close
Friday April 26, 2024

Judoka Hussain now eyes Olympics

By Alam Zeb Safi
February 23, 2018

KARACHI: After gaining the experience of playing in the 2016 Rio Olympics, Pakistan’s top judoka Shah Hussain has now set his eyes on lifting a medal in the 2020 Olympics which will be held at his hometown in Tokyo, Japan.

“In Rio I gained the experience and confidence and I should now get a medal in 2020 Tokyo Olympics,” Shah told ‘The News’ in an interview from Tokyo on Thursday.Shah was the first Pakistani judoka in history who took part in Olympics. He had qualified for the world’s prestigious extravaganza on the basis of continental quota. “I am now more matured and it’s time for me to click at the biggest stage,” the 24-year old Shah said. Shah has also to his credit silver medal in the 2014 Glasgow Commonwealth Games. When he was going to Rio he had weaknesses in different areas but now the son of former Olympic medallist boxer Hussain Shah says that he has overcome most of his grey areas. “I have worked hard over my weak areas and I now feel that I should now go for quality training which is the only way to qualify and win medal in Olympics,” Shah said.

In Rio Shah had faltered in his -100 kilogramme first bout when he had been beaten by Ukraine’s Artem Bolshenko in the round of 32. The 2020 Olympics qualifiers for judo would begin this summer and would last till 2020 summer.

Shah is being sent to Hungary for a couple of months training by the Pakistan Judo Federation (PJF) along with a handful of Pakistan’s grown fighters. And Shah said it would be a great tour.

“It will help me a lot,” said Shah, who has also been recruited by Army. “But I think how much I will improve in two months. I feel whether I should stay for longer time in Hungary or come to Japan and undergo training here for the qualifiers and a few vital international assignments, also including the Asian Games in Indonesia this summer,” Shah conceded.

He said training in Europe and Russia would be of great value. He expressed his desire to also compete in the National Games which are slated to be held in Quetta from April 21-29.

“Definitely I will compete in National Games if I return from Hungary,” Shah said. He said that he had been training hard alongside top national fighters of Japan. “I am doing hard training here in Tokyo and am in good shape,” Shah said. Shah also has to his credit a bronze medal in the 2014 Asian Championship in Bangkok.Besides Shah, Pakistan is also focusing on emerging youngster Qaiser Afridi and Japan-based Amina Toyoda as both have the capability to represent Pakistan at the biggest stage in future.