Nikhat Zareen, the fifth Indian woman boxer to win a gold medal in the world championship. IANS
Sports

Overcoming every obstacle, Nikhat Zareen attains glory with sheer hard work & determination.

Nikhat Zareen, who on Thursday became the fifth Indian woman boxer to win a gold medal in the world championship, attained glory in a 13-year-long journey with sheer hard work and determination.

NewsGram Desk

Nikhat Zareen, who on Thursday became the fifth Indian woman boxer to win a gold medal in the world championship, attained glory in a 13-year-long journey with sheer hard work and determination.

Hailing from a middle-class and conservative Muslim family and coming from Nizamabad town, which lacked sports infrastructure, the girl overcame all odds with a steely resolve to carve out a niche for herself.

On Thursday, Nikhat's parents and her three sisters were elated and proud as she defeated Thailand's Jitpong Jutamas in the 52kg category to join the selected club of Indian women boxers who have achieved glory in the World Championship.

The 26-year-old achieved the feat in Turkey, 11 years after she bagged gold in the Junior World Cup women's boxing championship in the flyweight category in the same country. She was the first boxer from then undivided Andhra Pradesh to achieve the feat.

"When Mohammed Ali's daughter can do it, why can't I?" Nikhat had asked after taking to the boxing ring in 2009.

Third among the four daughters of Jameel and Parveen Sultana, Nikhat wanted to prove that she could do it. She finally proved her mettle with hard work, discipline and commitment.

Within six months after taking to the ring, she won the State championship gold in 2010 in Karimnagar. She was picked for the Rural Nationals in Punjab, where she bagged the gold.

The success run continued as she won the gold in the sub-junior nationals in Tamil Nadu.

Her father Jameel Ahmed was a sales officer in Saudi Arabia before returning home. "It is not easy for girls to take to sports, but in her case, it was not a difficult decision. She wanted to follow in the footsteps of her cousins, who are international boxers. So this is like a family game for her," Jameel Ahmed, a former state-level football player, had said after her 2011 victory.

Nikhat did not have to search for a coach either. Spotting the inborn qualities of a boxer, her uncle Mohammed Samsamuddin, started training her in the open space at the Sports Authority of Andhra Pradesh (SAAP) training center in Nizamabad. The lack of proper infrastructure in the town did not deter her from achieving her goal.

Nikhat started practicing with her three cousins, who were international boxers. According to Samsamuddin, she developed an interest in boxing after watching his sons, and practicing with them, and thus grew in confidence and courage.

Though winning a medal at the Olympics is Nikhat's ultimate goal, her bid in the 2020 Tokyo Olympics ended under controversial circumstances when Mary Kom qualified by defeating her in an intense and ill-tempered trial bout in 2019.

The Boxing Federation of India (BFI) had agreed to the trial bout after Nikhat had thrown the challenge. Earlier, the boxer from Telangana was not happy after the BFI had called off a trial bout at the last minute to send Mary Kom to the 2019 World Championships in Russia.

However, Nikhat put behind the bitterness and overcame a shoulder injury, which had kept her out of action for one year, to remain focused on her career. (AA/IANS)

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