Salman Ahmed was distant from everyone else in the group when he turned into the first Pakistani to win the Musclemania world lifting weights title in Las Vegas a year ago, not able to bear the cost of an escort of supervisors, mentors, promoters like his kindred rivals.
Presently the 25-year-old is back in Pakistan and confronting a decision: with no monetary backing from the administration of his cricket-fixated nation and potential patrons made sketchy by its security issues, he should settle on surrendering his sparkling vocation or leaving home.
"A muscle head has no future in Pakistan," he said amid a workout at his rec center in a low-salary neighborhood of the eastern city of Lahore.
The US Consulate has praised him on his memorable win in the lightweight class at Musclemania, the world's head regular working out challenge. Indeed, even Pakistan's most inviting so as to outstanding adversary India has been courting him to talk at classes in different urban areas.
Be that as it may, from Pakistani authorities, he says, he has not heard a word.
"Cricket players get all the spotlight, while other sportsmen endure because of absence of consideration and money related backing," said Ahmed.
"No one in the administration minded to try and send me a celebratory message.
"He says he has had "some extremely lucrative offers" from European nations and the US to go after them.
"In any case, then I would need to leave my home and my nation, and I would not have the capacity to wave the Pakistani banner when I win."
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