India’s Contingent for Paris Olympics: 117 Athletes Cleared, Abha Khatua Dropped Mysteriously

India will be represented by 117 athletes at this month’s Paris Olympics after the sports ministry cleared the final contingent, which also features 140 support staff and officials. Of these, 72 have been approved at “cost to the government” to meet the “requirements” of the travelling sportspersons. The only qualified athlete missing from the list is shot-putter Abha Khatua. The games will run from July 26 to August 11.

Khatua, who made the cut through the world rankings quota, has been dropped without any explanation after her name was found missing from the World Athletics’ list of Olympic participants a few days ago. There is no word yet on whether her name has been knocked off owing to injury, a doping violation, or any other technical issue.

The rest of the contingent that has been cleared is on expected lines, with London Olympics bronze medal-winning former shooter Gagan Narang as chef-de-mission. Narang is also a vice president of the Indian Olympic Association (IOA).

“The permissible limit for stay of support personnel in the Games Village against accreditation as per norms of the Paris Organising Committee for the 2024 Olympic Games is 67, including 11 IOA Contingent Officials, which includes five Medical Team Members,” stated a letter from the ministry to IOA President P T Usha, explaining the ratio of support staff allowed as per the size of the contingent.

Despite Khatua’s absence, athletics will make up the biggest group in the contingent, with 29 names (11 women and 18 men), followed by shooting (21) and hockey (19). Table tennis will be represented by eight players, while badminton will feature seven competitors, including two-time Olympic medalist P. V. Sindhu.

Wrestling, archery, and boxing will have six representatives each, followed by golf (4), tennis (3), swimming (2), sailing (2), and one each for equestrian, judo, rowing, and weightlifting.

Tokyo Olympic silver medalist Mirabai Chanu is the lone weightlifter in the contingent and will compete in the women’s 49 kg category. In the Tokyo Olympics, India was represented by a 119-member contingent, and the country logged its best-ever performance of seven medals, including the historic javelin throw gold by Neeraj Chopra. Chopra will be there in Paris to defend his medal.

Besides, there will be 21 contingent officials, of whom 11 will be accommodated at the Games Village, including Narang, two Deputy Chefs de Mission, press attachés, two headquarters officials, and five medical team members. The remaining 10 officials (eight medical team members, a social media attaché, and a team official) will be accommodated in hotels outside the Games Village, the cost of which will be borne by the government.

Shooting will have the highest number of support staff, including one High Performance Director and six coaches, who will stay at the Games Village, while the remaining 11 (four coaches, four physiotherapists, two psychologists, and one strength and conditioning expert) will stay in hotels. Athletics will have 17 support staff members, followed by wrestling (12), boxing (11), hockey (10), table tennis (9), badminton (9), golf (7), equestrian (5), archery (4), sailing (4), weightlifting (4), tennis (3), swimming (2), and judo (1).

The ministry letter further stated that Air Commodore Prashant Arya, Air Attache in the Embassy of India at Paris, will be the Olympic Attache, who will have accreditation and will be visiting the Games Village and competition venues to take care of any issues requiring assistance and intervention from the Embassy.

The golf competition will be conducted at Le Golf National in Guyancourt, Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, which is around 42 km from Paris. To ensure hassle-free travel and practice arrangements, the Indian golf contingent will stay at a hotel near the venue instead of the Games Village.

“…accordingly arrangements for accommodation for members of the Golf Team, including players, coaches, physio and caddy at the request of the Golf players and Indian Golf Union have been made in a Hotel near the competition venue,” the ministry said in its letter.

In a bid to avoid doping embarrassment in Paris, the government has asked the IOA and concerned federations to take appropriate measures.

“The IOA, SAI, National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) and concerned National Sports Federations may take appropriate measures for conducting the dope tests. IOA may also ensure fitness of the team/individual sportsperson prior to their departure,” it said.

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