<p>All four Indian free-style grapplers competing on the opening day of the UWW World Championships lost their respective bouts on Saturday, in a disappointing start to the country's campaign at the global event, which is also a 2024 Paris Olympic qualification tournament.</p>.<p>Only Abhimanyu, in 70kg, showed the determination to slug it out by reaching the quarterfinal before his run was ended by Zain Allen Retherford of the United States.</p>.<p>The American, ranked No.2 in the world, secured a 9-2 'win by decision' to advance to the semifinals.</p>.IOA asks world wrestling body to keep WFI suspension in abeyance; seeks urgent meeting.<p>Abhimanyu, the bronze-medal winner at the U23 World Championships in June and ranked 26th in the world, had earlier upset Ukrainian world No.7 Ihor Nykyforuk 19-9 by effecting a victory by fall (VFA) before defeating Moldova's Nicolai Grahmez 13-2 (technical superiority) to secure a place in the quarters.</p>.<p>He, however, ran into Allen Retherford, runner-up at the 2022 World Championships in Belgrade last year, and the Indian was no match for the 28-year-old American.</p>.<p>Abhimanyu was in great form in the first round against the higher-ranked Nykyforuk, finishing the contest in 5 minutes, 41 seconds. The referee stopped the contest 2.41 minutes into the second three-minute session, after Abhimanyu had also dominated the first three-minute session, to take a 5-0 lead.</p>.<p>The other three Indians -- Akash Dahiya (61kg), Sandeep Mann (86kg) and Sumit (125kg) -- couldn't progress beyond the pre-quarterfinal stage, with Mann falling in the second round of qualification.</p>.<p>Abhimanyu, Akash and Sumit can still hope to win a bronze medal through the repechage route. The repechage comes into effect for wrestlers who lose in the pre-quarterfinals or later. It allows the wrestlers a chance to revive themselves in the competition if the opponent they lost to reaches the final.</p>.<p>Akash (61kg), despite beginning on a winning note and defeating his Moldovan opponent Leomid Colesnic 10-5, lost his pre-quarterfinal contest to Uzbekistan's world No.6 Jahongirmirza Turobov.</p>.<p>Akash, ranked 21st here, was no match for Turobov, the gold medallist at the 2021 Asian Championships, with the Ukrainian earning a victory by fall (7-4).</p>.<p>In the 86kg free-style category, Mann got the better of Dejan Mitrov of North Macedonia with a win by technical superiority (10-0), but was no match for Lin Zushen in the second round of qualification losing 0-11, with the referee declaring the Chinese winner on technical superiority with nearly 45 seconds still remaining in the contest.</p>.<p>India's 125kg grappler Sumit, after an easy first-round qualification contest against Japanese Taiki Yamamoto, whom he beat 3-1, lost his pre-quarterfinal contest to a far superior opponent in Poland's Robert Baran.</p>.<p>The seventh-seeded Polish wrestler, silver medallist at the European Championships and quarterfinalist at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games, was just too good for the Indian, securing a 'win by decision' VPO 3-0.</p>.<p>The finals in the four weight categories will be held on Sunday.</p>.<p>India is competing in the Worlds under the United World Wrestling (UWW) flag after the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) was suspended for failing to hold elections in the time-frame given by the world body.</p>
<p>All four Indian free-style grapplers competing on the opening day of the UWW World Championships lost their respective bouts on Saturday, in a disappointing start to the country's campaign at the global event, which is also a 2024 Paris Olympic qualification tournament.</p>.<p>Only Abhimanyu, in 70kg, showed the determination to slug it out by reaching the quarterfinal before his run was ended by Zain Allen Retherford of the United States.</p>.<p>The American, ranked No.2 in the world, secured a 9-2 'win by decision' to advance to the semifinals.</p>.IOA asks world wrestling body to keep WFI suspension in abeyance; seeks urgent meeting.<p>Abhimanyu, the bronze-medal winner at the U23 World Championships in June and ranked 26th in the world, had earlier upset Ukrainian world No.7 Ihor Nykyforuk 19-9 by effecting a victory by fall (VFA) before defeating Moldova's Nicolai Grahmez 13-2 (technical superiority) to secure a place in the quarters.</p>.<p>He, however, ran into Allen Retherford, runner-up at the 2022 World Championships in Belgrade last year, and the Indian was no match for the 28-year-old American.</p>.<p>Abhimanyu was in great form in the first round against the higher-ranked Nykyforuk, finishing the contest in 5 minutes, 41 seconds. The referee stopped the contest 2.41 minutes into the second three-minute session, after Abhimanyu had also dominated the first three-minute session, to take a 5-0 lead.</p>.<p>The other three Indians -- Akash Dahiya (61kg), Sandeep Mann (86kg) and Sumit (125kg) -- couldn't progress beyond the pre-quarterfinal stage, with Mann falling in the second round of qualification.</p>.<p>Abhimanyu, Akash and Sumit can still hope to win a bronze medal through the repechage route. The repechage comes into effect for wrestlers who lose in the pre-quarterfinals or later. It allows the wrestlers a chance to revive themselves in the competition if the opponent they lost to reaches the final.</p>.<p>Akash (61kg), despite beginning on a winning note and defeating his Moldovan opponent Leomid Colesnic 10-5, lost his pre-quarterfinal contest to Uzbekistan's world No.6 Jahongirmirza Turobov.</p>.<p>Akash, ranked 21st here, was no match for Turobov, the gold medallist at the 2021 Asian Championships, with the Ukrainian earning a victory by fall (7-4).</p>.<p>In the 86kg free-style category, Mann got the better of Dejan Mitrov of North Macedonia with a win by technical superiority (10-0), but was no match for Lin Zushen in the second round of qualification losing 0-11, with the referee declaring the Chinese winner on technical superiority with nearly 45 seconds still remaining in the contest.</p>.<p>India's 125kg grappler Sumit, after an easy first-round qualification contest against Japanese Taiki Yamamoto, whom he beat 3-1, lost his pre-quarterfinal contest to a far superior opponent in Poland's Robert Baran.</p>.<p>The seventh-seeded Polish wrestler, silver medallist at the European Championships and quarterfinalist at the 2016 Rio Olympic Games, was just too good for the Indian, securing a 'win by decision' VPO 3-0.</p>.<p>The finals in the four weight categories will be held on Sunday.</p>.<p>India is competing in the Worlds under the United World Wrestling (UWW) flag after the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) was suspended for failing to hold elections in the time-frame given by the world body.</p>