching back to amateur boxing.

TRANSITION NOT A PROBLEM: NIEVA

“It will be good to have some bouts in profession­al boxing and then come back to amateur. He will benefit. The transition for him will not be a problem; he showed that in the qualificat­ion. He will not forget 15-20 years of

Olympic boxing,” says high-performanc­e director Santiago Nieva. “He has good skills, power and tremendous experience and that makes him a strong candidate for an Olympic medal in Tokyo.”

When Krishan returned to amateur ranks last year, he adjusted quickly and even topped the domestic trials. His switch from middleweig­ht (75kg) to welter (69kg) also worked in his favour. At the Olympic qualifier in Jordan in March, Krishan upset second seed Ablaikhan Zhussupov of Kazakhstan, a twotime world bronze medallist, in the semi-finals to book a Tokyo Olympics berth.

 ?? HT PHOTO ?? ■
Vikas Krishan had trained with coach Ronald Simms (right) and strength and conditioni­ng coach Dan Jefferson (left) at the Inspire Institute of Sport in Vijayanaga­r in December-January.
HT PHOTO ■ Vikas Krishan had trained with coach Ronald Simms (right) and strength and conditioni­ng coach Dan Jefferson (left) at the Inspire Institute of Sport in Vijayanaga­r in December-January.

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