Mandeep Kaur, right, is congratulated after finishing first for India in the women’s 4x400m relay final at the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou. The country is debating sending only potential medal winners to the 2014 Games at Incheon, South Korea. Philippe Lopez / AFP
Mandeep Kaur, right, is congratulated after finishing first for India in the women’s 4x400m relay final at the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou. The country is debating sending only potential medal winneShow more

Athletes left in dark as India debate size of their delegation to Asian Games



MUMBAI // A large number of Indian athletes are in the dark about their participation at the Asian Games as the country’s sports officials debate sending only medal hopefuls to Incheon.

The Indian Olympic Association (IOA) sent a list of 944 athletes and officials for government approval to travel to the games, which begin on September 19, but the national sports authority wants it cut back for fear that the country might be embarrassed on the world stage.

“The IOA list is huge and we have recommended pruning. We don’t want the athletes to cut a sorry figure there,” Sports Authority of India (SAI) director general Jiji Thomson said yesterday.

“We want to send people with a realistic chance of winning medals, since it’s the country’s pride that is at stake.

“But we are bureaucrats and it’s up to the sports minister to take a final call.”

India sent 609 athletes in a delegation of 933 to the Guangzhou Games in China four years ago, where they participated in 35 disciplines and won 65 medals, including 14 gold.

The SAI recommended that the government approve athletes for only 26 disciplines for the games in South Korea, though they expect at least 70 medals. The SAI said last week that India was not likely to compete in baseball, bowling, fencing, karate, modern pentathlon, rugby, soft ball, soft tennis and triathlon in Incheon, because of the athletes’ poor standards.

The sports minister, Sarbananda Sonowal, was scheduled to discuss the issue late yesterday, Thomson said.

The ministry in the past has cleared federations to send athletes, so long as they take care of their own expenses.

IOA secretary general Rajeev Mehta said the sports ministry could not stop athletes from travelling to Incheon if their federations paid the bill.

“I can assure you all the athletes we have recommended will travel to Korea for the Asian Games,” Mehta said last week. “SAI has no authority to decide who will go. It’s the prerogative of the federations and the IOA.”

However, SAI insisted government clearance was mandatory.

“According to the new Sports Code, the minister’s approval is necessary even if the federations fund their trip,” Thomson said.

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