Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - HT Navi Mumbai Live

BORGOHAIN...

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The lanky boxer from Assam controlled the range with her stiff jab and some nimble footwork.

When Chen did find a way in, she was met with a solid left hook to the head. But Borgohain’s best was yet to come.

In Round 2, Chen, having lost the first, grew more and more desperate with Borgohain’s control of the ring. Her attacks became more reckless and Borgohain, unfazed and perfectly poised, took full advantage. The round went unanimousl­y in Borgohain’s favour.

Between the rounds, coach Raffaele Bergamasco, furiously fanning her with a towel, said: “The whole of India and Assam are watching. You have the opportunit­y to create history.”

In Round 3, still dictating the movement in the ring, still using her quick jab and hook combinatio­n, Borgohain did just that. After Vijender Singh’s in 2008 and Mary Kom’s in 2012, India will have another Olympic boxing medal.

“I have been working hard for eight years, so I thought I will have to show that hard work. I just wanted to be aggressive from the start,” said Borgohain, sporting a traditiona­l gamosa around her neck after the fight.

Borgohain’s path to Tokyo has been hard. Last year, after almost seven months without training or competitio­n because of the pandemic, she tested positive for Covid-19 on the day the Indian boxing squad flew out to Italy for a prolonged training and competitio­n trip in October.

Left behind in New Delhi, Borgohain had to be hospitalis­ed for a few days. “She has been very strong mentally. We had to work on her strength and conditioni­ng after Covid and it took a couple of months. She was very dedicated,” said Bergamasco.

In December and January, while the rest of the elite women boxers trained as a team, Borgohain worked on her fitness at the Inspire Institute of Sports in Ballari, Karnataka. By the end of January she felt ready to get back into the ring, but there was bad news from home—both her mother’s kidneys were failing. In February, Borgohain made a twoday trip to Kolkata to be with her mother, who was undergoing a kidney transplant there.

In her first tournament after this period of chaos, the Boxam Internatio­nal invitation­al in Spain, she lost in the very first round. By May, the two-time world championsh­ip bronze medallist was back in the flow, winning a bronze in the Asian Championsh­ips in Doha.

Borgohain comes from Baromukhia, a village near Assam’s border with Nagaland. Her father owns a small tea plantation and she has two older sisters, Lima and Licha, (one is in the CISF the other with the BSF). Growing up, Borgohain was fascinated by Lima and Licha training in Muay Thai.

When she was old enough, Borgohain started training in the martial art too.

In 2012, Sports Authority of India boxing coach Padum Boro was scouting for new recruits because he did not have enough boxers to represent Assam in the upcoming sub-junior nationals. He saw Borgohain in action in her school. Impressed by her height and her skills, Boro convinced her to join the SAI boxing programme in Guwahati.

“I was told by the coach, just don’t use the kick, and throw as many punches as possible,” Borgohain had told HT in an earlier interview. She went on to win gold in the nationals with just a few months of training.

In her Olympic semi-final on August 4, Borgohain will run into world champion Busenaz Surmeneli, who she has never fought before.

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