06 August,2021 08:02 AM IST | Tokyo | PTI
India’s Ravi Kumar Dahiya (orange) grapples with Russia’s Zavur Uguev in the 57kg final yesterday
Gracious in defeat, young Indian wrestler Ravi Kumar Dahiya on Thursday said perhaps he deserved only a silver medal at the Olympics at this stage and will strive to get better to complete the unfinished task of winning a gold at the 2024 Paris Games.
Dahiya, 23, competing in his maiden Games, settled for a silver after losing 4-7 to reigning world champion Zavur Uguev of Russian Olympic Committee in the freestyle 57kg title clash.
The wrestler said a silver medal will never give him satisfaction even though his performance would mean a lot for Indian wrestling. "I did not come to Tokyo for a silver medal. It will not give me satisfaction. Maybe this time I deserved only a silver because Uguev was a better wrestler today," Dahiya said. "I could not achieve what I wanted to," he said, disappointment palpable in his voice.
Dahiya tried every trick to breach the defence of Uguev but the Russian wrestler stayed solid in his defence, never allowing the Indian to launch his famously relentless attacks. "His style was very good. I just could not find a way to play my game. I don't know what I could have done. He wrestled very smartly," the two-time reigning Asian champion said.
His coach Mahabali Satpal said Dahiya was fighting from the front and the coaches in Tokyo should have advised him to wrestle from the sides. "The coaches [Jagmander Singh] there should have told him to change the strategy. The Russian was beatable, Ravi is a better wrestler than him, it's a golden chance that has been missed for a historic gold," rued Satpal, who has coached Dahiya since he was 12.
When told that his silver-winning effort also means a lot to Indian wrestling, Dahiya did not seem excited. "That is ok but I can't sit on a silver. I have to stay focussed and work on my technique and get ready for next Olympics Games," he said. His father Rakesh and his family have made a lot of sacrifices to get him to this stage.
Rakesh still works on leased fields to run the household. A windfall awaits as Haryana government has announced a R4 crore cash award for him. Dahiya said he was not thinking about money as all he is concerned about is winning an Olympic gold.
His village Nahri had been waiting for an Olympic medal, hoping that it will change the destiny of its habitants. "Yes, my village has given three Olympians, so it deserves basic facilities. It needs everything. Everything is important, good schools as well as sports facilities," he said.
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