India’s first step towards hosting 2028 World Indoor Athletics Championships — Bhubaneswar ready for maiden nationals


India will formally begin its tryst with narrower tracks and consistent conditions of indoor athletics by hosting the format’s maiden national championship starting in Bhubaneswar on Tuesday, taking the first preparatory step towards conducting the world championship at the same venue in two years’ time.

The state-of-the-art facility in Bhubaneswar was last week named as the venue for the World Indoor Athletics Championships to be held from March 3-5, 2028. It would be the first time that the country will be hosting a global track and field showpiece.

The national championship would be a two-day affair at the facility that was inaugurated in 2024.

Indoor athletics has been a lesser known aspect of the sport in the country though some Indians have been competing at the international stage. This has to do, in large part, with the lack of top-class indoor facilities in the country.

In indoor events, athletes run on tracks which are narrower and have banked turns. The outdoor 400m tracks are wider and have flat turns.

Indoor events are not affected by wind and the weather conditions are consistent throughout the duration of the competition.

Familiar faces like star javelin thrower Neeraj Chopra and 3000m steeplechaser Avinash Sable will not compete here as their events are not on the roster.

READ | India to host 2028 world indoor athletics champs, confirms Coe

With the completion of the world-class facility inside the Kalinga Stadium complex, India was able to convince World Athletics to allocate the 2028 global showpiece.

The Athletics Federation of India (AFI), which worked in tandem with the Odisha government to get the rights, is also hoping to host the Asian Indoor Athletics Championship in Bhubaneswar in 2028.

A decision of the host venue is likely to be taken in May by the Asian Athletics Association.

New Experience

It will be a novel experience for many Indian athletes, the organisers and the officials of the AFI.

An indoor competition is run on a 200m track, instead of 400m in outdoor events, in a closed and smaller facility. The shortest sprint race — 60m run — is one of the most followed events while 60m hurdles is also in the roster.

Field events like high jump, pole vault, long jump, triple jump and shot put are included. But throw events like javelin, discus and hammer are excluded for obvious reasons.

Around 300 athletes will compete in the national championships with Odisha, Uttar Pradesh and Maharashtra sending big contingents of around 30 athletes each.

National record holders in outdoor events such as Animesh Kujur, Mohammed Afsal and Praveen Chitravel are competing in the indoor competition.

Kujur, who holds national records in both 100m and 200m, will be competing in 60m sprint in what is going to be his season-opener. His last competition was the World (Outdoor) Championships in Tokyo in September 2025.

Men’s triple jump (outdoor) national record holder Praveen is competing in long jump, while Afsal is taking part in 800m and 1500m events. Afsal is the 800m outdoor national record holder.

Some of the country’s top performers in indoor events, mainly in the NCAA in the USA, like Lokesh Sathyanathan (men’s long jump), Krishna Jayasankar (women’s shot put) and Selva Prabhu (men’s triple jump) are not competing in Bhubaneswar.

There will be 11 events each for the men and women in the course of two days – 60m, 400m, 800m, 1500m, 3000m, 60m hurdles, high jump, pole vault, long jump, triple jump and shot put.

The 4x400m relay (both men and women), heptathlon for men and pentathlon for women are not included. The 4x400m mixed relay, which was introduced at the recent World Indoor Athletics Championships in Torun, Poland, also does not feature on the roster.

There will also be competition in Under-20 section in some events.

The Indoor facility at the Kalinga Stadium in Bhubaneswar has a 200m synthetic track of oval shape, a 100m straight running track (80m plus 20m), and designated areas for long jump, triple jump, pole vault, and shot put, each compliant with World Athletics Category 1 standards.

The facility has a spectator seating capacity of around 1700.

Published on Mar 23, 2026



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