Olympic-bound Ravi Dahiya could not take advantage of a tiring Gulomjon Abdullaev in the final after outclassing the same Uzbek wrestler in his opening round and settled for a silver medal at the Poland Open in Warsaw on Wednesday. (More Sports News)
Ravi went for several double-leg and right leg attacks but Abdullaev stayed strong in his defence, showing vast improvement from his first round drubbing.
None of his attempts fructified but Ravi did not seem to have a plan B and instead conceded points on counter-attack.
The Uzbekistan grappler was gasping for breath in the second period but Ravi still could not breach his defence and eventually lost the title clash 3-5.
In his previous bouts, Ravi had outlasted his opponents, who lost steam by the time second period began. However, it did not work in the final.
All his opponents attacked his left leg again and again but Ravi, the reigning Asian champion and 2019 World Championship bronze medallist grappler's superior stamina pulled him through in his bouts.
Competing in only his second competition of the season, Ravi began with an easy 10-1 win over Abdullaev but struggled against Kazakhsthan's Adlan Askarov before prevailing 13-8.
He sealed his spot in the semifinals with a 9-5 win over American Nathan Khalid Tomasello, who like Ravi, usually, competes in 57kg.
Ravi then reached the final with a 7-4 win over Iran's Reza Ahmadali Atrinagharchi.
The most challenging bout for Ravi turned out to be his second round duel against Askarov. It was all about stamina and power as the Indian effected a dramatic turnaround after trailing 0-8 to win against the Kazakh.
Askarov, the Asian Championship silver medallist, stunned Ravi with a flurry of double-leg attacks as the Indian was struggling to negotiate with the Kazakh wrestler's fast moves. Even as Ravi got himself positioned for counter attacks, he could not execute them.
It was a strange sight to see Ravi struggling and his defence falling apart. He was just one move and two points away from an embarrassing defeat by technical superiority.