Sports Federations Conclave Marks Key Step Towards India's Global Event Prep

Union Sports Minister Mansukh Mandaviya inaugurated the National Sports Federation Conclave 2026 with representatives from 37 federations. The conclave focused on India's preparations for the Commonwealth Games 2026, Asian Games 2026, and Summer Olympics 2028. Mandaviya emphasized governance reforms, anti-doping measures, and athlete-centric policies. The event also saw the release of the National Sports Governance Act 2025 Rules and Reform Guidelines Handbook.

Key Points: Sports Federations Conclave: India's Path to Olympics 2028

  • 37 National Sports Federations attend conclave
  • Focus on Asian Games, Commonwealth Games, Olympics 2028
  • Governance reforms and anti-doping measures highlighted
  • Khelo India and Fit India Movement emphasized
3 min read

Sports federations meet marks step towards Asian, Commonwealth and Olympic preparations: Mansukh Mandaviya

Union Minister Mansukh Mandaviya opens National Sports Federation Conclave 2026, focusing on governance reforms, anti-doping, and preparations for Asian Games, Commonwealth Games, and Olympics 2028.

Sports federations meet marks step towards Asian, Commonwealth and Olympic preparations: Mansukh Mandaviya
"The National Sports Federation Conclave marks a coordinated step towards India's preparation for upcoming global sporting events. - Mansukh Mandaviya"

New Delhi, May 7

Union Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports Mansukh Mandaviya attended the National Sports Federation Conclave 2026, which brought together representatives from 37 National Sports Federations, including the Indian Olympic Association, to deliberate on India's future sporting roadmap and preparations for major international events, including the Commonwealth Games 2026, Asian Games 2026 and Summer Olympics 2028, according to a press release.

Addressing the conclave, Union Sports Minister Mandaviya said, "The National Sports Federation Conclave marks a coordinated step towards India's preparation for upcoming global sporting events."

The Sports Minister also highlighted the Government's broader vision of transforming India into a leading sporting nation through long-term planning, scientific training, stronger sporting infrastructure and sustained support for athletes preparing for major international competitions.

Highlighting the importance of institutional reforms and good governance practices, Mandaviya stated, "India's sporting future depends on stronger coordination between athletes, federations and governments."

Stressing that governance within federations must remain athlete-centric, he called for greater transparency, timely elections, accountability and stronger institutional mechanisms to ensure athlete welfare remains at the centre of India's sporting ecosystem.

The Union Minister also reiterated the Government's commitment towards eradicating doping from the Indian sports ecosystem through awareness, education and stricter legal measures.

"Eradicating doping from the Indian sports ecosystem requires collective responsibility and strict action," Mandaviya said, while urging federations, coaches and support staff to actively contribute towards building a clean and transparent sporting culture in the country.

Mandaviya further highlighted the Government's larger vision of strengthening the sports ecosystem through initiatives such as Khelo India, Fit India Movement and the upcoming Khelo Bharat Mission.

He underlined the importance of scientific training, regular competition exposure, private sector participation, sports leagues, academies and governance reforms to improve India's medal prospects at the Asian Games, Commonwealth Games and LA Olympics 2028.

During the conclave, the National Sports Governance Act 2025 Rules and Reform Guidelines Handbook was also formally released by the Union Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports.

The Union Sports Minister also emphasised the need to strengthen India's sporting structure through greater accountability, transparent athlete selection processes and sustained institutional support for federations.

Mandaviya outlined that the Government is committed to ensuring open and fair selection systems, enhanced competition exposure, stronger international engagement for federations and increased investment in athletes, coaches and governance mechanisms.

Minister of State for Youth Affairs and Sports Raksha Khadse emphasised the importance of long-term planning, athlete support systems and scientific training practices in building a future-ready sporting ecosystem for the country.

She further stated that, "India's march towards Asian Games, Commonwealth Games and Olympics 2028 will be driven by performance, powered by science and anchored in stronger federations."

Secretary (Sports) Hari Ranjan Rao highlighted the importance of collective responsibility and long-term planning in achieving India's sporting ambitions.

"The nation that dreams big, prepares bigger; today's discussions will shape India's sporting future for 2036," he said.

Stressing the need for greater competition exposure, leagues and modern training systems, he called for coordinated teamwork among federations and stakeholders to fulfil India's aspirations of becoming a global sporting powerhouse.

The conclave also featured focused discussions on India's evolving sporting roadmap, spanning the Khelo India Mission Medal Strategy, promotion of sports goods manufacturing, scientific fitness protocols and athlete assessment, strengthening anti-doping laws, technical interventions for National Sports Federations, governance and compliance under the NSG Act 2025, India's ambition to host major international sporting events and enhance representation in global federations, along with strategic preparedness for the upcoming sporting events.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
Good to see the Minister talking about anti-doping and clean sports. But I hope this isn't just another press release photo op. We need real accountability in NSFs—many of them are run like personal fiefdoms. Let's see if the NSG Act 2025 actually changes ground reality.
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Rohit P
The emphasis on scientific training and private sector participation is long overdue! We can't just rely on government academies. Need leagues like ISL for every sport. Also, that quote "nation that dreams big, prepares bigger" is spot on. 2036 is our chance—start preparing yesterday! 🔥
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Neha E
Sounds promising on paper. But I'll believe it when I see our shooters and wrestlers not facing selection controversies. The part about transparent athlete selection processes is key—how many times have we seen deserving kids lose out because of federation bias? Let action follow the words.
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Raghav A
Great to see Minister Mandaviya taking charge. I liked the focus on Khelo India and Fit India—grassroots development is the only way we'll sustain long term. But one concern: with so many events (Asian Games, CWG, Olympics) in quick succession, are we spreading our resources too thin? 🤔
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David E
As someone who follows Indian sports from abroad, this seems like the most structured approach I've seen. The NSG Act 2025, governance handbook, scientific fitness protocols—these are all steps in the right direction. India has the talent, now just needs the system. Go for gold! 🇮🇳

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