Essayer OR - Gratuit
TOPS core group pruned from 120 athletes to just 42
Hindustan Times Ranchi
|February 23, 2025
The double Olympics bronze medal-winning men's hockey team, the men's and women's athletics relay teams, and a number of individual athletes have been left out from the Target Olympic Podium Scheme's (TOPS) list for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics cycle, according to officials aware of the matter.
NEW DELHI: India is interested in hosting the 2030 Commonwealth Games and is planning to send a letter of intent to the Commonwealth Games Federation (CGF), according to a top official in the sports ministry.
India has also spoken to CGF to see if it can organise the 10 sports that have been removed from the 2026 Glasgow CWG programme. Most of these sports - wrestling, shooting, table tennis, badminton, squash, archery, hockey, T20 cricket - are major medal-winning disciplines for India.
It has been learnt that sports minister Mansukh Mandaviya spoke to CGF president Chris Jenkins during his recent visit to India. "India is interested in hosting the 2030 CWG. A formal proposal will be sent in March. India has also said it is ready to hold competitions in 10 sports that have been left out from Glasgow 2026 in India. All these sports add to India's medal count and we don't want to lose out on that," the sports ministry official said. "CGF said they don't have any problem (on 2026) but it is a call of the Glasgow organisers as they have the hosting rights. India are in talks with CGF and Glasgow and is doing its best to see that these sports are held in India so that we don't lose out our medal winning disciplines."
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition February 23, 2025 de Hindustan Times Ranchi.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Hindustan Times Ranchi
Hindustan Times Ranchi
‘A book like this sucks you in’
On translating Mahatma Gandhi's grand-nephew’s memoir, Jivannu Parodh, from the original Gujarati
2 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
‘It is not the job of writing to be ethical; its job is to be true’
At the Jaipur Literature Festival, Richard Flanagan, the only writer in the world to have won both the Booker Prize and the Baillie Gifford Prize for Non-Fiction, talks about what stories mean to us
4 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
My heart, your deadline
‘90s rom-coms sold us The Pact: If you and your bestie are both single by a set age, you will get married. IRL, settling for a friend is such a bad idea
3 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
In Noida, reminder of the sinking state of humanity
Death shouldn't be a mere number.
2 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
Bastar: a traveller’s tale
In the introduction to Landscapes of Wilderness, the author Narendra confesses that his book is “not a formal sociological work” and is “more like a traveller's tale”.
3 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
Wait, is this Kolkata?
Kolkata’s food scene has got range. You can dig into 1947-era Lucknow biryani, contemporary food at cafés, and North-Eastern cuisine at top hotels
4 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
Govt may budget ₹9,800 crore for MDF
The government is set to operationalise the ₹25,000 crore Maritime Development Fund (MDF) by allocating ₹9,800 crore to it in the upcoming budget.
1 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
The national anthem before our national anthem was adopted
The British struggled to give India a universally acceptable national anthem, given the country’s rich diversity of language, music and sensibilities. The freedom movement and independent India faced no such challenge
4 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
You don't want to hear this, but....
Wes Anderson films are (gasp) lowkey boring. Candles are not self-care. Even radical art is pretending. Andaz Apna Apna is unwatchable. We're airing the most unhinged opinions of our time. Consider this your trigger warning
5 mins
January 24, 2026
Hindustan Times Ranchi
Social media ban alone won't work
Protecting children online calls for a range of measures, including improving parental awareness to monitor risky behaviour
2 mins
January 24, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

