■ Thousands attend annual wrestling tournament at Deshmesh Darbar Sikh Temple in Lodi

A team of four members back up to avoid making contact with the raider of the opposing team, left, during a Kabaddi tournament at the Sikh Temple on Sunday, Oct. 2, 2011.
Monday, October 3, 2011: They're dressed in nothing but shorts as they duke it out on a pile of dirt. They get bruises, cuts and even bone fractures as 10 teams from Sikh temples throughout California and beyond compete in a way that most Americans wouldn't dream of.
More than 3,000 people crammed the grounds outside the Deshmesh Darbar Sikh Temple on Sunday for a full day of wrestling, basketball, volleyball, eating and praying at an annual event in the southern outskirts of Lodi. The festivities even included a 71-year-old Sikh man lifting a 125-pound weight.
Brawl breaks out at end of the day Several fights broke out late Sunday afternoon at the Deshmesh Darbar Sikh Temple's annual wrestling matches. San Joaquin County Sheriff's deputies were already patrolling the grounds, but extra units were sent to the temple when the fighting broke out at about 5:30 p.m. Lodi Police and the California Highway Patrol also sent officers to help sheriff's deputies control the crowd, according to sheriff's spokesman Les Garcia. The original fight started when part of the crowd thought the referee missed a call, Garcia said. Once deputies broke up the fight, other fights among the 3,000-plus participants and spectators started throughout the property, he added. There were no arrests, and no injuries were reported. It took about two hours to close down the event. — Ross Farrow |
But at the Sikh temple, they follow a tradition from their homeland — matches are held outdoors, on dirt, while sporting bare chests and feet.
"It's a very tough game," said Ajitpal S. Kahlon, president of the Lodi-based temple at Armstrong Road and West Lane. "The game started in the (Indian) villages."
The matches, called Kabaddi, feature a wrestler from one team challenging four wrestlers from the opposing team. The single wrestler chooses one of his opponents, and the two of them go at it on the dirt.
Ten teams came to Lodi on Sunday for the tournament, including one squad from England and another from Canada, said Amarjit Bedi, a trustee at the Deshmesh Darbar Temple. The remainder came from parts of California, including Sacramento, Modesto, Fresno and the Bay Area.
"Everybody loves this game," San Francisco resident Kuldip Singh said.
Singh, who went to a tournament last weekend in Lathrop, brought his 8-year-old son, Mandeep Singh, to watch the wrestling and see how the matches operate. Young Mandeep said he'd like to someday wrestle in a ring like the one he saw in Lodi.
Contact reporter Ross Farrow at [email protected].