India will head into the much-awaited World Athletics Championships in Tokyo with a 19-member squad, led by reigning men's javelin champion Neeraj Chopra. The nine-day event will be held between September 13 and 21 in Tokyo, the venue of Neeraj's historic Olympic gold from four years ago.
India sent as many as 28 athletes to the 2023 World Championships in Budapest. But with no relay teams making it this time, the contingent is dominated by javelin stars. For the first time in history, India will have five javelin throwers (four in men's section).
All eyes will be on Neeraj Chopra as he defends his title against world leader Julian Weber (Germany) and Olympic champion Arshad Nadeem (Pakistan).
Sprinters Animesh Kujur, India's fastest man, and Tejas Shirse mark new milestones, qualifying in the 200m and 110m hurdles respectively. Among women, Asian Games champion Annu Rani headlines the squad.
Men
Women
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All times in IST
Day 1 - Saturday, 13 Sept
Day 2 - Sunday, 14 Sept
Day 3 - Monday, 15 Sept
Day 4 - Tuesday, 16 Sept
Day 5 - Wednesday, 17 Sept
Day 6 - Thursday, 18 Sept
Day 7 - Friday, 19 Sept
Day 8 - Saturday, 20 Sept
Day 9 - Sunday, 21 Sept
Neeraj Chopra (Javelin Throw) - Season-best 90.23m at Doha Diamond League; won Paris Diamond League (88.16m) and Neeraj Chopra Classic (86.18m); second at Diamond League Final (85.01m).
Sachin Yadav (Javelin Throw) - Gold at National Games (84.39m), silver at Asian Championships (85.16m), and 82.33m at Neeraj Chopra Classic.
Yashvir Singh (Javelin Throw) - Season-best 82.57m at Asian Championships.
Rohit Yadav (Javelin Throw) - Gold at National Inter-State Championships (83.65m); winner at Taiwan Athletics Open (74.42m).
Murali Sreeshankar (Long Jump) - Returned from knee surgery; season-best 8.13m to win Indian Open (World Athletics Continental Tour, Bhubaneswar).
Praveen Chithravel (Triple Jump) - Equalled national record 17.37m at Federation Cup; silver at Asian Championships (16.90m) and World University Games.
Abdulla Aboobacker (Triple Jump) - Personal best 17.19m at India Open, Bengaluru; hasn't surpassed this mark since.
Sarvesh Anil Kushare (High Jump) - Won Inter-State Championships with 2.24m; fifth at Asian Championships; 0.3m shy of personal best from 2022.
Gulveer Singh (5000m/10,000m) - Broke Indian 10,000m record (27:00.22) at The TEN, California; 5000m indoor NR (12:59.77); double gold at Asian Championships (5000m 13:24.77, 10,000m ~28:38.63); 3000m NR 7:34.49 in Budapest.
Animesh Kujur (200m) - First Indian male sprinter at Worlds; national records in 100m (10.18s, Greece) and 200m (20.32s, Asian Championships, Gumi); bronze despite illness.
Tejas Shirse (110m Hurdles) - Broke national 60m hurdles record indoors; overcame hamstring & navicular injuries; gold at National Inter-State (13.60s); qualified via world rankings.
Servin Sebastian (20km Race Walk) - Bronze at Asian Championships (PB 1:21:14); won Indian Open Race Walk (1:21:46.47).
Ram Baboo (35km Race Walk) - Gold at Indian Open Race Walk (2:32:53.50).
Sandeep Kumar (35km Race Walk) - Silver at Indian Open Race Walk (2:35:05.75).
Parul Chaudhary (3000m Steeplechase) - Parul, 30, ever-consistent, finished 16th at Budapest 2023 (PB 9:24.29s) and enters Tokyo with a silver at the Asian Championships and a new NR of 9:12.46s.
Ankita Dhyani (3000m Steeplechase) - Breakout year: gold at National Games (9:53.63), PB 9:44.05 at Mangrum Invitational (USA), silver at World University Games (9:31.99).
Annu Rani (Javelin Throw) - Gold at Wieslaw Maniak Memorial (62.59m); missed medal at Asian Championships; near personal best form.
Priyanka Goswami (35km Race Walk) - National record 2:56:34 (Dudinska 50, Slovakia); gold at Austrian Championships 10km (47:54).
Pooja (800m / 1500m) - Breakthrough year: PB 2:01.89 (800m) & 4:10.83 (1500m) at Asian Championships; won double gold at Taiwan Open (2:02.79 / 4:11.63); gold in 1500m at World Continental Bronze Meet, Bhubaneswar.
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