India will be banking largely on its shooters, wrestlers and boxers to deliver gold at the Asian Games in Indonesia to better the 57-medal mark it achieved in Incheon four years ago.

Manu Bhaker clinched gold in the 10m air rifle for women at the 2018 CWG in Gold Coast
New Delhi:
India, which struggles at the Olympics despite its population, has done reasonably well in the quadrennial continental event, only twice finishing outside the top eight since hosting the first Asiad in 1951. It won at least 10 golds in each of the last four Games and the Aug 18-Sept. 2 multi-sports competition will be a timely indicator ahead of the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.
“India was ranked eighth in the last Asian Games and every effort has been made... to ensure we win more medals this time and improve our overall standings,” said Indian Olympic Association President Narinder Batra. Spearheading India’s golden pursuit will be the shooters, who topped the medal tally in this year’s Mexico World Cup, finishing ahead of United States and China and be headlined by a trio of talented teenagers.
Anish Bhanwala, 15, became India’s youngest Commonwealth Games gold medallist when he won the men’s 25m rapid fire pistol, snatching the honour from 16-year-old Manu Bhaker who had won the women’s 10m air rifle finals on the Gold Coast barely a week before. A third teenager, rifle shooter Elavenil Valarivan, will be another strong contender after landing two junior World Cup gold medals setting a new world record in the process.
The wrestling mat could prove equally high-yielding and Bajrang Punia’s sizzling form makes the 2014 silver medallist India’s best bet for a gold in Jakarta. The freestyle wrestler won the 65kg gold at the Commonwealth Games and was not required to attend trials for the Asiad. In the women’s section, Gold Coast champion Vinesh Phogat (50kg) will be a strong contender for the gold medal. New training methods introduced by Argentine-born Swedish coach Santiago Nieva have been credited for the Indian success in recent boxing tournaments.
Vikas Krishan, who won the lightweight gold at Guangzhou in 2010 but took silver when he moved to middleweight four years later, is seeking his third successive Asiad medal. India has won all nine kabaddi gold since its inclusion in 1990 and the trend is unlikely to change, while anything less than gold will be a disappointment for the men’s hockey team which was runner-up in the CT.