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Vladimir Mestvirishvili, the Georgian coach who devoted his life to Indian wrestling and produced four Olympic medalists, passes away
Vladimir Mestvirishvili, the Georgian coach who devoted his life to Indian wrestling and produced four Olympic medalists, passes away

Indian Express

time10 hours ago

  • Sport
  • Indian Express

Vladimir Mestvirishvili, the Georgian coach who devoted his life to Indian wrestling and produced four Olympic medalists, passes away

Vladimir Mestvirishvili, the legendary wrestling coach who devoted his life to Indian wrestling and had a hand in four of the six men's Olympic medals, passed away on Monday. In his 80s, Vladimir died of age-related illness, Indian wrestlers said. Fondly called 'Lado', the wrestler-turned-coach from Georgia came to India as the national team coach in 2003, when wrestling was 'next to non-existent'. He went on to spend nearly two decades in Haryana and New Delhi, punting on young, untested wrestlers and turning them into Olympic medallists. Twice Olympic medallist Sushil Kumar, bronze winners Yogeshwar Dutt and Bajrang Punia, and Tokyo Games silver medallist Ravi Dahiya were all his products. Vladimir also coached World Championship medallists like Deepak Punia in his early years. 'Usne hamein ladna sikhaya (he taught us how to fight),' says Yogeshwar, the London Olympic bronze medallist. Bajrang, the Tokyo Games medal winner, adds: 'Today, our standing in world wrestling is respectful because of him. He dedicated his life, at least the last two decades of his life, to Indian wrestling.' In an Indian wrestling universe that isn't for the faint-hearted, many coaches and many foreigners have come and gone but Vladimir was a constant at the national camps in Haryana's Nidani — in the early years — and Sonepat. After the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) discontinued his contract following the Rio Olympics, citing his age and 'archaic' coaching methods, he moved to the iconic Chhatrasal Stadium in Delhi, stayed in a rented apartment in the Model Town neighbourhood and continued producing champion wrestlers. Vladimir was soft spoken, goofy and immersed himself in Indian, rather Haryanvi, culture. Vladimir could converse in Haryanvi and ate like them, and with them. He also picked up the classic Indian jugaadu mindset. 'In 2003, when he came, we didn't have many facilities. So, he set up most things himself, from mats to ropes,' Yogeshwar says. When India lacked quality mats to train on, Vladimir arranged them using his contacts. If those mats would not fit the floor size, the Georgian would be seen with tailoring equipment and fix it. 'I have seen how hard he worked. When I was drafted to the senior camp in 2012, he used to fix the mats himself if there were gaps. He cut them, adjusted and ensured the quality was good. He'd get ropes to displace them from the ceilings or trees, so that we could climb them to build core strength,' Bajrang says. 'We must not forget that while these are all common things now, it wasn't so 15 years ago. He taught us all of this. A coach will mostly be bothered about conducting training and the rest in his room. But not Lado.' Crucially, he taught a generation of Indian wrestlers — who were proficient in mud but amateur on the mat — 'how to fight, how to win a point and also defend'. Largely power wrestlers, Vladimir taught the Indians technique. Not one or two, Yogeshwar says, but almost 'everything from scratch'. Bajrang says he didn't dismiss the traditional mitti wrestling moves. Instead, he married them with the modern methods he'd picked up from his decades of experience in Eastern Europe and the rest of the world. 'I didn't know how to wrestle on the mat because I spent my early years wrestling in mud. The transition was tough but he taught me all the moves,' says Bajrang. His teaching style, too, was unique back then. Adds Bajrang, 'He demonstrated every technique. After I joined the camp, he made me his partner to show all the moves. All the other wrestlers would sit around the mat in a circle, watch him pull off the moves on me and learn. And later, they would be asked to repeat.' Very sad to hear of the passing away of legendary wrestling coach Vladimir Mershidivilli of Georgia. He coached Sushil, Yogeshwar, Bajrang, Ravi, Deepak & many other top 🇮🇳 wrestlers during their junior days. He was so dedicated & passionate. Everyone loved him. RIP Vlado ❤️🙏🏽 — Viren Rasquinha (@virenrasquinha) June 23, 2025 Watching, learning and repeating was his mantra, Yogeshwar says. 'Each daav would be repeated hundreds of times until he was satisfied that we had learnt it well,' the former wrestler adds. 'You won't find many coaches like him these days. For him, coaching wasn't just about teaching a few techniques or strategies, it went much beyond that. He massaged us during tournaments, even though we would say no, and treated us like his children.' Despite his vast contribution, Vladimir was never given his due. Dozens of coaches walked away with Dronacharya awards and other accolades but the federation ignored him, saying that as a foreign coach, he was 'paid more than the Indians' anyway. Not that Vladimir cared. He continued living the same simple life, living and breathing wrestling and quietly churning out champions.

Opinion: Beyond The Mat - Yoga, The Return To The Centre
Opinion: Beyond The Mat - Yoga, The Return To The Centre

NDTV

time4 days ago

  • General
  • NDTV

Opinion: Beyond The Mat - Yoga, The Return To The Centre

What is Yoga? You hear a familiar answer: a way to stay fit, reduce stress, or maybe a sequence of well-practised postures. You see glossy images: flexible bodies on Yoga mats, people meditating with closed eyes and calm faces. The worn-out cliche rings hollow: the union of mind, body and soul. Suppose Yoga were about the physical demonstrations that we are incessantly subjected to. Why would Arjuna, one of the physically fittest and finest warriors of his time, stand helpless on the battlefield? Why would Shri Krishna, the Yogeshwar, speak at length about Yoga not to someone physically unfit or unwell, but to someone already as physically competent as Arjuna? Yoga must mean something else. Yoga Through Krishna: Five Foundational Verses That Define It Let's turn to the Gita, not through interpretations, but through Shri Krishna's own words. These five verses open a different window into what Yoga truly means. 1. Renouncing attachment, and keeping the same attitude towards success and failure, you must act. This equanimity of mind is Yoga. Krishna isn't saying, "Accept whatever happens." He's asking us to drop the idea of winning or losing altogether. Not detachment after chasing goals-but freedom from the need to chase at all. Yoga here is about being free of the inner compulsion to chase outcomes, unaffected by inner turbulence. 2. True Yoga is when action comes from inner clarity - when actions are performed with equanimity and wisdom, they do not bind one. This "clarity" Krishna speaks of isn't about being sharp or strategic. It's the freedom to act without the ego pulling the strings. Even admired actions, if done with self-interest, stir up inner noise. But when action flows from detachment and understanding, it leaves no scar. Whatever quietens the ego is virtue. Whatever feeds it is sin. Yoga is when your core remains undisturbed, even as you act. 3. He who sees inaction in action and action in inaction is wise among men; he is a Yogi and a true performer of all actions. Krishna redefines action here. Most of our "doing" is reactive, compulsive, anxious movement without clarity. Though outwardly busy, we're inwardly inert. That's inaction in action. And when something shifts quietly inside - not out of emotion, but out of understanding - that's action in inaction. Yoga begins when we're no longer taken in by appearances and start looking at what's really driving us. 4. When the renunciate, having given up all desires and resolves, is no longer attached to sense objects or actions, then he is truly said to be established in Yoga. A yogi doesn't fight urges, he just sees through them. There's no rush to get something or become someone. He acts when there's clarity, and stays still when there is none. It's not suppression, it's the absence of inner pressure. The one who used to be driven is simply not there anymore. 5. He who is satisfied by knowledge and realisation, who is steady, self-controlled, and regards a lump of clay, a stone, and gold alike-he is a yogi. Here is Krishna's complete image of the yogi: one whose knowledge is not academic, but alive. He is not pretending to be calm - there's nothing left in him to be agitated. He doesn't crave applause, nor does insult shatter him. What's valuable or worthless to the world doesn't disturb his vision. His eyes don't flicker. His mind doesn't chase. That's Yoga. So, What Is Yoga? Yoga is not something you do - it's what remains when falsehood falls away. It is the union, through conscious acsendence, of your current (ordinary and lowly) state with your highest possibility. You can hold a pose, repeat a chant, or study scripture. But if your actions are still driven by fear, comparison, or insecurity, it's not Yoga - it's ego in disguise. Even spirituality can become another of the ego's tactics. That's why Yoga begins in honesty: "Why am I really doing this?" "Is it freeing me, or feeding my image?" Yoga is Not an Isolated Practice - It Must Pervade Your Entire Life It's tempting to treat Yoga like a morning ritual: before coffee, before emails. But it's not a wellness hack. Yoga is a fundamental shift in perception - when you begin seeing through the false. You can't spend your day driven by restlessness and expect peace from a few minutes of breathwork. Yoga isn't an act of willpower. It is submission to truth by way of resolute rejection of the false. Not greater effort, but deeper honesty. That honesty must inform your conversations, decisions, and relationships. Otherwise, it remains just another ritual: comfortable, but hollow. The Ego Can Hijack Yoga The ego is cunning. It will use anything, even Yoga, to sustain itself. You may start with good intent. But soon you want to "master" poses, impress others, be admired for being 'spiritual'. And Yoga becomes another project, another chase. But Yoga isn't here to refine the ego. It is here to dissolve it. When you start asking honestly - What am I chasing? That's when the real practice begins. The Inner Victory Krishna uses the term 'vijitendriya', who has conquered the senses. But victory doesn't mean suppression. You don't overcome the senses by fighting them; you outgrow them. When the ego stops craving pleasure and approval from the world, the senses stop rebelling. When the heart finds something real, the rest naturally settles. It's not denial, it's dissolution. When the false drops, nothing remains to control. This Yoga Day, Don't Just Celebrate. Inquire. Mass gatherings will happen. People will pose, chant, and post hashtags. But real Yoga doesn't begin in a group. It begins with honest observation. So take a moment, not to just display stillness, but to truly understand it. Ask: "Am I more at ease than last year?" "Have I moved toward simplicity or complication?" "Do my actions reflect deeper clarity?" If the answer is yes, even hesitatingly, then something false is already dropping. Stay with it. If not, just see that clearly. That seeing itself is the beginning. Because Yoga isn't a display. It's the quiet undoing of all that is false. (Acharya Prashant, a modern Vedanta exegete and philosopher, is a national bestselling author, columnist, and founder of the PrashantAdvait Foundation. An IIT-IIM alumnus, he is a recipient of the OCND Award from the IIT Delhi Alumni Association for outstanding contribution to national development.)

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