Key Points

Nagaland’s young girls stunned Bihar in a thrilling Sepak Takraw final at KIYG 2025. Assam’s Manipuri boys also clinched gold, defying home crowd pressure. Both teams drew inspiration from family legacies and sheer determination. The Northeast’s dominance in the sport was on full display in Patna.

Key Points: Nagaland and Assam Win KIYG 2025 Sepak Takraw Gold in Bihar

  • Nagaland girls staged a comeback after trailing Bihar
  • Assam’s Manipuri trio overcame home crowd pressure
  • Inspired by YouTube and family legacies
  • KIYG 2025 showcases Northeast dominance in Sepak Takraw
3 min read

Northeast roars loud in Bihar: Nagaland, Assam clinch KIYG 2025 Sepak Takraw gold

Nagaland’s girls and Assam’s Manipuri boys clinch Sepak Takraw gold at Khelo India Youth Games 2025 in a thrilling final against Bihar.

"Our girls played really well. Credit to them for keeping their calm when it mattered the most. – Dziesebeinuo Vizo, Nagaland Chef-de-Mission"

Patna, May 11

The cheers were deafening, the stakes high and yet, in the eye of the storm, three young girls from Nagaland found their calm.

Inside the BSAP Indoor Hall, the Sepak Takraw girls' doubles final at the Khelo India Youth Games 2025 Bihar had all the makings of a one-sided show. Bihar had the crowd, the confidence and the opening game in the bag. But what it didn't have was the heart of Vikhosanu, Meyonu and Thujono.

Down but not out, the Naga team rallied. Point by point, game by game, it clawed back, turning the home fans raucous support to silence, its hope into disbelief. The second game was its. The third? The Naga team made it a veritable tug-of-war after trailing 4-11 at one stage.

It pulled level at 13-13 and it felt like time stood still. And then, just like that, two clutch points and an eruption of tears, joy and disbelief. What followed was grit, poise and two perfectly-timed points. Gold belonged to Nagaland.

Products of the Dimapur State Sports Academy, Vikhosanu (15) and Meyonu (13) are paternal cousins, while Thujono (16) also trains under the same coach Holshe Khrieo. Sparked by YouTube videos of its idol Sezovelu Dozo, the trio started taking interest in the sport and the rest is history.

"Frankly speaking, we didn't expect gold, but our girls played really well. Credit to them for keeping their calm when it mattered the most. It was a really close encounter, and could have been anyone's match, but the way it unfolded, I am proud of my girls," said an elated Dziesebeinuo Vizo, Nagaland's Chef-de-Mission.

Manipuri boys shine for Assam

In the heart of Bihar, far from their hometowns in the Barak Valley, Aprince Sinha, M Abhijit, and H Manganthoiba walked into the spotlight. Representing Assam, the trio, born to Manipuri families settled in Hailakandi and Cachar, carried expectation and pride on their shoulders. A tale of courage under pressure unfolded.

Up against a formidable Bihar side on its home turf, Assam had no crowd, no backing--only the bond and belief. The first game saw Aprince and Abhijit explode with energy and precision, taking it 15-9 with clinical play. The second game, however, was a battle of nerves as Bihar came back fighting, pushing the contest to a decider.

At 15-all in the decider, every serve felt like a final breath. But the Assam duo didn't blink. With composure forged from years of practice and passion, it eked out the last two points to seal the gold, though the home lads saved two match points with great defence.

Inspired by his sister A Priya Devi, who represented India at the 2023 Hangzhou Asian Games, Aprince found his calling early. When his father first took him to the court, he didn't just pick up a sport--he picked up a dream.

Abhijit, too, comes from a Sepak Takraw family. His elder brother, M Premchandra, has competed at the national level, making the path clearer but no less demanding. And then there's Manganthoiba, the quiet force, whose steady presence in the final grounded the team when pressure peaked.

Together, they showed what happens when personal passion meets collective purpose. No celebration was louder, no smile wider as Bihar suffered a second consecutive jolt barely minutes after the women's team settled for the silver.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
What an inspiring story! These young athletes from Northeast are making India proud. We need more coverage of sports beyond cricket - Sepak Takraw looks so exciting! Hope Doordarshan starts broadcasting these regional games too.
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Priya M.
The girls from Nagaland showed such mental strength! Coming back from behind against a home crowd takes real guts. 👏 But why aren't we hearing more about Manipuri players representing Assam? Interesting cultural dynamics there.
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Arjun S.
Khelo India is doing great work but need better infrastructure in Northeast. These kids train with YouTube videos as inspiration - imagine what they could do with proper facilities! Government should focus on sports academies in all states equally.
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Sunita R.
As a mother, I'm so proud seeing young girls achieving sporting excellence! But concerned about education - these players are just 13-16 years old. Hope their schools are supporting them properly along with sports training.
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Vikram J.
Bihar put up a good fight but Northeast dominance continues! Their natural agility suits Sepak Takraw perfectly. Maybe other states should learn from their training methods. Also great to see unity - Manipuri players representing Assam shows our diversity is our strength.
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Neha T.
Wonderful performance but the article focuses too much on "defeating Bihar". Should celebrate all athletes equally without making it regional rivalry. At Khelo India, every participant is winner for reaching national level! 🇮🇳

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