India's Elite Shooters Face Off in High-Stakes National Selection Trials

The Indian domestic shooting season advances as over 150 elite rifle and pistol shooters gather at Delhi's Dr. Karni Singh Shooting Range for the Group A National Selection Trials. The event, running from January 19 to 25, features top talent including Olympic medalists and reigning world champions across eight Olympic events. Performances here are crucial as scores from these first two trials are mandatory for selection to the first National Squad of 2026. The trials serve as a key benchmark ahead of a busy international season featuring the Asian Games and the World Championships, which offers the first quotas for the LA 2028 Olympics.

Key Points: National Shooting Trials: Top Indian Shooters Compete for 2026 Squad

  • Trials for 2026 national squad selection
  • Over 150 elite shooters competing
  • Mandatory scores from first two trials
  • Features Olympic and world medalists
3 min read

Elite Indian rifle and pistol shooters set for trials test

Over 150 elite Indian rifle and pistol shooters compete in Delhi trials. Scores are mandatory for 2026 national squad selection ahead of Asian Games and Worlds.

"Top Shooters will like to test themselves in top international competitions early - Report"

New Delhi, January 19

The Indian domestic Shooting season moves forward from Monday, when the country's elite Rifle and Pistol shooters, over 150 of them across eight Olympic events plus the exclusive 50m rifle prone event for men and women, line-up at the Dr. Karni Singh Shooting Range in the national capital, for the Group A National Selection Trials 1 and 2, scheduled from January 19 to January 25. Day one will see the two T1 prone finals and the first day of qualification of the men's 25m rapid-fire pistol T1 trial played out respectively.

Incidentally, the men's RFP has the fewest starters, a dozen of India's best, led by Olympian and world championship silver medalist Anish Bhanwala.

Among other elite shooters who will be seen in action at the hallowed DKSSR will be the likes of reigning world champion Samrat Rana in the men's 10m air pistol, double Olympic bronze medalist Manu Bhaker and her fellow Paris Olympic bronze medalists Swapnil Kusale in the men's 50m rifle 3 positions (3P) and Sarabjot Singh, also in the men's air pistol.

Adding to the star value will be former mixed team world champion and individual world championship bronze winner last year, Esha Singh in both the women's pistol events alongside Manu and former 10m air rifle world champion, Rudrankksh Balasaheb Patil, who will also be starting in both the men's rifle events.

Besides world championship medalists Anjum Moudgil, Mehuli Ghosh and Akhil Sheoran will also be seen in action in the Air Rifle and 3P competitions for women and men.

Also in the mix will be world number two and world cup finals winner Suruchi Phogat, making the women's air pistol the real showstopper of the trials.

Spicing up the National Trials will be the Group A rookies, young and upcoming young talent who have forced their way through to the elite group with rip-roaring performances in recent times and the likes of Jonathan Gavin Antony in the men's pistol, Adriyan Karmakar and Mahit Sandhu in the men's and women's 3P respectively and Suraj Sharma in the men's RFP, will look to give the established stars a run for their money.

Among the seasoned, renowned shots, Olympian and former Asian Games champion Rahi Sarnobat, will also start in both the women's pistol events. Also lining up will be the likes of ONGC's Shweta Singh, an Asian Games bronze medalist, Indian Navy's Omkar Singh, and Gujarat's Lajja Gauswami, who have been part of India and junior India teams two decades ago and to their huge credit are still in reckoning.

With the 68th National Shooting Championship Competitions (68th NSCC) having concluded in the first week of the new year, top shooters, particularly those who missed out on the nationals on the scores front, will look to make strong comebacks as the international season begins in mid-March, beginning April, and the race to make the Indian team heats up.

To make the cut for the first National Squad of 2026, scores of the first two trials are mandatory, adding to the importance of these trials. Top Shooters will like to test themselves in top international competitions early, in order to find out how sharp they are and where they need to improve, ahead of a big second-half of the year which has the Asian Games and the World Championships, the latter the first quota event for the Los Angeles 2028 Olympics, scheduled.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
So much talent! Manu Bhaker and Sarabjot Singh, our Paris heroes, starting the new cycle. The women's air pistol with Suruchi Phogat, Manu, and Esha will be a thriller. Hope the newcomers like Jonathan Gavin Antony can create an upset. All the best to everyone!
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Rohit P
Good to see the system is working. Mandatory trials keep everyone on their toes. No one can rest on past laurels. This competitive pressure is what will produce world champions. Let's see who handles it best.
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Sarah B
As a sports fan, I'm impressed by the structure. Having the trials so early sets the tone for the entire year. The focus on LA 2028 quotas starting already shows long-term planning. Hope the coverage is good for fans who can't be in Delhi.
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Vikram M
While the talent pool is great, I hope the federation ensures a level playing field and transparent selection. Sometimes politics can creep in. The focus must purely be on scores and consistency. Best of luck to all shooters, may the best win.
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Michael C
The mix of experience and youth is perfect. Veterans showing the way and rookies bringing fresh energy. Anish Bhanwala leading a small but elite RFP group is interesting. Shooting is one sport where India consistently delivers on the world stage.

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