Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Spurned by family, hungry Mizo boxer sets ring on fire

- Rahul Karmakar rahul.karmakar@htlive.com

GUWAHATI: I gave it a shot thinking life cannot be tougher than what I have been through. Besides, it (taking up boxing) ensured shelter and food. VANLALHRIA­TPUII Adversitie­s have made her a fighter. It is remarkable how she has turned things around with the SAI and Mizoram body taking care of her needs. BHASKAR BHATT, India coach

Mizoram’s Vanlalhria­tpuii didn’t find it natural to throw punches. But when she donned the gloves only for assured meals, the coaches discovered in her a natural switchhitt­er, a rarity among boxers.

A switch-hitter is a boxer who switches back and forth between an orthodox, or right-handed, stance and a southpaw, or lefthanded, stance to confuse the opponents in a fight.

“Top boxers train hard to be a switch-hitter. But Puii (the name everyone calls Vanlalhria­tpuii by) has this natural ability to change stance suddenly during a fight, and this should take her far,” said Bhaskar Bhatt, the head coach of the 10-boxer Indian contingent for theWomen’s Youth World Championsh­ips 2017 here.

Vanlalhria­tpuii, 18, exited in the preliminar­y round of the lightweigh­t (60 kg) category at the world event, losing 3:2 to South Korea’s Aeji IM on Monday.

Her coaches blamed the loss on her left shoulder, weakened after it was dislocated last year. Vanlalhria­tpuii dictated the terms initially, but the Korean exploited her tendency to shield her left arm.

Boxing was not in the Mizo girl’s mind four years ago when she was struggling to come to terms with her parents’ divorce. Her father, a driver in Champhai town 185 km southeast of Aizawl, remarried and her mother went back to her native village.

The divorce rate in Mizoram is one of the highest in India.

“My elder sister got married, a brother is staying with an aunt and my youngest brother, 5 years old, is staying with my father and stepmother. The SAI (Sports Authority of India) hostel in Aizawl has been my home since 2013,” Vanlalhria­tpuii said.

FOR SHELTER, FOOD

She impressed the local scouts at a boxing trial in 2014, just a few months after she had moved into the SAI hostel. “I gave it a shot thinking life cannot be tougher than what I have been through. Besides, it ensured shelter and food,” she said.

Vanlalhria­tpuii relished battering the punching bag. The ambition soared as her jabs, crosses, uppercuts and bolo punches made opponents uncomforta­ble.

She became the School Games Champion in 2015 and gold at the National Championsh­ip earned her a berth in the national youth team earlier this year.

“Adversitie­s have made her a strong fighter. It is remarkable how she has turned things around with the SAI and Mizoram Boxing Associatio­n taking care of all her needs,” Bhatt said.

But Vanlalhria­tpuii feels she needs more strength and speed to be like her idols – Philippine great Manny Pacquaio and MC Mary Kom, both southpaws.

Assam’s Ankushita Boro, 17, needs speed and power too. Unlike Vanlalhria­tpuii, she has the backing of her parents. But they make only about R3,000 between them.

“My maternal grandfathe­r, a teacher who retires in 2019, has been helpful. I might not have come this far were it not for his support,” she said.

Ankushita hopes that her ability to almost always land a punch on target would see her through in her next bout.

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