Bajrang Punia: My focus is on winning medals for India, not rankings

World number one in 65kg men's freestyle rankings, Bajrang Punia is focused on bringing laurels to the country as he targets the 2020 Olympics.

Published : Jun 23, 2019 19:29 IST

Punia has eight gold medals from his previous nine international tournaments including last year's Commonwealth and Asian Games.
Punia has eight gold medals from his previous nine international tournaments including last year's Commonwealth and Asian Games.
lightbox-info

Punia has eight gold medals from his previous nine international tournaments including last year's Commonwealth and Asian Games.

Ace Indian wrestler Bajrang Punia has said he is happy to top the ranking charts but his main focus is to win more medals for the country with the 2020 Tokyo Olympics being the main focus.

Bajrang, who recently regained his number one position in 65kg freestyle category of the United World Wrestling ranking, said he is not under pressure to be the top wrestler as he simply believes on performing on the mat each time.

“I feel happy to be the number one wrestler but in true sense, rankings doesn’t matter much for me. My aim is to deliver my hundred per cent every time and get medals for my nation,” the 25-year old said.

It is for the first time when 15 grapplers from India have made to the rankings released by the UWW. Bajrang is happy over the development and believes it will motivate other wrestlers to perform better.

“It shows that Indian wrestling is in right direction as many of our wrestlers are in the top 10. It will certainly motivate others to do even better,” he opined.

Bajrang was defeated by Yianni Diakomihalis of the USA in a thrilling bout at the iconic Madison Square Garden last month, going down to the American by a close margin of 8 - 10 in the 65 kg category bout. He, however, scripted history as he became the only Indian to fight a bout at the Madison.

“It was a great moment to fight at the Madison Square as I am the only Indian who got an opportunity to do so. The American Wrestling Federation had invited me there and I learnt a lot there. It was a tough fight and I will always remember it. Many Indians came to watch the fight and cheered for me which boosted my confidence,” he said.

Bajrang, who mostly trains abroad, said that there is not much difference in practice but the weather is better. “I underwent training in America and the experience was great. Though the training is more or less same everywhere but the climate is ideal over there as in India, it gets difficult to practise in hot weather,” he said.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment