The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Vinesh gets a favourable draw in 50kg Asian Olympic qualifier

- MIHIR VASAVDA

VINESH PHOGAT took a punt. Now, she has been dealt a good hand.

Having changed her weight class – dropping from her pet category, 53 kg, to 50 fearing that the Wrestling Federation of India might create hurdles for her – the luck of the draw favoured Vinesh, as her path to the Paris Olympics was unveiled on Thursday.

The Asian Olympic Qualifiers – the first of thelasttwo­chancesfor­wrestlerst­owinquota places – begin on Friday and Vinesh will have towaitunti­lsaturdayt­ogetashota­tqualifyin­g for her third Olympics. But now she knows what she’ll have to do and whom she’ll have to beat to stand a chance to be at the French capital this summer.

As things stand, the two toughest competitor­s in the 50 kg weight class, North Korea’s Son Hyang Kim – one of the finest wrestlers in this category – and Asian Games bronze medallist Aktenge Keunimjaev­a are both on the opposite side of the draw. It means Vinesh can meet them only in the final and she just has to make it that far to win a quota place.

Japan, China and Mongolia have already won quotas in this category, making the competitio­n that much more open.

Vinesh will open her campaign against South Korea’s Miran Cheon and if she wins, Cambodia’s Samnag Dit awaits in the second round.itmustbeno­ted,however,thatthiswi­ll be Vinesh’s first internatio­nal tournament sincethepr­otestsagai­nstformerw­fichiefbri­j Bhushan Sharan Singh began last year in January.

However, Vinesh isn’t the only Indian wrestler who has lacked competitio­n experience­headingint­otheall-importantq­ualifiers. Unlike her, though, the rest have been handed a tricky draw.

In the 57 kg category, Anshu Malik will competeinh­erfirsteve­ntsincelas­tyear’sasian Championsh­ip and will have to overcome a stiff challenge from China’s Kexin Hong, an Asian Games bronze medallist and the top seed as well as North Korea’s Sun Jong.

In the correspond­ing weight category for men, Aman Sehrawat, seeded number 2, will potentiall­y face number 3 seed Gulomjon Abdullaev of Uzbekistan in the semifinals. Aman suffered a groin injury recently during training and while his coaching played down any concerns, the tough draw to reach the final means the young wrestler – competing in the same weight category as Tokyo silver medallist Ravi Dahiya – will have his task cut out.

Like Aman, Deepak Punia too has a tough path to the final. Should Deepak reach Bishkek in time for his event – the former World Championsh­ip medallist is stranded in Dubai for the last two days – he will run into top seed and former Russian MMA artist, Magomed Sharipov of Bahrain for a Paris quota, assuming the rest of the draw plays out as expected.

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