-Ramphal Kataria
Producing Champions without Policy: Haryana’s Women Athletes and Institutional Failure
Abstract
India’s sporting outcomes continue to reveal a structural paradox: exceptional individual performances coexist with systemic administrative failure. Haryana, a state with limited urbanisation and entrenched patriarchal norms, has emerged as the most prolific producer of elite women athletes in contemporary India. This article argues that the success of Haryana’s women athletes is not the result of coherent sports governance, but rather a consequence of familial investment, informal community institutions, and individual resilience compensating for state neglect. Through an examination of wrestling, boxing, hockey, shooting, and emerging disciplines, the article critically analyses the political economy of sports administration in India, foregrounding issues of gender, class, governance failure, and institutional violence. It contends that without structural reform—particularly at the grassroots—the promise of sport as a vehicle for gender emancipation and social mobility will remain narrowly accessible and deeply unequal.
Introduction
India’s international sporting performance remains modest relative to its population size and demographic youthfulness. While episodic success is often celebrated, it rarely translates into institutional learning or policy reform. This failure is most visible in women’s sports, where athletes from rural and working-class backgrounds continue to shoulder disproportionate personal, social, and financial risks in pursuit of excellence.
Haryana offers a revealing counterpoint to dominant assumptions about gender and sport. Over the past two decades, the state has produced an extraordinary concentration of elite women athletes—Olympians, world champions, and Asian Games medallists—across disciplines traditionally perceived as masculine. Wrestling, boxing, hockey, shooting, weightlifting, and badminton have all witnessed sustained contributions from women raised in villages, often with minimal institutional backing.
This article situates Haryana’s sporting success within a broader critique of India’s sports administration. It argues that the visibility of Haryana’s women athletes masks deeper structural failures: politicised federations, absence of grassroots nurseries, weak safeguarding mechanisms, and the relegation of athlete welfare to post-achievement recognition. The persistence of these failures raises fundamental questions about governance, gender justice, and the developmental role of the state.
Early Women Achievers and the Limits of Institutional Support
Women’s sporting achievements in India historically preceded institutional readiness. Athletes such as PT Usha, Anju Bobby George, and Karnam Malleswari emerged during periods when women’s sport received negligible public investment. Malleswari’s bronze medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympics marked a historic milestone as India’s first Olympic medal won by a woman, yet it did not result in systematic expansion of women’s weightlifting infrastructure or athlete pipelines.¹
Similarly, Santosh Yadav’s twin ascents of Mount Everest (1992, 1993) challenged prevailing gender norms but remained symbolic achievements rather than catalysts for policy reform. These early successes followed a familiar trajectory: individual exceptionalism followed by ceremonial recognition, without sustained institutionalisation.
Haryana’s later emergence must be understood against this backdrop. The state did not pioneer women’s sports policy; rather, it benefited from a confluence of socio-cultural shifts, agrarian restructuring, and the growing legitimacy of sport as a pathway to employment and social mobility.
Wrestling and the Informal Akhara Economy
Women’s wrestling in Haryana developed through a dense network of informal akharas embedded in rural life. These spaces—often family-run and community-supported—substituted for absent state infrastructure. The rise of the Phogat sisters from Balali village in Charkhi Dadri district exemplifies this process. Geeta Phogat’s gold medal at the 2010 Commonwealth Games marked a symbolic rupture, followed by sustained international success from Babita and Vinesh Phogat.
Sakshi Malik’s bronze medal at the Rio Olympics in 2016 further consolidated Haryana’s centrality to women’s wrestling. However, these achievements emerged despite persistent precarity. Training often involved outdated facilities, limited nutritional support, and uncertain educational continuity. Families bore the costs of coaching, travel, and injury management, effectively acting as risk absorbers in a system devoid of social security for athletes.²
The akhara system demonstrates both resilience and vulnerability: while it enables talent production, it lacks regulatory oversight, safeguarding protocols, and long-term sustainability.
Boxing: Bhiwani and the Gendered Costs of Excellence
Bhiwani’s reputation as India’s boxing hub has been extensively documented, yet the experiences of women boxers reveal persistent structural inequities. Internationally successful athletes such as Jaismine Lamboria, Nupur Sheoran, Minakshi Hooda, Sakshi Dhanda, Parveen Hooda, Kavita Chahal, Saweety Boora, Nitu Ghanghas, and Preeti Dahiya have repeatedly emerged from modest backgrounds.
Despite this depth of talent, women boxers continue to face limited access to sports science support, professional contracts, and post-career planning. The burden of sustaining athletic careers often falls on families already constrained by agrarian distress and informal labour markets.³ The state’s intervention remains largely episodic, triggered by medals rather than sustained developmental planning.
Hockey and the Shahabad Exception
Shahabad in Kurukshetra district represents one of the most significant yet under-institutionalised centres of women’s hockey in India. Players such as Rani Rampal, Savita Punia, and Mamta Kharab emerged from local academies sustained by community initiative rather than comprehensive state planning.
Rani Rampal’s trajectory—from severe childhood poverty to captaining the Indian women’s hockey team—has been widely celebrated. Yet her story also underscores systemic neglect: nutritional deprivation, lack of stable housing during early training years, and delayed institutional recognition.⁴ Shahabad’s success remains fragile, dependent on individual mentors rather than guaranteed public funding.
Shooting, Weightlifting, and the Expansion of Sporting Frontiers
The rise of Manu Bhaker marks a significant moment in Indian women’s sport. Her multiple medals at the Paris 2024 Olympics signalled both technical excellence and psychological resilience. Shooting, however, exposes acute class barriers. Equipment costs, range access, and specialised coaching remain prohibitive, rendering public investment indispensable.
Similarly, emerging women weightlifters from Haryana—such as Jyoti Yadav, Rashmi Kamboj, and Usha—illustrate the state’s expanding talent base. Yet injury management, rehabilitation, and career security remain poorly addressed, increasing the likelihood of early dropout.⁵
Governance Failure and the Political Economy of Sports Bodies
India’s sports federations remain structurally vulnerable to politicisation. Leadership positions are frequently occupied by career politicians or senior bureaucrats with limited professional engagement with sport. This concentration of power undermines transparency, accountability, and athlete-centric governance.⁶
Selection processes are often mediated by informal networks, reinforcing class and gender hierarchies. For rural women athletes, access to facilities and competitive exposure remains contingent on patronage rather than institutional entitlement.
Gender, Power, and Institutional Violence
The crisis surrounding the Wrestling Federation of India (WFI) exposed the gendered vulnerabilities embedded within sports governance. Allegations of sexual harassment against former WFI chief Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh, and the prolonged protests by elite women wrestlers in 2023, highlighted systemic failures in safeguarding, grievance redressal, and institutional accountability.⁷
The episode underscored how concentration of power within federations creates environments where abuse can persist with impunity. The absence of independent oversight mechanisms disproportionately affects women athletes, particularly those from non-elite backgrounds with limited social capital.
Structural Attrition and the Limits of Participation
Despite demonstrated talent, many girls exit sports prematurely due to intersecting constraints: economic instability, educational discontinuity, social pressure to conform to gender norms, and fear of institutional harassment. The lack of health insurance, injury compensation, and post-career employment pathways further increases risk.
Sport thus becomes a high-stakes gamble rather than a structured developmental pathway. For many families, continued participation is economically unsustainable without assured returns.⁸
Conclusion: Institutionalising Possibility
Haryana’s women athletes reveal a fundamental contradiction in India’s sports ecosystem. The state’s hinterland continues to produce world-class talent, yet governance structures remain ill-equipped to nurture, protect, and sustain it. The burden of excellence is displaced onto families and individuals, while institutional responsibility begins only after international success.
Transforming this landscape requires a shift from celebratory exceptionalism to systemic investment: village-level nurseries, educational integration, income security, independent safeguarding bodies, and professionalised federation governance. Without such reform, sport will remain an uneven avenue of emancipation—accessible to a few, foreclosed to many.
References
1. Majumdar, B. & Mehta, N. (2010): Olympics and Indian Women, Routledge.
2. Ghosh, S. (2018): “Gender, Akharas and Rural Sport,” EPW, 53(21).
3. Ministry of Youth Affairs & Sports (2022): National Sports Development Code.
4. Hockey India (2021): Women’s Hockey Pathways Report.
5. Sports Authority of India (2023): Injury and Rehabilitation in Elite Sport.
6. Sengupta, S. (2019): “Politicisation of Sports Federations in India,” EPW, 54(7).
7. Delhi Police Chargesheet, State vs. Brij Bhushan Sharan Singh (2024).
8. NITI Aayog (2021): Women in Sports: Participation and Retention.