Key Points

The Sports Ministry has released new selection criteria to ensure only athletes with genuine medal potential represent India at multi-sport events. For measurable sports, athletes must match the 6th-place performance from the previous Asian Games. The policy includes strict provisions to prevent federations from sending athletes just for participation. These benchmarks aim to focus resources on athletes most likely to achieve podium finishes.

Key Points: Sports Ministry Sets Asian Games 2026 Selection Criteria for Medal-Winning Athletes

  • Athletes must match the 6th-place performance from the last Asian Games within 12 months
  • Team sports require a top-8 finish among Asian countries in recent championships
  • The ministry can reject recommendations aimed only at participation, not excellence
  • A relaxation clause allows expert opinions to justify exceptions to the criteria
4 min read

Sports Ministry lays out selection criteria for participation in Asian Games 2026, other multi-sports events

India's Sports Ministry introduces strict benchmarks for Asian Games 2026 selection, requiring athletes to meet top-6 Asian performance standards to ensure medal potential.

"The Ministry may not approve the names recommended by National Sports Federations if the aim is just for participation and not aiming for excellence - Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports"

New Delhi, Sep 24

With a view to ensuring that athletes who have a real chance of winning a medal are only considered for participation in multi-disciplinary sports events, the Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports has brought out selection criteria for participation of individuals and teams in the 2026 Asian Games and other multi-sports events.

New Delhi, Sep 24 (IANS) With a view to ensuring that athletes who have a real chance of winning a medal are only considered for participation in multi-disciplinary sports events, the Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports has brought out selection criteria for participation of individuals and teams in the 2026 Asian Games and other multi-sports events. According to the ministry's release, the selection criteria have established benchmarks for both measurable and non-measurable events, which will serve as guiding principles for deciding participation in multi-sports events such as the Asian Games, Para Asian Games, Commonwealth Games, Asian Indoor Games, Asian Beach Games, Youth Olympics, Asian Youth Games, and Commonwealth Youth Games.

Moreover, the Olympics and other international competitions where athlete or team participation is determined by qualification standards set by the respective international federations are exempt from this criterion.

As per the selection criteria for measurable individual sports and events, an athlete will qualify for the Indian contingent if they have matched or exceeded the 6th-place performance from the last Asian Games at a competition recognised by the international sports federation for that sport, held within the 12 months preceding the upcoming Asian Games.

Where the sport or event was not contested at the last Asian Games, the selection criteria will be based on the same benchmarks as those used in the Senior Asian Championships for the sport or event, conducted within 12 months preceding the upcoming Asian Games.

For non-measurable individual sports and events, where the Senior Asian Championship was held within the 12 months preceding the upcoming Asian Games or where world rankings are regularly promulgated, an athlete who achieved a 6th place or better finish in their weight class or event at the last Senior Asian Championships held within the past 12 months, or whose World ranking is among the top six of Asian nations in international rankings, will be considered for inclusion in the contingent.

Where no Senior Asian Championships have been held in the 12 months before the upcoming Asian Games and no international rankings are published regularly, the athlete must have finished in the top 6 among Asian nations in equivalent international competitions.

For team sports (such as football, hockey, etc.) and team events (such as relay, doubles, mixed doubles, etc.), a team that has achieved a top 8 finish in the last Senior Asian Championships held within 12 months, or the team ranked within the top 8 among Asian countries in international rankings, will be considered for participation in the Asian Games.

Where international rankings are not published or the Senior Asian Championship has not been held within the 12 months preceding the upcoming Asian Games, the team must have achieved a top-8 finish among Asian countries in the equivalent international competition.

"The criteria has a relaxation clause authorising the Ministry to take appropriate decision if participation of individuals and teams in relaxation of the prescribed criteria is recommended with justifiable reasons, based on the opinion of experts in specific sports or Sports Authority of India (SAI).

"It provides that the Ministry may not approve the names recommended by National Sports Federations if the aim is just for participation and not aiming for excellence," the ministry circular read.

"The Ministry may not approve participation if experts from specific sports disciplines and the SAI find that the Asian Championships for a sport are being held at irregular intervals to circumvent rules and help athletes meet eligibility criteria, particularly if the competition standard is low or if top nations expected to participate in the forthcoming Asian Games were absent from the said competition," it added.

The ministry also clarified that "selection criteria further provides that only sportspersons, coaches and support staff cleared at cost to the government will be part of the Indian contingent, and no additional sportspersons, coaches or support staff will be included even at no cost to the government."

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good move but what about young talent? Sometimes exposure at big events helps athletes grow. The 6th place benchmark seems fair but hope there's flexibility for promising newcomers.
A
Aditya G
The relaxation clause is important. Sports can be unpredictable - an athlete might be injured during qualification but recover before main event. Expert opinion should matter more than rigid rules.
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Sarah B
As someone who follows Indian sports closely, I appreciate this transparency. Clear benchmarks mean less politics in selection. Hope this improves our medal tally in 2026! 🇮🇳
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Karthik V
Concerned about team sports - top 8 finish requirement might exclude emerging teams. Our football team, for example, needs international exposure to improve. Hope they consider development aspects too.
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Michael C
Smart fiscal policy. Taxpayer money should fund only serious contenders. The "no additional staff even at no cost" rule shows they're serious about streamlining the contingent size. Good governance!
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Neha E
Implementation will be key. Hope the National Sports Federations don't find loopholes. The ministry's vigilance against "low-standard competitions" is particularly important. Jai Hind!

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