Bhubaneswar is officially rewriting the Indian track and field playbook. Starting Tuesday, the Kalinga Stadium complex will host the country’s 1st National Indoor Athletics Championships. While the event marks a novel experience for over 300 domestic athletes, its significance stretches far beyond national medals.
This meet is the primary test for the city as it prepares to host the 2028 World Indoor Athletics Championships (March 3–5, 2028), the first time India will ever host a global track and field showpiece. With a world-class Category 1 facility now operational, India is moving to bridge the gap between outdoor dominance and indoor technicality.
Indoor athletics isn't just "outdoor sports with a roof." The environment alters the physics of the sport entirely. Narrower tracks, banked turns, and the total absence of wind create a controlled "vacuum" where pure explosiveness and rhythm take center stage.
Over two days, there will be 11 events for both men and women, including the 60m, 400m, 800m, 1500m, 3000m, 60m hurdles, high jump, pole vault, long jump, triple jump, and shot put. The men's and women's 4x400m relays, the men's heptathlon, and the women's pentathlon are not part of the schedule. Additionally, the 4x400m mixed relay, which was recently introduced at the World Indoor Athletics Championships in Torun, Poland, is also not included in the lineup.
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.
| Feature | Indoor (Bhubaneswar) | Standard Outdoor |
|---|---|---|
| Track Length | 200m | 400m |
| Turns | Banked (Sloped) | Flat |
| Conditions | Consistent / No Wind | Weather-dependent |
| Key Sprint | 60m | 100m |
| Field Events | Jumps & Shot Put | Full Roster (incl. Javelin/Discus) |
While fan favorites like Neeraj Chopra and Avinash Sable are absent (as their throwing and steeplechase events are not suited for indoor venues), the field is packed with national record holders testing their mettle on the shorter 200m loop.
Animesh Kujur: India’s fastest man (100m/200m NR holder) headlines the 60m sprint. After finishing his 2025 season at the Tokyo Worlds, he views this as a crucial gauge for his explosiveness ahead of the Asian and Commonwealth Games.
Praveen Chithravel: The triple jump national record holder will compete in the Long Jump, noting that the "feeling of everything being just next to me" in the smaller arena changes the psychological approach to the pit.
Siddhant Thingalaya: The 60m hurdles veteran is making a comeback from an ACL injury, stressing that indoors, the race is won or lost at the blocks.
Mohammed Afsal, the national record holder for the 800m outdoor event, is competing in both the 800m and 1500m races.
Some of the nation's leading indoor athletes, particularly those in the NCAA in the USA, such as Lokesh Sathyanathan in men's long jump, Krishna Jayasankar in women's shot put, and Selva Prabhu in men's triple jump, are not participating in this competition.
For the first time in Indian history, the Shot Put will be held indoors. This required the installation of specialized 10cm-thick landing mats and a dedicated throwing cage to ensure safety within the Kalinga Indoor Stadium. With a seating capacity of 1,700, fans will be positioned significantly closer to the action than in a traditional outdoor stadium, creating a "pressure cooker" atmosphere.
Venue: The Kalinga facility features a Mondo track, which athletes predict will provide a "10-to-15 centimetre benefit" for jumpers due to its fast runway.
Excluded events: Due to space constraints, the 4x400m relay, Javelin, Discus, and Hammer throw are not on the roster.
Continental hopes: The AFI is also lobbying to host the Asian Indoor Athletics Championship at this venue in 2028.
NCAA influence: While many top Indians train in the US (NCAA circuit), this meet marks the first time home-based athletes can gain high-level indoor experience on soil.