KIYG 2025: Aisangfa Gogoi creates weightlifting record; Maharashtra sweep yogasana medals on Day 8

IANS May 12, 2025 213 views

The Khelo India Youth Games 2025 in Bihar witnessed an incredible performance by Assam's Aisangfa Gogoi, who set a new national youth weightlifting record in the girls 55kg category. Maharashtra continued its impressive run by dominating the yogasana competitions and winning multiple medals across different categories. The games showcased exceptional talent from across India, with states like Bihar, Punjab, and Haryana making significant contributions. As the competition enters its final days, athletics, wrestling, and boxing are set to provide even more excitement and medal opportunities.

"She opened up a 1kg lead after the Snatch lifts" - KIYG 2025 Match Report
Patna, May 11: Assam’s Aisangfa Gogoi scripted a new National Youth Record for total lifts on her way to gold in the girls 55kg class weightlifting competition in the Khelo India Youth Games 2025 Bihar at the Rajgir Sports Complex on Sunday. She raised the National Youth Record to 183kg, breaking the mark set by Mina Santa in Fiji last year.

Key Points

1

Aisangfa Gogoi breaks national youth weightlifting record

2

Maharashtra wins multiple yogasana medals

3

Bihar continues strong performance

4

First Kalaripayattu medals awarded

Winning Assam’s sixth gold medal, Aisingfa Gogoi helped the State break into the top 10 in the medal table, with two silver and two bronze medals as well.

It did not take long for Maharashtra to demonstrate its strength as the spring of Yogasana sport. Its athletes claimed both gold and silver in the boys and girls rhythmic pairs competitions. Along with Yash Khandagale’s 61kg class weightlifting gold, their contributions increased its collection of gold medals to 30 in addition to 24 silver and 25 bronze medals so far.

Karnataka remained in the second place ahead of Rajasthan, though the latter gained a gold through Prakriti Sharma in the girls Saber final at the Fencing arena in Rajgir. She beat giant-killer S Tanvi (Karnataka) who shocked the top ranked Pangambam Ambika Devi (Manipur) in the semifinals. Only the top three teams have claimed 10 gold medals or more. Madhya Pradesh stayed in fourth spot.

Haryana’s Sachin showcased his skills with the Foil to win a crucial gold for his State and help it rise above Tamil Nadu to the sixth spot on the table with seven gold, six silver and 16 bronze. However, Punjab kept its nose ahead of its neighbour, thanks to Sunil Singh’s gold in the boys 61kg weightlifting competition in Rajgir. Punjab has won seven gold and 10 silver and bronze each.

Bihar, which has enjoyed a good run in the Games, added a seventh sport in which its athletes have won medals. Bihar’s Yogasana artists ensured that the home State would gain at least one medal on Sunday. They joined their team-mates from Rugby, Sepak Takraw, Cycling, Gatka, Judo and Shooting in contributing to the home State’s growing tally.

Saransh Kumar and Abhishek Kumar were unable to match the top two Maharashtra pairs but topped the race for the Yogsana boys Rhythmic Pair bronze medal. Bihar now has 20 medals, including three gold, eight silver and 9 bronze. It thus became the eighth State to have collected 20 or more medals thus far.

There as a surprise in store when the first Kalaripayattu medals were decided today, the Chhattisgarh pair of Arjun Kumar Chandra and Anant Swarnkar claiming the boys Long Staff Fight gold from the Delhi combine of AM Aaron and Aadinath KB. The Kerala pair of Abhinand KP and Adarsh KS was left to bronze medal place on the podium with Karnataka’s Chandramouli R and Suhas R Ramapur. However, the Dhalana KS provided the balm for the hurting Kerala squad with a victory in the girls Chuvadukal final against Larisha Sharma (Karnataka).

In the Weightlifting arena, it was clear the contest for the girls 55kg gold would be among Mina Santa (Odisha), Karangi Hemasri (Andhra Pradesh) and Aisangfa Gogoi, who had finished in that order in the National Youth Championships in Nagorta, Himachal Pradesh. They would have been relieved that Koyel Bar, who won a silver medal in the Asian Youth Championships in Doha in December last, was not entered.

With the Andhra Pradesh girl not finding her form and settling for third place, it boiled down to a tough contest between Mina Santa and Aisangfa Gogoi. The Assam girl, who trains at the SAI National Centre of Excellence in Lucknow wound herself up to deliver a surprise. She opened up a 1kg lead after the Snatch lifts but despite some pressure applied by Mina Santu’s entry at a higher weight in clean and jerk, she was able to run out comfortable winner.

The Athletics and Wrestling competitions begin tomorrow and, together with Boxing that has reached the quarterfinal stage will see a hectic spurt in the medal charts as the last four days of exhilarating competition remain in the Khelo India Youth Games 2025 Bihar.

Reader Comments

Here are 6 diverse Indian perspective comments for the article:
R
Rahul K.
What an inspiring performance by Aisangfa Gogoi! 🇮🇳 Breaking national records at such a young age shows the incredible talent coming from Assam. The North-East has always been a powerhouse of sports - more infrastructure and support will make us dominate internationally too!
P
Priya M.
Maharashtra's dominance in yogasana is no surprise - our state has invested so much in traditional sports. But great to see Bihar performing well as hosts! Home advantage working wonders 😊 Hope this inspires more youngsters to take up indigenous sports.
A
Arjun S.
The Kalaripayattu results were unexpected! Chhattisgarh beating Kerala in their own martial art? Shows how sports are spreading across India. But organizers should ensure proper training for judges in traditional sports - heard some questionable calls today.
N
Neha T.
So proud of our girls in weightlifting! 💪 Aisangfa, Mina, Karangi - all under 20 and already breaking records. But why no coverage on TV? These athletes deserve more visibility than cricket. Doordarshan should broadcast KIYG live!
V
Vikram J.
Good to see smaller states like Bihar and Chhattisgarh performing well. But the medal gap between top 3 and others is concerning. Central govt should allocate more sports funds proportionally - not just to traditional strong states.
S
Sunita R.
As a teacher from Patna, I'm so happy seeing our city host such events! My students are inspired watching these young champions. Request to organizers - please arrange school visits to venues. The next Aisangfa might be sitting in our classrooms!

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