A medallist on debut at amateur boxing's biggest stage, world championship bronze-winner Manish Kaushik (63kg) says he was sure of finishing on the podium in Russia, the day he triumphed in the selection trials.
The 25-year-old, who hails from Devsar village which is about 5km from the cradle of Indian boxing -- Bhiwani, signed off with a bronze on Friday in Ekaterinburg after losing 0-5 to top-seeded Cuban Andy Gomez Cruz.
"My draw was tough and before that I had a tough trial bout against Shiva (Thapa). Once I beat him, I got the confidence that I would win a world medal," Kaushik told PTI in an interview, referring to his long-standing home rivalry with Thapa, a three-time Asian medallist and a 2015 world bronze-winner.
The disappointment of the semifinal loss apart, Kaushik can take heart from a stellar run at the big event. Among the opponents he took down en route the semifinals was Mongolia's fourth-seeded Baatarsukhiin Chinzorig, an Asian Games silver-medallist and a two-time Asian Championships medal-winner.
But despite his debutant status in Ekaterinburg, Kaushik wasn't exactly a rookie, he is a silver-winner from last year's Commonwealth Games.
His initiation to the sport coincided with boxing's phenomenal rise in India after Vijender Singh, one of Bhiwani's most famous son, became the country's first Olympic medallist in the sport with a bronze in the 2008 Beijing Games.
"At that time, boxing became the in thing in Haryana because of Vijender. I used to watch boxers train in my village Devsar, which is about 5km from Bhiwani. I found it attractive and decided to take it up as a career," recalled the strapping youngster, who is a Subedar in the Indian Army.
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Son of a farmer, Kaushik said sports was never a passionate career goal for him and neither did he has any athlete in the family to feel inspired from.
"It's not that I wanted to be a sportsperson but once I started watching boxing, I liked it and decided to pursue it," was his simple response to a question on what drove him to the sport.
And how did his family respond to the choice?