« Doggy style meets Bollywood ishtyle (Update) :+: Why so serious: The Dark Knight delves into politics? »
Looks like you are new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
BBC’s Against the Odds series features an Indian athlete who made it to Olympics in the face of overwhelming odds. [BBC]
The desi Rocky Balboas
img: via Hindu
Most professional sports in India, with the lone exception of cricket, offer little incentives for budding youngsters to follow that sport. Boxing is one such neglected sport in India. So pretty much any athlete not belonging to cricket probably belongs in the “Against the Odds” series.
The Indian boxing squad as a whole deserves special mention. [Hindu]
For starters, India has an unprecedented number of boxers qualify for the games.
“Not for nothing have five boxers made the qualification this time. It is India’s biggest ever boxing squad to the Olympics,” argues Chief coach Gurbax Singh Sandhu.
The qualifying boxers are no scrubs either.
One of the most experienced boxers in the squad, Akhil Kumar (54kg) is known for his aggression and guile as well as his gold winning feat in the 2006 Melbourne Commonwealth Games. Despite nurturing a wrist injury, he qualified for his second Olympics at the first Asian qualifying event in Thailand.
Vijender (75 kg), was a silver medallist at the last Commonwealth Games and had won a bronze in the Doha Asian Games.
But he lifted his performance to beat the Athens Olympics gold medallist Bakhtiyar Artayev of Kazakhstan in the President’s Cup meet in Chinese Taipei.
His recent gold winning performance in a strong field at the Chemistry Cup in Germany is another proof of the boxer’s ability.
Jitender Kumar (51 kg), A.L. Lakra (57 kg) and Dinesh Kumar (81 kg) also hold a lot of promise and have earned laurels at National and Asian level.
Vijender, the boxer featured on BBC’s “Against the Odds”, is also a police officer and a model, who has been featured among other places in the Indian Edition of Maxim.
The coach is pretty high on Akhil and Vijender.
Though Sandhu backs all the boxers in the squad, he agrees that Akhil and Vijender stand the best chance and are favoured to beat any boxer on their day. “Akhil is a confident boxer, very determined and strong willed. His sharp hooks and power-packed punches are world class. He is an athlete who has the rare ability to come back strongly from a trailing position,” Sandhu says.
Analysing Vijender, the chief coach says, “He is a cool boy who watches his opponent and tries to beat his strong points. His straight punches are deadly.”
The entire boxing unit seems to be confident about their chances at Beijing.
Whether their confidence is justified or misplaced will be determined by the number of Indian pugilists on the medals podium. Stay tuned.
« Doggy style meets Bollywood ishtyle (Update) :+:
Why so serious: The Dark Knight delves into politics? »
Discuss in our off-topic forums


[...] coverage of the boxing contingent. [UD] Other posts in olympicsAbhinav Bindra, a modern day William Tell? - August 12th, [...]
[...] part-time model Vijender Kumar, whom we talked about earlier on here as one of India’s brightest hopes for a medal lived up to expectations beating Ecuadoran [...]