Hindustan Times (Noida)

Seema: The girl with the ‘never say die’ attitude

- Sharad Deep sharad.deep@htlive.com

LUCKNOW: Seema Bisla is strong-willed. It’s the demand of her craft. Every time the wrestler has faced setbacks in her career, belief in her abilities egged her on. The reward of that neversay-die attitude: A ticket to the Tokyo Olympics.

Yet in April, the situation was so different for Bisla. She failed to make the cut at the Asian Olympic Qualificat­ion Tournament in Almaty, Kazakhstan. At the same venue, a few days later, she bounced back with a bronze at the Asian Championsh­ip—her first medal at the continenta­l level. Her qualificat­ion now depended on one last shot— World Qualifiers in Sofia, Bulgaria earlier this month. Bisla left nothing on the mat as she sealed her qualificat­ion spot.

“I was sure of getting a ticket to Tokyo even after failing to impress at the Asian Olympic Qualificat­ion Tournament in Almaty. My confidence grew when I won a bronze at the Asian Wrestling Championsh­ip,” said Bisla.

“It’s just the beginning for me and I am sure of getting a medal in Tokyo. I have been preparing well. Besides, paying special attention to my skills, I am more focused on my stamina. It’s my best weapon,” she said from her training centre in Jharsa, Gurgaon.

At the Qualifiers in Sofia, Bisla started her campaign with a thumping 8-0 win over Anastasiya Yanotava of Belarus. She had another crushing victory over Emma Jonna Denise Malmgren of Sweden. Bisla was leading 10-2 when a brilliant counter saw her pin down Malmgren. The semi-final against reigning European Championsh­ips silver medallist Anna Lukasiak was the final frontier, and Bisla showed her defensive side winning 2-1.

It was a moment of triumph for Bisla who has shifted to several weight categories after starting at 67kg in her junior days. She settled for 53kg but went a rung below 50kg in 2018 when Vinesh Phogat moved up to 53kg. She won gold in Yasar Dogu Ranking series in 2019 and silver medal in Spain Grand Prix.

It has been a long road for Bisla who started her career with a bronze medal at the 2009 Asian Cadet Championsh­ips in Pune. She then had back-to-back bronze medals at the 2012 and 2013 Asian Junior Championsh­ips but could find her feet in the senior level late in her career.

Growing up in Gudhan village in Rohtak, Bisla was introduced to the sport by her father Azad Singh but she had to battle tough financial conditions at home to keep her passion burning. She trained in academy in Rohtak before she found a good mentor in Paramjeet Singh in 2017 and trained under him in Gurgaon.

“If you have a good teacher, you can achieve anything. I am the perfect example of this. Whatever I am today is because of my coach,” she said.

She has been regularly training with male wrestlers to increase her power. “It was coach sir’s idea to prepare me against the boys in the heavyweigh­t category and this helped me emerge stronger against the women wrestlers in my own category,” she said.

Bouncing back from adversitie­s has become a way of life for Bisla. There was a time when she wanted to give up sport with the financial burden as it was increasing­ly becoming tough for her to make ends meet. Her sister’s support helped her continue with wrestling. Her coach Singh also motivated Bisla and helped her get a job in Indian Railways in 2017.

Bisla’s family encourages her to pursue wrestling despite the challenges. She can now see the effort she has put all these years and family’s support have given her the result. “I really wish to win a medal for India and for my family too as their contributi­on to every effort of mine is special,” she said. She had missed out on a berth at the World Championsh­ips in 2019, losing her second round in repechage but that only made her more determined. She is now gearing up for the Ranking Series at Poland next month.

“It would be a good opportunit­y to test my skills. Since the day I qualified for the Tokyo Games, I have been dreaming of success all the time and the Poland meet would show me where I stand before the Olympics,” said Bisla.

 ?? UWW ?? Seema Bisla.
UWW Seema Bisla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India