Kabaddi was introduced at the South Asian Games during the 1985 Games. There were no Kabaddi tournaments in the inaugural 1984 edition. India is the most successful team.[1]
Sport | Kabaddi |
---|---|
Founded | 1984 |
First season | 1984 |
No. of teams | 7 |
Region | South Asia |
Most recent champion(s) | M: India (10th title) W: India (4th title) |
Most titles | M: India (10 titles) W: India (4 titles) |
Results
editMen's
editYear | Gold | Silver | Bronze | |||
1984 Details |
No kabaddi tournament | |||||
1985 Details |
India |
Bangladesh |
Pakistan | |||
1987 Details |
India |
Bangladesh |
Pakistan | |||
1989 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Bangladesh | |||
1991 Details |
No kabaddi tournament | |||||
1993 Details |
Pakistan |
India |
Bangladesh | |||
1995 Details |
India |
Bangladesh |
Pakistan | |||
1999 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Sri Lanka | |||
2004 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Bangladesh | |||
2006 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Bangladesh | |||
2010 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Bangladesh Nepal | |||
2016 Details |
India |
Pakistan |
Bangladesh Sri Lanka | |||
2019 Details |
India |
Sri Lanka |
Pakistan Bangladesh |
Women's
editYear | Gold | Silver | Bronze |
2006 Details |
India |
Sri Lanka |
Bangladesh |
2010 Details |
India |
Bangladesh |
Nepal Sri Lanka |
2016 Details |
India |
Bangladesh |
Nepal Sri Lanka |
2019 Details |
India |
Nepal |
Bangladesh Sri Lanka |
References
edit- ^ "South Asian Games 2019: We didn't get much competition, says raider Pawan Sehrawat after India win seventh straight gold". Firstpost. 2019-12-18. Retrieved 2023-10-18.