• Saturday, April 20, 2024

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Commonwealth camaraderie: Mirabai Chanu one of the first to hail Pakistan’s 1st gold winner at Birmingham

(L-R) Pakistani weightlifter Muhammad Nooh Dastgir Butt (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images) and Indian weightlifter Mirabai Chanu (Photo by Clive Brunskill/Getty Images)

By: Shubham Ghosh

As soon as Nooh Dastagir Butt won Pakistan’s first gold medal at the ongoing Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, one of the first persons to lend a congratulatory hand was none other than Indian superstar Mirabai Chanu who has also won a gold in this edition of the Games.

As an Olympic medallist, Chanu has catapulted herself to superstardom and is not only an icon in India but also for weightlifters from the neighbouring nation.

“It was such a proud moment for me when she congratulated me and praised my performance,” weightlifter Butt told the Press Trust of India after winning the gold in the men’s 109+ kilogram (kg) category with a record lift of 405 kg.

CWG 2022 weightlifting
(L-R) Silver medalist David Andrew Liti of Team New Zealand, gold medalist Muhammad Nooh Dastgir Butt of Team Pakistan and bronze medalist Singh Gurdeep of Team India pose for a photo during the medal ceremony for the Men’s 109+kg Final on day six of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games at NEC Arena on August 03, 2022 in Birmingham, England. (Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

The 24-year-old Pakistani shattered all the three Games record — 173 in snatch, 232 in clean and jerk and the aggregate.

“We look up to Mirabai for inspiration. She has shown us that, we from the South Asian countries can also win an Olympic medal. We became so proud of her when she won the silver at the Tokyo Olympics,” Butt said.

Gurdeep Singh won bronze in the same category and Butt considers the Indian as one of his close friends.

“We have been very good friends for the last seven-eight years. We have trained together in abroad a few times. We are always in touch,” Butt let everyone know the bonhomie he shares with his Indian counterparts.

For Butt, it was never an Indo-Pak battle but an individual challenge to surpassing his best.

“It was not that I was competing with an India lifter. I just wanted to give my best and win it here,” he said of Gurdeep, who became the first Indian weightlifter to win a CWG medal in plus-weight category.

Butt has been to India twice for international events. First was the Youth Commonwealth Championship in Pune, Maharashtra, back in 2015, and the very next year for the South Asian Games in Guwahati in Assam.

“I’ve been to India two times and the support I received each time is unforgettable. I long to go back to India again,” he added.

“I think, mere Pakistan se jyada fans India mein hai (I think, I’ve more fans in India than back home),” he said in jest.

Amid the cross-border tension between the neighbouring countries, the Pakistani contingent had arrived for the South Asian Games in Guwahati-Shillong in 2016, only to “feel themselves at home”

“But when I was in Guwahati, the hotel staff became like my extended family and were in tears when I left. Such was the connection in those 10-15 days. They never made me feel that I am from Pakistan or their enemy.”

It has been six years since that championship and Butt wouldn’t mind visiting India again.

“Definitely, I look forward to visiting again. I never enjoyed any other competition like the way I did in India,” he added.

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