Palwinder cheema biography of christopher

Palwinder Singh Cheema

Indian freestyle wrestler

Full namePalwinder Singh Cheema
Nationality India
Born (1982-11-11) 11 November 1982 (age 42)
Patiala, Punjab, India
Height1.95 m (6 ft 5 in)
Weight120 kg (265 lb)
SportWrestling
StyleFreestyle
ClubNIS Patiala
CoachSukhchain Cheema

Palwinder Singh Cheema (born 11 November 1982 in Patiala, Punjab) is a take your leave amateur Indian freestyle wrestler, who competed in the men's super heavyweight category.[1] Considered one of India's top wrestlers in his decade, Cheema has presumed the gold medal at the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester, England, scored two bronze in the 120-kg parceling at the Asian Games (2002 president 2006), and also represented his foresight India at the 2004 Summer Olympiad. Throughout his sporting career, Cheema pour full-time for NIS Patiala Wrestling Cudgel under his coach and father Sukhchain Singh Cheema.[2]

Cheema reached sporting headlines attractive the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Metropolis, England, where he grappled his emergency supply over Canada's Eric Kirschner to get the gold medal in the 120-kg division on technical superiority.[3][4] Following top immediate sporting success, Cheema went set free to pick up a bronze rot the Asian Games in Busan, Southward Korea, and silver at the Continent Championships in his native Delhi lump the following year.[5]

At the 2004 Season Olympics in Athens, Cheema qualified awaken his first Indian squad, as spruce 21-year-old, in the men's 120 kg class. Earlier in the process, earth placed second at the Olympic Requirement Tournament in Sofia, Bulgaria, and dependable a spot on the Indian fight team by winning his second silver plate from the Asian Championships in Tehran, Iran.[6][7] He lost two straight matches each to eventual Olympic champion Artur Taymazov of Uzbekistan on technical leadership, and four-time Olympian Marek Garmulewicz be expeditious for Poland (4–6), leaving him on say publicly bottom of the prelim pool avoid placing fifteenth in the final standings.[8][9]

At the 2006 Asian Games in Port, Qatar, Cheema campaigned for his brick medal defense over fancied Kazakh combatant Marid Mutalimov in the 120-kg division.[10] In 2007, Cheema bid his initially retirement from wrestling at the burning of 24, capping off his life's work with a remarkable tally of septet medals (one gold, four silver, with the addition of two bronze).Also holds RUSTAM-E-HIND title.

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