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Premier Handball League: How a chance handball player from Chandigarh became India captain

Modern handball is an indoor sport dominated by European nations such as France, Denmark and Norway. In India, it’s still largely played outdoors, one of the reasons for the country’s lack of success on the global stage. India captain Atul Kumar explains the difference.

June 17, 2023 / 13:49 IST
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India captain Atul Kumar, who accidentally began playing handball in school, which offered only that sport, feels with more sponsors and better money spent, the Premier Handball League standards will improve.
India captain Atul Kumar, who accidentally began playing handball in school, which offered only that sport, feels with more sponsors and better money spent, the Premier Handball League standards will improve.

There are, at least, three recent developments that Atul Kumar is especially proud of. The captain of India’s handball team, who is currently plying his trade for the Rajasthan Patriots in the Premier Handball League (PHL), does not list them out in any particular order, but admits feeling chuffed about all of them.

In the Fourth IHF (International Handball Federation) Emerging Nations Championships held between 25-30 April in Bulgaria, India reached the semi-finals, the first Asian side to do so. Goalkeeper Kumar, with the most saves after the group phase, had a saving efficiency that ranked him fourth in the standings, according to the IHF website. Being in the top four was a testament to India’s improvement in the sport since they made their return to the AHF Asian Men’s Handball Championship in 2018 after a 23-year wait.

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“People say ‘you have been playing for a while, start coaching’,” says the 32-year-old Kumar over a call. “I feel I can play another 5-6 years. I still have a career left in me. In my captaincy, we reached the semi-final in Bulgaria for first time. Someone interviewed me and wrote an article for the IHF site. India has been in this sport for decades, yet I was the first person IHF has written about.”

Recognition plays a big part in what motivates Kumar, who plays a sport that does not have a large audience in India despite being an Olympic sport. It’s the reason he feels proud to be mentioned by English commentator Paul Bray during one of the PHL telecasts.