Most select their very own future. For some, it’s the opposite manner round. For boxer Preeti Sai Pawar, it’s undoubtedly the latter.
Four Indian boxers — Nikhat Zareen, Lovlina Borgohain, Nitu Ghangas and Saweety Boora — gained gold on the recently-concluded World Championship in New Delhi. There’s one who didn’t win a medal however made the boxing world sit up and take discover.
Preeti’s (54kg) IBA Women’s World Boxing Championship marketing campaign ended with a slender defeat to Thailand’s Jutamas Jitpong (who misplaced the World Championship remaining to Zareen in 2022) within the Round of 16. But it wasn’t earlier than she handed a shocking defeat to 2022 silver medallist and World No 2 Perijoc Lacramioara (4-3) within the second spherical after a bout evaluation.
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While the Romanian suffered a setback, the pugilist from Bhiwani loved one of many highs of her nascent profession, made further particular by the shocking flip her life has taken within the final 5 years.
At 14, in eighth normal, Preeti liked learning and sports activities was nowhere within the image. That modified when her father, Somveer Sai Pawar, assistant sub-inspector in Haryana Police, and uncle Vinod Sai Pawar, a boxing coach, motivated her to take up boxing impressed by the occasions round them.
“Sports wasn’t my priority. I was good in my studies and always got positions in my classes. I was also very active in co-curricular activities,” Preeti tells Firstpost. “I never thought that I will be a sportsperson, but my father and uncle motivated me to enter this field. In the beginning, I told them that I cannot do this and won’t become a boxer but slowly after I started competing and training, my interest in boxing rose and then I continued with the sport.”
“There was a growing interest among girls to take up sports in Haryana back then after Sakshi Malik won the Olympic bronze (medal) in 2014 and the movie Dangal had come in 2017. Everyone felt that girls can be successful in sports,” the 19-year-old shares.
There’s not a lot to complain about for Preeti. She could also be an unintended boxer, however the ring has turn out to be her completely satisfied place, one thing that has fetched her vital victories within the meteoric rise.
After successful silver (Guwahati 2020) and gold (Panchkula 2021) medals on the Khelo India Youth Games, Preeti gained silver on the Youth Asian Championships in 2021. Her change to the senior stage additionally began with a bang — with a bronze medal on the 2022 Asian Championships in her first occasion at that stage.
It appears surreal. The first time she entered the ring in a contest, it led to a crushing defeat. She was inconsolable, however her father and uncle, with whom she trains in Meham (in Rohtak, Haryana), had only one recommendation — belief the method.
“My first bout was in the junior state level tournament and I lost that and got very nervous and emotional. That was when my father and uncle consoled me and made me understand that in a bout, one has to lose. ‘A defeat at the start is not a surprise. Your focus should be on becoming better with every fight and then victories and medals will come’. I was very emotional then, and could not control my tears,” the boxer, who can be learning BSc in Health and Physical Education from Lovely Professional University, recollects.
The manner Preeti dealt with the No 1 seed Lacramioara on the World Championship was a protracted distance from her early days. Displaying maturity, Preeti neutralised an aggressive Lacramioara’s recreation by not participating together with her in shut quarters. Instead of counting on shut exchanges, Preeti made full use of the ring together with her fast motion and earned the victory with the assistance of a counterattack.
“Perijoc was seeded No 1 so naturally I had some nervousness but once I entered the ring, it went away. In the ring, you only look at the fighter and not at their rankings. The first round went in my favour 3-2. The coaches asked me to maintain a distance and I followed the same but the second round was won by her 2-3. My coaches told me to give my best and I changed my strategy for the third round.
She was more comfortable in taking the close punches, so I decided to step back a little and counterattack. Fortunately, this worked for me,” she explains. She had defeated Hanna Lakotar of Hungary within the opening spherical by way of RSC (Referee Stops Contest). Her marketing campaign nonetheless ended towards Jitpong, a combat that taught the boxer that it’s necessary to have an equally good attacking and counter-attacking recreation apart from higher stamina.
“I have gained a lot of confidence from the Worlds campaign, but the defeat taught me that I need to be better with my decision-making. I had the lead against Jitpong but later surrendered it with some confusion in mind,” she admits.
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Apart from her uncle and father, Preeti additionally credit Inspire Institute of Sports (IIS) for her speedy progress. She has been coaching on the Bellary-based institute since 2021.
“At the institute, I get to spar with different female boxers. In Haryana, I only get to spar with boys. IIS has taken us to training camps outside India. Even foreign contingents come to the institute. They have supported me all the way since 2021 including providing all types of equipment.”
The robust performances thus far have seen her compete within the Olympic weight class (54kg) and with the Asian Games beginning on 23 September in Hangzhou, China, Preeti’s focus is on qualifying for the continental occasion and later gaining entry into the Paris Olympics.
“I want to continue in 54kg and the aim is Asian Games for now because Olympic qualifications will happen from there,” Preeti signed off.
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