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Explained: How BCCI plans to help India develop Olympic talent

FirstCricket Staff May 16, 2025, 16:53:47 IST

The BCCI has in the past supported Olympic sports in India by providing financial assistance but this is the first time they could play a direct role in developing the talent.

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The BCCI could reportedly adopt two to three Olympic disciplines. Reuters
The BCCI could reportedly adopt two to three Olympic disciplines. Reuters

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has reportedly come forward to help Olympic sports grow and develop in the country. Reportedly, the world’s richest cricket board is “keen on adopting two to three Olympic disciplines” in the sports ministry’s ambitious plan to have corporate-backed individual Centres of Excellence, the work for which will begin this year.

This was conveyed by the cash-rich cricket body in a meeting with sports minister Mansukh Mandaviya on Thursday. The gathering also featured “representatives from 58 corporate houses”.

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“Mr Rajeev Shukla, who represented the BCCI in this meeting, said that the Board is willing to adopt two to three Olympic disciplines and would leave it on the ministry to decide what those disciplines would be,” a source in the sports ministry said.

“The ministry welcomes this. Our plan is to build Olympic Centres for each sport, which would train 100 to 200 of the very best in the country keeping in mind the current and the next Olympic cycle.

“There were 58 corporates in today’s meeting and all of them were keen to support this plan,” the source added.

Currently, India has 23 National Centres of Excellence operated by the Sports Authority of India (SAI). Of these, only three are single-sport facilities dedicated to boxing (Rohtak), swimming (Delhi) and shooting (Delhi). The two biggest NCOEs catering to multiple sports are in Patiala and Bengaluru.

BCCI aims to develop Olympic talent

Mandaviya has time and again reiterated his commitment to the idea of individual Olympic centres, saying that the inspiration for it has come after observing the functioning of training facilities in Japan, the USA, and Australia.

The BCCI has supported Olympic sports in the past by providing financial assistance to the National Sports Development Fund (Rs 50 crore back in 2008) and to the Indian Olympic Association (Rs 8.5 crore last year before Paris Olympics).

The Board had also given Rs four crore in cash prize to medal winners of the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021, including one crore to gold medallist javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra.

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However, it would be the first time that the Board gets involved in shaping talent if the modalities work out.

A senior BCCI office-bearer did not dwell on the details of Thursday’s meeting with Mandaviya, merely saying that, “things would be communicated if anything crystallises.”

With agency inputs

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