World Wrestling C'ships: Deepak Punia storms into final

He became the fourth Indian wrestler to qualify for 2020 Tokyo Olympics

deepak-punia-file Deepak Punia | via Twitter

Reigning junior world champion Deepak Punia on Saturday beat Switzerland's Stefan Reichmuth 8-2 in the 86-kg category semifinal at the World Wrestling Championship at Nur-Sultan in Kazakhstan on Saturday.

He will play Iran’s Hassan Yazdani Charati for gold tomorrow.

Earlier, he prevailed 7-6 in a tense quaterfinal to become the fourth Indian to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics. With one minute to go, he was trailing 3-6 but pulled off a take-down and then expose move to take a 7-6 lead in the dying moments of the tense bout.

Also doing a commendable job was Rahul Aware, who has moved to the semifinals in the 61kg non-Olympic category.

Both Deepak and Rahul overcame rough Kazakh wrestlers en route the semifinals.

Vinesh Phogat, Deepak Punia and Ravi Dahiya have already qualified for the 2020 Olympics with bronze medals.

However, Jitender (79kg) lost his quarterfinal while Mausam Khatri lost his first round in 97kg to reigning Olympic champion Kyle Frederick Snyder.

Deepak had bumped into home wrestler Adilet Davlumbayev in his opening round and looked a bit nervous before the bout, probably fearing partiality.

However, he played very smartly to defeat the home favourite despite trailing 0-5.

Adlilet was playing rough and was cautioned for poking Deepak. Consecutive takedown moves and a caution point brought Deepak on even terms at 5-5.

He converted an opportunity but also conceded a throw and it was 7-7. The home camp challenged the call and lost.

Deepak got one more point while the Kazakh lost one, sending Deepak into the next round.

He was hardly troubled by Tajikistan's Bakhodur Kodirov, who he beat 6-0 to move to quarterfinals.

In 61kg, Rahul Aware played his pre-quarterfinal against Turkmenistan's Kerim Hojakov.

The diminutive agile wrestler from Maharashtra was in complete control of the bout, which he ended with leg lace moves, winning by technical superiority.

Against Kazakhstan's Rassul Kaliyev, it was a tough bout but the Indian showed more craft than his rough opponent and won 10-7 in a roller-coaster quarterfinal. He was technically more sound and sharp.

Jitender began with an easy 7-2 win over Molodova's Gheorghi Pascalov.

In the pre-quarterfinals, he was up against Turkey's Muhammet Nuri Kotanoglu, the European Championship bronze medallist and again his immense upper body strength helped him to a 7-2 win.

However, he could not find a way to break the solid defence of Slovakia's Taimuraz Salkazanov, losing 0-4.

In 97kg, Mausam Khatri was no match to the American, losing by technical superiority.

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