Sports

India is home to a diverse population playng many different kinds of sports across the country. Cricket is the most popular sport in IndiaField hockey is the most successful sport for India at Olympics in which India has won eight Olympic gold medalsKabaddi is the most popular indigenous sport in the country. Other popular sports in India are BadmintonFootballBasketballChessShootingWrestlingBoxingTennisSquashWeightliftingGymnasticAthletics and Table Tennis. Some indigenous sports are also popular in India such as Kho-khoKabaddiFighter kitePolo and Gillidanda among others. There are some popular sports which has originated in India such as ChessSnooker and Kabbadi. India has won Olympic medals in BadmintonWrestlingShootingWeightliftingBoxing and Tennis. India has also won World Cups in CricketField Hockeyand Kabbadi.

India has hosted and co-hosted several international sporting events including the 2010 Commonwealth Games, the 1951and 1982 Asian Games, the 19871995 and 2016 South Asian Games, the 198719962011 Cricket World Cup and 2016 ICC World Twenty20, the 2003 Afro-Asian Games, the 19892013 and 2017 Asian Athletics Championships, the 1982 and 2010 Men’s Field hockey World Cup2016–17 Men’s FIH Hockey World League, the 197919871991200320102013and 2017 Asian Wrestling Championships, the 2009 BWF World Championships, the 20042007 and 2016 Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style), the 1980,1992 and 2009 Asian Table Tennis Championships, the 1981 ABC Championship, the 2009 FIBA Asia Championship for Women, the 1989, 20052013 and 2017 Asian Cycling Championships. India has recently hosted the 2017 FIBA Women’s Asia Cup, the 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup, the 2017 ISSF World Cup and will host the 2018 Men’s Hockey World Cup. India has some premier domestic leagues in different sports which are very popular in the country. Indian Premier League (IPL) is a premier Twenty20 & the most popular cricket league in the world held every year since 2008. The I-League and Indian Super League are premier football league tournaments held since 2007 and 2014 respectively, the Pro Kabaddi league is the most popular indigenous league in the country held since 2014, the Hockey India League is the premier hockey league held since 2013, the Premier Badminton League is the badminton premier league held since 2013, the Pro Wrestling League premier Wrestling league held since 2015 and Ultimate Table Tennis league held since 2017.

Major international sporting events annually held in India include the Chennai Open in tennis, the Indian Masters in golf, the India Open since 2008 and Royal Indian Opensince 2001 in badminton. From 2011 to 2013, India hosted the Indian Grand Prix Formula 1 race at the Buddh International CircuitGreater Noida.

The National Games of India is a national domestic sports event which has been held in the country since 1924 and for developing multi-sports culture in India Khelo India School Games, an event for under-17 school kids, had been started from 2018 as its first edition.

History

Before independence

The geography of sports in India dates back to the Vedic era. Physical culture in ancient India was fuelled by religious rights. The mantra in the Atharvaveda, says, “Duty is in my right hand and the fruits of victory in my left.” In terms of an ideal, these words hold the same sentiments as the traditional Olympic Oath: “For the Honour of my Country and the Glory of Sport.[1]” Badminton probably originated in India as a grownup’s version of a very old children’s game known in England as battledore and shuttlecock, the battledore being a paddle and the shuttlecock a small feathered cork, now usually called a “bird.” Games like chess (chaturanga)Snooker snakes and ladders, playing cards, originated in India, and it was from here that these games were transmitted to foreign countries, where they were further modernised.

After independence

India hosted the Asian Games in New Delhi in 1951 and 1982. The Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports was initially set up as the Department of Sports in 1982 at the time of organisation of the IX Asian Games in New Delhi. Its name was changed to the Department of Youth Affairs & Sports during celebration of the International Youth Year in 1985.[2] India has also hosted or co-hosted several international sporting events, including the 1987 and 1996 Cricket World Cup, the 2003 Afro-Asian Games, the 2010 Hockey World Cup, and the 2010 Commonwealth Games. Major international sporting events annually held in India include the Chennai OpenMumbai MarathonDelhi Half Marathon, and the Indian Masters. The country co-hosted the 1987, 1996, 2011 Cricket World Cup and the first Indian Grand Prix in 2011.

Administration and funding

Political responsibility for sport in India is with the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports, which is headed by a cabinet minister and managed by National Sport Federations.[3]The only major exception is the BCCI which is the administrative body of Cricket, is not a NSF. Presently there are more than 70 recognised national sports federations (NSF), of which 38 have politicians at the helm.[4]

Sports Authority of India, the field arm of the Ministry, supports and nurtures talent in youth, and provides them with requisite infrastructure, equipment, coaching facilities and competition exposure.[5] Dorabji Tata, with the support of Dr. A.G. Noehren, then director of YMCA, established the Indian Olympic Association (IOA) in 1927. IOA is responsible for the Indian continent’s participation in the Olympic GamesCommonwealth GamesAsian Games (outdoor, indoor and beach), and South Asian Games. Each Olympic and non-Olympic sport has a federation at the national level.[6]

The selection of the national teams is done by the respective national federations and then recommend to IOA for official sponsorship for participation in the games conducted under the auspices of the International Olympic CommitteeOlympic Council of AsiaCommonwealth Games Federation, and SAG. A special feature of the Indian Olympic Association is that the National Federations and the State Olympic Associations are affiliated with and recognised by it. The main task of the State Olympic Associations is to promote the Olympic sport and to ensure co-ordination among the State Sports Associations. In 2010–11, the total budget for sports and physical education schemes is ₹31,177 million (US$430 million).[7] Hockey, in which India has an impressive record with eight Olympic gold medals, is said to be the national sport.[8] The Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna and the Arjuna Award are India’s highest awards for achievement in sports, while the Dronacharya Award is awarded for excellence in coaching.

India has been criticised for neglecting women in sports, as depicted in the film “Chak De! India“, where women’s sports associations are under-sponsored and out of funds.

International sports events held in India

Following is a list of international sports events held in India:

hideInternational Sports Events Hosting Record
Sport Event name Year/Date Venue
Multi-sport event Asian Games logo.svg Asian Games 1951 New Delhi
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis World Table Tennis Championships 1952 Mumbai
Cue sports pictogram.svg Billiards IBSF World Billiards Championship 1952 Kolkata
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1958 Kolkata
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1963 Kolkata
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1973 Mumbai
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis World Table Tennis Championships 1975 Kolkata
Wrestling pictogram.svgWrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 1979 Jalandhar
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing Men’s Asian Amateur Boxing Championships 1980[9] Bombay
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis Asian Table Tennis Championships 1980 Kolkata
Archery pictogram.svg Archery Asian Archery Championships 1980[10] Kolkata
Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball FIBA Asia Cup 1981 Kolkata
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1981 New Delhi
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field hockey Field Hockey World Cup 1982 BHA StadiumBombay
Multi-sport event Asian Games logo.svg Asian Games 1982 New Delhi
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis World Table Tennis Championships 1987 New Delhi
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Cricket World Cup 1987 Multiple venues
Wrestling pictogram.svgWrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 1987 Mumbai
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1987 Bangalore
Multi-sport event South Asian Games 1987 Kolkata
Archery pictogram.svg Archery Asian Archery Championships 1988[11][12] Kolkata
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker ACBS Asian Snooker Championship 1989 India
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg Cycling Asian Cycling Championships 1989 Yamuna Velodrome, Delhi
Rowing pictogram.svg Rowing Asian Rowing Championships 1989[13] Sukhna LakeChandigarh
Athletics pictogram.svgAthletics Asian Athletics Championships 1989 New Delhi
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 1990 Bangalore
Wrestling pictogram.svgWrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 1991 New Delhi
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis Asian Table Tennis Championships 1992 New Delhi
Judo pictogram.svg Judo Asian Judo Championships 1995 New Delhi
Multi-sport event South Asian Games 1995 Chennai
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Cricket World Cup 1996 Multiple Venues
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey Men’s Hockey Champions Trophy 1996 Mayor Radhakrishnan StadiumChennai
Tennis pictogram.svg Tennis Chennai Open 1996– SDAT Tennis StadiumChennai
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Women’s Cricket World Cup 1997 Multiple Venues
Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship 1998 Kolkata
Chess World Chess Championship 2000 New Delhi
Wrestling pictogram.svg Wrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 2003 New Delhi
Multi-sport event Afro-Asian Games 2003 Hyderabad
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing Women’s Asian Amateur Boxing Championships 2003 Hisar District
Canoeing (flatwater) pictogram.svg Canoeing Asian Canoeing Championships Canoe sprint 2003[14] Bhopal
Kabaddi pictogram.svg Kabaddi Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style) 2004 MumbaiMaharastra
Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball FIBA Asia Under-18 Championship 2004 Bangalore
Sailing pictogram.svg Sailing Asian Sailing Championship 2004 Mumbai
Athletics pictogram.svg Marathon IAAF Road Race Label Events Mumbai Marathon 2004-(recur) Mumbai
Athletics pictogram.svg Half marathon IAAF Road Race Label Events Delhi Half Marathon 2005-(recur) Delhi
Rowing pictogram.svg Rowing Asian Rowing Championships 2005[15] Hussain SagarHyderabad
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg Cycling Asian Cycling Championships 2005 Punjab Agriculture University Velodrome
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey Men’s Hockey Champions Trophy 2005 Mayor Radhakrishnan StadiumChennai
Archery pictogram.svg Archery Asian Archery Championships 2005 New Delhi
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing AIBA Women’s World Boxing Championships 2006 New Delhi
Gymnastics (artistic) pictogram.svg Gymnastics Asian Artistic Gymnastics Championships 2006 Surat
Rhythmic Gymnastics Asian Championships 2006
Kabaddi pictogram.svg Kabaddi Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style) 2007 PanvelMaharastra
Volleyball (beach) pictogram.svg Beach Volleyball Asian Beach Volleyball Championship 2008 Hyderabad
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing Women’s Asian Amateur Boxing Championships 2008 Guwahati
Football pictogram.svg Football AFC Challenge Cup 2008 Ambedkar Stadium, New Delhi
Gachibowli Athletic StadiumHyderabad
Multi-sport event Commonwealth Games Federation Logo.svg Commonwealth Youth Games 2008 Pune
Badminton pictogram.svg Badminton BWF World Junior Championships 2008 Pune
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2008 Bangalore
Badminton pictogram.svgBadminton BWF World Championships 2009 Hyderabad
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2009[16] Hyderabad
Basketball pictogram.svgBasketball FIBA Asia Championship for Women 2009 Chennai
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis Asian Table Tennis Championships 2009 Lucknow
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2010 Maharashtra
Wrestling pictogram.svgWrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 2010 New Delhi
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field hockey Field Hockey World Cup 2010 New Delhi (Dhyan Chand National Stadium)
Multi-sport event Commonwealth Games Federation Logo.svg Commonwealth Games 2010 New Delhi
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field hockey Men’s Hockey Champions Trophy 2011 New Delhi
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Cricket World Cup 2011 Multiple Venues
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker ACBS Asian Snooker Championship 2011[17] Indore
Multi-sport event South Asian Winter Games 2011 Dehradun and Auli
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2011[18] Bangalore
Motor sports Formula One2011 Indian Grand Prix 2011 Buddh International CircuitGreater Noida
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field hockey 2012 Summer Olympics (London)
Qualification Tournament 1
2012 New Delhi (Dhyan Chand National Stadium)
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey FIH Men’s Hockey World League (2013 Round 2 (Delhi leg)) 2012–13 season New Delhi (Dhyan Chand National Stadium)
FIH Men’s Hockey World League (2013 Round 4 (Final round))
FIH Women’s Hockey World League (2013 Round 2 (Delhi leg)) 2012–13 season
Wrestling pictogram.svgWrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 2013 New Delhi
Canoeing (flatwater) pictogram.svg Canoeing Asian Canoeing Championships Canoe Polo 2013 New Delhi
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg Cycling Asian Cycling Championships 2013 New Delhi (Yamuna Velodrome)
Motor sports Formula One2013 Indian Grand Prix 2013 Buddh International Circuit,Greater Noida
Athletics pictogram.svg Athletics Asian Athletics Championships 2013 Pune
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Women’s Cricket World Cup 2013 Multiple Venues
Chess World Chess Championship 2013 Chennai
Multi-sport event Lusophony Games 2014 Goa
Tennis pictogram.svg Tennis Davis Cup World Group Play-offs 2014 KSLTA Tennis Stadium, Bangalore
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2014[19] Bangalore
Badminton pictogram.svg Badminton Thomas Cup Uber Cup 2014 Siri Fort Indoor Stadium, New Delhi
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey Men’s Hockey Champions Trophy 2014 Kalinga StadiumBhubaneshwar
FIH Women’s Hockey World League (2015 Round 2 (Delhi leg)) 2014–15 season Dhyan Chand National Stadium, New Delhi
FIH Men’s Hockey World League (2015 Round 4 (Final round)) 2014–15 season Raipur
Golf pictogram.svg Golf Asian Tour Indian Open (golf) 2015 Delhi Golf Club
Cue sports pictogram.svg Snooker IBSF World Snooker Championship 2016 Bangalore
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (T20) ICC World Twenty20 2016 Multiple Venues
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (T20) ICC Women’s World Twenty20 2016 Multiple Venues
Kabaddi pictogram.svg Kabaddi Kabaddi World Cup (Standard style) 2016 The ArenaAhmedabad
Golf pictogram.svg Golf Asian Tour Indian Open (golf) 2016 Delhi Golf Club
Multi-sport event South Asian Games 2016 Guwahati and Shillong
Athletics pictogram.svg Athletics Asian Athletics Championships 2017 Bhubaneswar
Wrestling pictogram.svg Wrestling Asian Wrestling Championships 2017 Indira Gandhi Sports Complex, New Delhi
Cycling (road) pictogram.svg Cycling Asian Cycling Championships 2017 Indira Gandhi Arena, New Delhi
Badminton pictogram.svg Badminton BWF Super Series India Open 2017 Siri Fort Indoor Stadium, New Delhi
Squash pictogram.svg Squash Asian Individual Squash Championships 2017 Express Avenue Mall, Chennai
Shooting pictogram.svg Shooting ISSF World Cup 2017 New Delhi
Table tennis pictogram.svg Table tennis ITTF World Tour India Open (table tennis) 2017 Thyagaraj Sports Complex, New Delhi
Football pictogram.svg Football FIFA U-17 World Cup 2017 Multiple Venues
Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball FIBA Asia Women’s Cup 2017 Banglore
Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball FIBA Asia Under-16 Championship for Women 2017 Bangalore
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing AIBA Women’s Youth World Championships 2017[20] Guwahati
Golf pictogram.svg Golf Asian Tour Indian Open (golf) 2017 DLF Golf and Country Club
Bowling pictogram.svg Lawn Bowls Asian Lawn Bowls Championships 2017[21][22] New Delhi
Asian Under 25 Lawn Bowls Championship
Field hockey pictogram.svg Field hockey FIH Men’s Hockey World League (2017 Round 4 (Final round)) 2016–17 season Kalinga StadiumBhubaneshwar
Field Hockey World Cup 2018
Golf pictogram.svg Golf Asian Tour Indian Open (golf) 2018 DLF Golf and Country Club
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing AIBA Women’s World Boxing Championships 2018[23] New Delhi
Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing AIBA Men’s World Boxing Championships 2021[24] New Delhi
Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (ODI) Cricket World Cup 2023 Multiple Venues

India at major international sports events[edit]

Olympics[edit]

The Indian Hockey team at the 1936 Berlin Olympics, later going on to defeat Germany 8–1 in the final.

A single athlete, Norman Pritchard, represented India in the 1900 Olympics, winning two silver medals. India sent its first national team to the Olympics in 1920, and has participated in every Summer Olympic Games ever since. India has also competed at several Winter Olympic Games since 1964.

India has won a total of 26 Olympic medals. India won its first gold medal in men’s field hockey in the 1928 Olympic GamesAbhinav Bindra became the first Indian to win an individual gold medal at the Olympic Games, and India’s first gold medal since 1980, when the men’s field hockey team won the gold.[25][26]

India has won very few Olympic medals, despite a population exceeding one billion, around half of them under the age of 25. Numerous explanations have been offered for the dearth, including poverty, malnutrition, neglected infrastructure, the lack of sponsorship, the theft of money and equipment, political corruption, institutional disorganisation, social immobility, the predominance of cricket, and other cultural factors.[27][28][29][30]

According to several informal statistics, India is the country with the lowest number of total Olympic medals per capita (out of those countries which have won at least one medal).[31][32] In the Winter Olympic Games, India has seen four consecutive representations–Nagano (Japan, 1998), Salt Lake City(Utah, USA, 2002), Turin (Italy, 2006), and Vancouver (British Columbia, Canada, 2010). Shiva Keshavan, Asian Champion in luge represented India in all four winter games.

Commonwealth Games[edit]

India has competed in fourteen of the eighteen previous Commonwealth Games; starting at the second Games in 1934 hosted the games one time. India hosted the Games in 2010, at Delhi. India is the fourth most successful country with a total of 436 medals including 156 gold medals.

Asian Games[edit]

India hosted the Asian Games in 1951 and 1982 at New Delhi. India is the 4th most successful country winning 602 medals including 139 gold. India has won the gold medal in Kabbadi ever since its inception except in 2018.

The National Games of India[edit]

The National Games of India is a sporting event held in India. It comprises various disciplines in which sportsmen from the different states of India participate against each other. The country’s first few Olympic Games, now christened as National Games.

Shooting is an important Olympic sport in India. Of India’s 26 Olympic medals, 4 have come from Shooting including a Gold by Abhinav Bindra in the 2008 Olympics. Indian shooters who have excelled at the world stage include Abhinav Bindra, Jitu Rai, Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, Vijay Kumar, Gagan Narang, Apurvi Chandela, Ronjan Sodhi and Anjali Bhagwat.

The Indian shooting contingent for the 2012 London was one of the largest to date. There were a total of 11 shooters including 4 female shooters. India’s first medal in the 2012 Olympics was when Gagan Narang won the bronze in the 10m Air Rifle event. This was the same event in which Abhinav Bindra won India’s first individual gold medal in the 2008 Summer Olympics Beijing. The second medal came from the unheralded army man Vijay Kumar when he won the silver in the 25m rapid fire pistol event after finishing 4th in the qualification rounds. He had to fend off some tough competition from the third-placed Chinese Ding Feng.

A notable performance was made by Joydeep Karmakar who finished 4th in the 50m rifle prone event. A strong medal prospect Ronjan Sodhi who is an Asian Games gold medallist, however, crashed out in the qualification rounds of the Double trap event.

Olympic sports[edit]

Field Hockey[edit]

Field Hockey is a popular sport in India. Until the mid-1970s, India men’s team dominated international field hockey, winning 7 Olympic gold medals and won the 1975 Men’s Hockey World Cup. Since then, barring a gold medal at the 1980 Olympics, India’s performance in field hockey has been dismal, with other hockey-playing nations such as AustraliaNetherlands and Germany improving their standards and catching up with India. Its decline is also due to the change in rules of the game, introduction of artificial turf, and internal politics in Indian field hockey bodies. The popularity of field hockey has also declined massively parallel to the decline of the Indian hockey team. In recent years, the standard of Indian hockey has gone from bad to worse, with the Men’s team not qualifying for the 2008 Olympics and finishing last in the 2012 Olympics. Since 2014, the men’s team is trying to regain its lost glory little by little as they become runners up at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, then winning a much needed 2014 Asian Games gold and 2017 Men’s Hockey Asia Cup to finally establishing the Asian dominance after long time but before that India lost to Belgium in the quarter final of 2016 Rio Olympics. India men’s hockey team is eyeing for gold at the 2018 Men’s Hockey World Cup as its going to hold in India, as support of home crowds which is a must need to defeat the aura of the Australians who constantly dominating the Indian team in the recent years in various finals such as the 2014 & 2018Hockey Champions Trophy. Currently, the Indian men’s team is 5th in the rankings of the Fédération Internationale de Hockey sur Gazon (FIH, English:International Hockey Federation), the international governing body of field hockey and indoor field hockey.[33]

The Women’s team came of age in 1980 when they first participated at the Summer Olympics and achieved the 4th place. The first golden moment for the team was in 1982 at the Asian Games. Since then not much of happening moments in the team history, though in 2016 after 34 years, its a little hope when Indian women’s team qualified for the Summer Olympics and they went on to win the 2017 Women’s Hockey Asia Cup claiming the Asian dominance after 2004. India Women’s team failed to win any medal in the Women’s Hockey World Cup. The present team is ranked 10th by the Fédération Internationale de Hockey[34].

India has hosted two Men’s Hockey World Cups–one in 1982 in Mumbai, and another in 2010 in Delhi, where they finished fifth and eighth respectively. India also hosted the annual Hockey Champions Trophy in 1996, 2005 and 2014. Until 2008, the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) was the apex body for hockey in the country. However, following revelations of corruption and other scandals in the IHF, the federation was dissolved and de-recognised, and a new apex body for Indian hockey called Hockey India (HI) was formed on 20 May 2009, with support from the IOA and former hockey players. HI, recognised by the International Hockey Federation (FIH), has the sole mandate to govern and conduct all activities for both men’s and women’s field hockey in India. Although the IHF was reinstated in 2010,[35] it is not recognised by the FIH. The IHF conducts a franchise-based tournament called World Series Hockey (WSH), with its first season conducted in 2012. However, it is not approved by HI or the FIH.

HI also conducts a franchise-based tournament called the Hockey India League (HIL). Its first season was in 2013 and is inspired from the Board of Control for Cricket in India’s (BCCI’s) highly successful Indian Premier League. The tournament is recognised by the FIH, which has also decided to provide a 30-day window for the forthcoming seasons so that all top players can participate.

Football[edit]

Sayed Rahim Nabi of East Bengal FC and Daniel of Chirag United SCduring I league at Salt Lake Stadium.

Football was introduced to India during the British colonial period. Although India has never been represented in any FIFA World Cup, it did qualify in 1950, though it did not take part, as they were not allowed to play barefoot.[36] India was an Asian powerhouse in football in the 1950s and 1960s. During this golden era, India created history as the first Asian team to reach semi-finals in an Olympic football tournament in 1956 Summer Olympics at Melbourne and Neville D’Souza became the first Asian and Indian to score a hat-trick (record remains unbeaten) in an Olympic match.[37][38] India also finished as runners-up in the 1964 AFC Asian Cup. But later on, the standard of football started to decline due to lack of professionalism and fitness culture. India currently ranks 97th in the FIFA rankings as of 10 August 2017.[39]

Football is, nevertheless, widely popular both as a spectator sport, and as a participation sport in some parts of the country such as Kerala, West Bengal, Goa and the Northeast. The India national football team represents India in all FIFA tournaments. The Yuva Bharati Krirangan of Kolkata was the second largest non-auto racing stadium in the world.

In June 1937, at the Army Headquarters, Shimla, the All India Football Federation (AIFF) was formed at a meeting of the representatives of football associations of six regions where the game was very popular in those days. It is the governing body for football in India. Domestic competitions for men’s football include the Indian Super LeagueI-LeagueI-League 2nd Division in the Indian League System and the annual knock-out style Federation Cup. For women’s football the India women’s football championship. However, it is European football, such as the English Premier League, Spanish La Liga, and the UEFA Champions League, which are very popular among Indian football fans, especially in metropolitan cities.

The 2017 FIFA U-17 World Cup will be the 17th tournament of the FIFA U-17 World Cup. FIFA revealed on 5 December 2013 (as part of their Executive Committee meets in Salvador, Brazil), that India will be the host. This will be the first time India will host an international football competition at world level.[40] To help increase interest in youth football in advance of the 2017 U-17 World Cup, India has launched the Mission XI Million programme.

Tennis[edit]

Mahesh Bhupati (left), Leander Paes (right)

Tennis is a sport among Indians in urban areas. Tennis has gained popularity after the exploits of Vijay Amritraj. India’s fortunes in Grand Slam singles have been unimpressive, although Leander Paes won a singles bronze medal at the 1996 Olympics. Since the late 1990s India has had impressive results in Grand Slam doubles, Leander Paes and Mahesh Bhupathi have won many men’s doubles and mixed doubles Grand Slam titles. Sania Mirza is the most notable Indian woman tennis player, having won a WTA title and breaking into the Top 30 WTA rankings, also winning three Grand Slam doubles events, the first at Wimbledon in 2015. On the men’s side, young Somdev Devvarman and Yuki Bhambri are flying India’s flag on the ATP Tour. Yuki was the Australian Open junior singles champion in 2009. Rohan Bopanna has won two mixed doubles titles.

Badminton[edit]

Jwala Gutta, the most successful doubles player from India.

Badminton is played widely in India and it is one of the most popular sports in India. Badminton is a fast growing sport in India. Badminton’s popularity has grown in recent years. Indian shuttlers Saina NehwalK. Srikanth and P.V. Sindhu are ranked amongst top-10 in current BWF ranking. Prakash Padukone was the first player from India to achieve world no.1 spot in the game and after him K. Srikanth made it to the top spot as male player for second time in April 2018 [41] and Saina Nehwal is the first female player from India to achieve World no.1 spot in April 2015[42]. The most successful doubles player from India is Jwala Gutta, who is the only Indian to have been ranked in the top-10 of two categories. She peaked at no. 6 with Valiyaveetil Diju in mixed doubles and at no. 10 with Ashwini Ponnappa in women’s doubles.[43] Other successful players include Aparna PopatPullela GopichandSyed ModiChetan AnandParupalli KashyapPrannoy KumarAshwini PonnappaChirag ShettySatwiksairaj Rankireddy and N. Sikki Reddy.

Padukone and Gopichand, both won the All England Open in 1980 and 2001 respectively making them the only Indians to ever win the prestigious title. At the 2012 London Olympic Games, Nehwal won the bronze medal in the individual women’s competition, the first for the country in badminton and in the next edition at Rio 2016 P.V.Sindhu won silver in Women’s singles, 2nd medal in badminton for India. India has won medals at the BWF World Championships as well, with Padukone winning in 1982. The doubles pairing of Gutta and Ponnappa became the first women to win the medal when they won the bronze in 2011.[44] Sindhu won consecutive medals at 2013 and 2014 editions. Nehwal won a silver at 2015 Championships.[45] Saina is the only gold medalist for India in BWF World Junior Championships, won in 2008, where as Sindhu and Lakshya Sen are the only gold medalists in Badminton Asia Junior Championships in their respective category for the country, won in 2012 and 2018.

Basketball[edit]

Members of India’s women’s national basketball team at the 2009 Asian Indoor Games in Vietnam

Basketball is a popular sport in India, played in almost every school, although very few people follow it professionally. India has both men’s and women’s national basketball teams. Both teams have hired head coaches who have worked extensively with NBAplayers and now aim to popularise the game in India.[46] Satnam Singh Bhamara officially marks the first player from India to be selected in the NBA by being taken by the Dallas Mavericks as the 52nd pick of the 2015 NBA draft, as well as the first player to be drafted straight out of high school as a postgraduate.

The Young Cagers, as the national team is nicknamed, made one Olympic appearance in basketball, and appeared 20 times in the Asian Championship. India is currently ranked 58th in the world in basketball. The Indian national team had its best result at the 1975 Asian Championship, when the team finished ahead of teams including the Philippines, one of Asia’s basketball strongholds. Internationally, one of the most recognised Indian basketball players has been Sozhasingarayer Robinson.[47] Affiliated into the International Basketball Federation (FIBA) since 1936, India has one of Asia’s longest basketball traditions.[48]

India’s women had their best result at the recent 2011 FIBA Asia Championship for Women when they finished 6th. The team has several internationally known players including Geethu Anna Jose, who was invited to tryouts for the WNBA in 2011.[49]

Table tennis[edit]

Table tennis is a popular indoor recreation sport in India, which has caught on in states including West Bengal and Tamil Nadu. The Table Tennis Federation of India is the official governing body of the sport. India, which is ranked 30th in the world, has produced a single player ranked in the top 50, Sharat Kamal.[50]

Golf[edit]

Golf is a growing sport in India. It is especially popular among the wealthier classes, but has not yet caught on with others due the expenses involved in playing.

The most successful Indian golfers are Jeev Milkha Singh and Anirban Lahiri. Singh won three titles on the European Tour, four on the Japan Golf Tour, and six on the Asian Tour. His highest world ranking was 28th in March 2009. Singh has won the Asian Tour Order of Merit twice. Meanwhile, Lahiri has two European Tour wins and seven Asian Tour wins. He qualified for the 2015 Presidents Cup.

Other Indians who have won the Asian Tour Order of Merit are Jyoti Randhawa in 2002 (the first Indian to do so), and Arjun Atwal, who went on in 2010 to become the first India-born player to become a member of the US-based PGA Tour and win the 2010 Wyndham Championship.

In golf at the Asian Games, India’s men’s golf team won gold at the 1982 Asian Games, and silver at the 2006 Asian Games. Lakshman Singh won the individual gold at the 1982 Asian Games.

There are numerous golf courses all over India, and a Professional Golf Tour of India. The main tournament is the Hero Indian Open, co-sanctioned by the Asian Tour and European Tour.

Boxing[edit]

Four men standing. Middle of them is a young Indian male who wears a shiny orange dressing gown with blue border. His hands are behind his head. The other three men are all dressed in black and appear to be waiting around the man.

Vijender preparing for a boxing match on a television show.

Boxing is a highly profiled sport in India, and although it is a regular medal-holder at the Asian Games and Commonwealth Games, though India has not yet produced a world champion in any weight class. In November 2007, India’s Mary Kom won the best boxer title and secured a hat-trick of titles. During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, Vijender Singh won a bronze medal in the middleweightdivision, and Akhil Kumar and Jitender Kumar qualified for the quarterfinals. Akhil Kumar, Jitender Kumar, A.L. Lakra, and Dinesh Kumar each won a bronze medal at the 2008 World Championship. India’s lone women boxer, M.C. Mary Kom, won the bronze medal at the 2012 London Olympic Games.

Wrestling

Considered one of the most ancient and oldest sports in the world, wrestling in India has a glorious past. The sport of wrestling began its journey in India several centuries ago, during the Middle Ages. Wrestling is among the most prestigious and oldest events in the Olympic Games. It was included in the Olympics in 708 BC. In ancient times, wrestling in India was mainly used as a way to stay physically fit. It was also used as a military exercisewithout any weapons. Wrestling in India is also known as dangal, and it is the basic form of a wrestling tournament.

In India, wrestling is mostly known as Malla-Yuddha. There are mentions of wrestling in the ancient times, found in the Sanskrit epic of Indian historyMahabharata. One of the premier characters in Mahabharata, Bhima, was considered to be a great wrestler. Other great wrestlers included JarasandhaDuryodhana, and Karna. Another Indian epic, Ramayana, also mentions wrestling in India, describing Hanuman as one of the greatest wrestlers of that time. The 13th-century Malla Purana references a group of GujaratiBrahmin wrestlers known as Jyesthimallas.

Weightlifting and powerlifting[edit]

Weightlifting training room

Karnam Malleswari won a bronze medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, making her the first Indian woman to win an Olympic medal.[51] The headquarters of the Indian Weightlifting Federation is in New Delhi. The federation is affiliated with the Indian Olympic Association (Delhi), and is also a member of the Asian Weightlifting Federation (Tehran) and International Weightlifting Federation (IWF, Budapest). The International Weightlifting Federation banned the Indian Weightlifting Federation from participating in all international competitions for one year when three Indian women weightlifters were accused of doping offences in various international competitions in a single year.

Archery[edit]

The game of archery has historical significance, as royals in the ancient days used to practice archery. Modern-day archery in India began in the early 1970s, before its introduction as an Olympic event in 1972, and it was formalised in 1973 when the Archery Association of India (AAI) came into existence. Since its inception, AAI has been promoting an organisation for the sport. India has been producing some world class players who are the medal hopefuls in international events of archery.

Volleyball[edit]

Volleyball is a popular recreation sport played all over India, both in rural and urban areas. India is ranked fifth in Asia, and 27th in the world. In the youth and junior levels, India came in second in the 2003 World Youth Championships. The Indian senior men’s team is ranked 46th in the world. A major problem for the sport is the lack of sponsors.[52]

Handball[edit]

Handball is a popular sport in India, played at the local level, but hasn’t yet made an impact at the domestic level. India’s handball team began on 27 April 1989, although it hasn’t yet made an impact on the world stage, at the international level or the World Cup. The Handball Federation of India manages handball in India.[53]

Taekwondo

Taekwondo in India is administered by the Taekwondo Federation of India which was founded by Jimmy R. Jagtiani.[54] Surendra Bhandari won a bronze medal in taekwondo at the 2002 Asian Games. Taekwondo is widely practised in India, with actors Neetu ChandraAkshay Kumar and Isha Koppikar holding black belts.

Rugby

Rugby union is a minor, but fast-growing, sport in India. Some Indian sporting clubs are beginning to embrace the game, and it is the second most popular winter sport after football in India,[citation needed] which itself trails in popularity after cricket and field hockey.

Cycling

The history of cycling in India dates back to 1938, and the Cycling Federation of India governs the sport. Though cycling is unknown as a professional sport in India, it is popular as a common recreational sport and a way to keep fit.

Mountain biking

Mountain biking is becoming a popular sport in India. For the last six years, Mtb himachal, a hardcore endurance event, has been organised regularly by Himalayan Adventure Sports & Tourism Promotion Association (HASTPA), a non-governmental organisation (NGO). A number of national and international riders participate, including Indian Army, Indian Air ForceIndo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), and a number of young and energetic mountain biking individual riders from cities including Pune, Bangalore, Delhi and Chandigarh. Last year[when?], the government of Sikkim (Department of Tourism) introduced its own mountain biking race, with Southeast Asia’s biggest prize money. The second edition saw 48 professional participants from around the globe.

Road Cycling/ Touring

The Tour of Nilgiris is a major non-competitive & non-commercial touring event in South Asia that covers 1,000 kilometres in under 10 days.[55] The Tour of Nilgiris (TfN), India’s first Day Touring Cycle Ride, was born in December 2008 with the twin objectives of promoting bicycling as an activity and spreading awareness about the bio-diversity, flora and fauna of the Nilgiris.

It soon grew into something a lot more, with an eclectic riding community in 2008 wanting to take part in. The community soon got together, chalked out plans, figured out a route and realised they would need a framework to support such a large group of people, got sponsors on board to mitigate costs as well as popularise the Tour and the Cause of popularising Cycling as a viable and sustainable means of travel. Ever since its first edition, the TfN has stayed true to the Community of Cyclists in India by being a Tour for the Community, Of the Community and By the Community. It has grown in size, stature and visibility. From 40 riders in the first edition, its grown to 100 cyclists in 2013.

The tour has grown bigger & the routes tougher, allowing cyclists to test their endurance, enjoy the biodiversity of the Nilgiris covering 3 southern states in India (Karnataka, Tamil Nadu & Kerala). For the racing aficionado’s, there are racing segments on the tour with colour coded jerseys, recognition and prizes. TfN as its lovingly called is pushing cycling to new frontiers with more and more interested cyclists, applying for the tour. The tour has acquired quite a name, and currently about 25% of registrations are selected for the tour by the organisers.

Equestrian sports

India has a wide following in various equestrian sports, including show jumpingeventingdressageendurance riding and tent pegging. Supported by the Equestrian Federation of India, eventing is the most popular of the five, with teams representing the country at most Asian Games, winning a bronze medal in the 2002 and 2006 games. India has been represented at the Olympics twice, by Wing Commander I.J. Lamba, and Imtiaz Anees.

Kayaking

Flat water and sea kayaking

Indian flat water kayakers are an emerging powerhouse on the Asian circuit. Outside of professional flat water kayaking, there is very limited recreational kayaking. The potential to generate interest in flat water kayaking is held by leisure resorts located near the sea or other water bodies. Indian tourists tend to consider kayaking a one-time activity, rather than a sport to be pursued.

Whitewater kayaking

Enthusiasts of whitewater kayaking are concentrated in the north towards the Himalayas, with some in the south in Bangalore in Karnataka. Most of these enthusiasts are or were whitewater raft guides who took to the sport of whitewater kayaking. Some of the prominent whitewater kayakers include Abhinav Kala, Shalabh Gahlaut, and John Pollard. Many of them have notched first descents (similar to climbing ascents) on rivers in India and Nepal.

“Bangalore Kayakers” or “Southern River Runners” are India’s first amateur group of white water kayakers. Based out of Bangalore, they explore rivers around Western Ghats.[56] The lure for most of these participants is adventure. Whitewater kayaking in India allows for exploration of places where, literally, no human has been before.

Gear availability is a problem that plagues kayakers. While the global designs for whitewater boats and paddles change annually, Indian kayakers have to pay high fees if they want to import any kind of gear, or they have to buy used gear in Nepal. More often than not, one will see Indian kayaking guides riding down the river in a Perception Amp, Piroutte or Dancer designs, while the kayakers from abroad ride the river in their new design, planing hull, centred volume kayaks from Riot, Pyranha, or Wave Sport.

Kayaking India groups on Facebook are good resources for kayakers in India.

Athletics: Track, Field and Road

India is unfortunately not affluent in the field of athletics and track events. There are very few athletes who won any medal in any global or major events. But the scenario is changing in the 20th century, when people started taking interest in athletics and facility are providing to improve the meager situation of athletics. Anju Bobby Georgemade history when she won the bronze medal in Women’s long jump at the 2003 World Championships in Athletics in Paris. With this achievement, she became the first Indian athlete ever to win a medal in a World Championships in Athletics jumping 6.70 m. Till 2010 Milkha Singh was the only athlete to win an individual gold medal at a Commonwealth Games but at 2010 Commonwealth GamesKrishna Punia created history by winning the Women’s discus throw gold medal for India after 52 years and as first woman to win a gold in athletics at Commonwealth Games[57]. In the same edition of Commonwealth games Manjeet KaurSini JoseAshwini Akkunji & Mandeep Kaur won the Women’s 4 × 400 m (Relay) gold medal. At 2014 Commonwealth Games Vikas Gowda won the Men’s Discus Throw gold medal.

Hima Das is only Indian track athlete to win a medal at any IAAF global event. She won the gold medal in Women’s 400 metres at 2018 IAAF World U20 Championships at Tampere, Finland, on 12 July 2018, clocking a time of 51.46 seconds[58][59].She is second gold medalist in athletics at IAAF World U20 Championships after Neeraj Choprawho won Men’s javelin throw gold at 2016 IAAF World U20 Championships by setting world junior record with a throw of 86.48 m. Later Neeraj went on to win the Men’s javelin throw gold at 2018 Commonwealth Games. Performances at Olympics Games are not satisfactory, till now no Indian athlete won any medal at the Olympics. At 2016 Summer Olympics Lalita Babar becomes the first Indian athlete since 1984 to reach Olympics finale in the event of Women’s 3000 metres steeplechase[60], before her, P.T. Usha reach the finale of Women’s 400 metres hurdles at 1984 Summer Olympics.

P.T. Usha won multiple gold medals in different editions of Asian Games and Asian Athletics ChampionshipsLavy Pinto was the first Indian to win a gold medal in the Asian Games which he won in the first Asian Games held at New Delhi in 1951 in 100 and 200-meter categories[61]Christine BrownStephie D’SouzaViolet PetersMary D’Souza gave India its first women athletics gold medal when they won 4 × 100 m relay in 1954 Asian Games but current Asian record is held by Priyanka Pawar,Tintu LukaMandeep KaurMachettira Raju Poovamma when they won Women’s 4 × 400 metres relay at 2014 Asian Games clocking 3:28:68. Kamaljeet Sandhu was the first Indian female athlete to win individual gold medal at any Asian games by winning 400m track event at 1970 Asian Games[62]Sunita Rani holds the current Asian record in 1500 m track event winning at Busan 2002 Asian Games clocking 4:06:03.
Madhurjya Borah, an Indian triathlete holds silver medal at South Asian Triathlon Championship

Anu Vaidyanathan, an Indian triathlete, is the first Asian to compete in Ultraman.[63]

In May 2016, Arunaabh Shah from Delhi became the 1st Indian male and the youngest Indian to finish Ultraman, at Ultraman Australia.[64]

Gymnastics

Gymnastics came of age in India, when at the 2010 Commonwealth GamesAshish Kumar won the first-ever medal in gymnastics for India in the form of bronze.[65]However, soon after the win, the president of the Gymnastics Federation of India, controversially asked Kumar’s chief coach from the Soviet Union, Vladimir Chertkov, “Is this all that you can deliver, a bronze?” The comment was widely reported in the press. Later, the coach revealed that, “In August 2009, we had no equipment. Ashish trained on hard floor till February 2010, and then we got equipment around 20 years old.” The federation announced that no Indian team would travel to Rotterdam for the World Championships in October, which would mean that Indian gymnasts would not have the opportunity to qualify as a team for the 2012 Summer Olympics.[66][67]Ashish also won a silver medal in the Men’s vault at 2010 Commonwealth Games.

It was Glasgow 2014 Commonwealth Games, from where India’s glorious path in gymnastics started taking shape slowly, when Dipa Karmakar from Tripura, a small state of India, went on to win bronze medal in the Women’s vault finale. But it was not her medal that stuns the world, but its her 2nd vault, the most difficult vault with a D-score of 7, the Produnova vault, named after famous Yelena Produnova of Russia, also known as the vault of death due to its difficulty and likelihood of injury, which she executed with a score of 15.1 (D-7, Ex- 8.1) which help her to get the precious bronze[68]. With this attempt she became 5th gymnast to ever execute the Produnova just after legendary gymnast Oksana Chusovitina who executed multiples times.In October 2015, Karmakar became the first Indian gymnast to qualify for a final stage at the World Artistic Gymnastics Championships. Later in 2016 when she qualified for Rio Olympics, she became first Indian gymnast to do so and also hours after her qualification at 2016 Gymnastics Olympic Test Event she clinched gold medal in Women’s vault event stunning Oksana Chusovitina with her prudunova again who came second to her[69]. On 6 July 2016, FIG honored Dipa by naming her World Class Gymnast[70]. At Rio Olympics she achieved 4th place in vaults. After a long break due to injury when she ran for vaults and landed with a gold at World Challenge Cup series[71]. Her medal is second to first ever medal won by any Indian, was won by Aruna Reddy at FIG Artistic Gymnastics World Cup Melbourne, where she secured the bronze medal in the individual vaults[72].

Non-olympic sports

Billiards and snooker

India has been a force in world billiards competitions. Champions including Wilson JonesMichael FerreiraGeet Sethi and now the domination of Pankaj Advani have underlined the powerhouse status of the country. The Snooker Federation of India, the apex body, plays a proactive role in popularising the game. Many efforts have been made by the Billiards and Snooker Federation of India in the recent past to enhance the popularity of the game in the country. Several training camps for developing budding talent and providing them with regional and state sponsorship have been organised by the Billiards and Snooker Federation in various parts of the country.

Chess

Chess has risen in popularity in India over the last few decades, primarily due to its star player Viswanathan Anand. He is a multiple World Champion. The game may have originated from India as a successor to Chaturanga or Shatranj. The All India Chess Federation is the governing body for chess in India.

Cricket

Cricket has a long history in India, having been introduced in the country during the British rule. It is the most popular sport by a wide margin in India .[73] Cricket is played on local, national, and international levels, and enjoys consistent support from people in most parts of India. Its development has been closely tied in with the history of the country, mirroring many of the political and cultural developments around issues such as castegender, religion, and nationality. The Indian national cricket team played its first official match (a Test) in 1932 against England, and the team’s performance since then has generally been mixed, sometimes enjoying stupendous success and sometimes suffering outright failure. The highest profile rival of the Indian cricket team is the Pakistani cricket team, though, in recent times, it has gained other rivals, including AustraliaSouth Africa and England.

In a career of twenty four-year span, Sachin Tendulkar has created many batting records, and is often regarded as one of the most successful cricketer of all time.

Although cricket is the most popular sport in India, it is not the nation’s official national sport as India does not have a national sport.[74] The governing body for cricket in India, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), was formed in December 1928 and is based in Mumbai. Today, BCCI is the richest sporting body in the world.[75]

India has hosted or co-hosted a large number of multi-nation major international cricket tournaments, including the 1987 Cricket World Cup (co-hosted with Pakistan), the 1996 Cricket World Cup (co-hosted with Pakistan and Sri Lanka), the 2006 ICC Champions Trophy and the 2011 Cricket World Cup (co-hosted with Sri Lanka and Bangladesh). The India national cricket teamhas won major tournaments, including the 1983 Cricket World Cup in England, the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 in South Africa, the 2011 Cricket World Cup (which they won by beating Sri Lanka in the final at home), and the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy, and has shared the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka. It had also briefly held the position of the No. 1 team in Tests.[76] The domestic competitions include the Ranji Trophy, the Duleep Trophy, the Deodhar Trophy, the Irani Trophy, and the Challenger Series, all of which are not widely followed, despite cricket’s popularity in the country. This parallels the global situation in cricket, where the international game is more widely followed than the domestic game in all major cricketing countries. In addition, the BCCI conducts the Indian Premier League, a domestic franchise-based Twenty20 competition, during March–April every year and is extremely popular.

Kabaddi

Kabaddi is one of the most popular sports in India.

Kabaddi is a popular national sport in India, played mainly among people in villages. It is regarded as a team-contact sport and as a recreational form of combat training.

Two teams occupy opposite halves of a small field and take turns sending a raider into the other half to win points by tagging and wrestling members of the opposing team. The raider then attempts to return to his own half while holding his breath and chanting “kabaddi, kabaddi, kabaddi” during the whole raid.

India has won gold in all the Asian Games in kabaddi excepting 2018 Asian games where they got bronze. The four forms of kabaddi recognised by Kabaddi federation in India are AmarSanjeevniGaminee and Punjabi rules Kabaddi. India won the Kabaddi World Championship in 2007, beating Iran 29–19.[77]

Motorsports

Motorsport is a popular spectator sport in India, although there are relatively few competitors compared to other sports, due to the high costs of competing. Coimbatore is often referred to as the “Motor sports Capital of India” and the “Backyard of Indian Motorsports”.[78] S.Karivardhan, spearheaded motor racing, making Coimbatore the country’s motor racing hub when he designed and built entry level race cars. Before Buddh International Circuit was constructed, the country’s only two permanent race ways were the Kari Motor SpeedwayCoimbatore and Madras Motor Racing Track, Chennai.[79] MRF built the first Formula 3 car in 1997.[80] MRF in collaboration with Maruti established the Formula Maruti racing, a single-seater, open wheel class motorsport racing event for race cars made in India.[81] MRF Challenge is a Formula 2000open-wheel motorsport formula based series organised by Madras Motor Sports Club in association with MRF. Narain Karthikeyan and Karun Chandhok are the only drivers from to represent India in Formula 1.

Force India drivers at the 2008 Canadian Grand Prix.

On 1 February 2005, Narain Karthikeyan became India’s first Formula One racing driver. On March 2007, he also became the first-ever Indian-born driver to compete in a NASCAR Series. He debuted in the NASCAR Camping World Truck Series in the Kroger 250.[82] Force India F1 is a Formula One motor racing team. The team was formed in October 2007, when a consortium led by Indian businessmen Vijay Mallya and Michiel Mol bought the Spyker F1 team for €88 million.[83] After competing in 29 races without a point, Force India won their first Formula One World Championship points and podium place when Giancarlo Fisichella finished second in the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix.[84] New Delhi hosted the Indian Grand Prix in 2011 at Buddh International Circuit in Greater Noida, 50 km from New Delhi. Karun Chandhok was the test driver for Team Lotus & Narain Karthikeyan raced for HRT during the first half of the 2011 Formula One season. Karun Chandhok participated in Friday’s[when?] practice session and Karthikeyan (stepping in for Daniel Ricciardo) raced at the 2011 Indian Grand Prix; it was the first time two Indian drivers associated with the same Formula One Grand Prix directly.

Team MRF’s Gaurav Gill the first Indian rally driver to win FIA Asia-Pacific Rally Championship in 2013.[85][86]

Korfball

Jump korfball in the Netherlands between ZKV Zaandam and ALO.

Korfball, a mixed-gender ball sport, with similarities to netball and basketball, is played by over 50 countries in the world. It is not as popular in India as other sports, but is still played by a significant amount of people. India came in third place twice (2002 & 2006)[87] in the Asia-Oceania Korfball Championships.

Karate

Karate in India is administered by the All India Karate Federation[88] whose president is Karate RAMESHVAR NIRVAR AIKF. India has produced many accomplished karatekas like Syeda Falak and Sabari Karthik. The 2011 Asian Sports Karate Games were held in Tamil Nadu, India.

Floorball

Floorball, an indoor team sport, a type of floor hockey, is gaining popularity in India. The Floorball Federation of India was started in 2001 and, since then, it has expanded rapidly. There have been four national floorball championships held, with Uttar Pradesh becoming the champions. Women’s floorball has also expanded, and Mumbai is the first national floorball champion of India. India is a provisional member of the International Floorball Federation. India has participated in many international friendlies and steps are being taken to make India an ordinary member of floorball.[89]

Netball

Netball, derived from early versions of basketball, is a popular sport in India, especially among Indian women. India’s national team is ranked 25th in the world and has played only a few matches. The team has failed to qualify for any of the World Netball Championships. They played 18 matches in total.[90] In the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi, India, netball was included as a medal sport. However, the Indian team failed to win a medal.

Throwball

Throwball, a non-contact competitive ball sport played across a net between two teams of seven players on a rectangular court, is gaining popularity in India. Indian authorities of the game were instrumental in organising an Asian level and, later, a world level association for the sport. Throwball is played in gym classcolleges, and clubs throughout Asian countries such as India, Sri Lanka, Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Japan, China, Pakistan, NepalBhutan, and Bangladesh. The sport is also slowly gaining in popularity in other countries including France, Australia, Brazil, Canada, and the United Kingdom. India’s junior throwball team visited Sri Lanka in 1982. Vijay Dahiya from Haryana was captain of the team. The Indian team won the test series.

Lacrosse

Lacrosse is a relatively new sport in India, introduced in 2006. The governing body for lacrosse in India is the Indian National Lacrosse Federation. It is now being played by schools in Shillong, Meghalaya, while being mostly unknown in the rest of the country.

American football

Introduced in 2011 by various American football figures, including Mike Ditka and Ron Jaworski, the Elite Football League of India was India’s first professional American football league. Their first league play was to commence in 2012, and feature teams from eight different Indian cities, including Mumbai, Kolkata, Delhi, and Jaipur.[91]

Polo

Fullright

Polo

India is considered the cradle of modern poloBabur, the founder of the Mughal Empire in the 15th century, firmly established its popularity. The period between the decline of the Mughal dynasty and the upsurgence of the British Imperial rule, polo almost vanished from mainland India. Fortunately, the game survived in a few remote mountainous enclaves of the subcontinent, notably GilgitChitralLadakh, and Manipur.

In India, the popularity of polo has waned and risen many times. However, it has never lost its regal status. In the last few decades, the emergence of privately owned teams has ensured a renaissance in Indian polo. Today, polo is not just restricted to the royalty and the Indian Army.

Baseball and softball

Baseball has recently begun to show up in India. Softball is played in school and at the university level. Two Indian pitchers were selected by the “Million Dollar Arm” competition to play in the United States. A talent hunt-style competition conducted by Major League Baseball to find baseball talent in India found the teenagers Rinku Singh and Dinesh Patel, who were taken to the US and received professional coaching.[92] These two players were selected to play for Pittsburgh Pirates minor league organisations. Rinku Singh played for the Canberra Cavalry of the Australian Baseball League for the competition’s inaugural 2010–11 season.

Rock climbing

Rock climbing has been around in India for a long time. Presumably, the mountaineers headed for Himalayan ascents had to train somewhere, and would have imparted some of the initial technical climbing culture. Documented evidence of rock climbing is associated with bouldering and climbing around Bangalore’s famous Ramanagaracrags and Turahalli boulders, around Western Ghats closer to Mumbai and Pune. The Deccan Plateau and south of the Vindhya Range are considered the prime locations for rock climbing in India. There is an established climbing tradition associated with Mumbai, Pune, and Bangalore. For example, Hampi is considered the bouldering capital of India. Climbers congregate here during New Year’s Eve and climb through the weeks preceding and after. Badami is popular for its free and sport routes (numbering over 200).

Sepak takraw

Sepak takraw ball

Sepak takraw, though not very well known in India, was a demonstration sport at the Delhi Asian Games in 1982.[93] The Sepak Takraw Federation, with its headquarters in Nagpur, Maharashtra, was founded on 10 September 1982. It is recognised by the Indian Olympic Association and Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports since 2000.[94] So far, the federation has conducted 14 senior, seven junior, and six sub-junior national championships in different cities, and is conducting Federation Cup Tournaments and zonal National Championships.

The game is very popular in the northeastern state of Manipur, and some of the best players came from there. In the 22nd King’s Cup International Sepak Takraw Tournament held in Bangkok, the India men’s team lost in the semi-finals and claimed bronze in the team event. In the doubles event, the women’s team lost in the semi-finals, but earned bronze medals.[95]

On 21st August 2018, at the 2018 Asian Games, the national men’s team created history as the team won a bronze after losing 2-0 to Thailand. It was Indian’s fisrt medal in Sepak takraw in Asian games.[96]

Winter sports

Winter sports are common in India in the Himalayan areas. Skiing tournaments take place every winter in Gulmarg, and Manali. Winter sports are generally more common in the northern states of Jammu and KashmirHimachal PradeshUttarakhandSikkim, and Arunachal Pradesh. Skiing, snow rugby, snow cycling, and snow football are some of the common winter sports played in India. Skiing is more popular, although India has taken part in luge in Winter Olympics since 1998. Shiva Keshavan is the only Indian to have won medals in international meets in winter sports (Asian Gold 2011, Asian Silver 2009, Asian Bronze 2008, Asian Silver (doubles) 2005, Asian Bronze (singles) 2005), and to have participated in four Olympic Games. He is the Asian speed record holder at 134.4 km/h, making him the fastest man in Asia on ice. Luge is practised in a big way by the mountain residents in an improvised form called “reri”.

Bandy

India has a national bandy team. The Bandy Federation of India governs bandy in India. Its headquarters are in Mandi in Himachal Pradesh. Bandy, a team winter sport played on ice, in which skaters use sticks to direct a ball into the opposing team’s goal, is generally played in northern India, where there is snow and ice. India is one of seven countries in Asia and out of a total of 28 to be a member of Federation of International BandyBFI planned to send a team to the 2011 Asian Winter Games in Astana-Almaty,[97] but ultimately did not.[98]

Ice hockey

Ice hockey is played in the colder parts of India, including Kashmir, Ladakh, and parts of Himachal Pradesh.[99]

Traditional and regional sports

Seval Sandai

Seval sandai, traditional cock fight

Seval Sandai or Seval Porr (cockfighting) is a popular rural sport. Three or four-inch blades are attached to the cocks’ feet and the winner is decided after three or four rounds of no hold barred fighting. The sport involves major gambling in recent times.

Jallikattu

Jallikattu, taming the bull

Rekla, bullock cart race

Jallikattu is a popular bull taming sport practiced particularly during Pongal festival. Jallikattu was a popular sport since the Tamil classical period.[100][101] Rekla race is an associated sport which is a form of bullock cart racing.[102] In May 2014, the Supreme Court of India banned both the sports citing animal welfare issues.[103]

Gilli-danda

Young boys playing Gilli-danda, a traditional Indian sport.

Gilli-danda is a sport played by using one small stick (gilli) and a large stick (danda) like cricket, with the ball replaced by gilli. It is still played in villages of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, Maharashtra and Gujarat in India only as a recreational sport among boys.

Kancha

Kancha is played by using marbles. Marbles are glass balls which are very popular among children. It is popular in small Indian cities and villages, among small boys only as a gully sport. It is rarely played by girls. The participant has to hit the marble kept in a circle. If he hits the target properly, he wins. The winner gets the kancha of the other participant boys.[104]

Kite-flying

Kite-flying is pursued by many people in India, in cities as well as villages. The festival of Makar Sankranti features kite-flying competitions. It is festival which is a passion among Indians.

Indian martial arts

India has many traditional regional forms of martial arts like lathi khelasqaykalarikushtithang-ta and silambam.

Kho-kho

Kho kho is a tag sport played by teams of twelve players who try to avoid being touched by members of the opposing team, only 9 players of the team enter the field.[105] It is one of the two most popular traditional tag games played in schools, the other being kabbadi.[106]

===Others=== ball badminton as combination of badminton and volleyball Uriyadi involves smashing a small earthen pot with a long stick usually with a cloth wrapped around the eyes to prevent the participants from seeing the pot.[107] Other minor sports include Ilavatta kal where lift huge spherical rocks,[108] Gilli-danda played with two pieces of sticks, Nondi played by folding one leg and hopping squares. Some of the indoor games include Pallanguzhi involving beads, Bambaram involving spinning of top, Dhayakattai which is a modified dice game, Aadu puli attam, Nungu vandi and Seechangal.[109] Other regional sports and games, including air sportsatya patyalangdisurrsitolia bridge, carromcycle polo, fencing, judo, Gatkakho-khomallakhambroller skatingrowing, shooting ball, soft tennissquash, swimming, ten-pin bowlingtennikoittug of waryachting, and yoga, have dedicated followers and their own national sports federations.[110] There are other seasonal sports like “Dahi Handi” which have a great public following as well.

Sports Broadcasting in India

Local sporting events broadcasting is in a stagnant stage in India due to the mandatory sharing of sporting events of live feed and rights made by ordnance in favour of Prasar Bharathi. Thus, all sports broadcasters playout from outside the country, which only allows the capability to produce international events and fades the production, distribution, invention of the new local field of sporting events.

Major sports television networks include Star SportsStar Sports NetworkSony TenSony SixSony ESPNESPN AsiaDSport and DD Sports.

Sports Leagues in India

National

Green background for the major IPL-Style sports leagues. Blue background for the major sports leagues.

The no of season are as on August 2016.

League Current Sponsored Game Participation Seasons Teams
All India & South Asia Rugby Tournament Rugby union pictogram.svg Rugby Union Club Teams 6 10
Champions Tennis League (CTL) Aircel Tennis pictogram.svg Tennis Club Teams 2 6
Deodhar Trophy Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (List A) Zonal Teams 44 5
Duleep Trophy Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (First Class) Zonal Teams 56 5
Elite Football League of India American football pictogram.svg American Football Club Teams 2 24
Golf Premier League Golf pictogram.svg Golf Club Teams 1 8
Hockey India League (HIL) Hero Field hockey pictogram.svg Hockey Club Teams 4 6
Indian Premier League (IPL) Vivo Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (Twenty20) Club Teams 10 8
Indian Super League (ISL) Hero Football pictogram.svg Football Club Teams 3 10
Indian Volley League Volleyball (indoor) pictogram.svg Volleyball Club Teams 1 6
I-League Hero Football pictogram.svg Football Club Teams 10 10
I-League 2nd Division Football pictogram.svg Football Club Teams 10 18
Premier Badminton League (PBL) Badminton pictogram.svg Badminton Club Teams 2 6
Premier Futsal Football pictogram.svg Futsal Club Teams 1 6
Pro Kabaddi League (PKL) Star Sports Kabaddi pictogram.svg Kabaddi Club Teams 5 12
Pro Wrestling League (PWL) Wrestling pictogram.svg Wrestling Club Teams 1 8
Ranji Trophy Paytm Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (First Class) State Teams 82 27
UBA Pro Basketball League Basketball pictogram.svg Basketball Club Teams 4 8
Vijay Hazare Trophy Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (List A) State Teams 15 27
Women’s Kabaddi Challenge (PKL) Star Sports Kabaddi pictogram.svg Kabaddi Club Teams 1 3
World Series Hockey (WSH) Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey Club Teams 1 8
Indian Women’s League Hero Football pictogram.svg Football Club Teams 1 6 (Main Round)

International

League Current Sponsored Game Participation Seasons Teams Indian Teams
AFC Cup Football pictogram.svg Football Club Teams 13 32 2
International Premier Tennis League (IPTL) Coca-Cola Tennis pictogram.svg Tennis Club Teams 2 4 1

Youth Sports Leagues

Others

Proposed League

League Current Sponsored Game Participation Seasons Teams
Indian Athletics League Athletics pictogram.svg Athletics Club Teams
Indian Series of Boxing[111] Boxing pictogram.svg Boxing Club Teams TBA
i1 Super Series F1 pictogram.svg Motorsports Club Teams 9 (Proposed)

Leagues that are defunct[edit]

League Game Participation Seasons Teams
Indian Cricket League (ICL) Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (Twenty20) Club Teams 2 9
ICL World Series (ICL World Series) Cricket pictogram.svg Cricket (Twenty20) Club Teams 2 4
National Football League Football pictogram.svg Association Football Club Teams 11 10
Premier Hockey League (PHL) Field hockey pictogram.svg Field Hockey Club Teams 4 7

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Indian Cricket

cric1

(sources:Wikipedia)

The India national cricket team, also known as Team India and Men in Blue, is governed by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), and is a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC) with TestOne Day International (ODI) and Twenty20 International (T20I) status.

Although cricket was introduced to India by European merchant sailors in the 18th century, and the first cricket club was established in Calcutta (currently known as Kolkata) in 1792, India’s national cricket team did not play its first Test match until 25 June 1932 at Lord’s, becoming the sixth team to be granted Test cricket status. In its first fifty years of international cricket, India was one of the weaker teams, winning only 35 of the first 196 Test matches it played. From 1932 India had to wait until 1952, almost 20 years for its first Test victory. The team, however, gained strength in the 1970s with the emergence of players such as batsmen Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath, all-rounder Kapil Dev and the Indian spin quartet of Erapalli PrasannaSrinivas VenkataraghavanBhagwat Chandrasekhar and Bishen Singh Bedi.

Traditionally much stronger at home than abroad, the Indian team has improved its overseas form, especially in limited-overs cricket, since the start of the 21st century, winning Test matches in AustraliaEngland and South Africa. It has won the Cricket World Cup twice – in 1983 under the captaincy of Kapil Dev and in 2011 under the captaincy of Mahendra Singh Dhoni. After winning the 2011 World Cup, India became only the third team after West Indies and Australia to have won the World Cup more than once,[8] and the first cricket team to win the World Cup at home. It also won the 2007 ICC World Twenty20 and 2013 ICC Champions Trophy, under the captaincy of MS Dhoni. It was also the joint champions of 2002 ICC Champions Trophy, along with Sri Lanka.

As of 2 May 2018, India is ranked first in Test 2nd in ODIs and third in T20Is by the ICC.[9] Virat Kohli is the current captain of the team across all formats, while the head coach is Ravi Shastri.[10] The Indian cricket team has rivalries with other Test-playing nations, most notably with Pakistan, the political arch-rival of India. However, in recent times, rivalries with nations like Australia, South Africa and England have also gained prominence.

History

Early history

Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji Jadeja was an Indian who played for the English cricket team

The British brought cricket to India in the early 1700s, with the first cricket match played in 1721.[11] In 1848, the Parsi community in Bombay formed the Oriental Cricket Club, the first cricket club to be established by Indians. After slow beginnings, the Europeans eventually invited the Parsis to play a match in 1877.[12] By 1912, the Parsis, Sikhs, Hindus and Muslims of Bombay played a quadrangular tournament with the Europeans every year.[12] In the early 1900s, some Indians went on to play for the England cricket team. Some of these, such as Ranjitsinhji and KS Duleepsinhji were greatly appreciated by the British and their names went on to be used for the Ranji Trophy and Duleep Trophy – two major first-class tournaments in India. In 1911, an Indian team went on their first official tour of the British Isles, but only played English county teams and not the England cricket team.[13]

Test match status

India was invited to The Imperial Cricket Council in 1926, and made their debut as a Test playing nation in England in 1932, led by CK Nayudu, who was considered as the best Indian batsman at the time.[14] The one-off Test match between the two sides was played at Lord’s in London. The team was not strong in their batting at this point and went on to lose by 158 runs.[15] In 1933, the first Test series in India was played between India and England with matches in Bombay, Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Madras (now Chennai). England won the series 2–0.[16] The Indian team continued to improve throughout the 1930s and ’40s but did not achieve an international victory during this period. In the early 1940s, India didn’t play any Test cricket due to the Second World War. The team’s first series as an independent country was in late 1947 against Sir Donald Bradman‘s Invincibles (a name given to the Australia national cricket team of that time). It was also the first Test series India played which was not against England. Australia won the five-match series 4–0, with Bradman tormenting the Indian bowling in his final Australian summer.[17] India subsequently played their first Test series at home not against England against the West Indies in 1948. West Indies won the 5-Test series 1–0.[18]

India recorded their first Test victory, in their 24th match, against England at Madras in 1952.[19] Later in the same year, they won their first Test series, which was against Pakistan.[20] They continued their improvement throughout the early 1950s with a series win against New Zealand in 1956. However, they did not win again in the remainder of the decade and lost badly to strong Australian and English sides. On 24 August 1959, India lost by an innings in the Test to complete the only 5–0 whitewash ever inflicted by England. The next decade saw India’s reputation develop as a team with a strong record at home. They won their first Test series against England at home in 1961–62 and also won a home series against New Zealand. They managed to draw home series against Pakistan and Australia and another series against England. In this same period, India also won its first series outside the subcontinent, against New Zealand in 1967–68.

The key to India’s bowling in the 1970s were the Indian spin quartet – Bishen BediE.A.S. PrasannaBS Chandrasekhar and Srinivas Venkataraghavan. This period also saw the emergence of two of India’s best ever batsmen, Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath. Indian pitches have had the tendency to support spin and the spin quartet exploited this to create collapses in opposing batting line-ups. These players were responsible for the back-to-back series wins in 1971 in the West Indies and in England, under the captaincy of Ajit Wadekar. Gavaskar scored 774 runs in the West Indian series while Dilip Sardesai‘s 112 played a big part in their one Test win.

One-Day cricket and World Cup success

A graph showing India’s Test match results against all Test match teams from 1932 to September 2006

The advent of One Day International (ODI) cricket in 1971 created a new dimension in the cricket world. However, India was not considered strong in ODIs at this point and batsmen such as the captain Gavaskar were known for their defensive approach to batting. India began as a weak team in ODIs and did not qualify for the second round in the first two editions of the Cricket World Cup. Gavaskar infamously blocked his way to 36 not out off 174 balls against England in the first World Cup in 1975, India scored just 132 for 3 and lost by 202 runs.

In contrast, India fielded a strong team in Test matches and was particularly strong at home, where their combination of stylish batsmen and beguiling spinners were at their best. India set a then Test record in the third Test against the West Indies at Port-of-Spain in 1976, when they chased 403 to win, thanks to 112 from Viswanath. This West Indian defeat is considered to be a watershed in the history of their cricket because it led to captain Clive Lloyd dispensing with spin altogether and relying entirely on a four-man pace attack instead. In November 1976, the team established another record by scoring 524 for 9 declared against New Zealand at Kanpur without any individual batsman scoring a century. There were six fifties, the highest being 70 by Mohinder Amarnath. This innings was only the eighth instance in Test cricket where all eleven batsmen reached double figures.

During the 1980s, India developed a more attack-minded batting line-up with stroke makers such as the wristy Mohammed AzharuddinDilip Vengsarkar and all-rounders Kapil Dev and Ravi Shastri. India won the Cricket World Cup in 1983, defeating the favourites and the two-time defending champions West Indies in the final at Lords, owing to a strong bowling performance. In spite of this, the team performed poorly in the Test arena, including 28 consecutive Test matches without a victory. In 1984, India won the Asia Cup and in 1985, won the World Championship of Cricket in Australia. Apart from this, India remained a weak team outside the Indian subcontinent. India’s Test series victory in 1986 against England remained the last Test series win by India outside the subcontinent for the next 19 years. The 1980s saw Gavaskar and Kapil Dev (India’s best all-rounder to date) at the pinnacle of their careers. Gavaskar made a Test record 34 centuries as he became the first man to reach the 10,000 run mark. Kapil Dev later became the highest wicket-taker in Test cricket with 434 wickets. The period was also marked by an unstable leadership, with Gavaskar and Kapil exchanging the captaincy several times.

Late 20th century

With 619 wickets, Anil Kumble is the world’s third highest wicket-taker in Tests and India’s highest Test and ODI wicket taker .[21]

The addition of Sachin Tendulkar and Anil Kumble to the national side in 1989 and 1990 further improved the team. The following year, Javagal Srinath, India’s fastest bowler since Amar Singh made his debut. Despite this, during the 1990s, India did not win any of its 33 Tests outside the subcontinent while it won 17 out of its 30 Tests at home. After being eliminated by neighbours Sri Lanka on home soil at the 1996 Cricket World Cup semifinal, the team underwent a year of change as Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid, later to become captains of the team, made their debut in the same Test at Lord’s. Tendulkar replaced Azharuddin as captain in late 1996, but after a personal and team form slump, Tendulkar relinquished the captaincy and Azharuddin was reinstated at the beginning of 1998. With the captaincy burden removed, Tendulkar was the world’s leading run-scorer in both Tests and ODIs, as India enjoyed a home Test series win over Australia, the best-ranked team in the world.

After failing to reach the semifinals at the 1999 Cricket World Cup, Tendulkar was again made captain, and had another poor run, losing 3–0 on a tour of Australia and then 2–0 at home to South Africa. Tendulkar resigned, vowing never to captain the team again. Ganguly was appointed the new captain and the team was further damaged in 2000 when former captain Azharuddin and fellow batsman Ajay Jadeja were implicated in a match-fixing scandal and given life and five years bans respectively. This period was described by the BBC as “the Indian cricket’s worst hour”. However, the new core – Tendulkar, Dravid, Kumble and Ganguly – swore not to let this happen to them again, and lead Indian cricket out of the dark times. And the first three put aside personal ambitions to let Ganguly lead them into a new era.[22]

Turn of the millennium

Since 2000, the Indian team underwent major improvements with the appointment of John Wright as India’s first ever foreign coach. India maintained their unbeaten home record against Australia in Test series after defeating them in 2001. The series was famous for the Kolkata Test match, in which India became only the third team in the history of Test cricket to win a Test match after following on. Australian captain Steve Waugh labelled India as the “Final Frontier” as a result of his side’s inability to win a Test series in India.[23] Victory in 2001 against the Australians marked the beginning of a dream run for India under their captain Ganguly, winning Test matches in Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, West Indies and England. The England series is also known for India’s highest ODI run-chase of 325 runs at Lord’s which came in the Natwest ODI Series final against England. In the same year, India were joint-winners of the ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka and then went to the 2003 Cricket World Cup in South Africa where they reached the final, only to be beaten by Australia. The 2003–04 season also saw India play out a Test series in Australia where they drew 1–1 with the world champions, and then win a Test and ODI series in Pakistan.

The Indian cricket team in action in the Wankhede Stadium

At the end of the 2004 season, India suffered from lack of form and fitness from its older players. A defeat in a following home Test series against Australia was followed by an ODI home series defeat against Pakistan followed by a Test series levelled 1–1. Greg Chappell took over from John Wright as the coach of the Indian cricket team following the series, and his methods proved to be controversial during the beginning of his tenure. The tension resulted in a fallout between Chappell and Ganguly, resulting in Rahul Dravid being made captain. This triggered a revival in the team’s fortunes, following the emergence of players like Mahendra Singh Dhoni, Suresh Raina, and the coming of age of players like Irfan Pathan and Yuvraj Singh. A thumping home series victory over Sri Lanka in 2005 and a drawn series with South Africa put India at second place in the ICC ODI rankings. Dravid, Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag were selected to play for the ICC World XI in the 2005 “SuperTest” against Australia. A convincing ODI series win in Pakistan in early 2006, following a loss in the Test series, gave India the world record of 17 successive ODI victories while batting second.[24] Towards the middle of 2006, however, a 4–1 series loss in the West Indies gave rise to a slump in India’s ODI form, while they achieved a 1–0 victory in the Test series that followed, giving them their first Test series victory in the Caribbean since 1971. India’s ODI form slumped further with a disappointing performance in the 2006 Champions Trophy and a drubbing in the ODI series in South Africa. This was followed yet again by an initial good performance in the Tests, giving India its first Test match win in South Africa, although they went on to lose the series 2–1. This Test series was marked by Ganguly’s comeback to the Indian team.[25]

In December 2006, India played and won its first ever Twenty20 international in South Africa, becoming the most recent Test team to play Twenty20 cricket. The beginning of 2007 had seen a revival in the Indian team’s ODI fortunes before the 2007 Cricket World Cup. Series victories against the West Indies and Sri Lanka, marked by the comeback of Ganguly, and strong form by Tendulkar, and the emergence of young players like Robin Uthappa saw many pundits to tip India as a real contender to win the 2007 Cricket World Cup. However, defeats to Bangladesh and Sri Lanka saw India fail to reach the second round.

Success under Dhoni

After winning the Test series against England in August 2007, Dravid stepped down as the captain of the team, following which Dhoni was made the captain of the Twenty20 and ODI team. In September 2007, India won the first-ever Twenty20 World Cup held in South Africa, beating Pakistan by 5 runs in the final. In 2007–08, they toured Australia where India lost the highly controversial home Test series 2–1 but managed to win the CB series the following month with a whitewash final of Australia.

In April 2009, India secured their first Test series win in New Zealand in 41 years. After beating Sri Lanka 2–0 in December 2009, India became the No. 1 Test team in the world. They retained the ranking by drawing series against South Africa and Sri Lanka. In October 2010, India whitewashed Australia 2–0 in the home test series, giving them back-to-back series wins against them. Later that year, India managed to draw the Test series in South Africa at 1–1.[26]

India’s results in international matches
Matches Won Lost Drawn Tied No result Inaugural Match Latest Match
Test[27] 522 145 160 216 1 25 June 1932 15 June 2018
ODI[28] 939 483 409 7 40 13 July 1974 16 February 2018
T20I[29] 99 61 35 1 2 1 December 2006 18 March 2018

On 2 April 2011, India won the 2011 Cricket World Cup by defeating Sri Lanka in the final, thus becoming the third team after West Indies and Australia to win the World Cup twice, the previous win being in 1983. Gautam Gambhir and the skipper Dhoni led the way with 97 and 91* respectively.[30] India also became the first team to win the World Cup on home soil.

India were whitewashed 4–0 in away Test series by England in August 2011 due to which England replaced India as the No. 1 Test team in the rankings.[31] This series was followed by another 4–0 whitewash of India in January 2012 in Australia. The disastrous whitewashes saw the retirement of Dravid and VVS Laxman from Test cricket in 2012. Tendulkar retired in November 2013 after his 200th Test match. With Ganguly having retired in 2008, this period signalled the end of the fabled middle-order batting line-up India had for a decade. 2012 signalled a rough period for Indian cricket as they were beaten 2–1 by England at home in the Test series. This was the first Team India were beaten by England at home in the modern era. This was followed by a 2–1 loss in the ODI series against Pakistan, India’s arch-rivals, at home. India was then knocked out in the second round of the 2012 ICC World Twenty20. India also failed to qualify for the 2012 Asia Cup final which closed out a disappointing 2012 for the Indian cricket team. 2013 saw a resurgence in Indian cricket.

Worldwide limited-overs success

In early 2013, India returned the favour to Australia and whitewashed them 4–0 at home in a Test series. India then beat the Aussies 3–2 in the 7-match ODI series and won the one-off T20I. However, India lost heavily against New Zealand and South Africa away from home and led to heavy criticism of Indian cricketers for not being able to perform overseas. India defeated England in the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy final and Mahendra Singh Dhoni became the first captain in history to win the three major ICC trophies, namely- ICC Cricket World CupICC World Twenty20 and ICC Champions Trophy. This was followed by a victory in the West Indies Triangular Series in 2013consisting of India, West Indies and Sri Lanka. In 2014, India toured Bangladesh and England. Although they beat the former 2–0 in 3 One Day Internationals, Team India were beaten 3–1 in 5 Test matches by England. This series included a famous win for the Indian team in the first match of the series at Lord’s. The Test series was followed by a 3–1 win for the Indians in a 5-match ODI series and a loss in a one-off T20, both against England.

India failed to reach the final of the Asia Cup yet again in 2014. In the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 hosted in Bangladesh, India narrowly missed out on another ICC trophy by losing to Sri Lanka in the final. This tournament saw the rise of Virat Kohli as one of the best limited overs batsmen in world cricket, as he was adjudged the man of the series. India soon comprehensively beat Sri Lanka and West Indies in ODI series to cement their position at the top of the ODI rankings. India toured Australia towards the end of 2014 for a 4-match Test series, which is remembered for MS Dhoni’s sudden retirement from Test cricket after the end of the second Test. Virat Kohli was appointed as the captain of Team India in Test matches but he was unable to turn the series around and India lost 2–0. Kohli’s first series win as captain came away from home in a 3-match Test series vs Sri Lanka, which signalled the beginning of an unbeaten Test series run for India.

Dominance at home 2016-17 season

2015 saw the beginning of India’s dominance at home in Test matches under new captain Virat Kohli when they comprehensively beat South Africa. This series was the beginning of an unbeaten streak of 19 Test matches for India which was brought to an end by Australia in early 2017. This series also saw the emergence of Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja as two of the best spinners and all-rounders. They spun webs around touring batsmen, much like the spinning quartet of the 1970s. This was followed by limited overs victories over Australia and Sri Lanka away from home. India was knocked out of the 2015 World Cup in the semi-final stage, to eventual winners Australia. India began 2016 by winning the 2016 Asia Cup, remaining unbeaten throughout the tournament, beating Pakistan along the way. India were favourites to win the 2016 ICC World Twenty20 which was being held at home, but they lost in the semi-final to eventual champions West Indies. Virat Kohli was again named the man of the series.

In 2016, “The Grand Home Season” began for India, including series at home against New Zealand, England, Bangladesh and Australia. India whitewashed New Zealand to regain the number one ranking in Test cricket after almost 10 years. Before the series against England in November 2016, MS Dhoni resigned as captain of India in limited overs, thus handing the captaincy to Virat Kohli across all formats. India beat England across all three formats, with a notable 4–0 win in the Test series. This was followed by Test series wins against Bangladesh and Australia, which meant India reclaimed the Border Gavaskar Trophy. Ravichandran Ashwin became the fastest cricketer of all time to reach 250 wickets; he and Ravindra Jadeja occupied the top two spots in both the ICC Bowlers and All-Rounders rankings at the time. In the process, India became the third team (after South Africa and Australia) to have won their most recent Test series against all the other Test-playing nations. India holds an unbeaten streak of 8 consecutive Test series wins as of 19 August 2017.

India defeated Pakistan in their first game of the 2017 ICC Champions Trophy, winning by a convincing 124-run margin,[32] but lost their second game of the group against Sri Lanka by 7 wickets despite posting a total of 321.[33] In their final group game against South Africa, a must-win encounter, India won comfortably and sealed a spot in the semi-finals, against Bangladesh.[34] India comfortably won the match by 9 wickets, and faced arch-rivals Pakistan in the final, the first time they had met at this stage of a tournament since 2007.[35] In an anti-climax, considering India were the clear favourites, Pakistan defeated India comfortably by 180 runs in the final, outclassing them across all three departments.[36]

India beat the West Indies 3–1 in a 5-match ODI series in the Caribbean in July 2017,[37] but lost to the same opposition in a one-off T20I.[38] India then toured Sri Lanka, and comprehensively defeated them 3-0 in a three-match Test series, the first time India had whitewashed a team away from home in a Test series with at least three games.[39]

Governing body

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is the governing body for the Indian cricket team and first-class cricket in India. The Board has been operating since 1929 and represents India at the International Cricket Council. It is amongst the richest sporting organisations in the world. It sold media rights for India’s matches from 2006–2010 for US$612,000,000.[40] It manages the Indian team’s sponsorships, its future tours and team selection.

The International Cricket Council determines India’s upcoming matches through its future tours program. However, the BCCI, with its influential financial position in the cricketing world, has often challenged the ICC’s program and called for more series between India, Australia and England which are more likely to earn more revenue as opposed to tours with Bangladesh or Zimbabwe.[41] In the past, the BCCI has also come into conflict with the ICC regarding sponsorships[42] and the legitimacy of the ICC Champions Trophy.

Selection committee

Selection for the Indian cricket team occurs through the BCCI’s zonal selection policy, where each of the five zones is represented with one selector and one of the members nominated by BCCI as the Chairman of the selection committee. This has sometimes led to controversy as to whether these selectors are biased towards their zones.[43]

The current chairman of the selection committee is M. S. K. PrasadDevang GandhiSarandeep SinghJatin Paranjpe, and Gagan Khoda are the other members of the selection committee from 21 September 2016.

Team colours

Period/Tournament Kit manufacturer Shirt sponsor
1987 World Cup Power None
1992 World Cup ISC None
1993-1996 None Wills
1996 World Cup
1999 World Cup ASICS
1999-2001 None
2001-2002 ITC Hotels
2002-2003 Sahara
2003 World Cup Aamby Valley
2003-2005 Sahara
2005-2013 Nike
2014-2017 Star India
2017-2022 Oppo

Since colours have made their way into international cricket, the Indian cricket team has chosen blue as their primary colour and orange/red as their secondary colour and have worn one or the other shade of blue. The blue colour of their uniform has also earned them the nickname of “Men in Blue”. With the advent of the World Series Cup in the 1970s, each team was to don a primary and secondary colour on their uniforms. The Indian team elected to wear light-blue as their primary colour and yellow as their secondary colour. Even during the 1999 Cricket World Cup, the secondary colour on the Indian cricket team’s clothing was yellow. However, this has since been replaced with the tricolour. In the past, the Indian ODI outfits were changed to different shades of blue, mostly darker than the current,[44] and the team donned navy blue during 1992,[45]and then the sky blue colour for the next decade. Indian team has got a new kit from 2009 which is feroza blue with India written on it in orange.[46] From October 2010, the team is once again using a light blue shade though not as light as the previous sky blue one, with India written in orange, and shades of the tricolour at the sides. The kit sponsor for the Indian cricket team is Nike, which in 2005 bought the kit rights in a $27.2 million contract with BCCI.[47]

Due to their love for blue colour Nike with Board for Control of Cricket in India launched the mega campaign called “Bleed Blue” for the support of Indian team in 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup which turned out to be a huge success and people over the internet and places adopted this to cheer for India.[48]

A new ultramarine blue coloured jersey of the one-day cricket team was released on 20 October 2010[49] for the upcoming tours and ICC Cricket World Cup. The jersey has been designed by team’s apparel and kit sponsor Nike. Previously, the Indian cricket team has worn a darker shade of blue and before that, the team has worn sky blue. The vertical tricolour band has been made on both sides in comparison to just one side in the previous shirt. OPPO, the manufacturer of Chinese electronics is the official team sponsor logo is on the central part of the jersey (above orange coloured INDIA logo) and on the right arm Nike logo is visible. The name and jersey number of the player are printed in orange at the back while on the chest the logo of BCCI is on the left side. The one-day cap was also sky blue with the BCCI logo on the front.

When playing first-class cricket, in addition to their cricket whites, Indian fielders sometimes wear a dark blue cap or a white wide-brimmed sun hat, with the BCCI logo in the center front. Helmets are also dark blue. Some players sport the Indian flag on their helmet. The current kit sponsor for the Indian team is Nike and current team sponsor is OPPO (since April, 2017).[50] Previously, the Indian team was sponsored by Star India (2014-2017),[51] Sahara India Pariwar (2002-2013) and Wills (1993-2002).

International grounds

Locations of all stadiums which have hosted at least four Test matches or 10 ODIs within India

There are numerous world-renowned cricket stadiums located in India. Most grounds are under the administration of various state cricket boards as opposed to being under the control of the BCCI. The Bombay Gymkhana was the first ground in India to host a full-scale cricket match featuring an Indian cricket team. This was between the Parsis and the Europeans in 1877. The first stadium to host a Test match in India was also the Gymkhana Ground in Bombay in 1933, the only Test it ever hosted. The second and third Tests in the 1933 series were hosted at Eden Gardens and Chepauk. The Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi was the first stadium to host a Test match after independence, a draw against the West Indies in 1948, the first of a 5-Test series. 21 stadiums in India have hosted at least one official Test match. In recent years, there has been an increase in the number of world-class cricket stadiums in India, with multiple Test venues in IndoreChandigarh MohaliChennaiMumbaiHyderabadRajkotRanchiPuneDharamshala and Nagpur.

Eden Gardens in Kolkata has hosted the most Tests, and also has the second-largest seating capacity of any cricket stadium in the world, being capable of holding more than 66,000 spectators. Founded in 1864, it is one of the most historical stadiums in India, having hosted numerous historical and controversial matches.[52] Other major stadiums in India include the Feroz Shah Kotla, which was established in 1883 and hosted memorable matches including Anil Kumble’s ten wickets in an innings haul against Pakistan. For the last two years, the ground has been undergoing renovation.[53]

The Bombay Gymkhana hosted the first ever Test match in India which is the only Test it has hosted to date. Wankhede Stadium, established in 1974, has a capacity to hold 33,000 spectators and is currently the most popular venue in the city. It has hosted 24 Test matches. It was the unofficial successor of the Brabourne Stadium, which is also located in Mumbai. Mumbai is often considered the cricketing capital of India because of its fans and the talent it produces (see Mumbai cricket team) and thus the stadium regularly hosts major Test matches.[54] The M. A. Chidambaram Stadium in Chepauk is also considered to be an important historical Indian cricket ground, established in the early 1900s it was the site of India’s first Test victory.[55]

List of venues

Stadium City Capacity First Used Tests ODIs T20Is Ref
Active Stadiums
Eden Gardens Kolkata 67,000 1934 41 30 6 [56]
Feroz Shah Kotla Ground Delhi 48,000 1948 34 24 5 [57]
M. A. Chidambaram Stadium ChepaukChennai 33,000 1934 32 21 1 [58]
Wankhede Stadium Mumbai 33,000 1975 25 21 6 [59]
M. Chinnaswamy Stadium Bangalore 40,000 1974 23 25 5 [60]
Green Park Kanpur 45,000 1952 22 15 1 [61]
Brabourne Stadium Mumbai 20,000 1948 18 8 1 [62]
Punjab Cricket Association Stadium Mohali 28,000 1994 13 24 4 [63]
Sardar Patel Stadium (Gujarat) MoteraAhmedabad 54,000 1983 12 23 1 [64]
Vidarbha Cricket Association Stadium Nagpur 40,000 2008 6 8 11 [65]
Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium Hyderabad 55,000 2010 4 5 3 [66]
Barabati Stadium Cuttack 40,000 1987 2 18 2 [67]
Holkar Stadium Indore 30,000 2016 1 5 1 [68]
Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium Rajkot 28,000 2016 1 2 2 [69]
ACA-VDCA Cricket Stadium Visakhapatnam 36,000 2016 1 7 1 [70]
Maharashtra Cricket Association Stadium Pune 33,000 2017 1 3 2 [71]
JSCA International Stadium Complex Ranchi 39,133 2017 1 4 2 [72]
Himachal Pradesh Cricket Association Stadium Dharamshala 28,000 2017 1 4 8 [73]
Sawai Mansingh Stadium Jaipur 23,185 1987 1 19 [74]
Greater Noida Sports Complex Ground Greater Noida 8,000 2017 0 5 3 [75]
Dr. Bhupen Hazarika Cricket Stadium Guwahati 40,000 2017 0 0 1 [76]
Greenfield International Stadium Thiruvananthapuram 55,000 2017 0 0 1 [77]
Rajiv Gandhi International Cricket Stadium, Dehradun Dehradun 25,000 2018 0 0 3 [78]
Former Stadiums
Nehru Stadium Chennai 1956 9 [79]
Vidarbha Cricket Association Ground Nagpur 35,000 1969 9 14 [80]
Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium Hyderabad 30,000 1955 3 14 [81]
Bombay Gymkhana Mumbai n/a 1933 1 [82]
Gandhi Stadium Jalandhar n/a 1983 1 3 [83]
K. D. Singh Babu Stadium Lucknow 22,000 1994 1 1 [84]
Sector 16 Stadium Chandigarh 16,000 1990 1 5 [85]
University Ground Lucknow na 1952 1 [86]
Barkatullah Khan Stadium Jodhpur 40,000 2000 0 2
Captain Roop Singh Stadium Gwalior 45,000 1988 0 12 [87]
Gandhi Sports Complex Ground Amritsar 16,000 1982 0 2
Indira Gandhi Stadium Vijayawada 25,000 2002 0 1
Indira Priyadarshini Stadium Visakhapatnam 25,000 1988 0 5
Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium New Delhi 60,000 1984 0 2
Keenan Stadium Jamshedpur 19,000 1983 0 10
Madhavrao Scindia Cricket Ground Rajkot 15,000 1989 0 12
Moin-ul-Haq Stadium Patna 25,000 1993 0 3
Moti Bagh Stadium Vadodara 18,000 1983 0 3
Nahar Singh Stadium Faridabad 25,000 1988 0 8
Nehru Stadium Guwahati 15,000 1983 0 14 [88]
Nehru Stadium Indore 25,000 1983 0 9
Nehru Stadium Kochi 60,000 1998 0 9
Nehru Stadium Margao 25,000 1989 0 7
Nehru Stadium Pune 25,000 1984 0 11 [89]
IPCL Sports Complex Ground Vadodara 20,000 1994 0 10
Sardar Vallabhbhai Patel Stadium, Ahmedabad Ahmedabad 50,000 1981 0 1 [90]
Sher-i-Kashmir Stadium Srinagar n/a 1983 0 2
University Stadium Thiruvananthapuram 20,000 1984 0 2

Updated on 25 June 2018 [91]

Captains

Thirty-two men have captained the Indian cricket team in at least one Test match, although only six have led the team in more than 25 matches, and six have captained the team in ODIs but not Tests. India’s first captain was CK Nayudu, who led the team in four matches against England: one in England in 1932 and a series of three matches at home in 1933–34. Lala Amarnath, India’s fourth captain, led the team in its first Test match after Indian independence. He also captained the side to its first Test victory and first series win, both in a three-match series at home against Pakistan in 1952–53. From 1952 until 1961–62, India had a number of captains such as Vijay HazarePolly Umrigar and Nari Contractor.

The Nawab of Pataudi, Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, was the team’s captain for 36 Test matches from 1961–62 to 1969–70, returning for another four matches against West Indies in 1974–75. In the early years of his captaincy tenure, the team was whitewashed in the West Indies, England and Australia. However, in 1967–68, Pataudi led India on its maiden New Zealand tour, which ended in India winning the Test series 3–1. In 1970–71, Ajit Wadekar took over the captaincy from Pataudi. Under Wadekar’s captaincy, India registered its first Test series win in the West Indies and England. India played its first ODI in 1974, also under his captaincy. India won its first ODI under the captaincy of Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan in the 1975 Cricket World Cup, against East Africa. Between 1975–76 and 1978–79, Bishen Singh Bedi captained the team in 22 Tests and 4 ODIs, winning 6 Tests and one ODI.

Sunil Gavaskar took over as Test and ODI captain in 1978–79, leading India in 47 Test matches and 37 ODIs, winning 9 Tests and 14 ODIs. He was succeeded by Kapil Dev in the 1980s, who captained for 34 Test matches, including 4 victories. Kapil Dev led India to victory in 39 of his 74 ODIs in charge, including the 1983 Cricket World Cup. Kapil Dev also captained India’s 2–0 Test series victory in England in 1986. Between 1987–88 and 1989–90, India had three captains in Dilip Vengsarkar, Ravi Shastri and Krishnamachari Srikkanth. Vengsarkar took over the captaincy from Kapil Dev after the 1987 Cricket World Cup. Although he started with two centuries in his first series as captain, his captaincy period was turbulent[citation needed] and he lost the job following a disastrous tour of the West Indies in early-1989 and a stand-off with the Indian cricket board (BCCI).

India has had six regular Test captains since Mohammad Azharuddin took charge in 1989. Azharuddin led the team in 47 Test matches from 1989–90 to 1998–99, winning 14, and in 174 ODIs, winning 90. He was followed by Sachin Tendulkar, who captained the team in 25 Test matches and 73 ODIs in the late 1990s; Tendulkar was relatively unsuccessful[92][93] as a captain, winning only 4 Test matches and 23 ODIs. He was replaced as ODI captain by Ajay Jadeja and then by Sourav Ganguly.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni holds the record for most Tests wins (27) by an Indian captain.

Ganguly became the regular captain of the team in both Tests and ODIs in 2000. He remained captain until 2005–06 and became the then most successful Indian captain, winning 21 of his 49 Test matches in charge and 76 of his 146 ODIs. Under his captaincy, India became the joint-winners of the 2002 ICC Champions Trophy with Sri Lanka, and the runners-up of the 2003 Cricket World Cup. India lost only three Tests at home under Ganguly and managed to draw Test series in England and Australia. Rahul Dravidtook over as Test captain in 2005. In 2006, he led India to its first Test series victory in the West Indies in more than 30 years.

In September 2007, Mahendra Singh Dhoni was named as the new captain of the ODI and T20I teams, after Dravid stepped down from the post. Soon after taking up the captaincy, Dhoni led the team to the inaugural World Twenty20 title. Anil Kumble was appointed Test captain in November 2007, but retired from international cricket in November 2008 after captaining in 14 Tests. Dhoni succeeded him as the Test captain, making him the captain in all formats. Under the captaincy of Dhoni, the Indian team held the number one position in the Test rankings for 21 months (from November 2009 to August 2011), and set a national record for most back-to-back ODI wins (nine straight wins).[94] Dhoni also led the team to victory in 2011 Cricket World Cup and 2013 ICC Champions Trophy. Thus, Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies, namely- ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011, ICC World Twenty20 in 2007 and ICC Champions Trophy in 2013. He is widely regarded as India’s best ever captain. However, the team performed poorly in away Tests from 2011 to 2014 and Dhoni retired from Test cricket in December 2014, with Virat Kohli being named as the new Test captain. Dhoni resigned as captain of the ODI and T20 teams in January 2017 and Kohli succeeded him at the position.

Under Kohli’s captaincy, India was unbeaten in 19 Test matches, starting from a 3–0 series win over New Zealand and ending with a 2–1 series win over Australia. India has an unbeaten streak of winning 9 consecutive Test series as of Dec 2017, starting with a 2–1 series win over Sri Lanka. India also became only the third team after Australia and South Africa to have won their most recent Test series simultaneously against all the other Test playing nations. As per winning percentage in Test matches, Kohli is India’s most successful test captain, having won more than 61% of Test matches (at least 2 games).

Results and fixtures

The recent results and forthcoming fixtures of India in international cricket:

 
Bilateral series and tours
Date Against H/A/N Results [Matches]
Test ODI T20I
July–September 2017  Sri Lanka Away 3–0 [3] 5–0 [5] 1–0 [1]
September–October 2017  Australia Home 4–1 [5] 1–1 [3]
October–November 2017  New Zealand Home 2–1 [3] 2–1 [3]
November–December 2017  Sri Lanka Home 1–0 [3] 2–1 [3] 3–0 [3]
January–February 2018  South Africa Away 1–2 [3] 5–1 [6] 2–1 [3]
June 2018  Afghanistan Home 1–0 [1]
June 2018  Ireland Away 2–0 [2]
July–September 2018  England Away 1–4[5] 1–2 [3] 2–1 [3]
October–November 2018  West Indies Home [2] [5] [3]
November 2018–January 2019  Australia Away [4] [3] [3]
January–February 2019  New Zealand Away [5] [3]
February–March 2019  Australia Home [5] [2]
March 2019  Zimbabwe Home [1] [3]
Multiteam series and tournaments
Date Series Format Position Results [Matches]
March 2018 Sri Lanka 2018 Nidahas Trophy T20I Winner 4–1 [5]
September 2018 United Arab Emirates 2018 Asia Cup ODI Winner 4–0–1 [5]
May–July 2019 England 2019 Cricket World Cup ODI

Personnel

Squad

This lists all the players who have played for India in the past 12 months and the forms in which they have played. Correct as of 22 September 2018.

Key

  • C/G = Contract grade
  • S/N = Shirt number
Name Age Batting style Bowling style Domestic team Zone C/G[95][96] Forms S/N
Captain and middle-order batsman
Virat Kohli 29 Right-handed Right medium Delhi North A+ Test, ODI, T20I 18
Test vice-captain and middle-order batsman
Ajinkya Rahane 30 Right-handed Right medium Mumbai West A Test, ODI 27
ODI/T20I vice-captain and middle-order batsman
Rohit Sharma 31 Right-handed Off break Mumbai West A+ Test, ODI, T20I 45
Opening batsmen
Shikhar Dhawan 32 Left-handed Off break Delhi North A+ Test, ODI, T20I 25
K. L. Rahul 26 Right-handed Off break Karnataka South B Test, ODI, T20I 1
Murali Vijay 34 Right-handed Off break Tamil Nadu South A Test 8
Middle-order batsmen
Shreyas Iyer 23 Right-handed Leg break Mumbai West ODI, T20I 41
Kedar Jadhav 33 Right-handed Off break Maharashtra West C ODI, T20I 81
Manish Pandey 29 Right-handed Right medium Karnataka South C ODI, T20I 9
Ambati Rayudu 33 Right-handed Off break Hyderabad South C ODI 5
Cheteshwar Pujara 30 Right-handed Leg break Saurashtra West A Test 16
Hanuma Vihari 24 Right-handed Off break Andhra South C Test
Suresh Raina 31 Left-handed Off break Uttar Pradesh Central C T20I 3
All-rounders
Ravichandran Ashwin 32 Right-handed Off break Tamil Nadu South A Test 99
Ravindra Jadeja 29 Left-handed Slow left arm Saurashtra West A Test, ODI 8
Hardik Pandya 24 Right-handed Right medium-fast Baroda West B Test, ODI, T20I 33
Axar Patel 24 Left-handed Slow left arm Gujarat West C ODI, T20I 20
Vijay Shankar 27 Right-handed Right medium Tamil Nadu South T20I 59
Washington Sundar 18 Left-handed Off break Tamil Nadu South ODI, T20I 55
Wicket-keepers
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 37 Right-handed Right medium Jharkhand East A ODI, T20I 7
Dinesh Karthik 33 Right-handed Off break Tamil Nadu South B Test, ODI, T20I 21
Rishabh Pant 20 Left-handed Delhi North C Test, T20I 77/47
Parthiv Patel 33 Left-handed Gujarat West C Test 42
Wriddhiman Saha 33 Right-handed Bengal East A Test 24
Pace bowlers
Jasprit Bumrah 24 Right-handed Right fast-medium Gujarat West A+ Test, ODI, T20I 93
Deepak Chahar 26 Right-handed Right medium-fast Rajasthan Central ODI, T20I 90
Siddarth Kaul 28 Right-handed Right medium-fast Punjab North C ODI, T20I 66
Bhuvneshwar Kumar 28 Right-handed Right medium-fast Uttar Pradesh Central A+ Test, ODI, T20I 15
Mohammed Shami 28 Right-handed Right fast-medium Bengal East B Test, ODI 11
Ishant Sharma 30 Right-handed Right fast-medium Delhi North B Test 1
Mohammed Siraj 24 Right-handed Right medium-fast Hyderabad South T20I 13
Shardul Thakur 26 Right-handed Right medium-fast Mumbai West C ODI, T20I 54
Khaleel Ahmed 20 Right-handed Left medium-fast Rajasthan Central C ODI 27
Jaydev Unadkat 26 Right-handed Left medium-fast Saurashtra West T20I 77
Umesh Yadav 30 Right-handed Right fast Vidarbha Central B Test, ODI, T20I 19
Spin bowlers
Yuzvendra Chahal 28 Right-handed Leg break Haryana North B ODI, T20I 3 ( 6 in T20I)
Kuldeep Yadav 23 Left-handed Left arm chinaman Uttar Pradesh Central B Test, ODI, T20I 23

Other players with a central contract who have not played for India in the past 12 months: Karun Nair and Jayant Yadav (both Grade C)

The BCCI awards central contracts to its players, its pay graded according to the importance of the player. Players’ salaries are as follows:

  • Grade A+ – ₹7 crore (US$974,848.00)
  • Grade A – ₹5 crore (US$696,000)
  • Grade B – ₹3 crore (US$418,000)
  • Grade C – ₹1 crore (US$139,000)

Players also receive a match fee of ₹15 lakh (US$21,000) per Test match, ₹6 lakh (US$8,400) per ODI, and ₹3 lakh (US$4,200) per T20I.[97]

Support staff

Tournament history

World Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
England 1975 Round 1 6/8 3 1 2 0 0
England 1979 7/8 3 0 3 0 0
England 1983 Champions 1/8 8 6 2 0 0
IndiaPakistan 1987 Semi-finals 4/8 7 5 2 0 0
Australia New Zealand 1992 Round 1 7/9 8 2 5 0 1
India Pakistan Sri Lanka1996 Semi-finals 4/12 7 4 3 0 0
United Kingdom Republic of Ireland Netherlands Scotland 1999 R2 (Super 6s) 6/12 8 4 4 0 0
South Africa Zimbabwe Kenya2003 Runners-up 2/14 11 9 2 0 0
West Indies Cricket Board 2007 Round 1 10/16 3 1 2 0 0
IndiaSri LankaBangladesh2011 Champions 1/14 9 7 1 1 0
Australia New Zealand 2015 Semi-finals 3/14 8 7 1 0 0
England Wales 2019
India 2023
Total 12/12 2 titles 75 46 27 1 1
World Twenty20 record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
South Africa 2007 Champions 1/12 7 4 1 1 1
England 2009 Super 8s 7/12 5 2 3 0 0
West Indies Cricket Board 2010 8/12 5 2 3 0 0
Sri Lanka 2012 5/12 5 4 1 0 0
Bangladesh 2014 Runners-up 2/16 6 5 1 0 0
India 2016 Semi-finals 3/16 5 3 2 0 0
Australia 2020
India 2021
Total 6/6 1 title 33 20 11 1 1

ICC Champions Trophy

Champions Trophy record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
Bangladesh 1998 Semi-finals 3/9 2 1 1 0 0
Kenya 2000 Runners-up 2/11 4 3 1 0 0
Sri Lanka 2002 Joint Champion 1/12 3 2 0 0 1
England 2004 Group Stage 7/12 2 1 1 0 0
India 2006 5/10 3 1 2 0 0
South Africa 2009 5/8 3 1 1 0 1
England 2013 Champion 1/8 5 5 0 0 0
England 2017 Runners-up 2/8 5 3 2 0 0
Total 2 Titles 8/8 27 17 8 0 2

Asia Cup

Asia Cup record
Year Round Position GP W L T NR
United Arab Emirates 1984 Champion 1/3 2 2 0 0 0
Sri Lanka 1986 Boycotted the tournament
Bangladesh 1988 Champion 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
India 1990–91 1/3 3 2 1 0 0
United Arab Emirates 1995 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
Sri Lanka 1997 Runners-up 2/4 3 1 1 0 1
Bangladesh 2000 First Round 3/4 3 1 2 0 0
Sri Lanka 2004 Runners-up 2/6 6 3 3 0 0
Pakistan 2008 2/6 6 4 2 0 0
Sri Lanka 2010 Champion 1/4 4 3 1 0 0
Bangladesh 2012 First Round 3/4 3 2 1 0 0
Bangladesh 2014 3/5 4 2 2 0 0
Bangladesh 2016 Champion 1/5 5 5 0 0 0
United Arab Emirates 2018 1/6 5 4 0 1
Total 7 titles 13/14 52 35 15 1 1

Other tournaments

Defunct Tournaments
Commonwealth Games Hero Cup Asian Test Championship Austral-Asia Cup World Championship of Cricket
  • India Pakistan Sri Lanka1999: 3rd place
  • Bangladesh Pakistan Sri Lanka 2001: Boycott

Cricket was played only at the 1998 Commonwealth Games. †The Indian team that won the 1985 World Championship of Cricket was adjudged by Wisden as the ‘Team of the Century’.

Individual records

Sachin Tendulkar celebrates his 38th Test century during a match against Australia in 2008. Tendulkar holds multiple world records including the world’s leading run-scorer and century maker in both Tests and ODIs.[98]

Sachin Tendulkar, who began playing for India as a 16-year-old in 1989 and has since become the most prolific run-scorer in the history of both Test and ODI cricket, holds a large number of national batting records. He holds the record of most appearances in both Tests and ODIs, most runs in both Tests and ODIs and most centuries in Tests and ODIs. The highest score by an Indian is the 319 scored by Virender Sehwag in Chennai. It is the second triple century in Test cricket by an Indian, the first being a 309 also made by Sehwag although against Pakistan. The team’s highest ever score was a 759/7 against England at MA Chidambaram Stadium, Chennai in 2016, while its lowest was 42 against England in 1974. In ODIs, the team’s highest score is 418/5 against West Indies at Indore in 2011–12. India score 413–5 in a match against Bermuda in 2007 World Cup which is the highest score ever in Cricket World Cup history. In the same match, India set a world record of the highest winning margin in an ODI match of 257 runs.

India has also had some very strong bowling figures, with spin bowler Anil Kumble being a member of the elite group of 3 bowlers who have taken 600 Test wickets. In 1999, Anil Kumble emulated Jim Laker to become the second bowler to take all ten wickets in a Test match innings when he took 10 wickets for 74 runs against Pakistan at the Feroz Shah Kotla in Delhi.

Many of the Indian cricket team’s records are also world records, for example Sachin Tendulkar’s century tally (in Tests and ODIs) and run tally (also in both Tests and ODIs). Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s 183 not out against Sri Lanka in 2005 is the world record score by a wicketkeeper in ODIs. The Indian cricket team also holds the record sequence of 17 successful run-chases in ODIs,[99]which ended in a dramatic match against the West Indies in May 2006, which India lost by just 1 run when Yuvraj Singh was bowled by Dwayne Bravo’s full toss.

Sachin Tendulkar was the first batsman to score 200 runs (he was unbeaten on 200 from 147 deliveries including 25×4 and 3×6) in a single ODI innings, on 24 February 2010 against South Africa in Gwalior. On 8 December 2011, this achievement was eclipsed by compatriot Virender Sehwag, who scored 219 runs from 149 deliveries (25×4 | 7×6) versus West Indies in Indore. On 13 November 2014 the record was broken by another Indian opening batsmen, Rohit Sharma, who scored 264 runs from 173 deliveries (33×4 | 9×6) against Sri Lanka in Kolkata. In 2013, MS Dhoni became the first captain in history to win all three major ICC trophies- ICC Cricket World Cup in 2011, ICC World Twenty20 in 2007 and ICC Champions Trophy in 2013.

In 2014, Virat Kohli became the first cricketer to win back-to-back man of the series awards in the 2012 ICC World Twenty20 and 2014 ICC World Twenty20. In 2017, Ravichandran Ashwin became the fastest cricketer in history to reach 250 wickets. He and Ravindra Jadeja are considered to be the best bowlers in Test cricket and occupy the top two spots in the rankings for Test bowlers as of May 2017. Virat Kohli became the first captain in history to score double tons in three consecutive series, against New Zealand, England and Bangladesh in 2017.

Statistics

Tests

Test record versus other nations

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied Draw W/L Ratio First Last
 Afghanistan 1 1 0 0 0 2018 2018
 Australia 94 26 41 1 26 0.63 1947 2017
 Bangladesh 9 7 0 0 2 2000 2017
 England 122 26 47 0 49 0.55 1932 2018
 Ireland 0 0 0 0 0
 New Zealand 57 21 10 0 26 2.10 1955 2016
 Pakistan 59 9 12 0 38 0.75 1952 2007
 South Africa 36 11 15 0 10 0.73 1992 2018
 Sri Lanka 44 20 7 0 17 2.85 1982 2017
 West Indies 94 18 30 0 46 0.60 1948 2016
 Zimbabwe 11 7 2 0 2 3.50 1992 2005
Total 527 146 164 1 216 0.89 1932 2018
Statistics are correct as of  India v  England at The OvalLondon 5th Test, Sep 7-11, 2018.[100][101]

One-Day Internationals

ODI record versus other nations

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tied No Result % Won First Last
ICC Full Members
 Afghanistan 2 1 0 1 0 75.00 2014 2018
 Australia 128 45 73 0 10 38.13 1980 2017
 Bangladesh 35 29 5 0 1 85.29 1988 2018
 England 99 53 41 2 3 56.25 1974 2018
 Ireland 3 3 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2015
 New Zealand 101 51 44 1 5 53.64 1975 2017
 Pakistan 131 54 73 0 4 42.52 1978 2018
 South Africa 83 34 46 0 3 42.50 1988 2018
 Sri Lanka 158 90 56 1 11 61.56 1979 2017
 West Indies 121 56 61 1 3 47.88 1979 2017
 Zimbabwe 63 51 10 2 0 82.53 1983 2016
Others
 Bermuda 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2007
 East Africa 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 1975 1975
 Hong Kong 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 2008 2018
 Kenya 13 11 2 0 0 84.61 1996 2004
 Namibia 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2003 2003
 Netherlands 2 2 0 0 0 100.00 2003 2011
 Scotland 1 1 0 0 0 100.00 2007 2007
 United Arab Emirates 3 3 0 0 0 100.00 1994 2015
Total 948 489 411 8 40 54.29 1974 2018
Statistics are correct as of  India v  Bangladesh at Dubai, 28 September 2018.[104][105]

Twenty20 Internationals

T20I record versus other nations

Opponent Matches Won Lost Tie+Win Tie+Loss No Result % Won First Last
ICC Full Members
 Afghanistan 2 2 0 0 0 0 100.00 2010 2012
 Australia 15 10 5 0 0 0 66.66 2007 2017
 Bangladesh 8 8 0 0 0 0 100.00 2009 2018
 England 14 7 7 0 0 0 50.00 2007 2018
 Ireland 3 3 0 0 0 0 100.00 2009 2018
 New Zealand 8 2 6 0 0 0 25.00 2007 2017
 Pakistan 8 6 1 1 0 0 81.25 2007 2016
 South Africa 13 8 5 0 0 0 61.53 2006 2018
 Sri Lanka 16 11 5 0 0 0 68.75 2009 2018
 West Indies 8 2 5 0 0 1 28.57 2009 2017
 Zimbabwe 7 5 2 0 0 0 71.42 2010 2016
ICC Associate members
 Scotland 1 0 0 0 0 1 2007 2007
 United Arab Emirates 1 1 0 0 0 0 100.00 2016 2016
Total 104 65 36 1 0 2 64.21 2006 2018
Statistics are correct as of  India v  England at Bristol, July 8, 2018.[108][109]

Players in bold text are still active with India.

Fan following

Supporters of the Indian cricket team wave the Indian flag during match between India and Australia at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

Sudhir Kumar Chaudhary a fan of the Indian Cricket team, travels to all Indian home games with his body painted as the Indian Flag.

Due to the massive Indian diaspora in nations like Australia, England and South Africa, a large Indian fan turnout is expected whenever India plays in each of these nations.

There have been a number of official fan groups that have been formed over the years, including the Swami Army or Bharat Army,[112] the Indian equivalent of the Barmy Army, that were very active in their support when India toured Australia in 2003/2004. They are known to attribute a number of popular Indian songs to the cricket team.[113]

Fan rivalry and cross-border tension has created a strong rivalry between the Indian and the Pakistani cricket teams. In tours between these two nations, cricket visas are often employed to accommodate for the tens of thousands of fans wishing to cross the border to watch cricket. This intense fan dedication is one of the major causes of the BCCI’s financial success.[114]

However, there are downsides to having such a cricket-loving population. Many Indians hold cricket very close to their hearts and losses are not received well by the Indian population. In some cases, particularly after losses to Pakistan or after a long string of weak performances, there have been reports of player effigies being burnt in the streets and vandalism of player homes.[115] In many cases, players have come under intense attention from the media for negative reasons, this has been considered as one of the reasons for Sourav Ganguly being left out of the Indian team. At times, when a match is surrounded by controversy, it has resulted in a debacle. For example, when India slid to defeat against Australia at Brabourne Stadium in 1969, fans began throwing stones and bottles onto the field as well as setting fire to the stands, before laying siege to the Australian dressing rooms. During the same tour, a stampede occurred at Eden Gardens when tickets were oversold and India fell to another loss; the Australian team bus was later stoned with bricks.[116] A similar event occurred during the 1996 Cricket World Cup, where India were losing the semi-final to Sri Lanka at Eden Gardens. In this case, the fan behaviour was directed at the Indian team in disappointment at their lacklustre performance. An armed guard had to be placed at the home of captain Mohammad Azharuddin to ensure his safety.[116] Indian fans have also been passionate in their following of Sachin Tendulkar, who has been commonly thought of as one of the best batsmen in the world. Glorified for the bulk of his career, a riot occurred in early 1999 in a Test against Pakistan at Eden Gardens after a collision with Pakistani paceman Shoaib Akhtar saw him run out, forcing police to eject spectators and the game to be played in an empty stadium. Although in 2006, a string of low scores resulted in Tendulkar being booed by the Mumbai crowd when he got out against England[117]

Often, fans engage in protests regarding players if they believe that regionalism has affected selection, or because of regional partisan support for local players. In 2005, when Sourav Ganguly was dropped due to lack of form, Ganguly’s home state of West Bengal erupted in protests.[118] India later played a match against South Africa in Kolkata, West Bengal. The Indian team was booed by the crowd who supported South Africa instead of India in response to Ganguly’s dropping.[citation needed] Similar regional divisions in India regarding selection have also caused protests against the team, with political activists from the regional Kalinga Kamgar Sena party in Odisha disrupting the arrival of the team in Cuttack for an ODI over the lack of a local player in the team, with one activist manhandling coach Greg Chappell.[119] Similar treatment was handed to Sunil Gavaskar in the 1987 World Cup Semi Finals by crowds at Wankhede Stadium when he got bowled by Philip DeFreitas.[117]

A successful string of results, victories against arch-rivals Pakistan or victory in major tournaments such as the World Cup are greeted with particular ecstasy from the Indian fans.[120]

Indian women’s cricket team

Eight female cricketers stand on a field. Two players are in red practice jerseys; three other players in red jerseys are facing toward them; a player in a blue shirt is facing away and hides another player in a blue game shirt. In the upper left corner is a fan with an Indian flag.

Members of the Indian cricket team before a Women’s Cricket World Cupgame in Sydney

The Indian women’s cricket team has a much lower profile than the men’s team. For all national women’s cricket teams, the female players are paid much less their male counterparts, and the women’s teams do not receive as much popular support or recognition as the men’s team. The women’s teams also have a less packed schedule compared to men’s teams and play fewer matches. The Indian women’s cricket team played its first Test match in 1976/7, when they drew with the West Indies in a six-match series.[121]

The Women’s Cricket World Cup was held in India in 1978 and featured 4 teams. India lost both the matches they have played. Their next appearance in the Test and ODI circuit was against Australia in 1984, in which the Test series was tied but the ODI series was lost in a whitewash.

The Indian women’s cricket team has since picked up their form, reaching the finals in the World Cup, but then losing to Australia. The Women’s Asia Cup of 2005–06 was won by India, who beat Sri Lanka in the final. They also beat the West Indies in the 2004–05 season, winning the 5 ODI series 5–0. They were knocked out in the group stage of the 2013 Women’s Cricket World Cup held in India. India reached the final of the 2017 World Cup but lost to England by 9 runs, following which the team was praised by many including Prime Minister Narendra Modi.

Jhulan Goswami is the world’s leading ODI wicket-taker while Mithali Raj, the captain, is the leading run-scorer in ODI cricket.

See also

References

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Indian Hockey

India men’s national field hockey team

The India national field hockey team was the first non-European team to be a part of the International Hockey Federation. In 1928, the team won its first Olympic gold medal and until 1960, the Indian men’s team remained unbeaten in the Olympics, winning six gold medals in a row. The team had a 30-0 winning streak during this time, from their first game until losing in the 1960 gold medal final. India also won the 1975 World Cup. India is the most successful team ever in the Olympics, having won eight gold, one silver and two bronze medals till date.

After their gold medal win at the 1980 Olympics, the team’s performance declined through the next three decades, with the team failing to win a medal at the Olympics or the World Cup. In 2016, the Indian men’s team won its first ever silver medal in Champions Trophy and reached the knockout stage of the Olympics for the first time in 36 years. As of 2018, the team is ranked fifth in the world. From February 2018, the Government of Odisha has started sponsoring the Indian national field hockey team, both men and women team. In a first-of-its-kind association, the state has decided to support the India’s field hockey team for next five years.

India
Hockey india Logonewone.jpg
Nickname Men in Blue; Bharat Army
Association Hockey India
Confederation ASHF (Asia)
Coach Harendra Singh
Manager Arjun Halappa
Captain P. R. Sreejesh
FIH ranking Increase (1) (July 2018)

Medals table

Indian Field hockey Team at 1928 Olympics

Indian Field hockey Team at 1932 Olympics

Indian Field hockey Team at the 1936 Berlin Olympics

 
Rank Nation Gold Silver Bronze Total
1 Olympics 8 1 2 11
2 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup 5 2 7 14
3 Asian Games 3 9 3 15
4 Asia Cup 3 5 1 9
5 Asian Hockey Champions Trophy 2 1 0 3
6 South Asian Games 1 3 0 4
7 Hockey Champions Challenge 1 1 2 4
8 World Cup 1 1 1 3
9 Afro-Asian Games 1 0 0 1
10 Hockey Champions Trophy 0 2 1 3
11 Commonwealth Games 0 2 0 2
12 FIH Hockey World League 0 0 2 2
Totals (12 nations) 25 27 19 71

Tournament history

Summer Olympics

No Year Host Position Wins Draws Losses
1 1928 Amsterdam, Netherlands 1st, gold medalist(s) 5 0 0
2 1932 Los Angeles, USA 1st, gold medalist(s) 2 0 0
3 1936 Berlin, Germany 1st, gold medalist(s) 5 0 0
4 1948 London, UK 1st, gold medalist(s) 5 0 0
5 1952 Helsinki, Finland 1st, gold medalist(s) 3 0 0
6 1956 Melbourne, Australia 1st, gold medalist(s) 5 0 0
7 1960 Rome, Italy 2nd, silver medalist(s) 5 0 1
8 1964 Tokyo, Japan 1st, gold medalist(s) 7 2 0
9 1968 Mexico City, Mexico 3rd, bronze medalist(s) 7 0 2
10 1972 Munich, West Germany 3rd, bronze medalist(s) 6 2 1
11 1976 Montreal, Canada 7th 4 0 3
12 1980 Moscow, USSR 1st, gold medalist(s) 4 2 0
13 1984 Los Angeles, USA 5th 5 1 1
14 1988 Seoul, South Korea 6th 3 1 3
15 1992 Barcelona, Spain 7th 3 0 4
16 1996 Atlanta, USA 8th 2 2 3
17 2000 Sydney, Australia 7th 3 2 2
18 2004 Athens, Greece 7th 2 1 4
2008 Beijing, China DNQ
19 2012 London, UK 12th 0 0 6
20 2016 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 8th 2 1 3
21 2020 Tokyo, Japan
Totals 76 14 33

World Cup[edit]

No Year Host Position
1 1971 Barcelona, Spain 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
2 1973 Amstelveen, Netherlands 2nd, silver medalist(s)
3 1975 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
4 1978 Buenos Aires, Argentina 6th
5 1982 Bombay, India 5th
6 1986 London, UK 12th
7 1990 Lahore, Pakistan 10th
8 1994 Sydney, Australia 5th
9 1998 Utrecht, Netherlands 9th
10 2002 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 10th
11 2006 Mönchengladbach, Germany 11th
12 2010 New Delhi, India 8th
13 2014 The Hague, Netherlands 9th
14 2018 Bhubaneswar, India Q

World League

FIH Hockey World League
Year Round
India 2012–13 6th
India 2014–15 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
India 2016–17 3rd, bronze medalist(s)

Champions Trophy

No Year Host Position
1 1980 Karachi, Pakistan 5th
2 1982 Amstelveen, Netherlands 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
3 1983 Karachi, Pakistan 4th
4 1985 Perth, Australia 6th
5 1986 Karachi, Pakistan 5th
6 1989 Berlin, West Germany 6th
7 1995 Berlin, Germany 5th
8 1996 Madras, India 4th
9 2002 Cologne, Germany 4th
10 2003 Amstelveen, Netherlands 4th
11 2004 Lahore, Pakistan 4th
12 2005 Chennai, India 5th
13 2012 Melbourne, Australia 4th
14 2014 Bhubaneswar, India 4th
15 2016 London, UK 2nd, silver medalist(s)
16 2018 Breda, Netherlands 2nd, silver medalist(s)

Commonwealth Games

No Year Host Position
1 1998 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 4th
2 2006 Melbourne, Australia 6th
3 2010 New Delhi, India 2nd, silver medalist(s)
4 2014 Glasgow, Scotland 2nd, silver medalist(s)
5 2018 Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia 4th

Asian Games

yes Year Host Position
1 1958 Tokyo, Japan 2nd, silver medalist(s)
2 1962 Jakarta, Indonesia 2nd, silver medalist(s)
3 1966 Bangkok, Thailand 1st, gold medalist(s)
4 1970 Bangkok, Thailand 2nd, silver medalist(s)
5 1974 Tehran, Iran 2nd, silver medalist(s)
6 1978 Bangkok, Thailand 2nd, silver medalist(s)
7 1982 New Delhi, India 2nd, silver medalist(s)
8 1986 Seoul, South Korea 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
9 1990 Beijing, China 2nd, silver medalist(s)
10 1994 Hiroshima, Japan 2nd, silver medalist(s)
11 1998 Bangkok, Thailand 1st, gold medalist(s)
12 2002 Busan, South Korea 2nd, silver medalist(s)
13 2006 Doha, Qatar 5th
14 2010 Guangzhou, China 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
15 2014 Incheon, South Korea 1st, gold medalist(s)
16 2018 Jakarta, Indonesia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)

Asian Cup

No Year Host Position
1 1982 Karachi, Pakistan 2nd, silver medalist(s)
2 1985 Dhaka, Bangladesh 2nd, silver medalist(s)
3 1989 New Delhi, India 2nd, silver medalist(s)
4 1994 Hiroshima, Japan 2nd, silver medalist(s)
5 1999 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
6 2003 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
7 2007 Chennai, India 1st, gold medalist(s)
8 2009 Kuantan, Malaysia 5th
9 2013 Ipoh, Malaysia 2nd, silver medalist(s)
10 2017 Dhaka, Bangladesh 1st, gold medalist(s)

Asian Champions Trophy

No Year Host Position
1 2011 Ordos, China 1st, gold medalist(s)
2 2012 Doha, Qatar 2nd, silver medalist(s)
3 2013 Kakamigahara, Japan 5th
4 2016 Kuantan, Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)

Sultan Azlan Shah Cup

No Year Host Position
1 1983 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
2 1985 Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
3 1991 Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
4 1995 Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
5 1999 Malaysia 5th
6 2000 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
7 2001 Malaysia 5th
8 2004 Malaysia 7th
9 2005 Malaysia 5th
10 2006 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
11 2007 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
12 2008 Malaysia 2nd, silver medalist(s)
13 2009 Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
14 2010 Malaysia 1st, gold medalist(s)
15 2011 Malaysia 6th
16 2012 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
17 2013 Malaysia 5th
18 2015 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
19 2016 Malaysia 2nd, silver medalist(s)
20 2017 Malaysia 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
21 2018 Malaysia 5th

Champions Challenge

No Year Host Position
1 2001 Kuala Lumpur 1st, gold medalist(s)
2 2007 Boom 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
3 2009 Salta 3rd, bronze medalist(s)
4 2011 Johannesburg 2nd, silver medalist(s)

Afro-Asian Games

No Year Host Position
1 2003 Hyderabad 1st, gold medalist(s)

South Asian Games

No Year Host Position
1 1995 Madras, India 1st, gold medalist(s)
2 2004 Islamabad, Pakistan 2nd, silver medalist(s)
3 2010 Dhaka, Bangladesh 2nd, silver medalist(s)
4 2016 Guwahati, India 2nd, silver medalist(s)

Team

Current roster

Players who are part of the 33-member core squad for 2018:[3]

No. Pos. Name Birthdate From Caps Latest call-up
2 GK Akash Chikte 24 July 1992 (age 26) YavatmalMaharashtra 48 2017 Hockey World League Final
13 GK Suraj Karkera 14 October 1995 (age 22) MumbaiMaharashtra 23 2018 Commonwealth Games
16 GK P. R. Sreejesh 8 May 1986 (age 32) ErnakulamKerala 189 2018 Asian Games
19 GK Krishan Pathak 24 April 1997 (age 21) KapurthalaPunjab 8 2018 Asian Games
1 DF Harmanpreet Singh 6 January 1996 (age 22) AmritsarPunjab 74 2018 Asian Games
3 DF Rupinder Pal Singh 11 November 1990 (age 27) FaridkotPunjab 192 2018 Asian Games
4 DF Gurinder Singh 1 January 1995 (age 23) RoparPunjab 25 2018 Commonwealth Games
6 DF Surender Kumar 23 November 1993 (age 24) KarnalHaryana 87 2018 Asian Games
12 DF Dipsan Tirkey 15 October 1998 (age 19) SundergarhOdisha 24 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
22 DF Varun Kumar 25 July 1995 (age 23) JalandharPunjab 43 2018 Asian Games
23 DF Nilam Sanjeep Xess 7 November 1998 (age 19) BargarhOdisha 10 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
26 DF Birendra Lakra 3 February 1990 (age 28) SundergarhOdisha 160 2018 Asian Games
30 DF Amit Rohidas 10 May 1993 (age 25) SundergarhOdisha 59 2018 Asian Games
5 MF Kothajit Singh 17 August 1992 (age 26) Imphal EastManipur 180 2018 Commonwealth Games
7 MF Manpreet Singh 26 June 1992 (age 26) JalandharPunjab 222 2018 Asian Games
8 MF Sardar Singh 15 July 1986 (age 32) SirsaHaryana 304 2018 Asian Games
10 MF Simranjeet Singh 27 December 1996 (age 21) BatalaPunjab 14 2018 Asian Games
15 MF S. K. Uthappa 2 December 1993 (age 24) KodaguKarnataka 138 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
17 MF Sumit 20 December 1996 (age 21) SonipatHaryana 43 2018 Commonwealth Games
18 MF Nilakanta Sharma 2 May 1995 (age 23) Imphal EastManipur 19 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
21 MF Harjeet Singh 2 January 1996 (age 22) Tarn TaranPunjab 50 2018 Four Nations Inv., New Zealand
25 MF Satbir Singh 22 October 1993 (age 24) GurdaspurPunjab 64 2018 Four Nations Inv., New Zealand
29 MF Chinglensana Singh 2 December 1991 (age 26) Imphal EastManipur 184 2018 Asian Games
9 FW Gurjant Singh 26 January 1995 (age 23) AmritsarPunjab 30 2018 Commonwealth Games
10 FW Armaan Qureshi 1 January 1995 (age 23) GwaliorMadhya Pradesh 13 2018 Four Nations Inv., New Zealand
11 FW Mandeep Singh 25 January 1995 (age 23) JalandharPunjab 109 2018 Asian Games
14 FW Lalit Upadhyay 1 December 1993 (age 24) VaranasiUttar Pradesh 73 2018 Asian Games
20 FW Talwinder Singh 1 January 1994 (age 24) JalandharPunjab 69 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
24 FW S. V. Sunil 6 May 1989 (age 29) KodaguKarnataka 240 2018 Asian Games
27 FW Akashdeep Singh 2 December 1994 (age 23) Tarn TaranPunjab 158 2018 Asian Games
28 FW Sumit Kumar 11 May 1997 (age 21) VaranasiUttar Pradesh 6 2018 Champions TrophyINJ
30 FW Affan Yousuf 29 December 1994 (age 23) BhopalMadhya Pradesh 21 2017 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
31 FW Ramandeep Singh 1 April 1993 (age 25) GurdaspurPunjab 124 2018 Champions Trophy

Reserves

Other players who were part of the squad in 2018:[4]

No. Pos. Name Birthdate From Caps Latest call-up
4 DF Mandeep Mor 16 March 1999 (age 19) NarwanaHaryana 5 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup
4 DF Jarmanpreet Singh 18 July 1996 (age 22) AmritsarPunjab 6 2018 Champions Trophy
30 MF Vivek Prasad 25 February 2000 (age 18) HoshangabadMadhya Pradesh 20 2018 Asian Games
12 FW Dilpreet Singh 12 November 1999 (age 18) AmritsarPunjab 20 2018 Asian Games
32 FW Shilanand Lakra 5 May 1999 (age 19) SundergarhOdisha 6 2018 Sultan Azlan Shah Cup

Support staff

Notable former players

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