For Indian sports fans, Rio de Janeiro gave more moments to celebrate from the Paralympics than the Olympics and if that is repeated in Tokyo, they would be in for a treat.

After a below par showing at Rio 2016 by the Olympic contingent, the Paralympians stepped up for India, registering the country’s best result with two gold medals, one silver and one bronze.

The Paralympic Games for 2020, postponed like the Olympics were, will officially begin on August 24. Tokyo will be the first city to host the Paralympics twice, with the tournament’s first edition held in Rome in 1960 followed by Tokyo in 1964. Paralympics and Olympics have been held together in the same city each time since the Seoul 1988 Games.

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India’s contingent for Tokyo Paralympics is nearly thrice as large as that of Rio 2016.

The country is fielding its largest ever contingent with 54 athletes set to compete across nine para sports including – Archery, Athletics, Badminton, Canoeing, Shooting, Swimming, Powerlifting, Table Tennis and Taekwondo. In Rio 2016, the number of athletes representing India at the Paralympics was 19, spread across five sports. The result was was also a record tally with two gold, one silver and one bronze. The count of athletes stood at just 10 in London four years previously, with one medal.

Expectations are aplenty from the Indian Paralympians, given some of their recent successes in the international arena.

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At Tokyo, India will have not one but two former gold medallists. Both Devendra Jhajharia and Mariyappan Thangavelu are back to defend their Rio 2016 titles. Javelin throw will once again be the focus for Indian fans, with Sumit Antil and Sandeep Chaudhary primed for podium finish in their category. Badminton’s addition to the Games’ roster is a boost for India’s hopes as well.

The athletes representing India at the Tokyo Paralympics span birthdays across 30 years. The 1973-born Parul Parmar (badminton) is the oldest in the contingent that has four 40-year-olds including double gold medallist Jhajharia. At the other end of the spectrum is Parmar’s doubles partner Palak Kohli, who recently turned 19 years old. The youngest Indian athlete in the contingent is 17-year-old Kashish Lakra (club throw). The average age of the contingent is 29.35.

Mariyappan will be the flagbearer at the opening ceremony for India.

India's entries at Tokyo Paralympics

Sport Female Male Total
Archery 1 4 5
Athletics 4 20 24
Badminton 2 5 7
Canoe Sprint 1 0 1
Powerlifting 1 1 2
Shooting 2 8 10
Swimming 0 2 2
Table Tennis 2 0 2
Taekwondo 1 0 1
Total 14 40 54

All the details about the Paralympic Games classification for different sports disciplines are available here.

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(Scroll across or swipe right in the tables below to view all columns on the screen)

Archery

Event Name Age Sport Class
Men's Individual Compound - Open Rakesh Kumar  36 Sport Class: W2
Men's Individual Compound - Open Shyam Sundar Swami  24 Sport Class: ST
Men's Individual Recurve - Open Harvinder Singh  30 Sport Class: ST
Men's Individual Recurve - Open Vivek Chikara  31 Sport Class: ST
Women's Individual Compound - Open Jyoti Balyan 27 Sport Class: ST

Athletics

Along with badminton, athletics is where the majority of India’s hopes will lie.

Watch out for 30 August where all eyes will be on the legendary Devendra Jhajharia, who will be gunning for an unprecedented third Paralympics gold medal. Having won the gold in Athens 2004, Jhajharia had to wait till Rio 2016 for a second chance at the world’s biggest stage as the F46 category was not included in 2008 and 2012. But he grabbed his chance in Brazil with a world record to eclipse his own world record and clinch gold.

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“I had to wait for 12 years after winning my first gold medal in 2004. I made the most of the opportunity and bagged my second gold at Rio de Janeiro. I don’t want to miss this opportunity in Tokyo,” Jhajharia has said.

The men’s javelin F46 event could turn out to be rather special for the Indian contingent. While Jhajharia will have his eye on gold, look out for Sundar Singh Gurjar who had an unfortunate experience in Rio. He missed the call for his event and could not compete, and it was in an event where he was seen as a serious medal hope. Back on the circuit, and in for, he will fancy his chances.

Another javelin event to look our for on the same day is the men’s F64, where Sandeep and Sumit are serious contenders after their 1-2 finish at the World Championships in 2019.

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And of course, Mariyappan Thangavelu is back to defend his title from Rio 2016. The men’s high jump T63 event is also a big one for India, with Rio bronze medallist Varun Singh Bhati and the impressive Sharad Kumar in fray.

“Since many years, India has a strong presence in Para athletics at the Paralympics,” Para Athletics coach Satyanarayan told the Paralympic Committee of India. “Last time we had four medals at Rio 2016. This time, we have a strong team comprising of both experienced and newcomers. This will be a great opportunity for the youngsters which are eager to make a mark. We are expecting at least 10 medals with two Paralympic records.”

Also, a fun-fact worth mentioning: Amit Kumar Saroha, the veteran who is making his third Paralympics appearance, is in the Indian contingent alongside a couple of athletes he has trained and mentored in Ekta Bhyan and Dharambir.

Event Name Age Sport Class
Men's High Jump - T47 Nishad Kumar  21 Sport Class: T47
Men's High Jump - T47 Ram Pal 32 Sport Class: T47
Men's High Jump - T63 Varun Singh Bhati  26 Sport Class: T42
Men's High Jump - T63 Sharad Kumar  29 Sport Class: T42
Men's High Jump - T63 Mariyappan Thangavelu  26 Sport Class: T42
Men's High Jump - T64 Praveen Kumar  18 Sport Class: T44
Men's Shot Put - F35 Arvind 28 Sport Class: F35
Men's Shot Put - F57 Soman Rana  38 Sport Class: F57
Men's Discus Throw - F52 Vinod Kumar 41 Sport Class: F52
Men's Discus Throw - F56 Yogesh Kathuniya  24 Sport Class: F56
Men's Javelin Throw - F41 Navdeep 20 Sport Class: F41
Men's Javelin Throw - F46 Ajeet Singh  27 Sport Class: F46
Men's Javelin Throw - F46 Devendra Jhajharia 40 Sport Class: F46
Men's Javelin Throw - F46 Sundar Singh Gurjar  25 Sport Class: F46
Men's Shot Put - F55* Tek Chand 37 Sport Class: F55*
Men's Javelin Throw - F57 Ranjeet Bhati  24 Sport Class: F57
Men's Javelin Throw - F64 Sandeep Chaudhary 25 Sport Class: F44
Men's Javelin Throw - F64 Sumit Antil 23 Sport Class: F64
Men's Club Throw - F51 Dharambir 32 Sport Class: F51
Men's Club Throw - F51 Amit Kumar Saroha 36 Sport Class: F51
Women's 100m - T13 Simran Sharma 21 Sport Class: T13
Women's Shot Put - F34 Bhagyashri Madhavrao Jadhav 36 Sport Class: F34
Women's Club Throw - F51 Ekta Bhyan  36 Sport Class: F51
Women's Club Throw - F51 Kashish Lakra  17 Sport Class: F51
Reclassified after the list was published

Badminton

One of the two sporting events (along with Taekwondo) to make its Paralympic debut in Tokyo, badminton will carry plenty of interest for Indian fans.

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India have some of the brightest medal prospects like world No 1 Pramod Bhagat (SL3), world No 2 Krishna Nagar (SH6) and world No 2 Tarun Dhillon (SL4) in their ranks.

The experienced Parul Parmar and the young Palak Kohli (SL3-SU5) will carry high hopes of returning with a medal in their women’s doubles category.

The team also comprises Suhas L Yathiraj (SL4) and Manoj Sarkar (SL3), who qualified after the Badminton World Federation granted two bipartite quotas to the country. They are high-ranked players too.

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“We have a very strong team representing the country at the Paralympics. Out of the six best players of the world selected for the Paralympics, two are Indians. Two from SL3 and two from SL4 category in men’’s singles,” coach Gaurav Khanna, a Dronacharya awardee, said recently.

“So I am pretty sure our players will bring medals and a realistic expectation will be a minimum of five medals. We are going to get five medals, including three golds, for the country.”

Additional information: Para Badminton world rankings

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Watch: How India’s Para Badminton athlete Palak Kohli began her inspiring sporting journey

Event Name Age Sport Class
Men's Singles SL3 Pramod Bhagat  33 Sport Class: SL3
Men's Singles SL3 Manoj Sarkar  31 Sport Class: SL3
Men's Singles SL4 Suhas Lalinakere Yathiraj  38 Sport Class: SL4
Men's Singles SL4 Tarun Dhillon 27 Sport Class: SL4
Men's Singles SH6 Krishna Nagar 22 Sport Class: SH6
Women's Singles SL4 Parul Dalsukhbhai Parmar  48 Sport Class: SL3
Women's Singles SU5 Palak Kohli  19 Sport Class: SU5
Women's Doubles SL3-SU5 Palak Kohli  19 Sport Class: SU5
Parmar Parul Dalsukhbhai 48 Sport Class: SL3
Mixed Doubles SL3-SU5 Pramod Bhagat  33 Sport Class: SL3
Palak Kohli 19 Sport Class: SU5

Canoe Sprint

Prachi Yadav is set to be the first Indian to participate in Canoeing at the Paralympics. The sport was introduced in 2016 and returns for Tokyo 2020. India had no representation in the event in Rio and Prachi, who started off as a swimmer, will create history in Tokyo.

Event Name Age Sport Class
Women's Va'a Single 200m - VL2 Prachi Yadav 26 Sport Class: VL2

Powerlifting

The Indian para powerlifting team couldn’t participate at the recent Fazza-Dubai 2021 Para Powerlifting World Cup owing to travel restrictions to the United Arab Emirates. But the World Para Powerlifting provided some relief as it conferred two bipartite quotas to the country to provide some relief.

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Jaideep got the quota in men’s -65 kg category while Sakina Khatun, a bronze medallist at the 2014 Commonwealth Games, will represent India in women’s -50 kg weight category. She would be the first Indian female powerlifter to take part at the Games, with eight different countries sending a female powerlifter for the first time to the Games.

India had sent one powerlifter, Farman Basha, to the Rio 2016 Paralympic Games.

Event Name Age Sport Class
Men's -65 kg Jai Deep 31 Sport Class: PWL
Women's -50 kg Sakina Khatun 32 Sport Class: PWL

Shooting

A record contingent within a record contingent, a total of 10 para shooters will be in Tokyo representing India. That includes top pistol shooters Singhraj and Manish Narwal, while Avani Lekhara features in as many as four events.

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This is the first time that 10 para shooters have achieved the required benchmark for the qualification. At Rio 2016 Paralympics, only one shooter – Naresh Sharma – had attained the qualifying berth in rifle events.

It’s a balanced team with young and senior players and many of them are coming out with excellent scores in the training. It has been a great journey for the entire team who have shown great results in the last few years. Many of them also have good temperament to pull off good results in the finals,” national chief coach JP Nautiyal told PCI.

“Everyone is working very hard and staying focused. And I am confident that they will produce good results. I am expecting at least four medals including gold from the team,” he added.

Event Name Age Sport Class
P1 - Men's 10m Air Pistol SH1 Manish Narwal  19 Sport Class: SH1
P1 - Men's 10m Air Pistol SH1 Deepender Singh  27 Sport Class: SH1
P1 - Men's 10m Air Pistol SH1 Singhraj 39 Sport Class: SH1
P2 - Women's 10m Air Pistol SH1 Rubina Francis  22 Sport Class: SH1
P3 - Mixed 25m Pistol SH1 Akash 31 Sport Class: SH1
P3 - Mixed 25m Pistol SH1 Rahul Jakhar 35 Sport Class: SH1
P4 - Mixed 50m Pistol SH1 Akash 31 Sport Class: SH1
P4 - Mixed 50m Pistol SH1 Manish Narwal  19 Sport Class: SH1
P4 - Mixed 50m Pistol SH1 Singhraj 39 Sport Class: SH1
R1 - Men's 10m Air Rifle Standing SH1 Deepak 39 Sport Class: SH1
R1 - Men's 10m Air Rifle Standing SH1 Swaroop Mahavir Unhalkar  34 Sport Class: SH1
R2 - Women's 10m Air Rifle Standing SH1 Avani Lekhara  19 Sport Class: SH1
R3 - Mixed 10m Air Rifle Prone SH1 Sidhartha Babu  42 Sport Class: SH1
R3 - Mixed 10m Air Rifle Prone SH1 Deepak 39 Sport Class: SH1
R3 - Mixed 10m Air Rifle Prone SH1 Avani Lekhara  19 Sport Class: SH1
R6 - Mixed 50m Rifle Prone SH1 Sidhartha Babu  42 Sport Class: SH1
R6 - Mixed 50m Rifle Prone SH1 Deepak 39 Sport Class: SH1
R6 - Mixed 50m Rifle Prone SH1 Avani Lekhara  19 Sport Class: SH1
R7 - Men's 50m Rifle 3 Positions SH1 Deepak 39 Sport Class: SH1
R8 - Women's 50m Rifle 3 Positions SH1 Avani Lekhara  19 Sport Class: SH1

Swimming

Event Name Age Sport Class
Men's 100m Breaststroke - SB7 Suyash Narayan Jadhav  27 Sport Class: SB7,SM7,S7
Men's 50m Butterfly - S7 Suyash Narayan Jadhav  27 Sport Class: SB7,SM7,S7
Men's 50m Butterfly - S7 Mukundan Niranjan 26 Sport Class: S7
Men's 200m Individual Medley - SM7 Suyash Narayan Jadhav  27 Sport Class: SB7,SM7,S7

Table tennis

Event Name Age Sport Class
Women's Team - Classes 4-5 Bhavinaben Hasmukhbhai Patel  34 Sport Class: 4
Women's Team - Classes 4-5 Sonalben Manubhai Patel  33 Sport Class: 3
Women's Singles - Class 3 Sonalben Manubhai Patel  33 Sport Class: 3
Women's Singles - Class 4 Bhavinaben Hasmukhbhai Patel  34 Sport Class: 4

Taekwondo

Event Name Age Sport Class
Women K44 -49kg Aruna Tanwar 21 Sport Class: K43

With PTI, Paralympic Committee of India and Paralympic.org inputs

More details about the Indian contingent will be available here during the course of the Games

Full list of Indian athletes at Paralympics

Sport Name Age
Archery Jyoti Balyan 27
Archery Rakesh Kumar  36
Archery Harvinder Singh  30
Archery Shyam Sundar Swami  24
Archery Vivek Chikara 31
Athletics Ajeet Singh 27
Athletics Arvind 28
Athletics Ranjeet Bhati  24
Athletics Varun Singh Bhati  26
Athletics Ekta Bhyan  36
Athletics Devendra Jhajharia 40
Athletics Dharambir 32
Athletics Sundar Singh Gurjar  25
Athletics Bhagyashri Madhavrao Jadhav  36
Athletics Yogesh Kathuniya  24
Athletics Amit Kumar Saroha 36
Athletics Sharad Kumar  29
Athletics Kashish Lakra  17
Athletics Navdeep 20
Athletics Nishad Kumar 21
Athletics Praveen Kumar  18
Athletics Ram Pal 32
Athletics Soman Rana  38
Athletics Sandeep 25
Athletics Simran Sharma 21
Athletics Sumit 23
Athletics Tek Chand 37
Athletics Mariyappan Thangavelu  26
Athletics Vinod Kumar  41
Badminton Pramod Bhagat  33
Badminton Palak Kohli 19
Badminton Yathiraj Suhas Lalinakere  38
Badminton Krishna Nagar  22
Badminton Parul Dalsukhbhai Parmar  48
Badminton Manoj Sarkar  31
Badminton Tarun Dhillon 27
Canoe Sprint Prachi Yadav  26
Powerlifting Jai Deep 31
Powerlifting Sakina Khatun  32
Shooting Akash 31
Shooting Sidhartha Babu  42
Shooting Deepak 39
Shooting  Rubina Francis 22
Shooting Avani Lekhara  19
Shooting Manish Narwal  19
Shooting Rahul Jakhar 35
Shooting Deepender Singh  27
Shooting Singhraj 39
Shooting Swaroop Mahavir Unhalkar  34
Swimming Suyash Narayan Jadhav  27
Swimming Niranjan Mukundan  26
Taekwondo Aruna Tanwar 21
Table tennis Bhavinaben Hasmukhbhai Patel  34
Table tennis Sonalben Manubhai Patel  33