India at the Paralympics

India made its Summer Paralympic debut at the 1968 Games, competed again in 1972, and then was absent until the 1984 Games. The country has participated in every edition of the Summer games since then. It has never participated in the Winter Paralympic Games.[1]

India at the
Paralympics
IPC codeIND
NPCParalympic Committee of India
Websitewww.paralympicindia.org.in
Medals
Ranked 57th
Gold
9
Silver
12
Bronze
10
Total
31
Summer appearances

India's first medal in Paralympics came in 1972 Games, with Murlikant Petkar winning a gold medal in swimming. India's best finish yet has been in the 2020 Games, at 24th place with a medal haul of 19 medals (5 gold, 8 silver and 6 bronze).[2]

History edit

India's first medal, and also the first individual gold medal, was won in 1972 Games, when Murlikant Petkar swam the 50 meters freestyle in a world record time of 37.331 seconds.[3] India finished at 25th rank in those games. In 1984, Joginder Singh Bedi won silver at the Men's Shot Put and followed it up with a pair of bronze winning performances in the Discus and Javelin throws. Thus, Joginder became the first multi-medallist Paralympian from India. Bhimrao Kesarkar also won a silver medal in Javelin in 1984 Games. India finished 43rd out of the 54 participating nations.[4]

India continued to participate in each Paralympic Games thereafter, but failed to make an impact until the 2004 Games when Devendra Jhajharia won gold in javelin throw and Rajinder Singh Rahelu won bronze for powerlifting in the 56-kg category.

In 2016 Games, Deepa Malik won a silver medal in Shot Put to become the first Indian woman to win a Parlaympics medal.[5]

The 2020 Games saw India's best-ever medal haul with a total of 19 medals (5 Gold, 8 Silver and 6 Bronze). This result was better than the medal haul of 12 medals of all previous Paralympics appearances combined. The games also had India's best ever participation yet with 54 athletes (40 men, 14 women) across nine sports. It was India's best performance by an overall ranking of 24 (among 162 nations; including Refugee Paralympic Team and Russian Paralympic Committee).[6]

Shooter Avani Lekhara won two medals - gold in 10m Air Rifle SH1 and bronze in 50m Rifle 3 Positions SH1. Thus, she became the first Indian woman to win an individual gold medal and first woman multi-medalist.[7] Shooter Singhraj Adhana also won two medals - silver in 50m Pistol SH1 and bronze in 10m Air Pistol SH1 categories. Para-badminton player Suhas Lalinakere Yathiraj became the first civil servant to win a Paralympic medal, a silver in SL4 category.[8]

In 2020 Games, Vinod Kumar initially clinched a bronze medal in the men's discus throw F52 category event. However, other competitors raised questions about his disability and was subsequently designated as "Classification not Completed". His performance was disqualified, resulting in the loss of his medal.[9]

Medals edit

Medals by Summer Games edit

Games Athletes Gold Silver Bronze Total Rank
  1960 Rome Did not participate
  1964 Tokyo
  1968 Tel Aviv 10 0 0 0 0 -
  1972 Heidelberg 10 1 0 0 1 25
  1976 Toronto Did not participate
  1980 Arnhem
 /  1984 Stoke Mandeville/New York 5 0 2 2 4 37
  1988 Seoul 2 0 0 0 0 -
  1992 Barcelona 9 0 0 0 0 -
  1996 Atlanta 9 0 0 0 0 -
  2000 Sydney 4 0 0 0 0 -
  2004 Athens 12 1 0 1 2 53
  2008 Beijing 5 0 0 0 0 -
  2012 London 10 0 1 0 1 67
  2016 Rio de Janeiro 19 2 1 1 4 43
  2020 Tokyo 54 5 8 6 19 24
  2024 Paris Future event
  2028 Los Angeles
  2032 Brisbane
Total 9 12 10 31 57

Medals by Summer Sport edit

Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
  Athletics 4 9 5 18
  Shooting 2 1 2 5
  Badminton 2 1 1 4
  Swimming 1 0 0 1
  Table tennis 0 1 0 1
  Archery 0 0 1 1
  Powerlifting 0 0 1 1
Total 9 12 10 31

Medalists edit

Medal Name/Team Games Sport Event
  Gold Murlikant Petkar   1972 Heidelberg  Swimming Men's 50m Freestyle 3
  Silver Bhimrao Kesarkar   /   1984 Stoke Mandeville/New York  Athletics Men's Javelin L6
  Silver Joginder Singh Bedi  Athletics Men's Shot Put L6
  Bronze Joginder Singh Bedi  Athletics Men's Javelin L6
  Bronze Joginder Singh Bedi  Athletics Men's Discus Throw L6
  Gold Devendra Jhajharia   2004 Athens  Athletics Men's Javelin F44/46
  Bronze Rajinder Singh Rahelu  Powerlifting Men's 56 kg
  Silver Girisha Nagarajegowda   2012 London  Athletics Men's High Jump F42
  Gold Mariyappan Thangavelu   2016 Rio de Janeiro  Athletics Men's High Jump F42
  Gold Devendra Jhajharia  Athletics Men's Javelin Throw F46
  Silver Deepa Malik  Athletics Women's Shot Put F53
  Bronze Varun Singh Bhati  Athletics Men's High Jump F42
  Gold Avani Lekhara   2020 Tokyo   Shooting Women's 10m Air Rifle SH1
  Gold Sumit Antil   Athletics Men's Javelin Throw F64
  Gold Manish Narwal   Shooting Mixed 50m Pistol SH1
  Gold Pramod Bhagat   Badminton Men's Singles SL3
  Gold Krishna Nagar   Badminton Men's Singles SH6
  Silver Bhavina Patel   Table Tennis Women's Singles C4
  Silver Nishad Kumar   Athletics Men's High Jump T47
  Silver Yogesh Kathuniya   Athletics Men's Discus Throw F56
  Silver Devendra Jhajharia   Athletics Men's Javelin Throw F46
  Silver Mariyappan Thangavelu   Athletics Men's High Jump T63
  Silver Praveen Kumar   Athletics Men's High Jump T64
  Silver Singhraj Adhana   Shooting Men's 50m Pistol SH1
  Silver Suhas Lalinakere Yathiraj   Badminton Men's Singles SL4
  Bronze Sundar Singh Gurjar   Athletics Men's Javelin Throw F46
  Bronze Singhraj Adhana   Shooting Men's 10m Air Pistol SH1
  Bronze Sharad Kumar   Athletics Men's High Jump T63
  Bronze Avani Lekhara   Shooting Women's 50m Rifle 3 Positions SH1
  Bronze Harvinder Singh   Archery Men's Individual Recurve Open
  Bronze Manoj Sarkar   Badminton Men's Singles SL3

Multiple Medalists edit

Athlete Games Sport   Gold   Silver   Bronze Total
Devendra Jhajharia   2004 Athens
  2016 Rio de Janeiro
  2020 Tokyo
  Athletics 2 1 0 3
Mariyappan Thangavelu   2016 Rio de Janeiro
  2020 Tokyo
  Athletics 1 1 0 2
Avani Lekhara   2020 Tokyo   Shooting 1 0 1 2
Joginder Singh Bedi   /   1984 Stoke Mandeville/New York   Athletics 0 1 2 3
Singhraj Adhana   2020 Tokyo   Shooting 0 1 1 2

2012 Games Village Controversy edit

During the 2012 Summer Paralympics it was reported that coaches and escorts of the Indian Team were denied accommodation in the Games Village because their permits were being used by officials of the Paralympic Committee of India.[10] The Team's 10 athletes were to be assisted by six coaches and five escorts, but only two escorts were given passes; Paralympic Committee General Secretary Ratan Singh confirmed that he had brought his son, that the Committee president had brought his wife, and the treasurer had brought his wife and daughter.[11]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ India at the Paralympics on paralympic.org
  2. ^ "Tokyo Paralympics: India finishes 24th with record 19 medals". Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  3. ^ "How a war hero won India's first Paralympics gold in 1972 | Mumbai News - Times of India". The Times of India.
  4. ^ "The lesser-known Olympics". blogger. 2012-08-08. Retrieved 2012-10-13.
  5. ^ "Deepa Malik: First Indian woman to win Paralympics medal". Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  6. ^ "India's Tokyo 2020 Paralympics medal winners". Retrieved 18 March 2023.
  7. ^ "Shooter Avani Lekhara becomes first Indian woman to win gold at Paralympics". The Hindu. September 2021.
  8. ^ Noida DM Suhas LY is World No. 3 para shuttler and Asian champion as well | Other Sports News | Zee News
  9. ^ "Tokyo Paralympics 2021: Vinod Kumar loses bronze, declared ineligible in classification reassessment". espn.com. 30 August 2021. Retrieved 30 August 2021.
  10. ^ "Not provided with escort, alleges Paralympics athlete". thehindu.com. The Hindu. September 3, 2012. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
  11. ^ Kumar, Nandini (September 2, 2012). "Officials ditch special athletes at Paralympics". epaper.timesofindia.com. Mumbai Mirror, re-published online by e-paper. p. 22. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved September 6, 2012.