Back in 2011, a younger Parveen Hooda heard the munadi wala (city crier) making an announcement about sarpanch Sudhir Hooda organising a boxing academy in her village Rurki close to Rohtak. She would urge her father Lakhpat Singh to get her enrolled within the academy, though the household’s monetary situation wasn’t nice. But with the academy not charging any charge from its trainees, that downside was solved.
On Wednesday, 21-year-old Parveen misplaced by a 1:4 break up resolution in opposition to Amy Broadhurst of Ireland within the 63kg semi-final of the IBA World Women’s Boxing Championship in Turkey, not earlier than making certain a medal on the world stage. Now, her father and coach had been planning to make an announcement about her feat by the village munadi wala earlier than her return residence.
“I had become the sarpanch of the village in 2011 and decided to open a boxing academy for the village kids. I got the announcement of the academy made through the munadi wala and more than 100 kids, including 60 girls, had come to enquire. I remember Parveen asking about the fee and rushing home to tell her father that there will be none. Since that day, I have seen the same passion for boxing in her every single day. We will be making the announcement in the village for her grand welcome,” Parveen’s coach Sudhir Hooda informed The Indian Express.
BRONZE ! 🥉
🇮🇳’s #Parveen bagged 🥉 to complete her run on the #IBAWWC2022 in Istanbul 🇹🇷 !
Congratulations, champ! 👏#PunchMeinHaiDum#IstanbulBoxing#Boxing pic.twitter.com/h3oR9i9GFV
— Boxing Federation (@BFI_official) May 18, 2022
The teen would first win the sub-junior title in Haryana earlier than changing into the nationwide sub-junior champion in Kolkata in 2011. While the interval from 2012 to 2016 wouldn’t see any sub-junior or junior occasions being performed because of the ban on the then Indian Boxing Federation, and coach Hooda shifting to Rohtak, it meant that the teen would journey in an auto to the stadium from her village.
“When she first came to train at the village, she weighed less than 25 kgs. So, my first focus was to make her add weight. The one thing which I noticed was that she displayed good speed during sparring. In training, she would always dodge the boys and return with counter-punches. Her strategy was always to prompt them to hit her and then escaping the punches before hitting combinations of counter-punches,” says the coach.
Parveen Hooda with dad and mom Lakhpat Singh and Neelam.
While the sub-junior nationwide gold would get Hooda a money award of Rs two lakh from the Haryana authorities, the very fact that there have been no home tournaments for 4 years, made the household take into consideration the funds. While coach Sudhir would handle all of the tools and coaching bills, the household typically needed to borrow cash as effectively. “She knew the family’s condition and would never ask for money for getting gloves or shoes. But we would often borrow money from friends and relatives and repay the loan with whatever we earned from the farmland or selling milk of a buffalo after Parveen had had her share of milk. Later, we got another buffalo for some extra income to support her dream,” says mom Neelam.
Steady progress
The teen would turn into the nationwide youth champion within the 54 Kg class in 2017 earlier than successful a silver medal on the Youth Nations Cup in Serbia the identical 12 months. Parveen’s identify could be despatched by her coach to Boxing Haryana for the trials for the nationwide camp. There, she would rating a 5-0 win over Asian Games medallist and former world champion Sarita Devi aside from two different wins to make it to the nationwide camp within the 60kg class. The teen would then win a bronze medal on the Cologne World Cup earlier than successful a silver within the President’s Cup in Kazakhstan, the place she beat 2018 World Championship bronze medallist Karina Ibragimova.
The teen would first win the sub-junior title in Haryana earlier than changing into the nationwide sub-junior champion in Kolkata in 2011.
“The win over Sarita Devi meant a lot for her confidence and prompted her to improve her game rather than taking the pressure to get medals,” says the coach.
Parveen, who made a mark within the 60 kg class, an Olympic weight class, with medals in Kazakhstan, Germany and India Open in 2019, needed to shift to 63 kg final 12 months after she joined Indo-Tibetan Border Police and underwent a four- month coaching stint. While the IBA has launched 66 kg as one of many two new weight classes in girls’s boxing for 2024 Paris Olympics with 60 kg too being a weight division, she shall be eying the 66 kg division publish the world championships.
“Her strength has been coming from left or right after drawing the opponent’s punch and to get her counter- punches going. Today also, she was able to do that but the Irish boxer displayed better control. The 66kg class will demand a lot of stamina and if she has to be a quota and medal contender for India at the Olympics, she has to increase her stamina apart from adding more range of power punches, which work in this weight,” says the coach.