About Khel Drishti
Khel Drishti (खेल दृष्टि, meaning "Sports Vision") is a comprehensive data-driven analytics platform designed to provide insights into India's sports ecosystem. The platform tracks performance metrics, training infrastructure, athlete development, and medal achievements across the nation.
Built to support India's Olympic mission for LA 2028 and Asian Games 2026, Khel Drishti consolidates data from multiple government sports programs into a single unified dashboard.
Home Page (/) - Dashboard Overview
The home page provides a quick snapshot of India's sports landscape:
- Countdown Timers: Days remaining until LA 2028 Olympics (July 14, 2028) and Asian Games 2026 (September 19, 2026)
- Medal Summary: Total Olympic and Asian Games medals won by India with breakdown by Gold, Silver, and Bronze
- Sports Grid: Visual grid of all 50+ sports covered with quick access to detailed sport pages
- Infrastructure Overview: Quick statistics on NCOE, STC, KIC, and KISCE centers
- Recent Achievements: Timeline of India's major sports milestones
Infrastructure Page (/infrastructure) - Training Centers
Comprehensive view of India's sports training infrastructure:
Training Center Types
| Center Type |
Full Name |
Description |
| NCOE |
National Centre of Excellence |
Elite training facilities for Olympic-level athletes. Located in major cities with world-class equipment and international coaches. Focus on high-performance training for medal prospects. |
| STC |
State Training Centre |
State-level training facilities managed by state sports departments. Bridge between grassroots and national level. Residential programs for promising athletes. |
| KIC |
Khelo India Centre |
District and block-level centers under Khelo India scheme. Focus on talent identification and grassroots development. Located across rural and urban areas. |
| KISCE |
Khelo India State Centre of Excellence |
State-of-art facilities designated as centers of excellence for specific sports. One per state focusing on sports where the state has historical strength. |
Geographic Distribution
Training centers are distributed across all 28 states and 8 union territories of India. Major concentration in:
- Haryana: Wrestling, Boxing, Athletics - 45+ centers
- Punjab: Hockey, Athletics, Wrestling - 35+ centers
- Maharashtra: Badminton, Table Tennis, Wrestling - 40+ centers
- Karnataka: Badminton, Swimming, Athletics - 30+ centers
- Tamil Nadu: Chess, Carrom, Athletics - 25+ centers
- Uttar Pradesh: Wrestling, Boxing, Kabaddi - 35+ centers
- Kerala: Athletics, Football, Volleyball - 20+ centers
- Odisha: Hockey, Athletics, Weightlifting - 25+ centers
Medals Page (/medals) - Historical Achievements
Complete record of India's Olympic and Asian Games medal history:
Olympic Medal History (1900-2024)
India has won medals in the following Olympic Games:
- Hockey: 8 Gold (1928-1980), 1 Silver, 2 Bronze - India's most successful Olympic sport
- Shooting: 1 Gold (Abhinav Bindra 2008), multiple medals in recent games
- Wrestling: Multiple Bronze medals, Silver (Sushil Kumar 2012)
- Badminton: Silver (PV Sindhu 2016), Bronze (PV Sindhu 2020, Saina Nehwal 2012)
- Boxing: Bronze medals (Mary Kom 2012, Vijender Singh 2008, Lovlina Borgohain 2020)
- Weightlifting: Silver (Mirabai Chanu 2020)
- Javelin Throw: Gold (Neeraj Chopra 2020) - Historic first individual Olympic Gold in athletics
- Tennis: Bronze (Leander Paes 1996)
Asian Games Performance
India has consistently performed well at the Asian Games:
- 2023 Hangzhou: Record haul with 100+ medals including 28 Gold
- 2018 Jakarta: 70 medals including 16 Gold
- 2014 Incheon: 57 medals including 11 Gold
- Top Sports: Athletics, Shooting, Wrestling, Boxing, Kabaddi, Cricket
Capacity Page (/capacity) - Athlete Training Capacity
Analysis of sanctioned vs existing athlete capacity across training programs:
Capacity Metrics
| Metric |
Description |
| Sanctioned Capacity |
Government-approved number of athlete slots at each training center |
| Existing Athletes |
Current number of athletes enrolled and training at the center |
| Residential Capacity |
Number of athletes who can stay on-campus with hostel facilities |
| Non-Residential Capacity |
Day-scholars who train at the center but live off-campus |
| Gender Distribution |
Breakdown of capacity between boys and girls athletes |
Capacity by Center Type
- NCOE Centers: Average 200-500 athletes per center, focus on elite training
- STC Centers: Average 100-300 athletes per center, state-level competition focus
- KIC Centers: Average 50-150 athletes per center, grassroots development
- KISCE Centers: Average 150-400 athletes, specialized sport focus
Sports Disciplines Covered
Khel Drishti tracks data for 50+ Olympic and Asian Games sports:
Olympic Sports
Archery, Athletics (Track & Field), Badminton, Basketball, Boxing, Canoeing, Cycling, Diving, Equestrian, Fencing, Football, Golf, Gymnastics, Handball, Hockey, Judo, Karate, Modern Pentathlon, Rowing, Rugby, Sailing, Shooting, Skateboarding, Sport Climbing, Surfing, Swimming, Table Tennis, Taekwondo, Tennis, Triathlon, Volleyball, Water Polo, Weightlifting, Wrestling
Asian Games Sports (Additional)
Cricket, Kabaddi, Kho Kho, Sepak Takraw, Squash, Wushu, Bridge, Chess, Esports, Soft Tennis, Bowling
Para Sports
Para Athletics, Para Badminton, Para Cycling, Para Powerlifting, Para Shooting, Para Swimming, Para Table Tennis, Wheelchair Basketball, Wheelchair Tennis