
Seven sportspersons to join UP govt as officers in key depts
Lucknow: Star cricketer
Rinku Singh
, hockey player
Rajkumar Pal
, shot putter Kiran Baliyan and four other national and international level sports players are set to join the UP govt in various posts.
Rinku will be appointed as basic education officer, Rajkumar as a deputy superintendent in the police department and Kiran as a regional forest officer, said a govt order issued by the principal secretary, sports and youth welfare department, Maneesh Chauhan.
Four other sportspersons — para athlete Praveen Kumar, Ajit Singh, Simran and Preeti Pal — have also been given govt positions.
While Praveen has been appointed as a deputy superintendent in the police department, Ajit and Simran have been recruited as panchayati raj officers. Preeti will work as a block development officer under the urban development department.
Chauhan told TOI that the govt has reserved certain positions in various departments for sportspersons of national and international repute.
"These sportspersons were selected through a committee headed by the chief secretary. All these players have won a medal in the Olympic or Asian Games. They have brought glory to the state and the nation, for which the govt is honouring them by giving them various positions," he added.
He said, "The order was issued sometime back, and now the departments concerned are issuing appointment letters to these sportspersons."
According to the order, these sportspersons will be given seven years of time to meet the minimum education qualification required for their jobs.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Hindu
2 hours ago
- The Hindu
Decision on India's 2036 Olympic Games bid set to take longer than expected
A decision on India's bid for the 2036 Olympics is set to take longer than expected as the International Olympic Committee's new President Kirsty Coventry, on Thursday (June 26, 2025), announced a 'pause' on the entire process and set up a working group to figure out the 'appropriate time' to identify a future host. In an online press conference after taking over as the first woman and the first African President of the IOC, the former Olympic champion swimmer said the consensus among the members was to reassess the process. Earlier, a decision on the bid was expected next year. 'There was an overwhelming support from the IOC members for a pause to be done and a review of the future host election process and we will be setting up a working group to look into this,' the 41-year-old Zimbabwean said after chairing her maiden executive board meeting in Lausanne. '(This is) for two main reasons. Firstly, members want to be engaged more in the process and secondly there was a very big discussion on when should the next host be awarded,' he added in her opening remarks after the two-day meeting. Coventry said the executive board members felt that the experience of already decided future hosts — Los Angeles (2028 Summer Games), Brisbane (2032 Summer Games), and the French Alps (2030 Winter Games) — needed to be studied before proceeding on future proposals. 'So there was a lot of discussion on when is the appropriate time to elect a future host. And also how we should be selecting a future host,' she added referring to the relatively shorter 'lead-up time' that French Alps got due to awarding of the rights only last year. India submitted a Letter of Intent to host the 2036 Games in October last year. A delegation, comprising high-ranking officials led by Sports Secretary Hari Ranjan Rao, is scheduled to be in Lausanne for informal talks on the issue next month.


NDTV
4 hours ago
- NDTV
India's 2036 Olympic Dream: IOC Pauses Bidding Process To Figure Out 'Appropriate' Time To Elect Host
A decision on India's bid for the 2036 Olympics is set to take longer than expected as the International Olympic Committee's new President Kirsty Coventry on Thursday announced a "pause" on the entire process and set up a working group to figure out the "appropriate time" to identify a future host. In an online press conference after taking over as the first woman and the first African President of the IOC, the former Olympic champion swimmer said the consensus among the members was to reassess the process. Earlier, a decision on the bid was expected next year. "There was an overwhelming support from the IOC members for a pause to be done and a review of the future host election process and we will be setting up a working group to look into this," the 41-year-old Zimbabwean said after chairing her maiden executive board meeting in Lausanne. "(This is) for two main reasons. Firstly, members want to be engaged more in the process and secondly there was a very big discussion on when should the next host be awarded," he added in her opening remarks after the two-day meeting. Coventry said the executive board members felt that the experience of already decided future hosts -- Los Angles (2028 Summer Games), Brisbane (2032 Summer Games), French Alps (2030 Winter Games) -- need to be studied before proceeding on future proposals. "So there was a lot of discussion on when is the appropriate time to elect a future host. And also how we should be selecting a future host," she added referring to the relatively shorter "lead-up time" that French Alps got due to awarding of the rights only last year. India submitted a Letter of Intent to host the 2036 Games in October last year. A delegation, comprising high-ranking officials led by Sports Secretary Hari Ranjan Rao, is scheduled to be in Lausanne for informal talks on the issue next month. Coventry said that visit will proceed as scheduled. "We want all interested parties to be a part of this pause and reflect and of this review. I am aware of the delegation coming next weekend that will continue. They might be the first interested party for us to ask a couple of questions and to better understand from them. "There is not going to be a specific pause on that but just on the entire process," she said. "We need to ensure that we have more membership engagement and also look at the timing. When is the most appropriate time, when is the best time, when is the most effective time (to decide an Olympic host). "What is the most effective way we are not going to overburden any of the stakeholders," she explained. She, however, acknowledged that the global south (comprising Africa, the subcontinent and parts of Latin America) has been under-represented in the Olympic host movement. "I think the Global South, in terms of host cities, is not really represented at all. But my job is to ensure that policies are in place to allow anyone who has the ability to host the Games," she said.


India Today
4 hours ago
- India Today
Determined as ever, PV Sindhu working on keeping pace with changing women's game
Blistering aggression has given way to stamina-testing rallies in women's singles badminton, says ace Indian shuttler P V Sindhu, who is reinventing her game to keep pace with the evolving tempo while navigating a challenging lean year has been far from ideal for the two-time Olympic-medallist. She has endured four first-round exits and three second-round losses, with a lone quarterfinal appearance at the India Open in January being a rare bright spot."The women's singles (competition) has completely changed. Initially it was more of attack and fast rallies; it has become much more defensive with long rallies and long matches," Sindhu told a select group of reporters at the Sports Authority of India Centre here."We have been working on that, especially in terms of being more patient to continue that rally and keep the shuttle in the court for a longer period of time. Because we have to make changes every time the game changes."As an athlete I have been changing my game, it might take time but it's important to do it every time," she former world champion, currently training under Indonesian coach Irwansyah Adi Pratama for close to six months, is making subtle yet significant adjustments to her game."Back then I used to attack but now every athlete is good in their defence. We are working on how patient I need to be to maintain the rally let's say 30 strokes or 40 strokes."I need to keep a check on my physical fitness, endurance. Because I need to withstand the court for a very long period. So, that way we have been working on these changes and it's good that Irwansyah has come and is training me."One of India's most decorated athletes, Sindhu has a glittering CV comprising five world championship medals, including a gold, an Olympic silver and bronze, and countless other accolades."I'm happy that I could do everything, whatever was under my control, and won every medal. Now it is also important to make sure to maintain it. I know people might say 'you have won everything there's no pressure' but I have to make sure it's going on," she 29, Sindhu is also becoming more mindful of how her body responds to the physical grind."It's not going to be the same as it was 10 years ago. Back then I would do a different type of training but now it might be different. So, I need to understand that as a player."(I need to) Understand that things might change and we adapt accordingly. Every time we need to make sure our body is in the right direction and we are able to take load, otherwise there are chances of injury and it's hard to come back."That shift means being selective with tournaments and prioritising quality over quantity."Definitely (the training module has changed). Earlier we used to have back to back four-five now you have to make sure your body condition is good, you can't just go out there and play five-six tournaments in a row and not being fit."We need to make sure how the body is feeling after one tournament, otherwise there's no point playing. You rather skip a tournament and train harder and then come back stronger."Recently, Sindhu ended up on the wrong side of some close games, and while she conceded that the results have bothered her, Sindhu believes she's closing the gap."Recent results definitely bother me. But there's been an improvement. I think five-six tournaments back, I was losing a bit easy but there's been improvement with some tough matches with top athletes."That's a positive thing I can take and work on what's required."- EndsMust Watch advertisement