India get 5th medal, first in wrestling

Pappu_Pager
By Pappu_Pager

Just before he left for the London Olympics, Yogeshwar Dutt had vowed to win a medal for the country - something he had failed to do in the last two Games. On Saturday, the Delhi Police officer lived up to his words and did the country proud by winning the bronze medal in the 60kg freestyle wrestling.

Fighting with great skill and stamina, the valiant Dutt fought five bouts one after the other before outwitting North Korea's Jong Myong Ri with a breathtaking move in his final fight to grab the biggest prize of his long career. After the win, he said, "If I had lost, no one would have remembered me. Jo jeeta wahi sikandar."

Yogeshwar Dutt has al ways been an under achiever in Indian wrestling. The 29-year-old from Bhainswal village in Sonipat, Haryana, is a courageous fighter and technically very sound, but somehow he always kept missing the big one. On Saturday at the Excel Arena here, it finally happened. He fought five bouts one after another, like a man possessed and finally got what he was looking for, more than two decades after he first entered a dusty dangal in his village to learn the art of kushti -- he won bronze in the 60 kg freestyle to secure India's fifth medal in the London Games.

Dutt won like a true champion, catching hold of his North Korean opponent Jong Myong Ri's legs in a scissor clinch and rolling him, again and again and again and again. Six points and the referee stopped the contest. The Korean was helpless, like a rag. Dutt jumped into the air and did two cartwheels as the stadium erupted at the emphatic nature of victory.

This was his third repechage bout in less than an hour. He was aching, hurting his right eye swollen after a scarring battle with his Russian opponent in the pre-quarterfinals in the afternoon. But fatigue was far from his mind.

He later came out of the ring, draped in a tricolour and said, "My efforts of 21 years have paid off. I kept waiting for it to happen. It has been a very long journey. I came here to win a medal. If I had missed it would have been heart-breaking. This is for my country, my family, coaches, fans, everyone who has prayed of me," he said getting emotional. Weren't you worried that the first period went to the Korean in clinch "I was worried but I knew would not let it go. I wanted it so desperately. I got that 'feetle (roll)' and that was it."

Dutt, like the other Indians before him here, got a tough draw. He started well in his qualification match, making a superb comeback after losing the first period to his Bulgarian rival Anatolie Ilarionovitch Guidea. The Bulgarian won the first period 1-0 but Yogeshwar fought back to take the second period at 2-0 before dominating the final period for a comfortable 5-2 victory.

In the pre-quarterfinals , Dutt was up against former world champion and Olympic medallist Besik Seradinovich Kudukhov, a man rated as one of the best pound-for-pound wrestlers in the world.

In the first period, Dutt tried to attack but was kept at bay. With scores 0-0 after two minutes, the Russian got lucky with a clinch and made it count with a point. In the second period, a desperate Dutt went all out into attack. He tried a takedown but the Russian avoided it and won a point.

Dutt then again went for the Russian's legs, turned in a jiffy and tried 'the bridge' , holding the Russian from behind and trying to flip him over his head.

The Russian later went into the final and Dutt into repechage. In his first bout in the repechage, he took out 26 year-old Puerto Rican Franklin Matos Gomez, a silver medal list in the World championship in 2011, with ease, helped by two clinches in two rounds.

The second repechage bout against Iran's Masoud Is maelpurjonybari went into three rounds. He won the first round and seemed to be winning the third when a referral changed his three-point lead to a deficit. However, in the third round, he pinned down his opponent twice to sail through to the medal round.

There destiny waited for him and he embraced it with both hands, gratefully.

By .sun26872• 12 Aug 2012 18:09
.sun26872

May not be Hockey or foot ball , but definitely boxing.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 16:57
anonymous

Happy for India. For a while I though their invitation got lost in the post.......

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 16:45
britexpat

Yep! Bubka won Gold at the 1988 Olympics

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 15:53
anonymous

TFS PP........................ :)

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 14:21
britexpat

I agree with you. Team GB should have won the hockey and football matches

By t_coffee_or_me• 12 Aug 2012 14:13
Rating: 4/5
t_coffee_or_me

Bubka won six consecutive IAAF World Championships, an Olympics gold and broke the world record for men's pole vaulting 35 times[4] (17 outdoor and 18 indoor records). He was the first to clear 6.0 metres and the only (as of July 2012) to clear 6.10 metres (20 ft).[5][6]

He holds the current outdoor world record of 6.14 metres, (20 feet 13⁄4 inches), set on 31 July 1994 in Sestriere, Italy[7] and the current indoor world record of 6.15 meters, set on 21 February 1993 in Donetsk, Ukraine.[8]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sergey_Bubka

By .sun26872• 12 Aug 2012 13:42
.sun26872

It's really great that Indian team has been able to get these 6 medals in view of the fact that phenomenal cheating is going on at London Olympic to keep certain countries happy.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:34
anonymous

Sergej Bubka never won gold, brit, still his world record of 6.15 m is untouched. He must be suffering.

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 11:28
britexpat

I'm upset about Yelena Isinbayeva not getting gold :O(

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:28
anonymous

To make it clear, I only fancy the Olympic Champion. Whatever nationality he or she has, is not important. And I honestly don't care for Silver or Bronce. There is only ONE Olympic champion! Forget the rest.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:26
anonymous

I think what you think is wrong, TDKR.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:25
anonymous

I think LincolnPirate is upset about the German pole vaulters missing the Gold and getting only Silver & Bronze.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:23
anonymous

Did they?

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 11:22
britexpat

Yes it does. Each time India wins a medal , parties are held and their lives change for the better - albeit briefly.

Did you not feel jubilation when Germany beat Holland in the Hockey ?

By Rizks• 12 Aug 2012 11:21
Rizks

A Babboon feel frm the tree in Amazon Forest and was hurted very badly. National Geography channel was showing it in Qatar...:(

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:19
anonymous

The USA has won 102 medals. There are many Americans in Qatar and the sports channels are showing the games in Qatar.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:17
anonymous

How does it matter, brit? Does the life of Indians change in Qatar depending on the medal count?

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 11:15
britexpat

It does matter because there are many Indians in Qatar and also the sports channels are showing the games in Qatar.

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:12
anonymous

200 Million UkEng, we don't deal in thousands.

By GodFather.• 12 Aug 2012 11:11
GodFather.

1 medal for every 200k population not bad..:)

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 11:09
anonymous

Does it really matter to Qatar and QatarLiving? Why don't the mods delete such useless threads immediately?

By anonymous• 12 Aug 2012 09:04
anonymous

Good job man !

By Prism• 12 Aug 2012 08:45
Prism

Good for the guy and congratulations to him. Nothing for India but it will be said so and thats the sad part.

By britexpat• 12 Aug 2012 08:24
britexpat

Well done to him and others like Gagan Narang.

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