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2011 National Games of India

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34th National Games of India
2011 National Games Logo By Dilip Kumar Toppo
Host cityRanchi, Jharkhand, India
Teams36
Athletes8511
Events444 in 33 sports
Opening12 February 2011 (2011-02-12)
Closing26 February 2011 (2011-02-26)
Opened byM. O. H. Farook
(Governor of Jharkhand)
Closed bySuresh Kalmadi
(Chairman of Indian Olympic Association)[1]
Athlete's OathDeepika Kumari
Torch lighterSylvanus Dung Dung
Main venueBirsa Munda Athletics Stadium
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The 2011 National Games of India, also known as the 34th National Games of India and informally as Jharkhand 2011 was the 34th edition of National Games of India, held from 12 February 2011 to 26 February 2011 in Ranchi, Jharkhand, India Jamshedpur Dhanbad.

Services (Services Sports Control Board – SSCB), which was a combined team of the Indian Armed Forces, retained the overall title with 70 gold medals. Services were presented with the Raja Bhalindra Singh Trophy for the champions team. The Maharashtra swimmer Virdhawal Khade who won 12 medals including 8 golds was adjudged the best male athlete while the Delhi swimmer Richa Mishra who won 16 medals including 11 golds was adjudged the best female athlete. The best state award was won by Manipur which won 48 gold medals to finish in second place overall.

Opening ceremony

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The opening ceremony was held at the Birsa Munda Athletics Stadium in Ranchi.[2] The governor of Jharkhand, M. O. H. Farook had declared the Games open. Jharkhand chief minister Arjun Munda presided over the function.[3] The games torch was lit by Indian men's hockey player Sylvanus Dung Dung. Deepika Kumari, double gold-winner at the Commonwealth Games took the oath on behalf of the athletes. A short film on folk hero Birsa Munda, arrival of mascot – the smiling deer 'Chhaua', fire dancers, a laser show highlighting five sporting icons of the state (hockey stars Jaipal Singh Munda, Samurai Tete, Sylvanus Dung Dung, archer Sanjeeva Singh and India cricket skipper MS Dhoni) were the main attractions of the opening ceremony. Popular fusion rock band- "Manthan", composed of students of IIT (ISM) Dhanbad opened the event and entertained the esteemed dignitaries.[3] Bollywood stars Sameera Reddy, Vivek Oberoi and Amisha Patel performed in the ceremony along with singer Sukhwinder Singh.[4][5]

Mascot

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Chhaua, the deer.

The mascot of the games is Chhaua, a deer in running motion holding the torch. Chhaua depicts the body of a human and head of a stag, symbolising both stillness and energy that characterise Jharkhand's tribal communities.[6] Chhaua means "little boy" in the local language.[7] The mascot of the games, Chhaua in famous dokra-art will be presented to all the players and officials by the games committee. The National Games Organising Committee (NGOC) had issued orders for the same to Jharcraft for manufacturing 14,000 mementoes that will be given to players and guests as a remembrance of their arrival in the State.[8] During the opening ceremony of the games, the Games mascot 'Chhaua' – baby deer—made an aerial entry into the athletics complex and ran around the stadium with the torch with echoes of Vande Mataram.[9]

Participating teams

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Sports

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There are a total of 444 gold medals in 35 events in the games. The events are:-

No: Event No: of participants Gold medals
1 Athletics 858 [10] 44
2 Fencing 225[11] 12
3 Karate 149[12] 15
4 Swimming 332[13] 40
5 Volleyball 214[14] 2
6 Basketball 226 [15] 2
7 Wrestling 308 [16] 21
8 Hockey 330 [17] 2
9 Football 406 [18] 2
10 Rugby 121[19] 1
11 Wushu 254 [20] 40
12 Badminton 132 [21] 6
13 Table tennis 95 [22] 7
14 Lawn Bowls 76[23] 8
15 Judo 129 [24] 16
16 Taekwondo 144 [25] 16
17 Gymnastics 227 [26] 20
18 Handball 265 [27] 2
19 Kabaddi 251 [28] 2
20 Kho-Kho 220 [29] 2
21 Cycling 200 [30] 24
22 Shooting 565 [31] 33
23 Tennis 93 [32] 6
24 Boxing 303 [33] 20
25 Archery 306 [34] 12
26 Weightlifting 130 [35] 15
27 Equestrian 143 [36] 6
28 Netball 224 [37] 2
29 Sepak Takraw 285 [38] 4
30 Rowing 432 [39] 17
31 Kayaking & Canoeing 382 [40] 31
32 Triathlon 164 [41] 4
33 Squash 87 [42] 2
34 Diving 47[43] 6
35 Water Polo 188[44] 2
Total 8511 444

Venues

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The 35 events in the games are held in 3 cities – Ranchi, Jamshedpur and Dhanbad, in a total of 21 venues. [45] [46] [47]

Venue City Capacity Sports Ref
Birsa Munda Athletics Stadium Mega Sports Complex Ranchi 35,000 Athletics
Sheikh Bhikhari Administrative Block Ranchi 22,000 Karate, Fencing
Veer Budhu Bhagat Aquatic Stadium Ranchi 3,194 Aquatics
Harivansh Tana Bhagat Indoor Stadium Ranchi 4,000 Basketball, Volleyball, Wrestling
Astroturf Hockey Stadium Ranchi 5,000 Hockey
Birsa Munda Football Stadium Ranchi 40,000 Football, Rugby 7s
Thakur Vishwanath Shahdeo Indoor Stadium Ranchi 2,000 Badminton, Wushu, Table tennis
RK Anand Lawn Bowl Greens Ranchi 1,000 Judo, Lawn Bowls
Ganpat Rai Indoor Stadium Ranchi 2,000 Badminton, Taekwondo, Table tennis, Gymnastics, Handball
Albert Ekka Stadium Ranchi n/a Kho kho, Kabbadi
Sidhu Kanhu Velodrome Stadium Ranchi 2,000 Cycling
Tikait Umrao Shooting Range Ranchi 2,000 Shooting
Tennis Stadium Ranchi 2,000 Tennis
Keenan Stadium Jamshedpur n/a Boxing
JRD Tata Sports Complex Jamshedpur n/a Football, Archery
XLRI Ground Jamshedpur n/a Weightlifting
Gopal Maidan Jamshedpur n/a Equestrian
Indian School of Mines Ground Dhanbad n/a Netball
Indoor Stadium Dhanbad n/a Sepak Takraw
Maithon Dam Dhanbad n/a Kayaking & Canoeing, Triathlon, Rowing
ISM & Officer Club Dhanbad n/a Squash

Medals tally

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  *   Host nation ( Jharkhand)

RankStateGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Services705042162
2Manipur483733118
3Haryana423340115
4 Maharashtra414447132
5 Jharkhand*33263796
6 Delhi32264199
7 Kerala30292887
8 Madhya Pradesh253246103
9 Punjab233854115
10 Uttar Pradesh20222870
11 Karnataka16192055
12 Tamil Nadu14122753
13 Tripura6219
14Andhra Pradesh5192549
15 Assam5111834
16 Goa55616
17 Odisha54312
18 West Bengal4102135
19Uttarakhand44513
20 Rajasthan411015
21 Chhattisgarh4127
22 Andaman and Nicobar Islands3227
23Himachal Pradesh2057
24 Bihar15612
25 Meghalaya1326
26 Sikkim1214
27 Jammu and Kashmir04812
28 Gujarat0347
29Arunachal Pradesh011011
30Chandigarh01910
31 Mizoram0156
32Nagaland0022
Totals (32 entries)4444475881,479

Closing ceremony

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The closing ceremony of the 34th National Games was held on 26 February 2011 at the Birsa Munda Athletic stadium in Ranchi, Jharkhand. The ceremony began with a monoplane performing aerobatics and showering coloured powder on the stadium. It was followed by an Indian Air Force helicopter showering flowers on the stadium, followed by the para-jump by 12 dare devils of the IAF, who jumped from a height of 4300 feet and anded in the middle of the stadium. The games was officially closed by Suresh Kalmadi, the chairman of the Indian Olympic Association (IOA). He ceremoniously handed over the Games flag to the Kerala officials. Kerala will host the 35th National Games in December 2012.[48] The Jharkhand chief minister Arjun Munda was the chief guest of the event. The Union sports minister Ajay Maken was supposed to be the chief guest, withdrew from the function due to differences with Suresh Kalmadi.[49][50] The cultural evening showcased the cultural heritage and folk dances from the participating states, especially Jharkhand, Punjab and Manipur and a team from Kerala displayed their local martial arts and art forms as a prelude of the next games. Bollywood actress Katrina Kaif and singer Shaan performed at the closing ceremony.[1] A special song Vidai has been performed by the "folk artists and percussionists" which formed the "theme of the state's cultural show". There was also a paika dance to celebrate the success of the Games.[51]

References

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  7. ^ 34th National Games 2011 Jharkhand Ranchi Jamshedpur Dhanbad Archived 11 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ The Pioneer :: Home : >> Chhaua in dokra art form is mascot of Games Archived 8 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
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  40. ^ [2] [dead link]
  41. ^ "34 th National Games-Triathlon". 26 February 2011. Archived from the original on 26 February 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  42. ^ "34th National Games-Squash". 22 February 2011. Archived from the original on 22 February 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  43. ^ "34th National Games - Diving". 22 February 2011. Archived from the original on 22 February 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  44. ^ "34 th National Games-Waterpolo". 16 February 2011. Archived from the original on 16 February 2011. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
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  49. ^ [3][permanent dead link]
  50. ^ "Sports university to come up at Games venue". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
  51. ^ "Gala closing ceremony to draw curtains on National Games". The Times of India. Archived from the original on 4 November 2012. Retrieved 20 August 2022.
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Preceded by National Games of India Succeeded by