For a first, Kolkata hosts tri-nation T20 wheelchair cricket

Date:

Share post:

Kolkata: At a time, when Indian cricket lovers are engrossed with their favourite Indian Premier League (IPL) teams, several para-sports organizations have come together to organize a Tri-nation wheelchair cricket tournament in the city of Kolkata.

With the aim of including people with disabilities in the field of popular sports, Wheelchair Cricket of India (WCI) along with Para Sports Foundation (PSF), Aciesta Sports Alliance and Kolkata-based organisation Civilian Welfare Foundation (CWF) is organising an International T20 Tri- series Cricket Tournament in Kolkata.

The 3-day cricket extravaganza will see cricket players from Nepal, Bangladesh and India clash at the NKDA Stadium, New Town. The mega event will kick off from April 26 and the finale will be on April 28.

Former sports and transport minister Madan Mitra addressed the press conference at 5 Mad Men, a gastro sports pub, determined to make a difference to the common definitive idea of sports and to promote para-sports and help para-athletes deserve their rightful accolades.

Mitra was very enthusiastic at the press conference. He said, “Kolkata is a sports crazy city so is pro-sports. And something as innovative as wheelchair cricket must be organised in the city so that people get to know about it.”

CWF, a non-profit organization, working for the betterment of para-athletes in the national and international area, is working toward eradicating the common belief that wheelchair-bound people cannot actively participate in something as engrossing as sports. “But people with other disabilities are participating in sports. So we thought of organising this mega international event, to build their confidence,” said Shuvojit Moulik, president of CWF.

Pradeep Raj, president of PSF, a social voluntary organisation involved in organising and promotion of para-sports said that Bengal lacks para-sporting talent. “The decision was taken to organise the event so that people get to know about para-sports, particularly wheelchair cricket. We have organised wheelchair cricket not only in India but in foreign shores as well,” he said.

He also mentioned that there is little to no enthusiasm in para-sports in eastern and northeastern India. There are no players from Bengal in the tournament this time. But Abhay Pratap Singh, CEO of WCI hopes that in the next tournament there would be players from Bengal.

So get set to cheer the talented para-sportsmen!

spot_img

Related articles

Her Cries, the World’s Silence: ‘The Voice of Hind Rajab’ Exposes a Rescue That Never Arrived

Long after The Voice of Hind Rajab ends, what lingers is not the imagery. It is the sound of human voices—and the failure they expose. A six-year-old pleading for help. Operators struggling to keep her calm. Paramedics waiting for clearance. A rescue that never arrived. Together, these voices reveal what statistics cannot. War wounds not only bodies but the systems meant to respond

After Akbar Ali Mondal’s Killing, Pani Sol’s Hawkers Ask: How Will We Survive?

Pani Sol (Bankura): Every morning before sunrise, hundreds of bicycles and motorcycles roll out of Pani Sol village...

What Do Leander Paes, Kamran Akmal, and RF Kennedy Jr. Have in Common? It’s Not What You Think

Tennis star Leander Paes, Cricketer Kamran Akmal, and politician RFK Jr. all faced neurocysticercosis. Discover how this highly preventable, treatable brain parasite causes sudden seizures and why clean vegetables are your best defense.

The Future of INDIA Depends on Unity, Humility and Struggle

To defeat authoritarianism, the INDIA bloc must look beyond mere electoral math, embrace its diverse ideological roots, and transform political cooperation into a sustained, grassroots movement for constitutional democracy.