India at Tokyo 2020: A Roadmap

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  • munna219777munna219777 28505 Points
    edited June 2021
    Tajinder Singh Qualified for Tokyo.
    Also made Asian Record I think.

    Dutee Chand broke National Record with 11.17s but failed qualification mark of 11.15s

    Hima Das failed to qualify in 200. 22.80s was the qualifying mark. She clocked 22.88s

    4 x 100m Womens Relay there is some hope based on rankings ?? 43.37 s
    deepu
  • munna219777munna219777 28505 Points

    Well, Hima Das can still qualify for the Tokyo Olympics via her performance during the Inter-State National Athletics Championship, which will be held on 25th June 2021.





    dhritiman7
  • BadBad 5141 Points
    edited June 2021
    Great achievement by Sajan Prakash(first ever Indian Swimmer to qualify for Olympics swimming via A Category Standard).

    Srihari Natraj also missed A Category mark in his category by 0.05 sec.

    This means our Swimmers are also showing improvement. Great job..


    Nagendramunna219777ashindia
  • munna219777munna219777 28505 Points
    okay
    Khajan Singh Tokas was famous for his Asian Games silver medal. He participated in 1988 Seoul Olympics
    Nagendrashibier
  • NagendraNagendra Rajahmundry, A.P6450 Points
    After him, only Virdhawal Khade won a swimming medal Asian games. That too in 2010 Asian games. 

    In Indian state/district level swimming competitions, we see lot of age cheating. Sometimes, even competitor & medal award winner will be different ( I mean some successful swimmer from U-17 category will swim on behalf of actual swimmer in junior level competition, U-14)
    thebeautifulgamemunna219777namewtheldashindia
  • thebeautifulgamethebeautifulgame Durgapur,India29574 Points
    edited June 2021

    As Tokyo Olympics Approach, a Look at India’s Sporting Potential

    India’s youth bulge and the potential for nurturing sportspersons

    In 2019, about 26.62% of the Indian population fell into the 0-14 years category, which translates to about 340 million. These large numbers of young people, while very exciting for the potential growth of a country, can also be worrying for the planners of a developing country like India. The young population needs to be provided with healthcare, education and opportunities for a meaningful livelihood.

    One area of opportunity for nurturing the potential of young people is in sports and fitness. However, barring cricket and to a certain extent field hockey, India has historically underperformed in the international sporting arena. While the emphasis on sports and physical fitness for the youth has, until recently, been limited, initiatives and organisations that have focused on cultivating young people’s sporting talent have met with success, including the academies started by ex-sportspersons, Army Sports Institute, and a few regional centres of the Sports Authority of India.

    The current government at the Centre has taken a number of measures at the policy level, perhaps recognising the potential among India’s youth to produce outstanding sportspersons. Amongst other areas, sports and fitness have featured prominently in a slew of policy modifications and additions.

    Samagra Shiksha Abhiyaan, an integrated scheme for school education launched in 2018, articulates four important ways that it will support school sports: “sports equipment will be provided to all schools; sports education will be an integral part of the curriculum; every school will receive sports equipment under the scheme to inculcate and emphasize the relevance of sports in the school curriculum; and it will provide support to ‘Khelo India’.”

    Initiated by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, the Khelo India programme is a national programme dedicated to the development of sports. The Khelo India Youth Games (KIYG), a multidisciplinary grassroots games scheme, has been held thrice till date in 2018, 2019 and 2020 respectively. The fourth edition, to be held later this year, will be hosted by Haryana, one of the top-performers in the 2020 games.

    Among other initiatives, there is the Fit India Movement and the National Talent Search Scheme. It is apparent that the overarching goals of these more recent policies are to strengthen sports infrastructure at the grassroots level and identify sporting talent among the youth through KIYG and similar initiatives.

    The Eklavya Model Residential School (EMRS) scheme, started by the Ministry of Tribal Affairs in 1997-98, is worth mentioning here. The objective of these schools was not only to impart quality education to children belonging to Scheduled Tribes (ST) in remote areas, but also to build their all-round development. This includes the provision of good quality sporting facilities to the children.

    Each school has a capacity of 480 students, catering to students from Class VI to XII.  The Ministry of Tribal Affairs has announced that by the year 2022, every block with more than 50% ST population and at least 20,000 tribal persons, will have an EMRS. Across the country, as per census 2011 figures, there are 564 such sub-districts out of which there is an EMRS in 102 sub-districts. Thus, 462 new schools have to be opened by the year 2022.

    Each of these schools will also have something that is referred to as the ‘Centre of Excellence for Sports’ (CoE for Sports). These centres will have dedicated infrastructure in the form of specialised state-of-the-art facilities for one identified individual sport and one group sport in each state. These facilities will include equipment and scientific back up along with specialised training, boarding and lodging facilities, sports kit, sports equipment, competition exposure, insurance, medical expenses etc. as per norms of Sports Authority of India.

    This scheme holds tremendous potential to nurture sports nationally for various reasons. Apart from dedicated advanced sports facilities inside the school, these facilities can be availed by both boys and girls as most of these schools are residential and co-educational. And the pragmatic policy declaration of creating ‘specialised state-of-the-art facilities for one identified individual sport and one group sport in each state’ would allow the promotion of the most favoured sports of the area where these schools are located. In a visit to one such school, we were particularly impressed with the state of facilities in the EMRS in block Kalsi of district Dehradun.

    The Annual Status of Education Report (ASER) 2018 survey, an annual rural assessment of children’s schooling status and foundational learning, tried to capture some of the indicators on school sports articulated in the Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan. The ASER 2018 findings are based on observations in roughly 16,000 government schools, about 9,000 primary and 7,000 upper primary schools in rural India, spread across 596 districts.

    Two-thirds of the schools visited across the country had a timetable with a physical education period. Top states included Maharashtra (93%), Tamil Nadu (82%), Gujarat (72%), Kerala (83%) and Andhra Pradesh (78%). Amongst the bottom seven states, six were from the north-east, including almost three quarters of the schools visited in Manipur and Nagaland and two thirds in Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya. These findings are somewhat surprising because many of these states have a strong culture of sports. It is possible that organised sports in these states take place outside of schools.

    Across all states, less than two out of 10 schools had a dedicated physical education teacher. Most often, one of the subject teachers was reported to conduct the physical education period. A fifth of Haryana schools and a third in Punjab did not have either a physical education teacher or any other subject teacher to supervise the physical education period.

    A more positive finding is that across India, more than two-thirds of the schools visited had a playground inside the school premises. Many schools did not have a playground inside the school, but used stretches of land just outside the school premises. In the case of sports equipment available inside schools, nationally, almost two-thirds of the schools visited seemed to fulfil this objective of the Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan.

    The ASER 2018 questions on school physical education and sports are just a starting point to probe the reality of sports infrastructure in rural India. There is much more scope for a detailed in-depth assessment to know the perception of communities, particularly youngsters, towards physical education and sports, and what kind of barriers they face in accessing opportunities to hone their sporting talent.

    https://thewire.in/sport/as-tokyo-olympics-approach-a-look-at-indias-sporting-potential

    Interesting Read

    dhritiman7
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