The Indian Express (Delhi Edition)

Vinesh clinches spot in Olympics

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Phogat’s pet weight class. In fact, not just the Olympics, Phogat’s wrestling future itself looked bleak when, attempting a comeback, she suffered a knee injury that required surgery.

But one of India’s most resilient athletes of this generation, Phogat, who weighed 59 kg when she began mat training in December, worked hard to drop to the lowest weight division of the Olympics — 50 kg — before defying all expectatio­ns to win a quota place.

Moments after Phogat won, Anshu Malik also clinched a quota win in the 57-kg category while under-23 world champion Reetika Hooda (76 kg) completed the hat-trick.

With four spots in Paris, the women wrestlers provided a reason to smile in what has been a prolonged period of gloom for Indian wrestling, on the mat and off it. And no one smiled wider than Phogat, whose abilities were repeatedly questioned over the last 12 months by, among many, Brij Bhushan.

In an attempt to discredit the protests against him, Brij Bhushan and his supporters claimed that Phogat, Punia and Malik wanted direct entries for marquee events, a “demand” he rejected.

However, when she got the medal, Phogat chose to focus only on her comeback trail.

“A lot of people are responsibl­e for where I am today. A team of six-seven people, with support from OGQ, ensured I got fit, I could reduce weight and ensured I could perform the way I did,” she said.

After the protests, when she decided to return to wrestling, Phogat said a team of experts got behind her. She sparred with male wrestlers to improve her strength, sports medicine experts routinely analysed her blood samples to monitor her recovery levels, and the coaches made shrewd tactical decisions that ensured she remained in control of her fate as far as Olympic qualificat­ion went.

This meant changing her weight category from 53 kg to 50 on the day of the domestic selection trials for the ongoing qualifiers. Her decision caused an uproar among the other wrestlers, who cried foul.

However, Phogat said the move was necessitat­ed because Panghal had already won a spot for India in the 53-kg category and if the WFI, headed by Brij Bhushan’s close aide Sanjay Singh, later decided to send only the quota winners to Paris, her dream would end “right there”.

“It was a big health risk to drop down to 50 kg,” said Phogat. “I was advised against it by doctors because they feared it could lead to injuries. However, it was a do-or-die situation for me. I would have regretted it if I sat at home in a healthy state and saw the Olympics on TV. So, I decided to take a risk.”

Reducing the weight, it now seems, was her only real hurdle.

For, when she stepped on the mat in an internatio­nal competitio­n for the first time in almost 18 months, it felt like she was never away. Unless there’s another twist in a tale that has seen many twists, Vinesh Phogat will head for her third consecutiv­e Olympic Games.

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