Key Points

Uttar Pradesh's Kadir Khan made headlines by breaking the 400m record twice at the Khelo India Youth Games 2025. Weightlifter Tushar Chaudhary also impressed, setting new records in snatch and clean & jerk. Maharashtra's Aditya Pisal became the fastest sprinter with a record-breaking performance. Meanwhile, Rajasthan cyclists dominated the time trials, securing five medals.

Key Points: Kadir Khan Breaks 400m Record at KIYG 2025 as Tushar Chaudhary Shines in Weightlifting

  • Kadir Khan breaks 400m record twice in 24 hours
  • Tushar Chaudhary shatters weightlifting records
  • Aditya Pisal sets new sprint record
  • Rajasthan cyclists dominate time trials
4 min read

KIYG 2025 Day 10: UP's Kadir Khan breaks 400m record; Tushar Chaudhary sets snatch record in weightlifting

Uttar Pradesh's Kadir Khan sets a new 400m record while Tushar Chaudhary dominates weightlifting at Khelo India Youth Games 2025 in Patna.

"I did not expect that I would be able to run so well. This was my first Khelo India Youth Games. – Kadir Khan"

Patna, May 13

Uttar Pradesh's Kadir Khan broke the 400m meet record twice inside 24 hours as Khelo India Youth Games 2025 saw another spate of good performances at the Patliputra Sports Complex here on Tuesday. Aditya Pisal became the fastest boy in the Games with a record performance as Maharashtra continued to lead the medal tally.

In his maiden Khelo India Youth Games, Kadir Khan broke the 400m Games record on Monday and improved his 47.67 seconds in the final. He clocked 47.34 seconds to relegate Bihar's Piyush Raj (47.43) to the silver. Karnataka's Sayed Sabeer (47.50 sec) won the bronze. Both Raj and Sabeer improved on the previous meet record.

Speaking to SAI Media, Khan said, "I did not expect that I would be able to run so well. This was my first Khelo India Youth Games. Now my effort will be to improve my record in the next edition of the Khelo India Youth Games. I am happy that I was able to achieve my personal best in Patna."

On another sweltering day, Pisal clocked a record 10.62 seconds to erase the previous meet record of 10.63 seconds set by Sadanand Kumar in Panchkula in 2022. Bihar finished with a second silver when Prince Kumar (10.64 sec) finished behind Pisal in a thrilling finish.

Pisal's statemate Rudra Sachin Shini (10.78) won bronze. Bihar won a third medal, a bronze, when Vijay Kumar clocked 3:57.12 in the boys' 1500 metres. The gold went to UP's Bablu Kumar, who timed 3:56.36 seconds. Bihar ended the evening with a silver from 4 x 100m boys' relay.

Like the first three days in the weightlifting competition in Rajgir, Day 4 on Tuesday also saw records. Uttar Pradesh lifter Tushar Chaudhary's performance was the highlight of the day as he broke both the clean & jerk and total lift records held by Goldi Khan of Himachal Pradesh, set at the Indian Weightlifting Federation's National Championships in Nagercoil in January 2023.

With stiff competition from Tamil Nadu's R Kishore, who improved the snatch record twice and the overall lift record once, Chaudhary was unperturbed and produced a superlative performance to put his rival in shade and claim the gold. Chaudhary lifted 126kg in snatch and 163 in clean & jerk, a 10kg improvement in the discipline, and 7kg more than Goldi Khan's overall total.

In hockey at Rajgir, Odisha defeated Jharkhand 3-1 in a shootout to win the girls' gold. Regulation time ended 1-1. Madhya Pradesh won the bronze. In the men's final, Haryana beat Uttar Pradesh 1-0 to win the boys' gold. Punjab won the bronze.

Rajasthan were one of the biggest movers on the medal standings on Tuesday, mainly due to their cyclists. Rajasthan cyclists won five of the six medals on offer in the 30km boys and 20km girls Time Trials on the picturesque Marine Drive along River Ganga in Patna.

Ramavatar Chhimpa, a sweetmeat shop owner's son from Nokha in Bikaner district who trains in the National Centre of Excellence Patiala, and Manju Choudhary, a farmer's daughter who moved from Barmer to Bikaner to pursue cycling, emerged as the winners of the boys' and girls' gold medals, respectively.

The medal rounds in wrestling started in Patna and in Bhagalpur, the badminton competition ended with Uttarakhand's Anish Negi beating teammate Nishcal Chandan 21-10, 17-21 and 21-16 for the boys' singles gold.

The girls' singles gold went to Tanoo Chandra of Chhattisgarh. Tanoo defeated Rishika Nandi of Delhi 21-17, 21-9. The boys' doubles gold went to Charan Ram Tippanna and Hari Krishan of Andhra Pradesh, while the girls' doubles title went to Gayatri Rawat and Mansa Rawat of Uttarakhand.

Haryana dominated the wrestling competitions in both U-17 boys and girls' categories winning four of the seven gold medals on offer on the day, with giant slayer Naina successfully defending her 49 kg Khelo India Youth Games crown, before her compatriots Rovind (65 kg Greco Roman), Harsh (51 kg) and Arjun Ruhil (92 kg) took home the yellow metal.

Among others, Uttar Pradesh's Shilpi and Aditya Gupta took home the gold medals in the girls' 61kg and boys' 55 kg GR categories, respectively. Maharashtra's Param Laxman emerged champion in the boys' 80 kg GR category.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya M.
What an inspiring performance by Kadir Khan! Breaking records twice in 24 hours shows his dedication. UP is really shining in athletics this year. 👏 Hope to see him in Asian Games soon!
R
Rahul K.
The weightlifting performances are mind-blowing! Tushar Chaudhary improving by 10kg in clean & jerk is no joke. But why isn't this getting same coverage as cricket? Our lifters deserve more recognition.
S
Sunita T.
So proud of Ramavatar and Manju from Rajasthan! Their stories prove talent exists in every corner of India. Just imagine how many more gems we'd find with better sports infrastructure in small towns.
A
Amit G.
Maharashtra leading medals tally again shows their strong sports culture. But other states need to step up! Central govt should allocate more funds to developing states for sports facilities.
N
Neha P.
Haryana wrestlers dominating as usual! But happy to see new states emerging in other sports. The cycling medals for Rajasthan are particularly exciting - we need more diversity in sports excellence.
V
Vikram S.
While celebrating winners, let's not forget athletes who missed medals by fractions of seconds. Prince Kumar's 10.64s in 100m was just 0.01s behind winner! They deserve equal encouragement.

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