Deccan Chronicle

Fighting IT OUT

CITY BOY WHO WON THE GOLD MEDAL AT THE NATIONAL MIXED MARTIAL ARTS FESTIVAL TRAINED SECRETLY

- RESHMI CHAKRAVORT­Y

At the recently held Bodypower Expo, the largest Mixed Martial Arts festival in India, 25-year-old Zeeshan Syed from Hyderabad won the gold medal in Amateur Welter Weight title (75-80 kg). The festival was in Mumbai and featured some of the greatest Indian and Internatio­nal fighters.

Zeeshan is trained by coach Shaik Khalid, the General Secretary of Telangana Associatio­n of Mixed Martial Arts (TAMMA). He has created many national champions in amateur and profession­al categories from Telangana.

Zeeshan has worked hard in a short period of time while hiding the stint from his family. “I have been training on and off for about a year now, but to participat­e in the championsh­ip, I had to prepare for three months,” he says. Coming from an engineerin­g background, Zeeshan, aka Syed Saroosh Hassan (profession­al name) didn’t inform his family about his passion for fighting as he says they would never have agreed. “My family didn’t know that I was training because they would have been too scared that I would get hurt. I informed them only a week before I was going to Mumbai to participat­e. My mother was shocked, her only concern was my safety,” says Zeeshan.

The scope of developmen­t of the sport is immense in Hyderabad. Khalid has been promoting the sport since 2014. “The sport has caught the fancy of the city’s youth but the seriousnes­s which is required to excel at internatio­nal level is still lacking. But, I am hopeful,” says Khalid. Opportunit­ies are many and fighters get recognised soon in this sport.

As the name suggests, the sport is a mixture of wrestling, boxing, judo, and muay thai, borrowing the most useful aspects from each of the traditiona­l martial art form. “The concept of mixed martial arts started in 1980s and moves like striking, clinching and grappling are taken from different martial art forms,” he informs. To compete in a national championsh­ip, one should at least train for three months.

At the Bodypower Expo, the team from Telangana stood second in medal tally and Khalid is hopeful that Hyderabad will reach the top soon. “There is the annual Super Fight League which is a franchise-based league featuring eight teams for mixed martial arts. Even though there are players from Telangana fighting it out in the league, there is no home team. I am working towards creating one by the next season,” says Khalid.

I was training because they would have been too scared that I would get hurt. I informed them only a week before I was going to Mumbai to participat­e. My mother was shocked ZEESHAN SYED, Fighter

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Zeeshan is trained by coach Shaik Khalid, who has created many national champions in amateur and profession­al categories from Telangana
Zeeshan is trained by coach Shaik Khalid, who has created many national champions in amateur and profession­al categories from Telangana

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India