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Sports India News Updated Dec 30, 2025

IOA Launches Historic National Athletes' Forum for Governance Reform in India

The Indian Olympic Association will host the inaugural National Athletes' Forum in Ahmedabad on January 10, 2026, marking a historic shift toward athlete-centered governance. Led by President PT Usha, the forum aims to move beyond consultation by ensuring athletes directly influence policies affecting their careers and welfare. It will address critical themes including athlete rights, safe sport, mental health, and transparent governance, converting athlete feedback into actionable reforms. The initiative strengthens the Athletes' Commission and seeks to build a more accountable sporting ecosystem across India.

Athlete voices will drive reform: IOA to convene National Athletes' Forum in Ahmedabad on January 10

New Delhi, December 30

In a decisive move to strengthen athlete-led governance and accountability in Indian sport, the Indian Olympic Association will organise the first National Athletes' Forum on January 10, 2026 in Ahmedabad, Gujarat, according to a release.

The Athletes' Forum represents a firm commitment by the IOA to move beyond consullation and ensure that athletes play an active, influential role in shaping policies that affect their careers, welfare, and future. The Forum will bring together current and former athletes, athlete representatives, and key stakeholders from across the country for direct, solution-oriented engagement.

Announcing the initiative, PT Usha, President IOA said, "This is the first time in India's sporting history that athletes are being brought together through a dedicated national forum to directly influence governance. Athlete voices can no longer be peripheral-this Forum signals a decisive shift towards athlete-led reform, accountability, and shared decision-making," as quoted from a release.

Reinforcing the significance of the initiative, Usha further added, "Sustained excellence in sport is impossible without safeguarding athlete dignity, safety, and well-being. This Forum makes it clear that athlete welfare is central to policy, not an afterthought."

The Forum will focus on critical themes including athlete rights and responsibilities, ethical and transparent governance, safe sport and integrity, mental health and well-being, anti-doping education, grievance redressal and structured career transition pathways. Discussions will be geared towards converting athlete feedback into actionable reforms.

MC Marykom, Chair of the IOA Athletes' Commission stated, "Athletes know the system from the inside. This Forum gives us a credible platform to speak openly about challenges and solutions, and to ensure that athlete experiences are reflected in governance and reform."

Adding the perspective of active athletes, Sharath Kamal, Vice Chairman of the IOA Athletes' Commission said, "As athletes, we often feel the impact of policies long after decisions are made. This Forum changes that equation. It allows athletes to be heard at the right time-before decisions are taken-and helps build a more transparent and accountable sporting ecosystem."

The choice of Ahmedabad as the host city reflects the IOA's intention to broaden athlete engagement across regions and ensure that reform-driven conversations reach athletes at all levels of the sporting ecosystem.

The Athletes' Forum is expected to strengthen the role of the Athletes' Commission and contribute meaningfully to the evolution of athlete-centred governance within Indian sport.

Further details regarding participation, agenda, and speakers will be announced in due course.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Sarah B

As someone who follows sports closely, I'm cautiously optimistic. The themes like mental health and career transition are critical. So many athletes struggle after retirement. The proof will be in the actionable reforms that actually come out of this. Hope it's not just another talk shop.

Ananya R

Excellent initiative! Having legends like Usha ji, Marykom ji, and Sharath Kamal sir leading this gives me hope. Athletes' welfare should be the top priority, not just medals. Hope they also address the harassment and discrimination many female athletes face behind the scenes. 🤞

Rohit P

Good move, but will it include athletes from smaller sports and not just cricket, hockey, or athletics? The real problems are in sports like wrestling, boxing, gymnastics where federations are often accused of mismanagement. The forum's composition will be key.

Karthik V

A step in the right direction. However, my respectful criticism is that we have seen many committees and forums before. The IOA must ensure this leads to tangible policy changes, not just a one-day event in Ahmedabad. The real test is implementing the feedback.

Priya S

This is fantastic news! As a former state-level athlete, I know how frustrating it can be when you have no say in the rules that govern you. "Athlete-led reform" sounds perfect. Hope they also create a strong, anonymous grievance system. Jai Hind! 🇮🇳

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

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