top of page

Wrestling: Bajrang Punia overcomes bleeding head to win World Championship bronze


Bajrang Punia Al Bello/Getty Images

Bajrang Punia gave it his all, including his blood and sweat, as he overcame a deep cut on his head to win a bronze medal via repechage at the World Wrestling Championships in Belgrade on Sunday.

Bajrang now has four medals at the Worlds [a silver and three bronze]but this medal will hold a special place in his heart as he fought the entire tournament with a bandaged head after suffering a cut on his head in the opening bout on Saturday.

Bajrang's bronze medal bout against Sebastian Rivera was a proper contest: the Puerto Rican raced away to a healthy 6-0 inside the opening 30 seconds as the Indian took time to get used to his opponent's pace.


Once he did though, there was no stopping him. Bajrang fought back with a four-pointer and then initiated a takedown to level the scores with a minute to go. The aggressive, vintage Bajrang was back.

Rivera, a silver medallist at the 2022 Pan American Championships, targetted Bajrang's right leg and executed an ankle pick to take an 8-6 lead at the interval. It was the third time Rivera had outfoxed Bajrang with the same maneuver. But Bajrang, being the second-period wrestler that he is, came up with a takedown to reduce the deficit and followed it up with another one to snap up a 10-9 lead.

Rivera was running out of options with less than 30 seconds to go and tried the ankle pick once again, but Bajrang was alert. Rivera left it too late as he worked his way past Bajrang's defence and flipped him with under a second to go. But it was too late as the buzzer had gone and the Puerto Rican camp lost its challenge.

Earlier on Saturday, Bajrang had begun his campaign with a gritty win over Cuba's Alejandro Enrique Valdes Tobier. What stood out was not just the fact that he'd beaten the former Pan-American champion, but that he did so with a severely bleeding head. Bajrang composed himself well to get past the opponent he'd earlier beaten on his way to the Worlds silver medal in 2018.



2 views0 comments

Comments


bottom of page