Nikpai has been winning medals since the age of 19, when he took gold in his first major competition in India. Two years later, he was an Olympian.
If his most recent training under the guidance of coaches Bashir Taraki and Korea's Min Sin-hak takes him through qualification, he will be fighting for Olympic gold in east London's ExCel centre next August.
While the sport, whose name translates from Korean as "the way of foot and fist", is dominated by South Korea and China, Nikpai is loath to be drawn on the fighters he expects to prove toughest to beat.
"At the Olympics, all of the sportsmen are champions," he adds with a smile.
Having been first inspired to enter the sport by his brother Habib, he now trains twice a day with the national team. Competing at the Olympic Games was a longstanding goal for him, even during his early years in local competitions in Kabul.
"When I started out in competitions, I made a lot of mistakes, I got knocked down," he says. "I got a lot of experience from that."
"In 2006, when I got gold medal at the south Asia games, I felt like I was ready to fight in an Olympic match."
Given that it took him only two years to claim a bronze medal in Beijing, the additional four may be long enough to lift him two more places on the podium.
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