Abandon passion or Pakistan — a stark choice for Mr. Musclemania

Abandon passion or Pakistan — a stark choice for Mr. Musclemania

January 18, 2016
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LAHORE, Pakistan — Salman Ahmed was alone in the crowd when he became the first Pakistani to win the Musclemania world bodybuilding title in Las Vegas last year, unable to afford an entourage of managers, coaches, promoters like his fellow competitors.

Now the 25-year-old is back in Pakistan and facing a choice: with no financial support from the government of his cricket-obsessed country and potential sponsors made skittish by its security issues, he must decide between giving up his glittering career — or leaving home.

“A bodybuilder has no future in Pakistan,” he said during a workout at his gym in a low-income neighborhood of the eastern city of Lahore.

The US Consulate has congratulated him on his historic win in the lightweight category at Musclemania, the world’s premier natural bodybuilding contest. Even Pakistan’s arch-rival India has been courting him by inviting him to speak at seminars in various cities.

But from Pakistani officials, he says, he has not heard a word.

“Cricket players get all the limelight, while other sportsmen suffer due to lack of attention and financial support,” Ahmed said. “Nobody in the government cared to even send me a congratulatory message.”

He says he has had “some very lucrative offers” from European countries and the US to compete for them instead.

“But then I would have to leave my home and my country, and I would not be able to wave the Pakistani flag when I win.”

Music pumps at the shabby, worn Body Shape Fitness Centre as mirrors reflect Ahmed and his protege, 21-year-old Hassan Butt, straining to lift weights so heavy that other gym-goers pause to gawk at them.

Bodybuilding is not a widely-practiced sport in Pakistan, though Butt — himself a national champion who vows to follow Ahmed’s path — says its popularity is growing in the era of the selfie because young people like to post pictures of their muscles on Facebook.

He admits, however, that for some the motivations are shallow: many young men pay their $5 a month to come to the gym and take a selfie of their “workout” to send to female friends, then leave without lifting a single weight.

The sport’s unpopularity has previously worked in Ahmed’s favor: he initially applied for university as a cricket player but the competition was too stiff.

Unable to afford the fees on his own, he tried his luck in bodybuilding — even then he was initially rejected, but after begging for a chance college authorities relented, warning he would have to bulk up.

Now he has a Masters in Human Resource Management from the University of Central Punjab but says starting salaries would pay only around $160 a month, while the proteins alone that he says he needs cost about $180.

He cannot count on financial support from his family — his father became ill during his time in university and often he found himself working three jobs while studying to support relatives.

And sponsors, he says, run away when they hear the word “Pakistan” — fearful of the country’s security situation.

“They are too afraid to come here,” he says. “I tell them that Lahore is safe... but they do not believe.”

Currently he manages the gym, once owned by his late brother — but the income it generates is hardly enough to pay the rent, much less support his training regime.

“It is a huge challenge,” he admits.

Ahmed began competing in local competitions through college and by 2014 was competing in Miami and Las Vegas.

After months of rigorous training, he took on some 600 bodybuilders from around the world at Musclemania last year with nothing but his own determination behind him.

“Koreans, Americans and European bodybuilders were in teams, they had managers and coaches and media promoters with them,” he says.
“I was alone there — a one-man team — and beat them all.” — AFP


January 18, 2016
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