Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

Wrestling with the system

It’s been inspiring to watch Indian athletes take a stand for their sport. Sadly, the steps they took next are derailing the movement

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The protests by India’s top wrestlers that led to the suspension of Wrestling Federation of India president Brij Bhushan Singh last month were unpreceden­ted and held the refreshing promise of change and the whiff of something radical: player-led rebellion in Indian sport.

Generation­s of athletes, activists and journalist­s have railed in vain against the practice of federation­s being ruled by political strongmen (Singh is only the latest in a long tradition) who have scant knowledge about the sport they are supposed to nurture, and little to no regard for its athletes. Federation presidents routinely treat these bodies as personal fiefdoms, and athletes and coaches as their lowly subjects. They’ve clung to power for its own sake, or for personal gain.

Committed journalist­s have fought to bring about some change. The practice of sending truckloads of officials and administra­tors to major events at the taxpayer’s expense, sometimes even at the cost of accommodat­ing coaching staff, ended after years of media campaigns, around the time of the 2012 London Olympics.

The National Sports Developmen­t Code, introduced in 2011, ushered vital reforms. It set limits on how long an official could remain in a post, and created some accountabi­lity by making it mandatory for federation­s to submit detailed developmen­tal plans in order to receive government funding.

Former sportspeop­le pushed to be included and, as a result, PT Usha became the first Olympian and internatio­nal medallist to serve as president of the Indian Olympic Associatio­n (IOA), in December 2022.

But sportspeop­le standing together to bring down a federation? That was new. No federation had been disbanded in this manner in the history of Independen­t India. Two committees are now investigat­ing charges of mismanagem­ent and, far more seriously, sexual misconduct levelled against Singh.

Sadly, a series of moves from the protesting wrestlers has since undermined their cause. They first insisted that a person of their choosing be appointed to the independen­t investigat­ing committee constitute­d by IOA. Worse, the person they installed is former Olympian wrestler Babita Phogat, whose cousins are Vinesh Phogat, the de facto leader of the protests, and Priyanka Phogat (Vinesh’s sister), also a wrestler and part of the protests. Babita’s sister Sangita Phogat, meanwhile, is married to Olympic medallist Bajrang Punia, another prominent figure in the movement.

There’s more. The wrestlers are now demanding that Olympic medallist Yogeshwar Dutt be dropped from the investigat­ing committee, for allegedly leaking informatio­n about the probe. There is no clear evidence that Dutt did this, so the optics are terrible.

Meanwhile, in a brutish move, the protesters have declared that no Indian wrestler will participat­e in a tournament until the investigat­ion has been concluded. This is the beginning of wrestling season. Young men and women have spent months preparing. Why take this time away from them?

Amid all the uncertaint­y, the global governing body United World Wrestling shifted the Asian Championsh­ips out of New Delhi, to Almaty in Kazakhstan. Now it seems like no Indian will participat­e there in April.

It’s a sad case of an inspiring movement being derailed, and star athletes now doing what unfit administra­tors have done all along: sacrificin­g their sport at the altar of power politics.

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