Key Points

India finished third at the ISSF Munich World Cup 2025, doubling their medal count from last year. Suruchi Phogat made history with her third consecutive gold in women’s 10m air pistol. Arya Borse and Arjun Babuta stunned China’s world champions in the mixed team event. Rising debutants and Olympians further strengthened India’s strong global shooting presence.

Key Points: India Claims Third Place at ISSF Munich World Cup 2025 with 2 Golds

  • Suruchi Phogat wins third consecutive gold in women’s 10m air pistol
  • Arya Borse and Arjun Babuta dominate Chinese pair in mixed team event
  • Elavenil Valarivan and Sift Samra add bronze medals
  • India improves medal count from last year
4 min read

ISSF Munich World Cup 2025: Consistent final appearances, two golds, power India to strong finish

India secures third place at ISSF Munich World Cup 2025, powered by Suruchi Phogat's historic gold and Arya Borse-Arjun Babuta's win over China.

"Our athletes have proven that the depth in Indian shooting is more formidable than ever before. – K. Sultan Singh, NRAI Secretary General"

Munich, June 16

A string of consistent final appearances and two standout gold medal performances, powered India to a commendable and strong third-place finish at the International Shooting Sport Federation (ISSF) World Cup (Rifle/Pistol) Munich 2025, one of the most competitive and popular events in the world of international rifle and pistol shooting. Held at the iconic Olympic Shooting range between June 8-15, 2025, the Munich World Cup saw India register their third top-three finish this year in four world cups, with two gold and two bronze medals.

They not only improved their standing from joint third last year to sole this year, but also doubled their medal count, including the gold count, from last year's Munich World Cup, a release said.

"The Munich World Cup which is an annual feature of the International Shooting calendar and is held at the revered Olympic Shooting range, which hosted the sport at the 1972 Munich Olympics, has once again brought out the best in our rifle and pistol shooters," said an overjoyed K. Sultan Singh, Secretary General, National Rifle Association of India (NRAI).

He added, "When many were saying and quite rightly so, that India will find it very tough given the large field, quality of competition and the fact that some of our best were not part of the squad, our athletes have proven that the depth in Indian shooting is more formidable than ever before. On behalf of the NRAI, I congratulate the entire squad, including the coaches and support staff, for the amazing results, not only in Munich, but throughout the year."

The high point for India at Munich this year, as also of this whole international season, has been the stunning consistency of rising women's pistol star Suruchi Phogat. The Haryana teenager won an unprecedented third consecutive individual ISSF World Cup stage gold in the women's 10m air pistol and to then imagine that Buenos Aires this year was her world cup debut, is mindboggling. She went where no Indian, man or woman, has even gone before.

The other being Arya Rajesh Borse and Olympian Arjun Babuta's tremendous win over the Chinese world record holders Sheng Lihao and Wang Zifei, the former also the Olympic champion in the event, in the 10m air rifle mixed team final, where they completely outgunned the crack Chinese pair 17-7. With some incredible and consistent series of high scores, they showcased the depth and new found confidence of Indian shooting like never before.

Elavenil Valarivan (women's 10m air rifle-arw), a two-time Olympian and Sift Kaur Samra (50m rifle 3 positions women-3P), Olympian and world record holder, also reinforced their status one of the world's top shooters, with their bronze-winning performances at Munich.

Ela also set a new qualification national record of 635.9 en route to her bronze, while Suruchi equalled Manu Bhaker's qualification national mark of 588 in the women's air pistol.

In keeping with the trend this year, Indian World Cup debutants, and there were as many as three in Munich, also delivered encouraging performances in world-class fields that they were up against first up.

Ananya Naidu (arw) shot a solid 632.4 to finish 13th among contenders. Nishant Rawat (10m air pistol men-apm) and Aditya Malra (apm) too shot scores of 582 and 578 to finish 10th and 27th respectively.

India made a total of seven finals in the 10 events in Munich with Manu Bhaker (women's 25m pistol), Varun Tomar (men's 10m air pistol) and Chain Singh (men's 3P), finishing sixth (both Manu and Varun) and seventh respectively, underlying India's strength in the sport.

China finished on top of the standings with seven medals, including four gold, while Norway edged India to second on the basis of having won a silver with the same number of golds and medals as India.

A total of 11 nations, including the individual neutral athletes group, won medals in Munich. The ISSF bandwagon next moves to Lonato Del Garda in Italy next month for the year's fourth Shotgun world cup stage, while the fourth and final Rifle/Pistol world cup is scheduled for Ningbo in China in September.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
What an incredible performance by our shooters! 🇮🇳 Suruchi Phogat is proving to be a real prodigy - three consecutive golds is no joke. The way our mixed team outplayed China shows we're becoming a shooting powerhouse. Paris Olympics 2024 medals loading... 💪
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Priya M.
So proud of our athletes! But I wish our media gave shooting as much coverage as cricket. These youngsters are bringing glory to India consistently. Special shoutout to the debutants - performing well in first World Cup itself against top competition is amazing!
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Arjun S.
Beating China in shooting is like beating Australia in cricket! That mixed team performance was 🔥. But we need more infrastructure at grassroots level - imagine how many more Suruchis are waiting to be discovered in small towns across India.
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Shalini V.
The consistency across events is what impresses me most. 7 finals out of 10 events shows our depth. But why aren't we as strong in shotgun events? Need to develop that discipline too if we want to dominate shooting sports completely.
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Vikram J.
Heartening to see new names performing well alongside established stars. The future looks bright! Though I worry about pressure management - we've seen talented shooters fade after initial success. Hope NRAI provides proper mental conditioning support.
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Neha R.
As someone from Haryana, I'm bursting with pride seeing Suruchi's success! 🎉 Our state is becoming the nursery of champions. But let's not forget the coaches and support staff - they're the real heroes behind these medals. More power to Team India shooting!

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