Mahavir Singh Fugat is a former amateur wrestler trained in Indian wrestling style.
Ghaibi is a national hero who lives in Balali, Haryana.
His father forced him to quit sports in order to get a good job.
In desperation he could not win a medal for his country, he promised that his born son would win.
Disappointed with having four daughters, he gave up hope.
But when her eldest daughters, Gita and Babita, insult her, she comes to Mahavir's house after beating two boys in response to the revelations.
He recognizes their ability to be a wrestler and starts training them.
His methods look tough including early morning strenuous exercise and short forced haircuts.
Despite the villagers' reaction, he confronts them and trains them in his temporary mud pit.
The girls initially resent their father for treating her but soon realize that he cares about their future.
Encouraged, they voluntarily take part in occult competitions where they beat boys.
Unable to afford a boat, Mahavir uses mattresses and trains in freestyle wrestling to prepare them for competitive events.
Gita travels to the National Sports Academy in Patiala to train for the upcoming Commonwealth Games before winning state and national junior and senior championships.
When he goes there, Gita befriends him and his instructor Pramod Kadam (Geresh Kalkarni) insists on ignoring the discipline taught by Mahavira, whose training methods and wrestling techniques are completely different from those of his father. .
That's why he loses every game on the world stage.
During a visit to the house he apparently beats the weary Mahavir in a hard fight after he laughs arrogantly.
Babita reminds Gita of her mistakes and she must respect Mahavira.
Soon after, Babita won the national championship and went to the Gita Academy.
After the two sisters talk emotionally to Babita, Gita reconciles with Mahavira with tears.
Before the Commonwealth Games, Pramod Gita was forced to compete in the 51kg weight class instead of his usual 55kg.
Angered by this, Mahavira goes to Patiala with his nephew Omkar and secretly starts training girls.
Learning about this and being angry at Mahavir's intervention, Pramod wants the girls to be expelled. The sports administration warns but allows them to continue.
Mahavir is barred from entering the academy and girls are barred from leaving.
Determined to continue helping her daughters, Mahavir receives tapes from Gita's previous failed contests and trains her by pointing out her mistakes over the phone.
Competing in the 55kg class at the Games, Gita paved the way for the finals.
Mahavira constantly opposes Pramod's instructions while sitting in the audience and he follows his father's instructions.
Just before the gold medal, the jealous Pramod plots to lock himself in a room of Mahavir.
In the contest, Gita manages to win the first session but loses the second.
With 1-5 and 9 seconds left in the final session, she remembers the tactics shown by her father and the 5-pointer, and in the last three seconds she performs on her opponent, scoring 6-5. Bought.
Thus Sessions and Bout won 2-1.
In the process, she became the first Indian female wrestler to win a gold medal at the Commonwealth Games.
Mahavir returns to embrace his daughters, breaking Pramod's hopes of getting credit for the news.