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U20 Wrestling Championships: Priya wins gold , 3 Indian women, including reigning champ Antim, in final of

Unperturbed by a cut above her left eye, Priya easily got the better of Germany’s Laura Celive Kuehn 5-0 in the 76kg gold medal bout, which had to be stopped twice due to bleeding caused by the cut. Her lightning fast leg attacks rattled the German.

Amman (Jordan) : Priya became only the second Indian woman wrestler to win a junior world title while fast-rising Antim Panghal also stormed into the title clash as unprecedented success followed India at the U20 World Championships here on Thursday, August 17, a report in The Tribune, Chandigarh, says

Unperturbed by a cut above her left eye, Priya easily got the better of Germany’s Laura Celive Kuehn 5-0 in the 76kg gold medal bout, which had to be stopped twice due to bleeding caused by the cut. Her lightning fast leg attacks rattled the German.

Last year Antim had become India’s first junior women’s world champion. She put up a dominating show to win her three bouts with consummate ease.

For the first time, four Indian women wrestlers have reached the gold medal bouts at the U20 World Championships as Savita (62kg) and Antim Kundu (65kg) also stayed unbeaten today. Meanwhile, Harshita will fight for bronze in the 72kg after losing her semifinal.

Antim Panghal lost just two points en route the final, annihilating her first round opponent from Poland, Nikola Monika Wisniewska, in mere 68 seconds. 

She followed that up with a technical superiority win over China’s Xuejing Liang. In the semifinals, the wrestler from Hisar outplayed Russia’s Polina Lukina, again winning by technical superiority while not conceding a single point. 

Antim Kundu also blew away her competition. The Rohtak wrestler overpowered Russia’s Ekaterina Koshkina in the semifinal, winning 7-5. Before that, the 18-year-old beat Romania’s Maria Magdalena Pantiru 7-2 and pinned Poland’s Alicja Nowosad.

U17 world champion Savita was also in unstoppable form as she won all three bouts ‘by fall’. The 17-year-old defeated Serbia’s Dunja Lukic, Japan’s Suzu Sasaki and France’s Iris Mathilde Thiebaux to reach the final. 

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