Yogeshwar Dutt

Yogeshwar Dutt
योगेश्वर दत्त
Personal information
Native name योगेश्वर दत्त
Nickname(s) Yogi, Pahalwan Ji[1]
Nationality Indian
Born (1982-11-02) 2 November 1982
Bhainswal Kalan, Sonipat district, Haryana[2]
Residence Haryana
Height 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)
Sport
Country India
Sport Wrestling

Yogeshwar Dutt (born 2 November 1982) is an Indian freestyle wrestler. At the 2012 Summer Olympics, he won the bronze medal in the 60 kg category.[3] He was awarded the Padma Shri by the Government of India in 2013.[4] He won a gold medal at the 2014 Commonwealth Games.

Career

2006 Asian Games

Yogeshwar had lost his father on 3 August 2006 just nine days before he boarded the flight to Doha for the Asian Games.[5] He also sustained a knee injury, but despite all the emotional and physical trauma he managed to win the bronze in the 60 kilogram category at the 15th Asian Games at Doha.[6]

2010 Commonwealth Games

At the 2010 Delhi Commonwealth Games, Yogeshwar overcame a career-threatening knee injury to win the 60 kg title. Yogeshwar, who went past Australian Farzad Tarash (16–0, 17–0), South African Marius Loots (7–1) and England's Sasha Madyarchyk (4–4, 8–0) on his way to the final, came up with an exceptionally skillful performance to win the gold for India.[7]

2012 Summer Olympics

On 12 August 2012, Yogeshwar Dutt provided a late boost to India's medals tally in the 2012 London Olympics by claiming a memorable bronze in the Men's freestyle 60 kg, thus becoming the third Indian wrestler to win an Olympic medal after K D Jadhav in 1952 and Sushil Kumar in 2008 and 2012.

He had defeated North Korean Ri Jong-Myong in the bronze medal bout thus winning the fifth medal for Indian contingent at the London Olympics 2012.

Earlier, Yogeshwar qualified for the 2012 Olympics by winning a silver medal at an Asian qualification tournament in Astana, Kazakhstan where he lost to Iranian Masoud Esmaeilpour (2–3, 0–1) in the final.

At the Olympics he lost to the Russian B Kudukhov 1–0, 2–0 and was knocked out from the pre-quarterfinal round. He got a chance to contest in the repechage rounds as Kudukhov reached the finals of the event.

In his first repechage round he went on to beat Franklin Gómez of Puerto Rico with a score of 1–0, 1–0. He got lucky against his opponent, winning the toss on both the occasions to earn a clinch position. Yogeshwar then scored 7–5 to beat Masoud Esmaeilpour with an aggregate of counted points 3–1 in Repechage Round 2. Esmaeilpour had beaten Yogeshwar at the Asian qualifications earlier that year.

He finally beat his North Korean opponent to clinch the bronze medal (0–1, 1–0, 6–0). He was exceptional in the last round, and clinched it in just 1:02 minutes.[8]

2014 Commonwealth Games

Yogeshwar Dutt won the gold medal in the men's 65 kg freestyle category by beating Canada's Jevon Balfour 10–0 in the finals.

Yogeshwar had earlier beaten Alex Gladkov of Scotland 4–0 in the pre-quarters and then easily defeated another Scottish wrestler Gareth Jones in the quarterfinals by employing his trademark Fitele (leg twisting) technique that he had used while winning the bronze medal at the 2012 London Olympics. In the semifinals, Yogeshwar successfully used his favourite technique again to get the better of Sri Lanka's Chamara Perera in just two minutes and three seconds. Yogeshwar won with a 0–5 verdict after taking a 10–0 lead on technical points.[9]

2014 Asian Games

Yogeshwar Dutt won the Gold in the 65 kg freestyle wrestling category by defeating Zalimkhan Yusupov of Tajikistan in the final at the Asian games 2014. Dutt won a closely fought final 1–0. Earlier, he defeated the opponent from China in the semifinal by Fall in another closely fought bout in which Dutt was trailing almost till the end. He defeated Jinhyok Kang of North Korea in the quarterfinal.[10]

2015

In 2015, he was clubbed into the ‘Icon’ category by Haryana Hammers[11]– one of the six teams playing under the first edition of Pro Wrestling League (PWL), which was held from 10 to 27 December in six Indian cities.[12]

Awards, rewards and recognition

For the bronze medal at 2012 London Olympic

See also

References

  1. "'रियो ओलिंपिक के आखिरी दिन 'पहलवान जी' से है गोल्ड की उम्मीद'".
  2. Hussain, Sabi (17 July 2014). "Getting a grip". The Tribune (Chandigarh). Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 10 August 2016.
  3. "Flipping arena with a toss, Dutt gives India its fifth medal". 12 August 2012.
  4. "Padma Awards". pib. 27 January 2013. Retrieved 27 January 2013.
  5. Father's dream drives Yogeshwar Archived 12 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine.. Hindustan Times (10 August 2012).
  6. "Medal winners at the 15th Asian Games on Dec. 13", People's Daily, (14 December 2006). Retrieved on 16 August 2008.
  7. Yogeshwar Dutt Phogat Olympics 2012 Player Profile, News, Medals – Times of India. Timesofindia.indiatimes.com (1 January 1970).
  8. Yogeshwar Dutt repe-charges to bronze, gets India 5th medal Archived 12 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine.. Hindustan Times (11 August 2012).
  9. "CWG 2014: Yogeshwar Dutt, Babita Kumari win gold as India's medal tally reaches 44 – The Economic Times".
  10. NDTVSports. "Asian Games: After Historic Gold, Yogeshwar Dutt Dedicates Medal to Father".
  11. Yogeshwar Dutt Bio Haryana Hammers . Haryanahammers.com/.
  12. Yogeshwar, Sushil highest bids at Pro Wrestling League auction The Hindu.com
  13. "Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award and Arjuna Awards Announced". Press Information Bureau, Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports. 19 August 2012. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
  14. "Haryana chief minister announces cash award of Rs 1 crore to Yogeshwar Dutt". 12 August 2012.
  15. After bronze, Dutt looks to go all the way at Worlds. Indian Express (16 August 2012).
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