Asian Games 2023 medal tally: Indian winners in Hangzhou - full list
India's Asian Games 2023 medal tally is 107 medals - 28 gold, 38 silver and 41 bronze. Know all Indian medal winners in Hangzhou and get medal table.
A 655-member Indian contingent participated at the Asian Games 2023 in Hangzhou, the People’s Republic of China from September 23 to October 8.
The 19th edition of the continental quadrennial multisport meet was originally scheduled for 2022 but was postponed by a year due to COVID-19.
India finished their Asian Games 2023 campaign with a record haul of 107 medals - 28 gold, 38 silver and 41 bronze.
This surpassed India’s previous record tally achieved at the last edition at Jakarta 2018, where a 570-strong Indian squad racked up 70 medals - 16 gold, 23 silver and 31 bronze.
China led the overall Asian Games 2023 medals tally with 201 gold, ahead of Japan (52) and the Republic of Korea (42).
Only four countries won over 100 medals in Hangzhou.
Shooting led the way for India at the Asian Games 2023 with an unprecedented haul of 22 medals, which included seven gold.
Athletics, headlined by Neeraj Chopra’s successful title defence in the javelin throw, came a close second with six gold along with 14 silver and nine bronze.
The archery compound team, meanwhile, clean-swept the five gold medals in the category.
The cricket and kabaddi teams also bagged two gold medals each while the men’s hockey team’s gold secured a spot at the Paris 2024 Olympics.
India also earned their first Asian Games badminton gold medal courtesy of the men’s doubles pair of Chirag Shetty and Satwiksairaj Rankireddy.
Squash, tennis and equestrian completed the 28 gold medals for India in Hangzhou.
In addition to medals, Hangzhou offered 74 Paris 2024 Olympic quotas - six in archery, 10 in artistic swimming, 34 in boxing, two in breaking, two in hockey, 10 in modern pentathlon, six in sailing, two in tennis and two in water polo.
India secured six quotas in all – four in boxing (Nikhat Zareen, Preeti Pawar, Parveen Hooda, Lovlina Borgohain) and one each in athletics (Kishore Jena) and men’s hockey.