HomeSportsAs nation celebrates 100 years of Indian Hockey, here is a look back on the early years

As nation celebrates 100 years of Indian Hockey, here is a look back on the early years

Men’s hockey first appeared at the 1908 Olympic Games in London. Women’s hockey waited much longer, finally debuting in 1980.

November 07, 2025 / 10:19 IST
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Image used for representational purpose
Image used for representational purpose

The Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) was established in 1925 in Gwalior and in the very next year organised a trip to New Zealand where Dhyan Chand for the first time made a mark. Riding on this success and encouraged by the colonial British government’s support, the IHF applied for and subsequently obtained global affiliation in 1927. This was crucial to India’s participation at the Amsterdam Games in 1928. It was in Amsterdam that India started its uninterrupted reign over the world of hockey for the next two decades.

Men’s hockey first appeared at the 1908 Olympic Games in London. It reappeared in Antwerp in 1920, returning to stay from the 1928 Amsterdam Games onwards. Women’s hockey waited much longer, finally debuting in 1980. Between 1928 and 1956, India won six straight Olympic gold medals and 24 consecutive matches, a record likely to stand for the foreseeable future. Indians have won two more gold medals since, in 1964 and 1980. In fact, it was at India’s insistence that hockey was reinstated at Amsterdam after being dropped from the program of the eighth Olympiad in Paris in 1924.

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Anthony S. de Mello — one of India’s best sports administrators — writes that before leaving for Amsterdam, India’s hockey players, were ‘confident that they would not disgrace themselves’. At the same time they did not approach the Games with any fantastic hopes. Jaipal Singh, who had a first class degree from his native Ranchi and was then a student at Oxford, was appointed captain of the team. A Munda tribal from Chhotanagpur, Jaipal is a fascinating character in Indian history whose influence in later years extended far beyond the hockey field.