Key Points

India wrapped up their FISU World University Games campaign with a total of 12 medals. Ankita Dhyani secured a silver in the women’s steeplechase, while relay and race walk teams added bronze. Historic wins came in tennis and badminton, marking India’s first medals in these events. Compound archery also delivered multiple podium finishes, boosting India’s overall tally.

Key Points: India Wins 12 Medals at FISU World University Games 2024

  • Ankita Dhyani wins silver in women’s 3000m steeplechase
  • Men’s 4x100m relay and women’s race walk team clinch bronze
  • India earns historic tennis and badminton medals
  • Compound archery contributes multiple gold and silver medals
3 min read

FISU World University Games: India finish competition with medal count of 12

India concludes FISU World University Games with 12 medals, including athletics, archery, and historic tennis and badminton performances.

"Ankita Dhyani shines with steeplechase silver as India secures 12 medals in Rhine-Ruhr – Olympics.com"

Rhine-Ruhr, July 28

India concluded their campaign at the FISU World University Games with a total of 12 medals, including two bronze medals and a silver medal by Ankita Dhyani in women's 3,000 m steeplechase on the final day of the competition on Sunday.

The three medals on the final day took the Indian tally to two gold, five silver and five bronze medals, a total of 12 medals. The bronze medals were secured by the men's 4x100m relay and women's race walk teams on Sunday, as per Olympics.com.

Ankita, who took part in the 5,000 m event in the 2024 Paris Olympics, took the steeplechase late last year and, in April, clocked her previous best timings of 9:39.00 in Iowa

Ilona Mononen of Finland bagged the gold after finishing in 9:31.86, and Germany's Adia Budde bagged bronze with a time of 9:33.34.

India kick-started the final day of the competition with a bronze medal in the women's 20 km race walk event as the trio of Sejal Singh, Munita Prajapati, and Mansi Negi secured a combined timing of 4:56:06 hours. Sejal was the fastest amongst all Indian walkers, finishing 15th individually with a 1:35:21 hour timing, while Munita Prajapati (1:39:33) finished in 18th spot, and Mansi Negi (1:41:12) finished 20th.

China walked away with the gold medal in the event with a time of 4:28:51 hours, and Australia finished second with a time of 4:31:20 hours in the women's 20km race walk event.

Coming to the men's 4x100m relay, the quartet of Lalu Prasad Bhoi, Animesh Kujur, Manikanta Hoblidhar and Dondapati Mrutyum Jayaram took home the bronze medal with a timing of 38.89, while South Korea took home the gold with 38.50 and South Africa got the silver with 38.80.

India secured a total of five athletics medals at the competition, with Praveen Chitravel and Seema getting the silver medals in men's triple jump and the women's 5000m race, respectively, on Saturday.

India also had a fine medal count in compound archery, as Sahil Rajesh Jadhav and Parneet Kaur walked away with gold and silver medals in the men's and women's compound events. India also landed a gold medal in the mixed team event, and the men's team got a silver. The women's team bronze was another highlight in the compound category.

India's medal tally opened with its second-ever badminton medal at the event, a historic bronze medal in the mixed team event. In tennis as well, India secured their first-ever medal, with Vaishnavi Adkar claiming a singles bronze. The first-ever tennis medal was won by Nandan Bal in 1979 in Mexico, a silver.

India's best-ever performance in the World University Games came back in 2023 at Chengdu, finishing seventh with 26 medals, including 11 gold medals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Our compound archery team was on fire! 3 medals including gold is amazing. But why is media not covering this as much as cricket? Other sports deserve equal attention.
R
Rohit P
Good performance but we can do better! China got 103 medals total. Need more investment in sports infrastructure at university level. Our race walk timing was 30 mins behind China's - shows the gap.
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Shreya B
Historic bronze in badminton mixed team and first-ever tennis medal! 👏 These small steps will inspire more students to take up sports. Education + sports can go hand in hand.
V
Vikram M
The relay team's bronze is special! 4 athletes from different states coming together with perfect coordination. This is what 'Unity in Diversity' actually looks like on ground.
K
Kavya N
While 12 medals is good, we must note it's less than half of last year's 26. Hope this isn't a downward trend. Sports Ministry should analyze what worked better in 2023 and replicate.
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Michael C
As an athletics coach visiting India, I'm impressed by the steady progress. The steeplechase timing shows good technique development. More international exposure will help bridge the gap with European athletes.

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