Tue, 26 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 26, 2026 · 20:17
Sports India News Updated May 26, 2026

SAI Backs Jyothi Surekha Vennam & Dhiraj Bommadevara for LA 2028 Cycle

The Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports and SAI are providing extensive financial and high-performance support to leading archers Dhiraj Bommadevara and Jyothi Surekha Vennam for the LA 2028 Olympic cycle. Dhiraj has received approximately Rs 66.28 lakh through TOPS, while Jyothi has received Rs 24.56 lakh, including funding for a personalized foreign training camp in Germany and a sports psychologist. A structured preparation program includes a foreign training camp in Mexico and an ongoing Senior National Archery Coaching Camp in Sonipat with 16 elite archers. Asiad-bound archers will also attend an exposure camp in Japan before the Asian Games 2026 in Aichi-Nagoya.

Jyothi Surekha Vennam, Dhiraj Bommadevara receive extensive support for LA 2028 cycle from SAI

New Delhi, May 26

In order to sharpen preparations for the Asian Games 2026 and the upcoming Archery World Cup stages, the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports and Sports Authority of India have continued to provide extensive financial and high-performance support to the country's leading archers, including Dhiraj Bommadevara and Jyothi Surekha Vennam. Both Dhiraj and Jyothi are part of the Target Olympic Podium Scheme Core group.

Dhiraj, representing India at the Asiad 2026 in the recurve category, has received overall support amounting to approximately Rs 66.28 lakh so far in the Los Angeles 2028 Olympic cycle so far, through TOPS. Compound archer Jyothi Surekha Vennam, meanwhile, has received close to Rs 24.56 lakh so far in support, according to a press release.

Jyothi was also provided financial assistance towards a personalised Foreign Training Camp from 20 July to 5 August, 2025 (15 Days) in August 2025 at Beiter Archery Centre, Germany. In addition, TOPS has also provided financial assistance for engaging sports and performance psychologist Shree Advani to further strengthen Jyothi's mental conditioning and competition readiness ahead of major international events.

The support comes alongside a structured international and domestic preparation programme for the Indian archery team. Earlier this year, a foreign training camp in Mexico was organised from March 26 to April 5 ahead of the Archery World Cup Stage 1 under NTPC CSR support at a total cost of Rs 57.42 lakh. The exposure camp featured several top Indian archers, including Dhiraj, Jyothi, Deepika Kumari and Atanu Das, giving the squad valuable international training exposure before the competitive season.

The preparations are also continuing through an ongoing Senior National Archery Coaching Camp at the SAI National Centre of Excellence in Sonipat from May 20 to June 7. The camp has brought together 16 elite archers across recurve and compound categories, supported by coaches and sports science staff, with a clear focus on building combinations, consistency and medal readiness for the Asian Games and upcoming World Cup stages.

To further hone the skills of the archers ahead of the Aichi-Nagoya games, the Asiad-bound archers will go through an exposure camp in Japan from 5th to 18th September. The Asian Games 2026 is scheduled from 19 September to 4 October.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Vikram M

Good to see TOPS investing in archers who have shown potential. But I hope this isn't another case of spending crores with no medal return. We've seen too many such stories before. Let's wait and watch if this translates into actual podium finishes at LA 2028.

Priya S

As someone who follows archery closely, I'm thrilled to see Jyothi getting mental conditioning support. Archery is 90% mental game, and Shree Advani's involvement could be a game-changer. Also happy that Deepika Kumari and Atanu Das are part of the camps—healthy competition will push everyone! 🙌

Rahul R

Rs 66 lakh for Dhiraj and Rs 24 lakh for Jyothi—that's serious investment. But why is there such a big difference between recurve and compound support? Both categories need equal attention. Also, I hope other promising archers from smaller states also get similar opportunities, not just the big names.

Siddharth J

The Mexico camp and Japan exposure camp are excellent moves. Competing in different conditions abroad always helps our archers improve. I just wish SAI would also focus on grassroots development in archery—our rural talent is immense but underfunded. Still, kudos for the structured approach this time! 🎯

Neha E

It's heartening to see women archers like Jyothi and Deepika getting such support. But I hope the same attention is given to other women athletes in different sports too. Indian women have been bringing home medals consistently—they deserve all the backing they can get. Also,

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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