Sportstar

Business as usual for Ravi Dahiya

- JONATHAN SELVARAJ

Reducing weight in quick time to be eligible to compete in Birmingham may perhaps be a bigger challenge for the wrestler than winning all the

bouts for the likely gold medal. But Dahiya is leaving nothing to chance; to accommodat­e some extra days of training at the Chhatrasal Stadium in

New Delhi, he is not even attending the opening ceremony of the Games.

Before he steps on the mat at the Commonweal­th Games, Ravi Dahiya will have to overcome the steepest obstacle between him and a gold medal — a weight cut he has to undergo to be eligible to compete.

Walking around at a pre-competitio­n weight of around 62kg, the Olympic silver medallist has already started the gruelling process by which he will slip into the 57kg category he will compete in at Coventry. At New Delhi’s Chhatrasal stadium where he trains, Dahiya, whose body fat percentage is already in single digits, has started skipping rotis from his meals. Even in that calorie deficient state, training continues as usual. In the last couple of days before his bouts, he will start reducing his water intake while training in clammy plastic jackets to sweat out the last tricky grams of excess fluid. It’s draining and exhausting routine.

“Cutting weight is very hard. And you have to do it before every competitio­n. If you are a wrestler, there’s no way around it,” he tells Sportstar.

The bouts in Birmingham, on the other hand, will likely not be anywhere as challengin­g.

Hot favourite

India’s wrestlers have typically done well at the Commonweal­th Games, a competitio­n which has always been of a far lower standard than the World Championsh­ips or even the Asian Games or the Asian Championsh­ips.

However, it’s unlikely there will be more of a mismatch than the one on the 6th of August when Dahiya steps on the mat in Coventry.

Dahiya is one of the best wrestlers in the world in his weight division at the moment. With Russia barred from

internatio­nal competitio­n for the immediate future, the Olympic silver medallist is arguably the best in active competitio­n.

The 24-year-old has been unbeaten in three competitio­ns he’s competed in this year including winning his third Asian Championsh­ips. In contrast, the toughest opponent Dahiya is likely to face in Coventry will be Canada’s Darthe Capellan whose highest profile result came six years ago when he won gold at the 2016 Pan American championsh­ips in a depleted field that didn’t include an American.

This isn’t expected to be a competitio­n for Dahiya as much as it will be a coronation. It will of course be for a relatively minor crown. There is a bit of irony to this. In October last year, Dahiya had put India’s sporting authoritie­s in a rather unusual fix. With an Olympic silver medal under his belt, Dahiya had rightly been nominated for the country’s highest sporting honour — the Khel Ratna. There was just one problem — Dahiya didn’t want it. Instead he had wanted the country’s other prestigiou­s sporting award — the Arjuna Award — which his achievemen­ts had suddenly become outsized for. Ultimately, Dahiya had to quietly accept the bigger award.

Reverse order

Dahiya can see the funny side to this.

“Normally in India, the first big medal for most wrestlers is the Commonweal­th Games and then the Asian Games, then the world championsh­ips and the Olympics. I started out with a medal at the world championsh­ips and the Olympics and now I’m competing at the Commonweal­th Games,” he says. “But I don’t have any control in the order of which I compete for things. Jo cheez haath mein nahin hai uspe kya baat karni hai (Why talk about things that are not in your hands)? I have to perform at whichever tournament I compete in,” he says.

The Commonweal­th Games might not be particular­ly tough but it’s important enough for Dahiya. “This year, the World Championsh­ips (in September) are the major tournament for me. But the Commonweal­th Games are also important for the country,” he says.

The Games were important enough for Dahiya to skip the Rome Ranking Series, one of the internatio­nal wrestling calendar’s premier build-up tournament­s, in order to complete the biometric requiremen­ts needed to get a visa to the United Kingdom.

He admits that heading to the Commonweal­th Games as the Olympic silver and world bronze medallist means there are a lot more expectatio­ns from him. “I have to win a gold for the country. It might not have been the case before I won medals at the Worlds and Olympics, but right now that is what the country expects I will do.”

‘No pressure’

Despite the weight of expectatio­ns, Dahiya isn’t feeling any nerves. “There’s no pressure. The only thought in my mind is to give my 100 per cent. But that’s how I feel before any competitio­n. It might have been harder in the past, but the more tournament­s you compete in, the better you get. I’ve played so many tournament­s that it doesn’t really worry me any more,” he says. Despite his favourite status, it’s not that Dahiya is taking the tournament lightly. At Chhatrasal stadium he’s training with the same intensity that he always has. “Training chalti rehti hai (Training goes on as usual). We know that we can’t take anyone lightly or easily. Everyone will come having trained to the best of their ability. It’s not in our control to decide the level of our opponents. Our purpose is to train to the best of our ability,” he says.

It’s something he’s learned from experience. “Sometimes we do take someone too lightly and then find out we shouldn’t have done that. In the 2020 World Cup (in Belgrade), I went into my first match with a Hungarian, thinking he was an easy opponent (Gamzatgazs­i Halidov had only finished 15th at the U-23 World championsh­ips the previous year). He was a wrestler who didn’t even have a very good record, so, I thought I’d beat him easily. In my mind, I was already thinking of my next bout. And I ended up getting pinned,” he says.

Preparatio­n mode

It will take a brave man to bet on a repeat happening next month or even that Dahiya will have to spend the entire six-minute duration of his matches on the mat.

Dahiya, though, isn’t leaving anything to chance. Indeed, Dahiya isn’t even planning on attending the competitio­n’s opening ceremony and will only travel to Birmingham on the 30th of the month so that he can get a few extra days of training at Chhatrasal stadium. “People say that the opening ceremony of these games are a very special occasion but it doesn’t matter to me. No one really cares if we are having a good time or not. There are certain expectatio­ns of us. The only thing that matters is whether we win a gold medal or not. After the event you can probably celebrate but until you have that medal, the only focus is on the mat,” he says.

While the Games will be the summit of the careers of many athletes, for Dahiya, it’s business as usual. His targets are a lot further on the horizon.

“All these tournament­s are important. The more you compete, the better you become as a wrestler. The Commonweal­th Games are important but after this we have the World Championsh­ips and then from the next year we have the qualification tournament­s for the Olympics. And the final goal will be to win a gold in Paris,” he says.

All that is in the future, though. For now, Dahiya’s looking just as far as the weighing scales in his room at Chhatrasal Stadium.

“That’s one thing that never is easy. I’ve tried to do it in multiple ways but it’s always hard. No matter how many times I’ve done it and no matter how many times I have to do it, it’s always going to be difficult,” he says.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Subdued: Ravi Dahiya during the 57kg semifinal at the Tokyo Olympics in August, 2021. He went on to win silver. With his accomplish­ments, Dahiya was nominated for the Khel Ratna award and he had to accept it despite not wanting it. He wanted the Arjuna award instead but his feats had become outsized for it.
REUTERS Subdued: Ravi Dahiya during the 57kg semifinal at the Tokyo Olympics in August, 2021. He went on to win silver. With his accomplish­ments, Dahiya was nominated for the Khel Ratna award and he had to accept it despite not wanting it. He wanted the Arjuna award instead but his feats had become outsized for it.
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