India at the 2022 Commonwealth Games: Difference between revisions
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India qualified for both the men's and women's team events via the [[International Table Tennis Federation|ITTF]] World Team Rankings (as of 2 January 2020). Seven players were selected on 31 May 2022; the women's selections were provisional and dependent on [[Sports Authority of India|SAI]] approval since [[Archana Kamath]] was selected even though she did not satisfy the selection criteria.<ref>{{cite news|title=Commonwealth Games 2022: Manika Batra headlines India's Table tennis squad, Archana Kamath makes the cut despite missing selection criteria|url=https://www.insidesport.in/commonwealth-games-2022-manika-batra-headlines-indias-table-tennis-squad-archana-kamath-makes-the-cut-despite-missing-selection-criteria/|access-date=31 May 2022|work=InsideSport|agency=[[Press Trust of India|PTI]]|date=31 May 2022|archive-date=31 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220531212640/https://www.insidesport.in/commonwealth-games-2022-manika-batra-headlines-indias-table-tennis-squad-archana-kamath-makes-the-cut-despite-missing-selection-criteria/|url-status=live}}</ref> |
India qualified for both the men's and women's team events via the [[International Table Tennis Federation|ITTF]] World Team Rankings (as of 2 January 2020). Seven players were selected on 31 May 2022; the women's selections were provisional and dependent on [[Sports Authority of India|SAI]] approval since [[Archana Kamath]] was selected even though she did not satisfy the selection criteria.<ref>{{cite news|title=Commonwealth Games 2022: Manika Batra headlines India's Table tennis squad, Archana Kamath makes the cut despite missing selection criteria|url=https://www.insidesport.in/commonwealth-games-2022-manika-batra-headlines-indias-table-tennis-squad-archana-kamath-makes-the-cut-despite-missing-selection-criteria/|access-date=31 May 2022|work=InsideSport|agency=[[Press Trust of India|PTI]]|date=31 May 2022|archive-date=31 May 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220531212640/https://www.insidesport.in/commonwealth-games-2022-manika-batra-headlines-indias-table-tennis-squad-archana-kamath-makes-the-cut-despite-missing-selection-criteria/|url-status=live}}</ref> |
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The SAI returned responsibility for the decision back to the ''Committee of Administrators'';{{ |
The SAI returned responsibility for the decision back to the ''Committee of Administrators'';{{refn|group=note|The CoA manage the [[Table Tennis Federation of India|TTFI]], which (as of 7 June 2022) is suspended.}} [[Diya Chitale]], who filed a writ petition to the [[Delhi High Court]] protesting her non-selection, replaced Kamath in the amended squad.<ref>{{cite news|title=Diya Chitale, Who Moved Court Over Non-selection, Included In Commonwealth Games Table Tennis Squad|url=https://www.outlookindia.com/sports/diya-chitale-who-moved-court-over-non-selection-included-in-commonwealth-games-table-tennis-squad-news-200926|access-date=7 June 2022|work=Outlook Web Bureau|agency=[[Press Trust of India|PTI]]|date=7 June 2022|archive-date=7 June 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220607131025/https://www.outlookindia.com/sports/diya-chitale-who-moved-court-over-non-selection-included-in-commonwealth-games-table-tennis-squad-news-200926|url-status=live}}</ref> Another player was also added to the men's squad. |
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;Singles |
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*[[India at the 2022 Winter Olympics]] |
*[[India at the 2022 Winter Olympics]] |
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*[[India at the 2022 Asian Games]] |
*[[India at the 2022 Asian Games]] |
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==Notes== |
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{{reflist|group=note}} |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 17:25, 8 August 2022
India at the 2022 Commonwealth Games | |
---|---|
CGF code | IND |
CGA | Indian Olympic Association |
Website | olympic |
in Birmingham, England 28 July 2022 – 8 August 2022 | |
Competitors | 210 (106 men and 104 women) in 16 sports |
Flag bearers (opening) | Manpreet Singh P. V. Sindhu |
Flag bearers (closing) | Nikhat Zareen Sharath Achanta |
Officials | 24 |
Medals Ranked 4th |
|
Commonwealth Games appearances (overview) | |
India is competing at the 2022 Commonwealth Games at Birmingham, England from 28 July to 8 August 2022.[1] It is India's 18th appearance at the Commonwealth Games.
In July 2022, the Indian team of 106 men and 104 women competing in 16 sports was named.[2] India is not competing in 3x3 basketball, beach volleyball, netball and rugby sevens. Indian para-athletes are competing in athletics, para powerlifting, swimming and table tennis.
Hockey player Manpreet Singh and badminton athlete P. V. Sindhu served as the country's opening ceremony flagbearers.[3][4] Squash player Anahat Singh became the youngest Indian athlete to compete at the Commonwealth Games at just 14 years of age.[5] 45-year old Lawn Bowls player Sunil Bahadur was the oldest player in the contingent. India's first medal of the Games was won by Sanket Sargar with a silver in weightlifting.
Saikhom Mirabai Chanu won the first gold medal for the country at the Commonwealth Games 2022.[6]
Sharath Kamal won four (3 Gold and 1 Silver) medals in Table Tennis.
Protest
Following a June 2019 decision by the Commonwealth Games Federation Executive Board to back BOCCG's proposal that archery and shooting not be included in the 2022 sport programme,[7] IOA President Narinder Batra proposed that India boycott the 2022 Games, claiming the CGF leadership had an "India bashing mindset" and that "people with a particular mindset" could not tolerate India's sporting prowess (of which shooting sports constitute a significant portion).[8]
However, the IOA later withdrew its boycott threat[9] and proposed the hosting of a combined archery and shooting championships, scheduled to take place in Chandigarh during January 2022. The proposal was backed by associated stakeholders[10] and subsequently received official approval on the proviso that India bore the cost of hosting the event; medals awarded in Chandigarh would be included in the 2022 Games overall medal table a week after the closing ceremony.[11] In July 2021, the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[12]
In October 2021, Hockey India withdrew both hockey teams from the Games, citing the pandemic within the United Kingdom and the proximity of Birmingham 2022 to the 2022 Asian Games (with Paris 2024 Olympic qualification at stake in the latter); the decision was made in response to the UK's non-recognition of Indian COVID-19 vaccination certificates and England Hockey withdrawing from the 2021 Men's FIH Hockey Junior World Cup in Bhubaneswar.[13] Following discussions with the IOA and Sports Minister Anurag Thakur, the federation determined that India would, subject to qualification, participate in the Commonwealth hockey tournaments.[14]
Competitors
The following is the list of number of competitors participating at the Games per sport/discipline.[15]
Sport | Men | Women | Total |
---|---|---|---|
Athletics | 20 | 18 | 38 |
Badminton | 5 | 5 | 10 |
Boxing | 8 | 4 | 12 |
Cricket | — | 15 | 15 |
Cycling | 9 | 4 | 13 |
Gymnastics | 3 | 4 | 7 |
Hockey | 18 | 18 | 36 |
Judo | 3 | 3 | 6 |
Lawn bowls | 5 | 5 | 10 |
Para powerlifting | 2 | 3 | 5 |
Squash | 5 | 4 | 9 |
Swimming | 7 | 0 | 7 |
Table tennis | 5 | 7 | 12 |
Triathlon | 2 | 2 | 4 |
Weightlifting | 8 | 7 | 15 |
Wrestling | 6 | 6 | 12 |
Total | 106 | 104 | 210 |
Medalists
Athletics
Following the National Inter-State Athletics Championships in Chennai, a squad of thirty-seven athletes was selected on 16 June 2022.[16][17]
- Key
- Q = Qualified for the next round
- q = Qualified for the next round as a fastest loser or, in field events, by position without achieving the qualifying target
- Men
- Track & road events
Athlete | Event | Heat | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Rank | Result | Rank | ||
Avinash Sable | 5000 m | — | DNF | ||
3000 m steeplechase | — | 8:11.20 NR | |||
Noah Nirmal Tom Amoj Jacob Naganathan Pandi Muhammed Anas |
4 × 400 m relay | 3:06.97 | 2 Q | 3:05.51 | 7 |
Nitendra Singh Rawat | Marathon | — | 2:19:22 | 12 | |
Sandeep Kumar | 10,000 m walk | — | 38:49.21 PB | ||
Amit Khatri | 43:04.97 SB | 9 |
- Field events
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Distance | Rank | Distance | Rank | ||
Tejaswin Shankar | High jump | — | 2.22 | ||
Muhammed Anees | Long jump | 7.68 | 8 q | 7.97 | 5 |
Murali Sreeshankar | 8.05 | 1 Q | 8.08 | ||
Abdulla Aboobacker | Triple jump | — | 17.02 | ||
Eldhose Paul | 17.03 | ||||
Praveen Chithravel | 16.89 | 4 | |||
Devendra Gahlot | Discus throw F44/64 | — | 42.13 | 5 | |
Devender Kumar | 46.28 | 7 | |||
Aneesh Pillai | DNS | ||||
D. P. Manu | Javelin throw | — | 82.28 | 5 | |
Rohit Yadav | 82.22 | 6 |
- Women
- Track & road events
Athlete | Event | Heat | Semifinal | Final | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Rank | Result | Rank | Result | Rank | ||
Dutee Chand | 100 m | 11.55 | 4 | Did not advance | |||
Hima Das | 200 m | 23.42 | 1 Q | 23.42 | 3 | Did not advance | |
Jyothi Yarraji | 100 m hurdles | 13.18 | 4 | — | Did not advance | ||
Dutee Chand Hima Das Srabani Nanda Jyothi Yarraji |
4 × 100 m relay | 44.45 | 2 Q | — | 43.81 | 5 | |
Bhawna Jat | 10,000 m walk | — | 47:14.13 PB | 8 | |||
Priyanka Goswami | 43:38.83 PB |
- Field events
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Distance | Rank | Distance | Rank | ||
Ancy Sojan | Long jump | 6.25 | 13 | Did not advance | |
Manpreet Kaur | Shot put | 16.78 | 7 q | 15.59 | 12 |
Poonam Sharma | Shot put (F57) | — | 7.07 PB/GR | 7 | |
Santosh | 6.53 | 8 | |||
Sharmila | 8.43 PB | 4 | |||
Navjeet Dhillon | Discus throw | — | 53.51 | 8 | |
Seema Punia | 55.92 | 5 | |||
Manju Bala | Hammer throw | 59.68 | 11 q | 60.96 | 12 |
Sarita Singh | 57.48 | 13 | Did not advance | ||
Annu Rani | Javelin throw | — | 60.00 | ||
Shilpa Rani | 54.62 | 7 |
Badminton
By virtue of its position in the combined BWF World Ranking (as of 1 February 2022), India qualified for the mixed team event.[18] Following the Senior Selection Trials, a full squad of ten players was selected on 20 April 2022.[19][20]
- Singles
Athlete | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Lakshya Sen | Men's singles | Bye | Smeed (SHN) W (21–4, 21–5) |
Lin Y X (AUS) W (21–9, 21–16) |
Paul (MRI) W (21–12, 21–11) |
Teh (SGP) W (21–10, 18–21, 21–16) |
Ng T Y (MAS) W (19–21, 21–9, 21–16) |
|
Srikanth Kidambi | Bye | Wanagaliya (UGA) W (21–9, 21–9) |
Abeywickrama (SRI) W (21–9, 21–12) |
Penty (ENG) W (21–19, 21–17) |
Ng T Y (MAS) L (21–13, 19–21, 10–21) |
Teh (SGP) W (21–9, 21–18) |
||
P. V. Sindhu | Women's singles | Bye | Abdul Razzaq (MDV) W (21–4, 21–11) |
Kobugabe (UGA) W (21–10, 21–9) |
Goh J W (MAS) W (19–21, 21–14, 21–18) |
Yeo J M (SGP) W (21–19, 21–17) |
Li (CAN) W (21–15, 21–13) |
|
Aakarshi Kashyap | Bye | Shahzad (PAK) W (22–20, 8–1 ret.) |
Kattirtzi (CYP) W (21–2, 21–7) |
Gilmour (SCO) L (10–21, 7–21) |
Did not advance |
- Doubles
Athlete | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Satwiksairaj Rankireddy Chirag Shetty |
Men's doubles | — | Bye | Ali / Bhatti (PAK) W (21–8, 21–7) |
Schueler / Tang (AUS) W (21–9, 21–11) |
Chan P S / Tan K M (MAS) W (21–6, 21–15) |
Lane / Vendy (ENG) W (21–15, 21–13) |
|
Gayathri Gopichand Treesa Jolly |
Women's doubles | — | Bye | Leung / Mungrah (MRI) W (21–2, 21–4) |
Richardson / Wynter (JAM) W (21–8, 21–6) |
Tan / Muralitharan (MAS) L (13–21, 16–21) |
Chen H-y / Somerville (AUS) W (21–15, 21–18) |
|
B. Sumeeth Reddy Ashwini Ponnappa |
Mixed doubles | Bye | Hemming / Pugh (ENG) L (18–21, 16–21) |
Did not advance |
- Mixed team
- Summary
Team | Event | Group stage | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
India | Mixed team | Pakistan W 5–0 |
Sri Lanka W 5–0 |
Australia W 4–1 |
1 Q | South Africa W 3–0 |
Singapore W 3–0 |
Malaysia L 1–3 |
- Squad
- Group stage
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | MF | MA | MD | GF | GA | GD | PF | PA | PD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | India | 3 | 3 | 0 | 14 | 1 | +13 | 28 | 2 | +26 | 620 | 329 | +291 | 3 | Knockout stage |
2 | Sri Lanka | 3 | 2 | 1 | 7 | 8 | −1 | 14 | 16 | −2 | 489 | 520 | −31 | 2 | |
3 | Australia | 3 | 1 | 2 | 6 | 9 | −3 | 12 | 18 | −6 | 514 | 546 | −32 | 1 | |
4 | Pakistan | 3 | 0 | 3 | 3 | 12 | −9 | 6 | 24 | −18 | 382 | 610 | −228 | 0 |
India 5 |
National Exhibition Centre, Court 2 29 July 2022, 14:00 UTC+1 [21] |
Pakistan 0 |
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|
India 5 |
National Exhibition Centre, Court 3 30 July 2022, 09:00 UTC+1 [22] |
Sri Lanka 0 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
India 4 |
National Exhibition Centre, Court 2 30 July 2022, 19:00 UTC+1 [23] |
Australia 1 |
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|
- Quarter Finals
South Africa 0 |
National Exhibition Centre, Court 2 31 July 2022, 17:30 UTC+1 |
India 3 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
- Semi Finals
Singapore 0 |
National Exhibition Centre 1 August 2022, 17:30 UTC+1 |
India 3 |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
- Final
Malaysia 3 |
National Exhibition Centre,Court 1 2 August 2022, 17:30 UTC+1 [24] |
India 1 |
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|
Boxing
Following the men's selection trials on 2 June 2022, eight boxers were selected for the competition.[25][26] The women's trials and selection of four more boxers followed on 11 June 2022.[27][28]
- Men
Athlete | Event | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Amit Panghal | 51 kg | — | Berri (VAN) W 5–0 |
Mulligan (SCO) W 5–0 |
Chinyemba (ZAM) W 5–0 |
MacDonald (ENG) W 5–0 |
|
Mohammad Hussamuddin | 57 kg | Dyeyi (RSA) W 5–0 |
Hossain (BAN) W 5–0 |
Ndevelo (NAM) W 4–1 |
Commey (GHA) L 1–4 |
Did not advance | |
Shiva Thapa | 63.5 kg | Baloch (PAK) W 5–0 |
Lynch (SCO) L 1–4 |
Did not advance | |||
Rohit Tokas | 67 kg | Bye | Kotey (GHA) W 5–0 |
Mata'afa-Ikinofo (NIU) W 5–0 |
Zimba (ZAM) L 2–3 |
Did not advance | |
Sumit Kundu | 75 kg | Bye | Peters (AUS) L 0–5 |
Did not advance | |||
Ashish Kumar | 80 kg | Bye | Tapatuetoa (NIU) W 5–0 |
Bowen (ENG) L 1–4 |
Did not advance | ||
Sanjeet Kumar | 92 kg | — | Plodzicki-Faoagali (SAM) L 2–3 |
Did not advance | |||
Sagar Ahlawat | +92 kg | — | Yegnong (CMR) W 5–0 |
Agnes (SEY) W 5–0 |
Onyekwere (NGR) W 5–0 |
Orie (ENG) L 0–5 |
- Women
Athlete | Event | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Nitu Ghanghas | 48 kg | — | Clyde (NIR) W ABD |
Dhillon (CAN) W RSC |
Resztan (ENG) W 5–0 |
|
Nikhat Zareen | 50 kg | Bagao (MOZ) W RSC |
Jones (WAL) W 5–0 |
Stubley (ENG) W 5–0 |
McNaul (NIR) W 5–0 |
|
Jaismine Lamboria | 60 kg | Bye | Garton (NZL) W 4–1 |
Richardson (ENG) L 2–3 |
Did not advance | |
Lovlina Borgohain | 70 kg | Nicholson (NZL) W 5–0 |
Eccles (WAL) L 2–3 |
Did not advance |
Cricket
By virtue of its position in the ICC Women's T20I rankings (as of 1 April 2021), India qualified for the tournament.[29][30]
Fixtures were announced in November 2021.[31]
- Summary
Team | Event | Group stage | Semifinal | Final / BM | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
India women | Women's tournament | Australia L 3 wickets |
Pakistan W 8 wickets |
Barbados W 100 runs |
2 Q | England W 4 runs |
Australia L 9 runs |
- Roster
Fifteen players were officially selected on 11 July 2022.[32]
Reserves: Simran Bahadur, Richa Ghosh, Poonam Yadav
- Group play
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | NR | Pts | NRR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Australia | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 2.832 |
2 | India | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 2.511 |
3 | Barbados | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 2 | −2.953 |
4 | Pakistan | 3 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | −1.768 |
v
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- India won the toss and elected to bat.
- Meghna Singh (Ind) made her WT20I debut.
- Alyssa Healy (Aus) became the first player, male or female, to take 100 dismissals as a wicket-keeper in T20I cricket.[33]
v
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- Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat.
- The match was reduced to 18 overs per side due to rain.
v
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- Barbados won the toss and elected to field.
- Shaunte Carrington (Bar) made her WT20I debut.
- Semi-final
v
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- India won the toss and elected to bat.
- Gold medal match
v
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- Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
- Yastika Bhatia (Ind) replaced Taniya Bhatia as a concussion substitute.[34]
Cycling
Thirteen cyclists (9 men and 4 women) have been officially selected to represent India at CWG 2022.[35]
Track
- Sprint
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Round 1 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opposition Time |
Opposition Time |
Opposition Time |
Opposition Time |
Rank | ||
Esow Alben | Men's sprint | 10.361 | 23 | Did not advance | ||||
Ronaldo Laitonjam | 10.012 | 13 Q | Glaetzer (AUS) L +0.162 |
Did not advance | ||||
David Elkatohchoongo | 10.120 | 18 | Did not advance | |||||
Rojit Yanglem Ronaldo Laitonjam David Elkatohchoongo Esow Alben |
Men's team sprint | 44.702 | 6 | — | Did not advance | |||
Mayuri Lute | Women's sprint | 11.542 | 20 | Did not advance | ||||
Triyasha Paul | 11.813 | 23 | Did not advance | |||||
Mayuri Lute Triyasha Paul Shushikala Agashe |
Women's team sprint | 51.433 | 7 | — | Did not advance |
- Keirin
Athlete | Event | First Round | Repechage | Second Round | Final |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rank | Rank | Rank | Rank | ||
Esow Alben | Men's keirin | 6 R | 2 | Did not advance | |
David Elkatohchoongo | 4 R | 2 | Did not advance | ||
Shushikala Agashe | Women's keirin | 6 R | 4 | Did not advance | |
Triyasha Paul | 6 R | 3 | Did not advance |
- Time trial
Athlete | Event | Time | Rank |
---|---|---|---|
Ronaldo Laitonjam | Men's time trial | 1:02.500 | 12 |
Mayuri Lute | Women's time trial | 36.868 | 18 |
- Pursuit
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Opponent Results |
Rank | ||
Dinesh Kumar | Men's individual pursuit | 4:37.066 | 19 | Did not advance | |
Vishavjeet Singh | 4:36.709 | 18 | Did not advance | ||
Vishavjeet Singh Naman Kapil Venkappa Kengalagutti Anantha Narayanan Dinesh Kumar |
Men's team pursuit | 4:12.865 | 6 | Did not advance | |
Meenakshi | Women's individual pursuit | 3:49.596 | 15 | Did not advance |
- Points race
Athlete | Event | Final | |
---|---|---|---|
Points | Rank | ||
Venkappa Kengalagutti | Men's point race | — | 10 DNF |
Naman Kapil | — | 10 DNF |
- Scratch race
Athlete | Event | Qualification | Final |
---|---|---|---|
Vishavjeet Singh | Men's scratch race | 5 Q | 13 DNF |
Naman Kapil | 11 | Did not advance | |
Meenakshi | Women's scratch race | — | 19 DNF |
Gymnastics
Artistic
- Men
- Team Final & Individual Qualification
Athlete | Event | Apparatus | Total | Rank | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F | PH | R | V | PB | HB | ||||
Yogeshwar Singh | Team | 11.300 | 11.200 | 11.950 | 13.000 | 13.450 | 12.700 | 73.600 | 18 Q |
Satyajit Mondal | 7.850 | — | 13.400 | — | |||||
Saif Tamboli | — | 14.050 | — | ||||||
Total | 19.150 | 11.200 | 11.950 | 26.400 | 27.500 | 12.700 | 108.900 | 8 |
- Individual Finals
Athlete | Event | Apparatus | Total | Rank | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F | PH | R | V | PB | HB | ||||
Yogeshwar Singh | All-around | 11.500 | 12.900 | 12.350 | 13.200 | 12.050 | 12.700 | 74.700 | 15 |
- Women
- Team Final & Individual Qualification
Athlete | Event | Apparatus | Total | Rank | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
V | UB | BB | F | ||||
Ruthuja Nataraj | Team | 12.300 | 11.950 | 11.350 | 10.650 | 46.250 | 16 Q |
Protistha Samanta | 12.900 | — | |||||
Pranati Nayak | 13.600 Q | 9.250 | 11.000 | 9.650 | 43.500 | 25 | |
Total | 38.800 | 21.200 | 22.350 | 20.300 | 102.650 | 9 |
- Individual events
Athlete | Event | Apparatus | Total | Rank | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
V | UB | BB | F | ||||
Ruthuja Nataraj | All-around | 12.950 | 10.000 | 10.250 | 9.800 | 43.000 | 17 |
Pranati Nayak | Vault | 12.699 | — | 5 |
Rhythmic
- Individual Qualification
Athlete | Event | Apparatus | Total | Rank | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hoop | Ball | Clubs | Ribbon | ||||
Bavleen Kaur | Qualification | 18.100 | 18.750 | 18.450 | 17.400 | 72.700 | 29 |
Hockey
By virtue of its position in the FIH World Rankings for men and women respectively (as of 1 February 2022), India qualified for both tournaments.[36] Detailed fixtures were released on 9 March 2022.[37]
Hockey India originally sought to send reserve squads to the Commonwealth Games; this was so the primary squads could focus on the Asian Games tournaments and attempt to qualify for the 2024 Summer Olympics at the first opportunity.[38] Owing to the subsequent postponement of the 2022 Asian Games, a full-strength men's squad for the Commonwealth Games was confirmed on 20 June 2022;[39] an experienced women's squad was also confirmed on 23 June 2022.[40]
- Summary
Key:
- FT = After full time
- P = Match decided by penalty-shootout
Team | Event | Preliminary round | Semifinal | Final / BM / PM | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
India men | Men's tournament | Ghana W 11–0 |
England D 4–4 |
Canada W 8–0 |
Wales W 4–1 |
1 Q | South Africa W 3–2 |
Australia L 0–7 |
|
India women | Women's tournament | Ghana W 5–0 |
Wales W 3–1 |
England L 1–3 |
Canada W 3–2 |
2 Q | Australia L 0–3P FT: 1–1 |
New Zealand W 2–1P FT: 1–1 |
Men's tournament
- Roster
- Group play
|
|
|
|
- Semi Final
|
- Gold medal match
|
Women's tournament
- Roster
- Group play
Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Qualification |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | England (H) | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 21 | 1 | +20 | 12 | Semi-finals |
2 | India | 4 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 12 | 6 | +6 | 9 | |
3 | Canada | 4 | 2 | 0 | 2 | 14 | 5 | +9 | 6 | Fifth place match |
4 | Wales | 4 | 1 | 0 | 3 | 5 | 12 | −7 | 3 | Seventh place match |
5 | Ghana | 4 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 1 | 29 | −28 | 0 | Ninth place match |
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) number of wins; 3) goal difference; 4) goals scored; 5) head-to-head results.
(H) Hosts
|
|
|
|
- Semi Final
|
- Bronze medal match
|
Judo
India announced a six-member judo team following selection trials held from May 23 to May 26.[41][42]
- Men
Athlete | Event | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Repechage | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Vijay Kumar Yadav | Men's 60 kg | Bye | Gangaya (MRI) W 10–0s1 |
Katz (AUS) L 0s2–10s1 |
Did not advance | Munro (SCO) W 1s2–0s1 |
Christodoulides (CYP) W 10–0 |
|
Jasleen Singh Saini | Men's 66 kg | — | Cugola (VAN) W 10s1–0 |
Burns (NIR) W 10s1–0s3 |
Allan (SCO) L 0s1–10 |
Bye | Katz (AUS) L 0–10s2 |
5 |
Deepak Deswal | Men's 100 kg | — | Omgba Fouda (CMR) W10s2–0s3 |
Lovell-Hewitt (ENG) L 0s3–10 |
Did not advance | Takayawa (FIJ) L 0–10 |
Did not advance |
- Women
Athlete | Event | Round of 16 | Quarterfinals | Semifinals | Repechage | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Shushila Likmabam | Women's 48 kg | Bye | Boniface (MAW) W 10s1–0s1 |
Morand (MRI) W 10s2–0s2 |
— | Whitebooi (RSA) L 0s2–1s2 |
|
Suchika Tariyal | Women's 57 kg | Kabinda (ZAM) W 10s1–1s1 |
Deguchi (CAN) L 0–11 |
Did not advance | Breytenbach (RSA) W 11s1–0 |
Legentil (MRI) L 0s1–1s2 |
5 |
Tulika Maan | Women's +78 kg | Bye | Durhone (MRI) W 10–0s2 |
Andrews (NZL) W 10s1–1 |
— | Adlington (SCO) L 1s2–10 |
Lawn bowls
- Men
Athlete | Event | Group Stage | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Mridul Borgohain | Singles | McIlroy (NZL) L 8–21 |
Locke (FLK) W 21–5 |
McLean (SCO) W 21–19 |
Davis (JEY) L 13–21 |
4 | Did not advance | |||
Sunil Bahadur Dinesh Kumar |
Pairs | Malaysia (MAS) L 14–17 |
Falkland Islands (FLK) W 36–4 |
Cook Islands (COK) W 13–10 |
England (ENG) W 18–15 |
2 Q | Northern Ireland (NIR) L 8–26 |
Did not advance | ||
Navneet Singh Mridul Borgohain Chandan Singh |
Triples | New Zealand (NZL) L 6–23 |
Scotland (SCO) L 12–19 |
Malta (MLT) D 16–16 |
— | 4 | Did not advance | |||
Sunil Bahadur Navneet Singh Chandan Singh Dinesh Kumar |
Fours | Fiji (FIJ) W 14–11 |
Cook Islands (COK) W 20–10 |
England (ENG) L 11–20 |
— | 2 Q | Canada (CAN) W 14–10 |
England (ENG) W 13–12 |
Northern Ireland (NIR) L 5–18 |
- Women
Athlete | Event | Group Stage | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Tania Choudhury | Singles | Hoggan (SCO) L 10–21 |
Arthur-Almond (FLK) L 20–21 |
Daniels (WAL) L 10–21 |
O'Neill (NIR) W 21–12 |
4 | Did not advance | |||
Nayanmoni Saikia Lovely Choubey |
Pairs | New Zealand (NZL) L 9–18 |
Niue (NIU) W 23–6 |
South Africa (RSA) D 16–16 |
— | 2 Q | England (ENG) L 14–18 |
Did not advance | ||
Tania Choudhury Rupa Rani Tirkey Pinki Singh |
Triples | New Zealand (NZL) W 15–11 |
England (ENG) L 11–24 |
Niue (NIU) W 28–7 |
— | 3 | Did not advance | |||
Rupa Rani Tirkey Nayanmoni Saikia Lovely Choubey Pinki Singh |
Fours | England (ENG) L 9–18 |
Cook Islands (COK) W 15–9 |
Canada (CAN) W 17–7 |
— | 2 Q | Norfolk Island (NFK) W 17–9 |
New Zealand (NZL) W 16–13 |
South Africa (RSA) W 17–10 |
Para powerlifting
Athlete | Event | Weight Lifted | Points | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|
Parmjeet Kumar | Men's lightweight | NM | DNF | |
Sudhir | Men's heavyweight | 212 | 134.5 GR | |
Sakina Khatun | Women's lightweight | 88 | 87.5 | 5 |
Manpreet Kaur | 90 | 89.6 | 4 |
Squash
As of 12 July 2022, a team of 9 athletes will represent India in the squash competition at the Games.[43]
- Singles
Athlete | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16/PR16 | Quarterfinals/PQF | Semifinals/PSF | Final/BM/PF | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Saurav Ghosal | Men's singles | Bye | Wakeel (SRI) W 3–0 |
Baillargeon (CAN) W 3–0 |
Lobban (SCO) W 3–1 |
Coll (NZL) L 0–3 |
Willstrop (ENG) W 3–0 |
|
Ramit Tandon | Bye | Binnie (JAM) L (w/o) |
Did not advance | |||||
Abhay Singh | Chapman (IVB) W 3–0 |
Clyne (SCO) L 0–1 RET |
Did not advance | |||||
Joshna Chinappa | Women's singles | Bye | Best (BAR) W 3–0 |
Watts (NZL) W 3–1 |
Naughton (CAN) L 0–3 |
Did not advance | ||
Sunayna Kuruvilla | Bye | Azman (MAS) L 0–3 |
Bye | Sinaly (SRI) W 3–0 |
Zafar (PAK) W 3–0 |
Fung-A-Fat (GUY) W 3–0 |
17 | |
Anahat Singh | Ross (SVG) W 3–0 |
Whitlock (WAL) L 1–3 |
Did not advance |
- Doubles
Athlete | Event | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Velavan Senthilkumar Abhay Singh |
Men's doubles | Reich / Chapman (IVB) W 2–0 |
Kempsell / Clyne (SCO) W 2–1 |
Ng E Y / Yuen (MAS) L 0–2 |
Did not advance | ||
Anahat Singh Sunayna Kuruvilla |
Women's doubles | Kuruppu / Sinaly (SRI) W 2–0 |
Lobban / Grinham (AUS) L 0–2 |
Did not advance | |||
Joshna Chinappa Dipika Pallikal |
Bye | Best / Haywood (BAR) W 2–0 |
Chan Yw / Ampandi (MAS) L 0–2 |
Did not advance | |||
Dipika Pallikal Saurav Ghosal |
Mixed doubles | Bye | Whitlock / Creed (WAL) W 2–0 |
Grinham / Alexander (AUS) W 2–0 |
King / Coll (NZL) L 0–2 |
Lobban / Pilley (AUS) W 2–0 |
|
Joshna Chinappa Harinder Pal Sandhu |
Kuruppu / Laksiri (SRI) W 2–1 |
Lobban / Pilley (AUS) L 0–2 |
Did not advance |
Swimming
India declared its four-member swimming team on 25 June 2022.[44]
- Men
Athlete | Event | Heat | Semifinal/SO | Final | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time | Rank | Time | Rank | Time | Rank | ||
Sajan Prakash | 50 m butterfly | 25.01 | 24 | Did not advance | |||
100 m butterfly | 54.36 | 19 | 54.24 | 16 | Did not advance | ||
200 m butterfly | 1:58.99 | 9 | 1:58.31 | 1 | Did not advance | ||
Srihari Nataraj | 50 m backstroke | 25.52 | 8 Q | 25.38 | 8 Q | 25.23 | 5 |
100 m backstroke | 54.68 | 5 Q | 54.55 | 7 Q | 54.31 | 7 | |
200 m backstroke | 2:00.84 | 9 NR | — | Did not advance | |||
Kushagra Rawat | 200 m freestyle | 1:54.56 | 25 | — | Did not advance | ||
400 m freestyle | 3:57.45 | 14 | — | Did not advance | |||
1500 m freestyle | 15:47.77 | 8 Q | — | 15:42.67 | 8 | ||
Advait Page | 15:39.25 | 7 Q | 15:32.36 | 7 | |||
Suyash Jadhav | 50 m freestyle S7 | — | 31.30 | 5 | |||
Niranjan Mukundan | 32.55 | 7 | |||||
Ashish Kumar | 100 m backstroke S9 | — | 1:18.21 | 8 |
Table tennis
India qualified for both the men's and women's team events via the ITTF World Team Rankings (as of 2 January 2020). Seven players were selected on 31 May 2022; the women's selections were provisional and dependent on SAI approval since Archana Kamath was selected even though she did not satisfy the selection criteria.[45]
The SAI returned responsibility for the decision back to the Committee of Administrators;[note 1] Diya Chitale, who filed a writ petition to the Delhi High Court protesting her non-selection, replaced Kamath in the amended squad.[46] Another player was also added to the men's squad.
- Singles
Athletes | Event | Group stage | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Sharath Achanta | Men's singles | Bye | Luu (AUS) W 4–0 |
Omotayo (NGR) W 4–2 |
Quek (SGP) W 4–0 |
Drinkhall (ENG) W 4–2 |
Pitchford (ENG) W 4–1 |
||||
Sathiyan Gnanasekaran | Bye | McCreery (NIR) W 4–0 |
Lum (AUS) W 4–2 |
Walker (ENG) W 4–2 |
Pitchford (ENG) L 1–4 |
Drinkhall (ENG) W 4–3 |
|||||
Sanil Shetty | Bye | Abrefa (GHA) W 4–0 |
Abiodun (NGR) W 4–2 |
Pitchford (ENG) L 1–4 |
Did not advance | ||||||
Sreeja Akula | Women's singles | Bye | Lyne (MAS) W 4–1 |
Carey (WAL) W 4–3 |
Zhang M (CAN) W 4–3 |
Feng Tw (SGP) L 3–4 |
Liu Yz (AUS) L 3–4 |
4 | |||
Manika Batra | Bye | Fu C N (CAN) W 4–0 |
Jee Mh (AUS) W 4–0 |
Zeng J (SGP) L 0–4 |
Did not advance | ||||||
Reeth Tennison | Bye | Bardsley (ENG) W 4–1 |
Feng Tw (SGP) L 1–4 |
Did not advance |
- Para-Singles
Athletes | Event | Group stage | Semifinal | Final / BM | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Raj Alagar | Men's singles C3–5 | Wyndham (SLE) W 3–2 |
Ogunkunle (NGR) L 1–3 |
Bullen (ENG) W 3–1 |
2 Q | Sule (NGR) L 1–3 |
Ogunkunle (NGR) L 0–3 |
4 |
Bhavina Patel | Women's singles C3–5 | Di Toro (AUS) W 3–1 |
Ikpeoyi (NGR) W 3–0 |
Latu (FIJ) W 3–0 |
1 Q | Bailey (ENG) W 3–0 |
Ikpeoyi (NGR) W 3–0 |
|
Sonalben Patel | Bailey (ENG) W 3–1 |
Tscharke (AUS) W 3–0 |
Obiora (NGR) W 3–1 |
1 Q | Ikpeoyi (NGR) L 1–3 |
Bailey (ENG) W 3–0 |
||
Sahana Ravi | Women's singles C6–10 | Obazuaye (NGR) L 0–3 |
Gloria W S (MAS) L 2–3 |
Yang Qa (AUS) L 0–3 |
4 | Did not advance |
- Doubles
Athletes | Event | Round of 64 | Round of 32 | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Sanil Shetty Harmeet Desai |
Men's doubles | Bye | Elia / Savva (CYP) W 3–0 |
Chambers / Yan (AUS) W 3–1 |
Chew / Poh (SGP) L 0–3 |
Did not advance | ||
Sathiyan Gnanasekaran Sharath Achanta |
Bye | Alleyne / Van Lange (GUY) W 3–0 |
Bawm / Ridoy (BAN) W 3–0 |
Jarvis / Walker (ENG) W 3–0 |
Lum / Luu (AUS) W 3–2 |
Drinkhall / Pitchford (ENG) L 2–3 |
||
Manika Batra Diya Chitale |
Women's doubles | Bye | Chung / Spicer (TTO) W 3–0 |
Hosenally / Jalim (MRI) W 3–0 |
Carey / Hursey (WAL) L 1–3 |
Did not advance | ||
Sreeja Akula Reeth Tennison |
Bye | Elliott / Plaistow (SCO) W 3–0 |
Thomas W Z / Whitton (WAL) W 3–0 |
Wong Xr / Zhou Jy (SGP) L 1–3 |
Did not advance | |||
Sathiyan Gnanasekaran Manika Batra |
Mixed doubles | Bye | Crea / Sinon (SEY) W 3–0 |
Omotayo / Ojomu (NGR) W 3–0 |
Choong / Lyne (MAS) L 2–3 |
Did not advance | ||
Sanil Shetty Reeth Tennison |
Wong Q S / Tee A X (MAS) L 2–3 |
Did not advance | ||||||
Sharath Achanta Sreeja Akula |
Bye | Cathcart / Earley (NIR) W 3–0 |
Leong C F / Ho Y (MAS) W 3–1 |
Pitchford / Ho (ENG) W 3–2 |
Lum / Jee Mh (AUS) W 3–2 |
Choong / Lyne (MAS) W 3–1 |
- Team
Athletes | Event | Group stage | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Final / BM | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Opposition Score |
Rank | ||
Harmeet Desai Sanil Shetty Sharath Achanta Sathiyan Gnanasekaran |
Men's team | Barbados (BAR) W 3–0 |
Singapore (SGP) W 3–0 |
Northern Ireland (NIR) W 3–0 |
1 Q | Bangladesh (BAN) W 3–0 |
Nigeria (NGR) W 3–0 |
Singapore (SGP) W 3–1 |
|
Diya Chitale Manika Batra Reeth Tennison Sreeja Akula |
Women's team | South Africa (RSA) W 3–0 |
Fiji (FIJ) W 3–0 |
Guyana (GUY) W 3–0 |
1 Q | Malaysia (MAS) L 2–3 |
Did not advance |
Triathlon
A squad of four triathletes (two per gender) was selected for the competition; the men will be named at a later date.[47]
- Individual
Athlete | Event | Swim (750 m) | Trans 1 | Bike (20 km) | Trans 2 | Run (5 km) | Total | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adarsh Nair | Men | 9:51 | 1:02 | 31:14 | 0:27 | 18:04 | 1:00:38 | 30 |
Vishwanath Yadav | 10:55 | 1:05 | 32:24 | 0:22 | 18:06 | 1:02:52 | 33 | |
Sanjana Joshi | Women | 11:16 | 0:52 | 33:21 | 0:27 | 23:04 | 1:09:00 | 28 |
Pragnya Mohan | 11:26 | 1:11 | 32:53 | 0:25 | 21:32 | 1:07:27 | 26 |
- Mixed Relay
Athlete | Event | Time | Rank | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Swim (300 m) | Trans 1 | Bike (5 km) | Trans 2 | Run (2 km) | Total group | |||
Adarsh Nair | Mixed relay | 4:17 | 0:47 | 7:54 | 0:21 | 7:12 | 20:31 | — |
Pragnya Mohan | 5:45 | 0:55 | 8:37 | 0:21 | 8:31 | 24:09 | ||
Vishwanath Yadav | 5:08 | 0:51 | 7:54 | 0:24 | 7:54 | 22:11 | ||
Sanjana Joshi | 5:24 | 0:52 | 8:46 | 0:24 | 9:26 | 24:52 | ||
Total | — | 1:31:43 | 10 |
Weightlifting
A squad of 15 weightlifters was confirmed on 13 April 2022.[48]
Jeremy Lalrinnunga, Achinta Sheuli, Ajay Singh and Purnima Pandey qualified for the competition by winning gold at the 2021 Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships in Tashkent, Uzbekistan.[49][50] The other 11 qualified via the IWF Commonwealth Ranking List, which was finalised on 9 March 2022.[51]
- Men
Athlete | Event | Snatch | Clean & Jerk | Total | Rank | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Rank | Result | Rank | ||||
Sanket Sargar | 55 kg | 113 | 1 | 135 | 2 | 248 | |
Gururaja Poojary | 61 kg | 118 | 4 | 151 | 3 | 269 | |
Jeremy Lalrinnunga | 67 kg | 140 GR | 1 | 160 | 2 | 300 GR | |
Achinta Sheuli | 73 kg | 143 GR | 1 | 170 | 1 | 313 GR | |
Ajay Singh | 81 kg | 143 | 3 | 176 | 4 | 319 | 4 |
Vikas Thakur | 96 kg | 155 | 3 | 191 | 2 | 346 | |
Lovepreet Singh | 109 kg | 163 NR | 2 | 192 NR | 4 | 355 NR | |
Gurdeep Singh | +109 kg | 167 | 3 | 223 NR | 3 | 390 |
- Women
Athlete | Event | Snatch | Clean & Jerk | Total | Rank | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Result | Rank | Result | Rank | ||||
Saikhom Mirabai Chanu | 49 kg | 88 CR | 1 | 113 GR | 1 | 201 GR | |
Bindyarani Devi | 55 kg | 86 PB | 3 | 116 NR/GR | 1 | 202 NR | |
Popy Hazarika | 59 kg | 81 | 7 | 102 | 7 | 183 | 7 |
Harjinder Kaur | 71 kg | 93 PB | 4 | 119 | 3 | 212 | |
Punam Yadav | 76 kg | 98 | 2 | NM | DNF | ||
Usha Kumara | 87 kg | 95 | 5 | 110 | 5 | 205 | 6 |
Purnima Pandey | +87 kg | 103 PB | 5 | 125 | 6 | 228 | 6 |
Wrestling
Following the women's selection trials on 16 May 2022, six wrestlers were selected for the competition.[52] The men's trials and selection of six more wrestlers followed on 17 May 2022.[53]
Key:
- VFA – Victory by Fall.
- VPO1 – Decision by Points – the loser with technical points.
- VPO – Decision by Points – the loser without technical points.
- VSU – Technical superiority – the loser without technical points and a margin of victory of at least 10 points.
- VSU1 – Technical superiority – the loser with technical points and a margin of victory of at least 10 points.
- VB – Victory by Injury
- VFO - Victory by Forfeit - if an athlete does not show up on the mat
- Men
Athlete | Event | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Repechage | Final/BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Ravi Kumar Dahiya | 57 kg | Bye | Singh (NZL) W 10–0VSU |
Ali (PAK) W 14–4VSU1 |
— | Welson (NGR) W 10–0VSU |
|
Bajrang Punia | 65 kg | Bingham (NRU) W 4–0VFA |
Bandou (MRI) W 6–0VFA |
Ramm (ENG) W 10–0VSU |
— | McNeil (CAN) W 9–2VPO1 |
|
Naveen Malik | 74 kg | John (NGR) W 13–3VSU1 |
Lou H Y (SGP) W 10–0VSU |
Bowling (ENG) W 12–1VSU1 |
— | Tahir (PAK) W 9–0VPO |
|
Deepak Punia | 86 kg | Oxenham (NZL) W 10–0VSU |
Kassegbama (SLE) W 10–0VSU |
Moore (CAN) W 3–1VPO1 |
— | Inam (PAK) W 3–0VPO |
|
Deepak Nehra | 97 kg | Bye | Randhawa (CAN) L 6–8VPO1 |
Did not advance | Bye | Raza (PAK) W 10–2VPO1 |
|
Mohit Grewal | 125 kg | Bye | Kaouslidis (CYP) W 10–1VPO1 |
Dhesi (CAN) L 2–12VSU1 |
Bye | Johnson (JAM) W 6–0VFA |
- Women
- Group Stage Format
Athlete | Event | Group Stage | Semifinal | Final / BM | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Pooja Gehlot | 50 kg | Letchidjio (SCO) W 12–2VSU1 |
Muambo (CMR) W VFO |
1 Q | Parks (CAN) L 6–9VPO1 |
Letchidjio (SCO) W 12–2VSU1 |
- Nordic Format
Athlete | Event | Nordic Round Robin | Rank | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result | |||
Vinesh Phogat | 53 kg | Stewart (CAN) W 2–0VFA |
Adekuoroye (NGR) W 6–0VPO1 |
Maduravalage (SRI) W 4–0VFA |
- Repechage Format
Athlete | Event | Round of 16 | Quarterfinal | Semifinal | Repechage | Final/BM | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Opposition Result |
Rank | ||
Anshu Malik | 57 kg | Bye | Symeonidis (AUS) W 10–0VSU |
Poruthotage (SRI) W 10–0VSU |
— | Adekuoroye (NGR) L 3–7VPO1 |
|
Sakshi Malik | 62 kg | — | Barnes (ENG) W 10–0VFA |
Ngolle (CMR) W 10–0VSU |
— | Godinez (CAN) W 4–4VFA |
|
Divya Kakran | 68 kg | Bye | Oborududu (NGR) L 0–11VSU |
Did not advance | Ngiri (CMR) W 4–0VFA |
Cocker-Lemalie (TGA) W 2–0VFA |
|
Pooja Sihag | 76 kg | — | Montague (NZL) W 5–3VPO1 |
Di Stasio (CAN) L 0–6VPO |
Bye | De Bruine (AUS) W 11–0VSU |
See also
Notes
References
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- ^ "India Names 210-Member Athlete Contingent For Commonwealth Games". NDTV. New Delhi, India. 7 July 2022. Retrieved 9 July 2022.
- ^ "PV Sindhu named India's flagbearer". The Times of India. Mumbai, India. 27 July 2022. Retrieved 27 July 2022.
- ^ "Manpreet Singh named Team India male flagbearer for Commonwealth Games 2022 opening ceremony". www.sportstar.thehindu.com/. The Hindu. 28 July 2022. Retrieved 28 July 2022.
- ^ DelhiJuly 29, India Today Web Desk New; July 30, 2022UPDATED; Ist, 2022 01:20. "Commonwealth Games 2022: 14-year-old Anahat Singh off to winning start in women's squash". India Today. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
{{cite web}}
:|first3=
has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ MumbaiJuly 31, Tanushree Roy; July 31, 2022UPDATED; Ist, 2022 16:16. "Indian Celebs praise Mirabai Chanu for winning gold medal in CWG 2022". India Today. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
{{cite web}}
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has numeric name (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "Birmingham 2022 proposes three new sports to Commonwealth Games schedule". CGF. 20 June 2019. Archived from the original on 28 January 2020. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "Indian Olympic Association Proposes Boycott Of 2022 Commonwealth Games For Shooting Snub". Outlook Web Bureau. PTI. 27 July 2019. Archived from the original on 27 July 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "India to take part in 2022 Commonwealth Games". DD News. Doordarshan. 31 December 2019. Archived from the original on 31 December 2019. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "CGF statement on India proposal for Commonwealth Shooting and Archery Events". CGF. 7 January 2020. Archived from the original on 15 January 2020. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ Dixon, Ed (24 February 2020). "India to host 2022 Commonwealth Games shooting and archery". SportsPro. Archived from the original on 24 February 2020. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "2022 Commonwealth shooting and archery in India cancelled due to COVID threat". ESPN. 2 July 2021. Archived from the original on 6 March 2022. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "Hockey India Withdraws From 2022 Commonwealth Games Due To Covid Concerns". NDTV Sports. PTI. 5 October 2021. Archived from the original on 5 October 2021. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
- ^ "Indian hockey teams to compete in Birmingham Commonwealth Games, says Commonwealth Games Federation". The Indian Express. PTI. 4 December 2021. Archived from the original on 15 December 2021. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
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