Key Points

India's campaign at the Tokyo World Athletics Championships ended without a medal after two historic editions. Neeraj Chopra failed to defend his world title, finishing eighth in javelin and breaking his 26-event top-two streak. The team's final competitor, Servin Sebastian, placed 31st in the men's 20km race walk. Despite some bright spots like Sarvesh Kushare making high jump finals, India couldn't add to its three total medals in championship history.

Key Points: India Misses World Athletics Medal After Neeraj Chopra Gold Streak

  • Neeraj Chopra finishes 8th in javelin, ending 26-event top-two streak
  • India fails to medal after 2022 silver and 2023 gold editions
  • Servin Sebastian concludes campaign with 31st in 20km race walk
  • Sarvesh Kushare becomes first Indian jumper to reach World Championships final
2 min read

After two editions of glory, India draw blank at 2025 Tokyo World Athletics Championships

India draws blank at Tokyo World Athletics Championships as Neeraj Chopra's title defense ends at 8th spot, halting historic two-edition medal run.

"Neeraj Chopra... ending his 26-event streak of top two finish - Article"

Tokyo, September 20

Race walker Servin Sebastian finished in 31st spot in the men's 20 km race walk to conclude India's campaign at the World Athletics Championships without a medal on Saturday.

Sebastian was the last Indian in action during the Championships, finishing with a time of 1:23:03 in a 48-man field, as per Olympics.com. After Neeraj Chopra's historic silver at the 2022 edition and a monumental gold in 2023, India has failed to secure a medal in the World Athletics Championships after two editions of history.

Also, it is Akshdeep Singh who holds the Indian national record in the 20 m race walk with a timing of 1:19:55, achieved at the 2023 National Open Race Walking Championships in Jharkhand.

The gold medal in the 20 km men's race walk went to Paris 2024 silver medalist Caio Bonfim of Brazil after clocking 1:18:35, with the rest of the podium being completed by China's Asian champion Wang Zhaozhao (1:18:43) and Spanish Olympian Paul McGrath (1:18:45).

India had sent a 19-member contingent for the Tokyo World Championships to compete for medals across 15 events.

The biggest highlight was Neeraj Chopra, the Olympic gold medalist failing to defend his world title in javelin throw and finishing at eighth spot with best throw of 84.03 m and ending his 26-event streak of top two finish. His compatriot Sachin Yadav, outclassed him with a fourth-place finish and falling short of a medal with best throw of 86.27 m.

Also, Sarvesh Kushare made history, becoming the first Indian jumper to qualify for finals of World Athletics Championships in his discipline and finished at sixth place with a personal best timing of 2.28m.

Pooja also secured her career-best timings of 2:01.03 in the women's 800m, but with a bottom-place finish in her heats, she failed to reach finals.

Indian athletes have secured only three medals in the history of World Para Athletics Championships, with Anju Bobby George becoming the first Indian to claim a medal back in 2003 in the long jump, a bronze medal. Neeraj became the first male medalist at the championships 19 years later with a silver in javelin throw. Then in the next edition, he became the first Indian to secure the world championship gold at Budapest with the best throw of 88.17 m.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
Let's not be too harsh. Sarvesh Kushare making history as first Indian jumper in finals and finishing 6th with PB is actually a positive! Progress takes time 🇮🇳
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Ananya R
Why wasn't Akshdeep Singh sent for race walking? He holds the national record at 1:19:55 which is much better than Sebastian's 1:23:03. Selection committee needs to answer this!
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Michael C
Sachin Yadav finishing 4th with 86.27m shows there's new talent emerging. Neeraj can't carry Indian athletics alone forever. This might be a blessing in disguise for long-term development.
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Priya S
Pooja's personal best of 2:01.03 in 800m is actually promising! Sometimes it's about personal growth rather than medals. Our athletes are improving gradually 💪
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Vikram M
We need better infrastructure and coaching at grassroots level. Other countries are investing heavily while we're still relying on individual brilliance. SAI needs to step up!
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Karthik V
Let's support our athletes instead of criticizing. They train hard and represent our country with pride. Better luck next time team India! 🇮🇳✨

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