Olympic-bound Indian wrestler Bajrang Punia pulled off a two-pointer in the last 30 seconds of the gold medal bout to defend his title at the Matteo Pellicone Ranking Series event, a result that propelled him back to world No. 1.
Up against Mongolia’s Tulga Tumur Ochir, Bajrang was trailing 0-2 till the final moments of the 65kg final but managed to level the scores 30 seconds from the final whistle. Since the last scoring point came from the Indian, he was declared the winner on criteria on Sunday night.
Bajrang’s leg defence seemed to be a particularly improved aspect of his game in the one-year break forced by the pandemic.
The 27-year-old though said he needs to work more on his defence as he is eyeing a medal at the Tokyo Games.
“I found that my leg defence has improved compared to where it was before the break. I have got better but it still needs more work. I also need to be better on my attacking moves,” Bajrang said.
Asked about his struggle in the final against the Mongolian, one of the three men’s Indian wrestlers to have qualified for the Tokyo Games said it indeed was tough. “The 65kg category is extremely competitive. The Mongolian has qualified for the Tokyo Games. He is not a weak opponent. All the wrestlers in this category have the same aim of doing well in Tokyo, so all are tough and we are all almost at same level,” he said.
Bajrang will now be back in the national camp but wants to train outside before the Asian championship, scheduled to be held in Kazakhstan from April 9 to 11.