Tuesday, June 18, 2013

India's Team and Individual Sports Rankings

Indian Team Sports Ranking             World Rank                                     Date: 6/18/13
  1. Test Cricket                                     3rd 
  2. One Day International Cricket            1st
  3. Twenty20                                         3rd
  4. Tennis Davis Cup                             26th
  5. Men's Football (Soccer)                    147th
  6. Women's Football (Soccer)               51nd
  7. Men's Basketball                              58th
  8. Women's Basketball                         40th
  9. Boys Basketball                               43rd
  10. Girls Basketball                                39th
  11. Men's Volleyball                                30th 
  12. Women's Volleyball                           103rd
  13. Junior Boys Volleyball                       16th 
  14. Junior Girls Volleyball                        29th
  15. Men's Rugby                                    74th
  16. Men's Field Hockey                          11th
  17. Women's Field Hockey                     12th

Individual Sports ranking:

Men's Single's Tennis: India's Top 3            World Rank
  1. Somdev Devvarman                                     135th
  2. Saketh Myeni                                             279th
  3. Prakash Amritraj                                         312th
   
   
Men's Double's Tennis: India's Top 3          World Rank
  1. Mahesh Bhupati                                           7th
  2. Rohan Bopanna                                           10th
  3. Leander Paes                                              11th
   
Women's Single's Tennis: India's Top 3        World Rank
  1. Ankita Raina                                               362nd
  2. Rishika Sunkara                                          531st                                                  
  3. Prerna Bhambri                                           541st
   
Women's Double's Tennis: India's Top 3      World Rank
  1. Sania Mirza                                                 15th
  2. Rishika Sunkara                                           408th 
  3. Kyra Shroff                                                   539th 

Men's Single's Badminton: India's Top 3       World Rank
  1. P. Kashyap                                                   10th
  2. R.M.V Gurusaidutt                                         23rd
  3. Ajay Jairam                                                   25th
Men's Double's Badminton: India's Top 2      World Bank
  1. Pranav Jerry Chopra                                       37th
  2. Akshay Divalkar                                             37th
Women's Single's Badminton: India's Top 3     World Rank 
  1. Saina Nehwal                                                  2nd
  2. P.V Sindhu                                                     11th
  3. Arundhati Pantawane                                       61st
Women's Double's Badminton: India's Top 2      World Rank
  1. Pradnya Gadre                                                42nd
  2. Ashwini Ponnappa                                           42nd
If you think there is any other sport that should be added to this, please let me know and if you could provide me the source of where I can find the rankings it will be of great help. Thank you.

Monday, June 17, 2013

Indians won 17 medals

Here is the list of medals won at the 2013 Asian Junior Wrestling Championships:

Gold Medals:
1) Mangal Kadyan (50 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
2) Pradeep Kumar (60 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
3) Sumit (96 Kg, Men's Freestyle)


Silver Medals:
1) Mamta Rani (46 Kg, Women's Freestyle)
2) Manisha Mahadev Divekar (72 Kg, Women's Freestyle)
3) Vikas (66 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
4) Pradeep Kumar (84 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
5) Mehar Singh (120 Kg, Men's Greco-Roman)


Bronze Medals:
1) Sheetal Tomar (44 Kg, Women's Freestyle)
2) Divyanshi Tyagi (51 Kg, Women's Freestyle)
3) Seema (61 Kg, Women's Freestyle)
4) Mandeep (60 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
5) Surjeet (120 Kg, Men's Freestyle)
6) Santhosh Yadav (50 Kg, Men's Greco-Roman)
7) Nitin (55 Kg, Men's Greco-Roman)
8) Prabhal Singh (84 Kg, Men's Greco-Roman)
9) Praveen Dagar (96 Kg, Men's Greco-Roman)

I combined the women's and men's categories in the medal count break up in the spirit of equality. I also listed the women ahead of men in their medal categories.

If you notice, India's Gold and Silver hauls are slanted towards the Freestyle category and less towards Greco-Roman style. That just shows that Greco-Roman style is still in the beginning stages of our wrestling culture. Over time there will be more kids who will take up Greco-Roman and we might see better performances in that area.

Also, we are trending towards getting more Bronze medals than Silver and Gold medals. That shows that at the world stage level our boys and girls will definitely be competitive but might not be guaranteed medals according to their current skill level. The gold and silver medalists definitely have a chance to win the medals at their current skill levels, and if the bronze medal winners improve going forward they will have a chance at the world stage as well.

This was the biggest haul of medals for India in this tournament. Even though it is not a world wide event this bodes well for the future of Indian wrestling because Asia usually has strong wrestling teams from Iran, South Korea, North Korea, China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and many others.

This proves that India is on its way to becoming a world power in the field of wrestling. This sport should be our bread and butter in the Olympics and in tournaments in general because over history going 1000's of years back had some form of grappling as the sporting mainstay in India. We need to revive that tradition and be a top 3 wrestling country in the world.



India usually has some good Freestyle wrestlers because that suits our traditional schools in India. In the category of Greco-Roman wrestling we still have to advance a bit more. The main difference between Freestyle wrestling and Greco-Roman wrestling is that in Freestyle wrestling the player is allowed to go for the legs to take the opponent down, while in the Greco-Roman wrestling they are not allowed to go for the legs for the take down. The main difference comes in with the utilization of footwork and agility in Freestyle while the Greco-Roman wrestlers have to use their upper body strength and lift/throwdown techniques.

Keep in mind though that it doesn't mean the Freestyle wrestler doesn't have upper body strength and the Greco-Roman wrestler doesn't have agility. The difference is only in the utilization of those characteristics.

Image of Mamta Rani (women's freestyle)


Note: Women only have a freestyle category in wrestling and for my knowledge doesn't have a Greco-Roman category.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

The Sacramento Kings and India

Links between the Sacramento Kings and India:
While randomly doing some research on the Indian basketball scene I discovered some possibly planned (or co-incidental) links forming between the Sacramento Kings basketball organization and India.

First off, as many of you already know, the Sacramento Kings was recently bought by a group led by a prominent Indian businessman named Vivek Ranadive. He founded a couple of IT companies and was a pioneer in some areas of Information Technology. Vivek grew up in Juhu (Mumbai) and being such a crazy basketball fan, he probably has some aspirations of spreading the love for the game of basketball in India.

Vivek Ranadive

Vivek seems like the kind of person who knows what he is doing. He was a part owner of the Golden State Warriors, but he had to sell his share with the Warriors before purchasing the Kings. He has the connections and the experience related to owning a sports team, and he has his own vision of how a team should be run. Here is an article where he talks about his transformative ideas.

Another interesting link I found was that the current Indian national team's head coach Kenny Natt was an assistant coach and an interim head coach with the Sacramento Kings prior to taking the job with the Indian national team. This might be a complete co-incidence but I found it very fishy (in a good way) that these links are being formed with the Sacramento Kings and India.

Kenny Natt


I have a feeling that the NBA, just like how they made all of China fall in love with the Houston Rockets, are planning on making India fall in love with the Sacramento Kings. Watch, the next thing we will see is the Sacramento Kings drafting a player of an Indian origin. I am all for these people to people contacts between the Kings and the basketball fraternity in India as long as it helps motivate more kid in India to take up basketball as a sport.

NBA in the Indian market: 
The NBA has been busy trying to get in touch with the Indian market over the recent years. Starting with Kevin Garnett (in 2006) players like Raja Bell, Brandon Jennings, Paul Gasol, Dwight Howard and many others have visited India to garner excitement about the NBA and basketball in general. There is talk about Chris Bosh visiting India this summer.

Here is Dwight Howard in India being....himself....






Mangal Kadyan wins gold for India at the Asian Junior Wrestling Championships



Mangal Kadyan had very strong performances during the 50 KG championship bouts. He beat Chan Jun Park (South Korea) with a score of 8-0, he beat Song Hyon (North Korea) with a score of 10-2, he beat Shavkator Mukhmudjon (Uzbekistan) with a score of 9-1. In the final bout he beat Mostafa Yaghoubizeleti (Iran) with a score of 8-0. 

Besides the gold medal, India won 1 silver, and 7 bronze medals in this tournament. 

1 Silver (Boys) - Mehar Singh 
4 Bronze (Boys) - Nitin, Prabhpal Singh, Parveen Dagar, Santosh Kumar Yadav.
3 Bronze (Girls) - Sheetal Tomar, Divyanshi Tyagi, Seema. 

The country won a gold and a silver (in wrestling) at the 2012 London Olympics, and the sport has picked up popularity in India over the years. With India's wrestling history it seems only natural for India to be successful in the sport of wrestling. The wrestling fans from India are very excited about its chances with winning more wrestling medals at the 2016 Rio Olympic games. 

At the beginning of the year the International Olympic Committee decided to drop wrestling from the 2020 Olympics. It was a devastating blow for all the wrestlers and fans around the world, it was a scary decision from India's point of view because it would derail the momentum Indian wrestling has picked up over the last decade. The good news is that there is significant outrage around the world and there is a large lobby from the wrestling powers of the world which includes US, Russia, Iran and etc. The consensus is that the IOC will add wrestling back into the list by the time 2020 comes along. 

All the aspiring wrestlers shouldn't be worried, it would be prudent to stay confident that the IOC will add back wrestling into the 2020 Olympics because the Olympics will not be complete with out wrestling. I for one will boycott watching the Olympics if they exclude wrestling. What will they do next? Exclude the running and walking events from the Olympics? 


Thursday, June 13, 2013

India: My Angels Football Academy




I am so speechless that I can't write anything about this academy and the person who leads it. The person responsible for this academy is Sylvester Peter and he has a nice blog which speaks very well for his cause and I urge you to read and follow it.

Here is a link to a text interview of Sylvester conducted by Harmeet Kamboe from Sportskeeda. It was very informative about the tough issues that Sylvester faces in running the Academy. The guy is a champ and is doing something which is mind boggling.

The future football stars of India will be coming from all walks of life, including the most disenfranchised of all. One out of Eight children in India grow up in the slums (there is no PC word for it, I checked), and for them football can be a great guide in life, especially if they are led by a person like Sylvester. He has a system which works for the kids who grow up in harsh environments, any little assistance he can get will only help the cause in helping his students and India's cause in becoming a better nation.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Football in India - The other kind


There is a new sport in India. The kind which would qualify to be a contact sport and arguably one of the toughest to play and understand. When I say football, I don't mean the one from the EU I am talking about the one from the US. I was browsing today about what was going on in Indian sports and came across this news item about a 21 year old named Roshan Lobo from India being interviewed by a couple of American news anchors.

A couple of things caught my eye about this young adult. First of all, he sounds super confident. Second of all, he sounds super freaking confident. When the interviewer asks him if he would like to play in the US, he replies back saying that it would be cool to play in America but that he wants to learn everything he can and go back to India to make Indian football the BEST in the world. Not one of the best, not second best (considering India has to compete with the US), but the BEST. How many balls would it take for someone to dream of such a thing? Probably 4.

I will talk about the football league in India on a day when I start seeing more progress, but in this piece I wanted to share some of my thoughts on American Football.

Unlike other sports which are played in India, American Football is a special one. Mainly because it has remnants of the good old american values. Yes, hard to believe but when you think about it America didn't become such a great country with out values. People who built the foundations of America were risk takers who weren't scared of tackling problems head on with full force. Yes, the sentence was written with football in mind as a metaphor. Americans built  the biggest bridges, the tallest buildings, and pretty much more than half the things we use in our daily lives. What I am trying to imply is that Americans didn't built America with out strong values. Football was invented in the US, and guess what the sport might bring to the table?

If you walk through American high schools, you will notice the stars of the schools are usually the athletes. The super stars are usually the athletes who also excel at academics. Football and basketball usually take the limelight in the school. They are played in the fall and winter respectively and receive a lot of community support. The football quarterbacks, linebackers and receivers are generally dating the hottest girls in school, all the nerds hate it but they can't help it (I would fall in the nerd category).

Besides the glam and fame that come with playing football, there are virtues that accompany with the sport. If you watch one of the grueling practices the football players go through, you will understand right away that it takes guts to be covered with armor and a helmet and do all the football drills in the severe heat or cold, which ever mother nature throws at you.

There is no faking of injuries, there is no SLY time wasting, there is no backing down from confrontation. You beat the other team head on with out holding back. You support each other on the team like they are your brothers in arms because if you don't the weakest link in the chain breaks and the whole thing falls apart. If there is no teamwork in football, there is no team. A linebacker will probably never touch the ball through out the game, but if he doesn't  do his job (which is to defend/assist the quarterback) the play falls apart. The linebacker isn't the main player on the team but he is just as important. One of the lessons many Indian kids can learn through football, teamwork.

Another virtue football holds is the fact that it is a contact sport. For many Indian kids who grow up to be afraid of being hurt, it would be a virtue to learn not to be afraid of getting hurt. To enhance one's body to perform hard physical tasks and match up against someone else who is performing against you is an awesome feeling to have. There are only a few sports which offer that feeling and American football is one of them.

Football is also hard work. Your goal is always to run faster and zig-zag through people who are trying to tackle you, become stronger to push and ram through who ever is trying to stop you from crossing the ball over the end line, and jump higher to make sure you jump over all the players falling in front of you.

Most people don't know this but football takes intelligence. Each team's coach develops many plays with different variations of those plays, and it is the case both on the offensive/defensive ends and the special teams department. It is pretty hard to memorize all the plays and actually implement them on the field and it takes a good amount of intelligence to do that. Here is a small piece on the aspects of memorizing and implementing plays.

Remember I was talking about how Roshan Lobo is such a confident lad? I want to get back to that point. It is not an accident that he plays football and has confidence to show for it. Playing football forces you to think confidently, because when you put those shoulder pads on and teach yourself to not be afraid of being tackled or tackle someone, you transcend into a zone where your mind tells you that you can face anything in life.

The final virtue that I notice about football is that it builds character in the player. For all the things I mentioned above there are many other things a person has to do to be a football player. He has to eat more, work out more, take care of his body through all the dings, bruises, broken bones and concussions. Through all those tough situations he has to motivate himself and motivate his team to keep going through the end line. Through all those endeavors you will have to respect your coach even though he yells at you to build you a thicker skin, and in the end respect your teammates and the teams you play against.

It is a good old American sport which built itself out of the good old American values, and as Indians we should learn from what it can teach us. From all the strengths and weaknesses that India has as a nation, it will never hurt to learn some things from other great nations.

Keep it up Lobo, I hope you become an inspiration for many other Indian kids.


Saturday, January 26, 2013

India's team and Individual Sports Rankings


Indian Team Sports Ranking             World Rank                                     Date: 1/26/13
  1. Test Cricket                                     5th
  2. One Day International Cricket            1st
  3. Twenty20                                         3rd
  4. Tennis Davis Cup                             25th
  5. Men's Football (Soccer)                    166th
  6. Women's Football (Soccer)               52nd
  7. Men's Basketball                              58th
  8. Women's Basketball                         40th
  9. Boys Basketball                               43rd
  10. Girls Basketball                                39th
  11. Junior Boys Volleyball                       12th (Men's volleyball is 30th)
  12. Junior Girls Volleyball                       55th (Women's volleyball is 103rd)
  13. Men's Rugby                                    68th
  14. Men's Field Hockey                          11th
  15. Women's Field Hockey                     12th

Individual Sports ranking:

Men's Single's Tennis: India's Top 3            World Rank
  1. Yuki Bhambri                                              238th
  2. Sanam Singh                                              293rd
  3. Sriram Balaji                                               324th
   
   
Men's Double's Tennis: India's Top 3          World Rank
  1. Leander Paes                                              3rd
  2. Mahesh Bhupati                                           11th
  3. Rohan Bopanna                                           12th 
   
Women's Single's Tennis: India's Top 2        World Rank
  1. Sania Mirza                                                 282nd
  2. Kyra Shroff                                                  476nd
  3. Rishika Sunkara                                          548th
   
Women's Double's Tennis: India's Top 2      World Rank
  1. Sania Mirza                                                  12th
  2. Rishika Sunkara                                            391st 
  3. Ankita Raina                                                 463rd 

Men's Single's Badminton: India's Top 3       World Rank
  1. P. Kashyap                                                   9th
  2. Ajay Jayaram                                                31st
  3. R.M.V Gurusaidutt                                         38th
   
Women's Single's Badminton: India's Top 3     World Rank 
  1. Saina Nehwal                                                  2nd
  2. P.V Sindhu                                                     16th
  3. P.C Thulasi                                                     94th

If you think there is any other sport that should be added to this, please let me know and if you could provide me the source of where I can find the rankings it will be of great help. Thank you.