The 24-year-old was not even meant to be in the team till the second half of July which is when fortune smiled on him and he was handed a wildcard entry by the Asian Boxing Confederation (ASBC).
"When I got to know that I have got a wildcard entry, I went around confirming it with every coach, I kept asking 'is this right?' I asked each one of them. I asked everyone and only after each one of them said that I have made it, I finally eased up a bit," the relief was palpable as Gaurav spoke to PTI during an interview after the bout.
The most recent of these quarterfinal exits happened in the Asian Championships in Tashkent earlier this year, where he twice missed the chance to qualify directly for the world showpiece.
"I have nearly always lost in the quarterfinal stage of every tournament that I have competed in. Here also, once I reached quarters, I was having these negative thoughts that 'may be again the same thing will happen, I will lose, that I am not good enough'. But then another part of me was also telling me to break this jinx," he spoke about how he sparred with creeping self doubts.
"It is the toughest part of being an athlete, to control the mind. I was having all kinds of thoughts. All of them were not negative but then not every thought was positive too. There was a lot of noise in my mind, something which only I could hear," smiled the youngster.
And now, Gaurav might become the first Indian boxer to win a medal better than bronze at the prestigious championships should he go on to win his semi-final on Thursday.
Gaurav will fight his bantamweight (56kg) semifinal bout against American Duke Ragan tomorrow.
By advancing to the last-four stage, he joined Vijender Singh (2009), Vikas Krishan (2011) and Shiva Thapa (2015) in a select band of Indian boxers to have finished on the podium at the biennial mega-event.
Tomorrow, he wants to go a step ahead of Vijender, Vikas and Shiva and make the final to ensure that India finishes with a medal better than bronze.
This, despite the fact that he had been in good form coming into the tournament. He had won a gold medal at an invitational tournament in Czech Republic in July but was still a long way off from being even considered a top medal contender here.
However, his prequarterfinal win over Ukraine's Mykola Butsenko, a two-time European Championships' silver-medallist and 2013 world championship bronze-winner, brought him into focus.
He is ready to fight pain as he would like to add a different colour to his medal.
India's Swedish coach Santiago Nieva, perhaps, summed it up best.
"He got a lucky break, he made it count. That's luck, that's life.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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