India at the Olympics

India first participated at the Olympic Games in 1900, becoming the first Asian nation to do so. Norman Pritchard represented the country and won two medals, both silver, in athletics. The nation first sent a team to the Summer Olympic Games in 1920 and has participated in every Summer Games since then. India has competed at several Winter Olympic Games after its debut in 1964.

India at the
Olympics
Flag of India
IOC codeIND
NOCIndian Olympic Association
Websiteolympic.ind.in
Medals
Ranked 60th
Gold
10
Silver
10
Bronze
21
Total
41
Summer appearances
Winter appearances
  • 1964
  • 1968
  • 1972–1984
  • 1988
  • 1992
  • 1994
  • 1998
  • 2002
  • 2006
  • 2010
  • 2014
  • 2018
  • 2022
  • 2026
Other related appearances
 Independent Olympic Participants (2014)

Indian athletes have won 41 medals, all at the Summer Games. At a period of time during the 1900s, the Indian men's field hockey team was dominant in the Olympic Games, winning eleven medals in twelve Olympics between 1928 and 1980 including eight gold medals of which six were won consecutively from 1928 to 1956. India's best performance happened at the 2020 Games, with seven medals including a gold and two silver.

History

Before independence

India made its first appearance at the 1900 Summer Olympics as part of British India (1858–1947), becoming the first Asian nation to participate in the Olympic Games. A lone athlete Norman Pritchard represented the country and won two silver medals in athletics. India was classified 19th in the overall medal table, which represents its best placement till date. India did not compete in the next three Summer Olympic Games. At the behest of then Governor of Bombay George Lloyd, Indian businessman Dorabji Tata secured representation for British India at the International Olympic Committee, enabling it to independently participate in the 1920 Summer Olympics. India sent a contingent of six competitors including four athletes and two wrestlers with two support staff. The Indian Olympic movement was then established during the 1920s. In 1923, a provisional All India Olympic Committee was formed, and in February 1924, the All India Olympic Games (later National Games of India) were held to select a team for the 1924 Summer Olympics at Paris. The Indian delegation at the Paris Olympics consisted of 14 competitors including eight in athletics and four in tennis, led by team manager Harry Buck.

In 1927, the provisional Indian Olympic Committee was recognized by the International Olympic Committee and formally became the Indian Olympic Association (IOA). The organization was formed to promote the development of sports in India, host the national games, and select teams for the Olympics. For the 1928 Summer Olympics in Amsterdam, it selected eight competitors, which included seven in athletics and one swimmer. The Indian Hockey Federation, which had been established earlier in 1925, sent the men's team to the 1928 Games. The hockey team won India's first gold medal in the Olympics at Amsterdam. This was the first gold medal won by any nation from Asia at the modern Olympic Games. For the 1932 Games, the Indian contingent consisted of the field hockey team and five athletes. For the subsequent 1936 Games, India sent a contingent consisting of the field hockey team and eight athletes, who competed in four sports. The only medals in the last two Games came from the Indian field hockey team, which won three consecutive gold medals from 1928 to 1936. The victory run included the largest victory margin in Olympics history after India defeated United States 24–1 in 1932 and the largest margin of victory in an Olympic final during the 8–1 defeat of Germany in the final in 1936.

After independence

India gained its independence in 1947, it sent its first contingent as an independent country for the 1948 Summer Olympics held at London. The Indian contingent consisted of 79 athletes, who competed across ten sports and included country's first participation in arts, boxing, cycling, football, and water polo events. The Indian field hockey team won the lone medal, a gold, which was the first medal for India as an independent nation. The 1952 Summer Olympics marked the first time India sent women competitors to the Games. The Indian contingent consisted of 64 competitors including four women with first time participants in gymnastics and shooting events. Wrestler K. D. Jadhav won a bronze medal, the first individual medal for independent India. India sent a contingent of 59 competitors for the 1956 Games at Melbourne and the only medal came from the Indian field hockey team, which won a then record sixth straight gold medal in a single event at the Games. The Indian contingent consisted of 45 competitors for the next Summer Olympics at Rome. The country won a single silver medal from field hockey after the team lost in the final, which was its first loss in the Olympic Games since the 1928.

India made its Winter Olympics debut at the 1964 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck with Jeremy Bujakowski competing in the men's downhill event in alpine skiing. In the subsequent Summer Olympics held in Tokyo in the same year, India sent a contingent of 53 competitors including two participants for the diving event for the first time. The men's field hockey team won the gold medal, for the country's only medal at the Games.

In the 1968 Winter Olympics held in Grenoble, Bujakowski was again the only participant representing India. India sent its smallest delegation since independence, consisting of 25 athletes to the 1968 Summer Olympics at Mexico City. India did not participate in the four subsequent Winter Olympic Games from 1972 to 1984. In the 1972 Summer Olympics at Munich, 41 Indian athletes competed across seven sports including two competitors in the badminton for the first time. The only medals in the previous two Summer Olympics were the bronze medals won by the men's field hockey team. In 1976 Summer Olympics at Montreal, India entered 26 athletes, but failed to win a medal for the first time since 1924.

The Indian delegation for the 1980 Summer Olympics at Moscow consisted of 76 competitors, the second largest since independence with first time participants in the equestrian event. The only medal again came from the men's hockey team which won their record extending eighth Olympic gold in a single event. This was also the last time the Indian field hockey team won the gold medal at the Olympics. India sent 48, 46 and 52 athletes to the subsequent three Summer Olympics in 1984, 1988, and 1992 respectively, but failed to win a single medal across the three Olympic Games. In between, India returned to compete in the 1988 Winter Olympics after a gap of nearly 20 years. The Indian contingent consisted of three athletes including the first women participant Shailaja Kumar. The country entered two athletes to the 1992 Winter Olympics before missing the subsequent 1994 Winter Olympics. India entered 49 competitors across 13 events at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. Tennis player Leander Paes won a bronze medal in the men's singles event, the country's first Olympic medal in nearly 16 years and became the first Indian individual medalist since 1952. India's lone participant in the subsequent 1998 Winter Olympics was Shiva Keshavan, who would become the Indian with most appearances in the Olympic Games after his sixth appearance in 2018.

21st century

The Indian contingent for the 2000 Sydney Olympics consisted of 65 athletes with athletes competing in the rowing event for the first time. The country's only medal was a bronze won by Karnam Malleswari in the women's 69 kg weightlifting event. It was the first Olympic medal won by an Indian woman. Keshavan was again the only competitor for India at the 2002 Winter Olympics. The Indian contingent for the 2004 Athens Olympics consisted of 73 athletes and the only medal came from shooter Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore, who won the silver medal in men's double trap event. The Indian delegation for the 2006 Winter Olympics consisted of four athletes, two in alpine skiing, one in cross-country skiing, and one in luge. At the 2008 Beijing Olympics, the Indian contingent of 57 athletes competed in 12 sports. India registered its best performance at the time, winning three medals in the event including a gold and two bronze medals. Abhinav Bindra became the first Indian individual gold medalist after his victory in the men's air rifle event. Vijender Singh and Sushil Kumar got the country's first Olympic medal in boxing and second medal in wrestling respectively. Three Indian athletes represented the country in the 2010 Winter Olympics at Vancouver.

The Indian contingent for the 2012 Summer Olympics consisted of 83 members, the highest till then. The country won six medals including two silver and four bronze, the highest count of medals as of then. Sushil Kumar won a silver medal to become the first Indian since independence with multiple individual Olympic medals. Shooter Vijay Kumar won the other silver medal in shooting. Amongst the bronze medalists, Saina Nehwal won India's first medal in badminton and boxer Mary Kom became the first Indian woman to win a medal in boxing. Other bronze medalists included shooter Gagan Narang and wrestler Yogeshwar Dutt. In December 2022, the Indian Olympic Association was suspended by the International Olympic Committee due to government interference in the autonomy of the country's National Olympic Committee (NOC). Due to the suspension, three Indian athletes entered the 2014 Winter Olympics as Independent Olympic Participants. The suspension was revoked when the games were underway and two competitors resumed the competition under the Indian flag.

For the 2016 Summer Olympics, India sent more than 100 athletes for the first time with 117 competitors. India won two medals including a silver and a bronze. Shuttler P. V. Sindhu became the first Indian woman to win an Olympic silver medal and the youngest Indian woman medalist after she won a silver medal in badminton. Sakshi Malik became the first Indian female wrestler to win an Olympic medal with her bronze medal in the women's freestyle 58 kg category. Two Indian athletes represented the country in the 2018 Winter Olympics at PyeongChang.

India sent its largest delegation consisting of 119 athletes to the 2020 Summer Olympics. India registered its most successful performance in a single Games with seven medals including one gold, two silver and four bronze. Neeraj Chopra won India's first gold medal in athletics after his victory in the men's javelin throw event. In the women's 49 kg event, Saikhom Mirabai Chanu won India's first silver medal in weight lifting. Sindhu became the first Indian female athlete and the second Indian to win medals in consecutive Summer Games in individual events after she won a bronze in women's badminton. The men's field hockey team won a bronze medal to record their first Olympic medal since 1980.Ravi Kumar Dahiya won a silver medal in men's freestyle wrestling. Other bronze medalists included Lovlina Borgohain in women's boxing and Bajrang Punia in men's freestyle wrestling. India entered one male alpine skier, Arif Khan for the 2022 Winter Olympics.

The Indian contingent for the 2024 Summer Olympics consisted of 110 competitors across 16 sports. India won six medals in total including one silver and five bronze, three of which came from the shooting events. Chopra won the only silver medal for India in the men's javelin throw event and became the first Indian individual medalist to have won a gold and silver at the Olympics. Manu Bhaker won two bronze medals including the first Indian medal at the Games in the air pistol event and another along with Sarabjot Singh in the mixed pistol team event. She became the first Indian since independence to win two medals in a single Olympics. Swapnil Kusale then won another bronze medal in shooting. The men's field hockey team won the bronze medal for the second consecutive Olympics. Aman Sehrawat won a bronze medal for India in the men's freestyle 57kg wrestling event to become the youngest Indian to win an Olympic medal.

Medal table

Summer Games

Winter Games

Medals by sport

Sport Rank Gold Silver Bronze Total
Men Women Overall
 Athletics 59th 1 3 0 4
 Badminton 9th 0 1 2 3
 Boxing 68th 0 0 3 3
 Field hockey [a] 1st N/A 2nd 8 1 4 13
 Shooting 33rd 1 2 4 7
 Tennis 33rd 0 0 1 1
 Weightlifting 53rd 0 1 1 2
 Wrestling 48th 0 2 6 8
Total 60th 10 10 21 41

Best results in non-medaling sports

Sport Result Participant(s) Event Games
 Football 4th National football team Men's tournament Melbourne 1956
 Artistic gymnastics 4th Dipa Karmakar Women's vault Rio 2016
 Golf 4th Aditi Ashok Women's individual Tokyo 2020
 Archery 4th Dhiraj Bommadevara
Ankita Bhakat
Mixed team Paris 2024
 Cycling 9th Rusi Mulla Feroze Men's sprint London 1948
 Cycling 9th Adi Havewala
Jehangoo Amin
Rohinton Noble
Piloo Sarkari
Men's team pursuit London 1948
 Basketball 12th National basketball team Men's tournament Moscow 1980
 Water polo 12th National water polo team Men's water polo London 1948
 Table tennis R16 Manika Batra
Sreeja Akula
Women's singles Paris 2024
 Cycling 19th Rohinton Noble Men's track time trial London 1948
 Diving 25th Ansuya Prasad Men's 3 m springboard Tokyo 1964
 Diving 30th Sohan Singh Men's 10 m platform Tokyo 1964
 Fencing R32 Bhavani Devi Women's sabre Tokyo 2020

Medalists

Medal Medalist Sport Event Date
1900 Paris
Silver Norman Pritchard Athletics Men's 200m 22 July 1900
Silver Norman Pritchard Athletics Men's 200m hurdles 16 July 1900
1928 Amsterdam
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Richard Allen
    Dhyan Chand
    Michael Gateley
    William Goodsir-Cullen
    Leslie Hammond
    Feroze Khan
    George Marthins
    Rex Norris
    Broome Pinniger
    Michael Rocque
    Frederic Seaman
    Ali Shaukat
    Jaipal Singh
    Sayed Yusuf
    Kher Singh Gill
Field hockey Men's tournament 26 May 1928
1932 Los Angeles
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Richard Allen
    Muhammad Aslam
    Lal Bokhari
    Frank Brewin
    Richard Carr
    Dhyan Chand
    Leslie Hammond
    Arthur Hind
    Sayed Jaffar
    Masud Minhas
    Broome Pinniger
    Gurmit Singh Kullar
    Roop Singh
    William Sullivan
    Carlyle Tapsell
Field hockey Men's tournament 11 August 1932
1936 Berlin
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Richard Allen
    Dhyan Chand
    Ali Dara
    Lionel Emmett
    Peter Fernandes
    Joseph Galibardy
    Earnest Goodsir-Cullen
    Mohammed Hussain
    Sayed Jaffar
    Ahmed Khan
    Ahsan Mohomed Khan
    Mirza Masood
    Cyril Michie
    Baboo Nimal
    Joseph Phillips
    Shabban Shahab-ud-Din
    Gurcharan Singh Grewal
    Roop Singh
    Carlyle Tapsell
Field hockey Men's tournament 15 August 1936
1948 London
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Leslie Claudius
    Keshav Dutt
    Walter de Sousa
    Lawrie Fernandes
    Ranganathan Francis
    Gerry Glackan
    Akhtar Hussain
    Patrick Jansen
    Amir Kumar
    Kishan Lal
    Leo Pinto
    Jaswant Singh Rajput
    Latif-ur Rehman
    Reginald Rodrigues
    Balbir Singh Sr.
    Randhir Singh Gentle
    Grahanandan Singh
    K. D. Singh
    Trilochan Singh
    Maxie Vaz
Field hockey Men's tournament 12 August 1948
1952 Helsinki
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • K. D. Singh
    Leslie Claudius
    Meldric Daluz
    Keshav Dutt
    Chinadorai Deshmutu
    Ranganathan Francis
    Raghbir Lal
    Govind Perumal
    Muniswamy Rajgopal
    Balbir Singh Sr.
    Randhir Singh Gentle
    C. S. Dubey
    Udham Singh
    Dharam Singh
    Grahanandan Singh
    Chaman Singh Gurung
Field hockey Men's tournament 24 July 1952
Bronze K. D. Jadhav Wrestling Men's freestyle 57 kg 23 July 1952
1956 Melbourne
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Leslie Claudius
    Ranganathan Francis
    Haripal Kaushik
    Amir Kumar
    Raghbir Lal
    Shankar Lakshman
    O. P. Malhotra
    Govind Perumal
    Amit Singh Bakshi
    Raghbir Singh Bhola
    Balbir Singh Sr.
    Hardyal Singh
    Randhir Singh Gentle
    Balkrishan Singh
    Gurdev Singh
    Udham Singh
    Bakshish Singh
    Charles Stephen
Field hockey Men's tournament 6 December 1956
1960 Rome
Silver
Men's field hockey team

  • Joseph Antic
    Leslie Claudius
    Jaman Lal Sharma
    Mohinder Lal
    Shankar Lakshman
    John Peter
    Govind Sawant
    Raghbir Singh Bhola
    Udham Singh
    Charanjit Singh
    Jaswant Singh
    Joginder Singh
    Prithipal Singh
Field hockey Men's tournament 9 September 1960
1964 Tokyo
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Haripal Kaushik
    Mohinder Lal
    Shankar Lakshman
    Bandu Patil
    John Peter
    Syed Ali
    Udham Singh
    Charanjit Singh
    Darshan Singh
    Dharam Singh
    Gurbux Singh
    Harbinder Singh
    Jagjit Singh
    Joginder Singh
    Prithipal Singh
    Balbir Singh Kullar
    Rajendran Christie
Field hockey Men's tournament 23 October 1964
1968 Mexico City
Bronze
Men's field hockey team

  • Rajendran Christie
    Krishnamurty Perumal
    John Peter
    Inam-ur Rahman
    Munir Sait
    Ajitpal Singh
    Balbir Singh Kullar
    Balbir Singh Kular
    Balbir Singh
    Gurbux Singh
    Harbinder Singh
    Harmik Singh
    Inder Singh
    Prithipal Singh
    Tarsem Singh
    Jagjit Singh
Field hockey Men's tournament 26 October 1968
1972 Munich
Bronze
Men's field hockey team

  • B. P. Govinda
    Charles Cornelius
    Manuel Frederick
    Michael Kindo
    V. J. Philips
    Ashok Kumar
    M. P. Ganesh
    Krishnamurty Perumal
    Ajitpal Singh
    Harbinder Singh
    Harcharan Singh
    Harmik Singh
    Kulwant Singh
    Mukhbain Singh
    Virinder Singh
    Vece Paes
Field hockey Men's tournament 10 September 1972
1980 Moscow
Gold
Men's field hockey team

  • Vasudevan Baskaran
    Bir Bahadur Chettri
    Sylvanus Dung Dung
    Mervyn Fernandis
    Zafar Iqbal
    Maharaj Krishan Kaushik
    Charanjit Kumar
    M. M. Somaya
    Allan Schofield
    Mohammed Shahid
    Davinder Singh
    Gurmail Singh
    Amarjit Singh Rana
    Rajinder Singh Jr.
    Ravinder Pal Singh
    Surinder Singh Sodhi
Field hockey Men's tournament 29 July 1980
1996 Atlanta
Bronze Leander Paes Tennis Men's singles 3 August 1996
2000 Sydney
Bronze Karnam Malleswari Weightlifting Women's 69 kg 19 September 2000
2004 Athens
Silver Rajyavardhan Singh Rathore Shooting Men's double trap 17 August 2004
2008 Beijing
Gold Abhinav Bindra Shooting Men's 10m air rifle 11 August 2008
Bronze Vijender Singh Boxing Middleweight 20 August 2008
Bronze Sushil Kumar Wrestling Men's freestyle 66 kg 21 August 2008
2012 London
Silver Vijay Kumar Shooting Men's 25m rapid fire pistol 3 August 2012
Silver Sushil Kumar Wrestling Men's freestyle 66 kg 12 August 2012
Bronze Saina Nehwal Badminton Women's singles 4 August 2012
Bronze Mary Kom Boxing Women's flyweight 8 August 2012
Bronze Gagan Narang Shooting Men's 10m air rifle 30 July 2012
Bronze Yogeshwar Dutt Wrestling Men's freestyle 60 kg 11 August 2012
2016 Rio
Silver P. V. Sindhu Badminton Women's singles 19 August 2016
Bronze Sakshi Malik Wrestling Women's freestyle 58 kg 17 August 2016
2020 Tokyo
Gold Neeraj Chopra Athletics Men's javelin throw 7 August 2021
Silver Mirabai Chanu Weightlifting Women's 49 kg 24 July 2021
Silver Ravi Kumar Dahiya Wrestling Men's freestyle 57 kg 5 August 2021
Bronze P. V. Sindhu Badminton Women's singles 1 August 2021
Bronze Lovlina Borgohain Boxing Women's welterweight 4 August 2021
Bronze
Men's field hockey team

  • Dilpreet Singh
    Rupinder Pal Singh
    Surender Kumar
    Manpreet Singh
    Hardik Singh
    Gurjant Singh
    Simranjeet Singh
    Mandeep Singh
    Harmanpreet Singh
    Lalit Upadhyay
    P. R. Sreejesh
    Sumit Walmiki
    Nilakanta Sharma
    Shamsher Singh
    Varun Kumar
    Birendra Lakra
    Amit Rohidas
    Vivek Prasad
Field hockey Men's tournament 5 August 2021
Bronze Bajrang Punia Wrestling Men's freestyle 65 kg 7 August 2021
2024 Paris
Silver Neeraj Chopra Athletics Men's javelin throw 8 August 2024
Bronze Manu Bhaker Shooting Women's 10m air pistol 28 July 2024
Bronze Manu Bhaker
Sarabjot Singh
Shooting Mixed 10m air pistol team 30 July 2024
Bronze Swapnil Kusale Shooting Men's 50m rifle 3 positions 1 August 2024
Bronze
Men's field hockey team

  • Harmanpreet Singh
    Jarmanpreet Singh
    Abhishek Nain
    Manpreet Singh
    Hardik Singh
    Gurjant Singh
    Sanjay Rana
    Mandeep Singh
    Lalit Upadhyay
    P. R. Sreejesh
    Sumit Walmiki
    Shamsher Singh
    Raj Kumar Pal
    Amit Rohidas
    Vivek Prasad
    Sukhjeet Singh
Field hockey Men's tournament 8 August 2024
Bronze Aman Sehrawat Wrestling Men's freestyle 57 kg 9 August 2024

Source

Multiple medalists

Individual

Athlete Sport Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
Neeraj Chopra  Athletics Tokyo 2020
Paris 2024
1 1 0 2
Norman Pritchard  Athletics Paris 1900 0 2 0 2
Sushil Kumar  Wrestling Beijing 2008
London 2012
0 1 1 2
P. V. Sindhu  Badminton Rio 2016
Tokyo 2020
0 1 1 2
Manu Bhaker  Shooting Paris 2024 0 0 2 2

Team

Athlete Sport Games Gold Silver Bronze Total
Leslie Claudius  Field hockey 1948, 1952, 1956, 1960 3 1 0 4
Udham Singh 1952, 1956, 1960, 1964 3 1 0 4
Richard Allen 1928, 1932, 1936 3 0 0 3
Dhyan Chand 1928, 1932, 1936 3 0 0 3
Ranganathan Francis 1948, 1952, 1956 3 0 0 3
Randhir Singh Gentle 1948, 1952, 1956 3 0 0 3
Balbir Singh Sr. 1948, 1952, 1956 3 0 0 3
Shankar Lakshman 1956, 1960, 1964 2 1 0 3
Haripal Kaushik 1956, 1960, 1964 2 1 0 3
Carlyle Tapsell 1932, 1936 2 0 0 2
Roop Singh 1932, 1936 2 0 0 2
Jaswant Rai 1948, 1952 2 0 0 2
Govind Perumal 1952, 1956 2 0 0 2
Amir Kumar 1948, 1956 2 0 0 2
Jaswant Singh Rajput 1948, 1952 2 0 0 2
Leslie Hammond 1928, 1932 2 0 0 2
Broome Pinniger 1928, 1932 2 0 0 2
Sayed Jaffar 1932, 1936 2 0 0 2
Keshav Dutt 1948, 1952 2 0 0 2
Grahanandan Singh 1948, 1952 2 0 0 2
K. D. Singh 1948, 1952 2 0 0 2
Raghbir Lal 1952, 1956 2 0 0 2
John Peter 1960, 1964, 1968 1 1 1 3
Prithipal Singh 1960, 1964, 1968 1 1 1 3
Joginder Singh 1960, 1964 1 1 0 2
Charanjit Singh 1960, 1964 1 1 0 2
Raghbir Singh Bhola 1956, 1960 1 1 0 2
Mohinder Lal 1960, 1964 1 1 0 2
Balkrishan Singh 1956, 1960 1 1 0 2
Harbinder Singh 1964, 1968, 1972 1 0 2 3
Rajendran Christie 1964, 1968 1 0 1 2
Balbir Singh Kullar 1964, 1968 1 0 1 2
Jagjit Singh 1964, 1968 1 0 1 2
Gurbux Singh 1964, 1968 1 0 1 2
Krishnamurthy Perumal 1968, 1972 0 0 2 2
Ajitpal Singh 1968, 1972 0 0 2 2
Harmik Singh 1968, 1972 0 0 2 2
Harmanpreet Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Manpreet Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Hardik Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Gurjant Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Mandeep Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Lalit Upadhyay 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
P. R. Sreejesh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Sumit Walmiki 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Shamsher Singh 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Amit Rohidas 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2
Vivek Prasad 2020, 2024 0 0 2 2

Milestones

Milestone Medalist Games Sport Medals Ref(s)
First medalist
First individual multi-medalist
Norman Pritchard 1900 Paris  Athletics Silver
Silver

First gold medalists Men's field hockey team 1928 Amsterdam  Field hockey Gold
First gold medalists after independence Men's field hockey team 1948 London  Field hockey Gold
First individual medalist after independence K. D. Jadhav 1952 Helsinki  Wrestling Bronze
First woman medalist Karnam Malleswari 2000 Sydney  Weightlifting Bronze
First individual gold medalist Abhinav Bindra 2008 Beijing  Shooting Gold
First individual multi-medalist after independence Sushil Kumar 2008 Beijing
2012 London
 Wrestling Bronze
Silver
First woman multi-medalist P. V. Sindhu 2016 Rio de Janeiro
2020 Tokyo
 Badminton Silver
Bronze
First multi-medalist in single Olympics after independence Manu Bhaker 2024 Paris  Shooting Bronze
Bronze

Dominance of men's field hockey team

The Indian Men's Field Hockey Team has won the most medals in the sport in the Olympic competition. The team has won 13 medals including eight gold medals of which six were won consecutively from 1928 to 1956.

Olympic records

The men's hockey team holds multiple Olympic records in the sport:

  • Most appearances : 22
  • Most consecutive appearances : 18 (1928 Amsterdam – 2004 Athens)
  • Most matches played : 142
  • Most wins : 87
  • Most medals : 13 (8 Gold, 1 Silver, 4 Bronze)
  • Most titles : 8 Gold medals
  • Most consecutive medals won : 10 medals, (7 Gold, 1 Silver, 2 Bronze), 1928 Amsterdam – 1972 Munich
  • Most consecutive titles : 6 Gold medals (1928 Amsterdam – 1956 Melbourne)
  • Most goals scored : 473
  • Most goals scored in a single tournament : 43 (1980 Moscow)
  • Fewest goals conceded in a single tournament: nil (1928 Amsterdam, 1956 Melbourne)
  • Biggest margin of victory :  India 24–1  United States (1932 Los Angeles)
  • Biggest margin of victory at an Olympic final :  India 8–1  Germany (1936 Berlin)
  • Longest winning streak : 30 matches (1928 Amsterdam – 1960 Rome)
  • Most goals scored by a player in a match : 10 goals by Roop Singh vs  United States (1932 Los Angeles)
  • Most goals scored by a player in an Olympic final : 5 goals by Balbir Singh Sr. vs  Netherlands (1952 Helsinki)

Results

Stamps released by India Post commemorating Olympic victories
Olympic Performance
Games Ranking
1908 London Did not enter
1920 Antwerp
1928 Amsterdam Gold
1932 Los Angeles
1936 Berlin
1948 London
1952 Helsinki
1956 Melbourne
1960 Rome Silver
1964 Tokyo Gold
1968 Mexico City Bronze
1972 Munich
1976 Montreal 7th
1980 Moscow Gold
1984 Los Angeles 5th
1988 Seoul 6th
1992 Barcelona 7th
1996 Atlanta 8th
2000 Sydney 7th
2004 Athens
2008 Beijing Did not qualify
2012 London 12th
2016 Rio de Janeiro 8th
2020 Tokyo Bronze
2024 Paris

See also

  • Sport in India
  • List of flag bearers for India at the Olympics
  • India at the Paralympics
  • India at the Youth Olympics
  • India at the World Games
  • India at the Asian Games
  • India at the Asian Para Games
  • India at the Asian Youth Games
  • India at the Commonwealth Games
  • India at the South Asian Games
  • India at the Lusofonia Games
  • Indian sports at the Olympics
  • Olympic Gold Quest

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