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SAI forms 45-day national coaching camp to fire karate aspirations for 2026 Asian Games

By IANS | Updated: November 21, 2025 20:25 IST

New Delhi, Nov 21 The Sports Authority of India (SAI) is through the Target Asian Games Group (TAGG) ...

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New Delhi, Nov 21 The Sports Authority of India (SAI) is through the Target Asian Games Group (TAGG) scheme, ensuring India’s karatekas get the best exposure in the critical build-up to the 2026 Asian Games in Japan.

With the mega event in Japan in mind, SAI has approved a 45-day Senior National Coaching Camp for karate, currently underway from November 17 to December 31 at the SAI Regional Centre in Lucknow.

The camp features 64 participants, including 48 athletes, 12 coaches, and four support staff, and the entire camp has been sanctioned with financial assistance of Rs 1.42 Crore under the Assistance to National Sports Federations (ANSFs) Scheme.

One of the key takeaways of the camp is to ensure the identified 48 core athletes – 24 male and female each- get full access to training facilities and continue their high-performance training despite NSF derecognition. The camp is ensuring coaching & Sports Science support, equipment, and recovery inputs, and seamless preparation of both the men’s and women’s squads.

At a time when Asian Games qualification standards and international benchmarks are rapidly rising, the national coaching camp in Lucknow will further identify the cream of talents who will go through exposure opportunities abroad in the build-up to the Asian Games, scheduled from September 19 to October 4 next year.

Owing to the situation where no NSFs are recognised by the MYAS, SAI had constituted an Organising Committee for Karate in July this year to manage all aspects of the sport, from athlete selection to coaching camps and foreign exposure.

To ensure a transparent and fair selection pathway, the aforementioned committee had conducted Open National Selection Trials in the Senior Category from October 12–14 at the SAI Training Centre in NEHU Campus, Shillong.

The trials were fully managed by the Karate Organising Committee of SAI, ensuring compliance with international norms, anti-doping rules, and videography-based evaluation.

The said committee will remain functional until an NSF is officially recognised by the MYAS, thus ensuring that athletes face no administrative hurdles in their preparation cycle. Besides Karate, a similar committee is also governing martial arts sports, Ju-Jitsu, and Kurash.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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