World
championship silver medallist says he was at least hoping that his coach Anil
Dhankar gets Dronacharya.
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New Delhi(Agencies): For
the third year in a row, world championship silver medallist boxer Amit Panghal
has been overlooked for a national sports award. The probable reason? A failed
dope test eight years back, when he was a rising boxer in the youth system.
Panghal had served a ban of 18
months in 2012-13 after testing positive for an anabolic steroid. As per the
eligibility criteria for the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, “Sportspersons who have
been penalized or against whom enquiry is pending/ongoing for use of banned
substances…will not be eligible for the award.”
“It was during my youth level and my dope ban
was reduced from two years to one and a half years because I had consumed it
inadvertently when I was sick,” Panghal said. “Why is that part not
acknowledged? Now it seems as if I am going to be tainted for life.”
The 24-year-old has come a
long way since then to become one of the finest amateur boxers in the country.
In 2018, he won gold at the Asian Games. The next year, he won the Asian
Championships, became India’s first male boxer to win a silver medal at the
World Championships, and became the world’s No1 boxer in his weight class
(52kg), where he continues to reign.
In both 2018 and 2019, Panghal
had applied for the Arjuna, without any luck. This year, the Boxing Federation
of India recommended him for the Khel Ratna, while the Indian Army put his name
forward for the Arjuna. A Subedar in the Army, Panghal was given the Vishist
Sewa Medal after his feat at the World Championships.
Panghal said he was not
expecting an award this year too, but was more pained to see that his coach
Anil Dhankar—a former national medallist—was also sidelined for the
Dronacharya.
“I have consistently won medals for the
country in the last few years at the international level,” Panghal said. “I am
being felicitated by the sports ministry and given cash awards by the
government. Then why am I being neglected for the Arjuna and Khel Ratna awards?
It is a big disappointment in an Olympic year.
“I was at least expecting my coach to be given
the Dronacharya. He has made me a champion. A coach at the grassroots in India
works hard to groom an athlete. I had no money to spend on boxing. He invested
his money, time and energy, bought me equipment, boxing gloves, shoes, and took
care of my diet,” Panghal, who comes from a village called Myna in Rohtak,
Haryana, said.
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