Moneycontrol
HomeSportsOlympics 2024Outfought in semis, Aman Sehrawat keeps alive India’s wrestling hopes at Paris 2024
Trending Topics

Outfought in semis, Aman Sehrawat keeps alive India’s wrestling hopes at Paris 2024

Incidentally, Sehrawat comes from the same Chhatrasal Stadium in Delhi, which has given India Olympic medallists like Sushil, Yogeshwar Dutt and Ravi Dahiya.

August 08, 2024 / 23:41 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Aman Sehrawat keeps alive India’s wrestling hopes at Paris 2024. (PTI Photo)

Aman Sehrawat had stormed into the men’s 57kg freestyle wrestling semi-finals with two comprehensive wins earlier on Thursday. He was packed off as swiftly in the last-four round bout by Rei Higuchi after that. The six-minute bout was over in just over two minutes. The top-seeded Japanese ended the contest with a 10-0 verdict. It ended almost as soon as it started.

Sehrawat stays alive for a bronze medal nonetheless. It will be his if he beats Darian Toi Cruz of Puerto Rico on Friday. These wrestling events award two bronze medals, but unlike in boxing, the semi-finalists do not get them just by reaching that stage. They go through the repechage rule and that’s what the 21-year-old Indian will have to overcome to keep intact India’s medal-winning run in Olympic wrestling started by Sushil Kumar in 2008.

Story continues below Advertisement

Incidentally, Sehrawat comes from the same Chhatrasal Stadium in Delhi, which has given India Olympic medallists like Sushil, Yogeshwar Dutt and Ravi Dahiya. The last mentioned had won silver in the same 57kg class in Tokyo. The Olympic debutant could have had a go at it or more had he beaten Higuchi. But the 2016 Olympic silver-medallist made it a virtual no-contest.

Given the way Sehrawat had revived the Indian wrestling campaign at Paris 2024, with two technical superiority wins (a lead of 10 points to call the bout off), against Vladimir Egorov of North Macedonia and Armenia’s Zelimkhan Abakarov in the first two rounds, there were high hopes of him. Although the Japanese was seeded first, at fifth, the Indian was not exactly a pushover.