Tokyo Olympic bronze medallist Bajrang Punia has come out in support of Vinesh Phogat and her assertion that athletes can be vulnerable to mental health issues and should not face brickbats from rogue officials. (More Sports News)
Bajrang Punia, who is in rehab after suffering a grade 2 tear in his right knee and will miss the upcoming world wrestling championships, said Vinesh has raised some pertinent issues and the federation needs to act and provide players with all the help they require.
At Tokyo 2020, Punia faced a tough choice between a lengthy rehab and a career-threatening injury but the wrestler risked everything and defeated Kazakhstan's Daulet Niyazbekov 8-0 to win bronze in the 65kg freestyle category.
Bajrang Punia, who went to Tokyo 2020 as India’s brightest medal prospect, lost in the semifinals due to a knee injury that resurfaced during the Games. It has now appeared that he had also pulled his hamstring. He had suffered the injuries during training, a month before the Games and a heavy knee strapping cost him the semifinal bout against Haji Aliyev of Azerbaijan.
For the 27-year-old Haryana wrestler, who hails from Khudan Village of Jhajjar district, this was his first Olympics. Excerpts from a conversation with Outlook.
Outlook: Do you think your target was completed at the Tokyo Olympics?
Bajrang: Yes and no. The Olympic medal was missing from my collection but I have that too now. But as far personal goal is concerned, I missed out on gold. So, my target for Olympics is not complete. I went to Tokyo searching for gold and it didn’t happen.
Q: Your injury resurfaced at the wrong time and getting injured so close to the Tokyo 2020, did that hurt you chances?
A: The injury hurt me a lot. I was away from the mat for 20-25 days. I was doing light training but it was a learning curve. Ahead of the last bout, I told doctors not to strap my knee. I told them that it’s either medal or my leg. I risked it all.
Q: What is your current injury status and when can we see you back on the mat?
A: I think my injury will heal in five-six weeks and the good news is no surgery is required. It’s a grade 2 tear and surgery would have meant extended recovery time. I can’t train now but will start only after my rehab is complete.