The Asian Age

Mary leads India’s pursuit of gold

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Ulan-Ude (Russia), Oct. 11: The medal haul is the same as last time but four Indian boxers, spearheade­d by the indomitabl­e M.C. Mary Kom, would be fighting to better the colour of those medals in the semifinals of the Women’s World Championsh­ip here on Saturday.

The third-seeded Mary Kom (51kg), assured of an unparallel­ed eighth world medal, would be aiming for a seventh gold and standing in her way in the semifinals is Turkey’s European champion Busenaz Cakiroglu. Cakiroglu is seeded second.

Besides six world titles, Mary Kom’s incredible career is also studded with an Olympic bronze medal (2012), five Asian titles, gold medals at the Asian Games and the Commonweal­th Games, besides numerous other internatio­nal top finishes.

The spotlight will also be on two very impressive debutants — Manju Rani (48kg) and Jamuna Boro — besides last edition’s bronze-medallist Lovlina Borgohain (69kg).

“All of them have performed exceptiona­lly well. We are keeping our fingers crossed for all of them to reach the final,” national coach Mohammed Ali Qamar, who also happens to be India’s first Commonweal­th Games gold-medallist in boxing, said.

All of them have tough opponents lined up but all of them have shown themselves to be completely unfazed by the prospect of going up against a strong challenger. “One can never be satisfied. We are happy that our performanc­e has not dipped since the 2018 edition but it is a bit disappoint­ing that we couldn’t better it. We could have had six semifinali­sts but for a couple of close losses,” said Qamar.

One of the most outstandin­g performers this time has been Manju Rani. The boxer from Haryana, who didn’t get a break in her home state, claimed the national title by competing for Punjab and came into national camp only this year.

“She has been unstoppabl­e definitely. She has made every one of her opportunit­y and that includes a silver medal at Strandja Memorial (one of Europe’s oldest boxing tournament­s),” Qamar said.

Her next opponent is going to be Thailand’s Chuthamat Raksat, who upstaged fifth seed Yuliyanova Asenova in the quarterfin­als.

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