Dr. C. Ajithkumar: The Mastermind Behind India’s Unsung Athletics Triumphs
In a country where athletic achievements are increasingly gaining spotlight, one name quietly but consistently drives excellence from behind the curtain — Dr. C. Ajithkumar. With over 25 years of committed service in sports coaching and athlete development, his journey is not just one of medals and milestones, but of creating pathways for Indian youth to shine on national and international stages.
Born in 1972 in Thrickodithanam, a village in Kottayam district of Kerala, Dr. Ajithkumar’s introduction to athletics was not incidental — it was a calling. As a former 100m and 200m sprinter, he brought home medals from both junior national and All India University meets between 1987 and 1992, proudly representing Mahatma Gandhi University, Kottayam. He pursued his early and undergraduate studies at SB College, Changanacherry, where his academic and athletic talents flourished in parallel.
Following his successful stint as an athlete, he transitioned into coaching—a field where his influence would soon become transformative. Over the last two and a half decades, Dr. Ajithkumar has served in key coaching and leadership roles across prominent institutions, including:
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Alva’s Education Foundation, Karnataka
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Indira Gandhi Technological and Medical Sciences University (IGTMS), Arunachal Pradesh
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Mangalore University (Athletics Coach, 2017–2024)
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Shaheed Bhagat Singh University, Punjab (Director of Sports, Present)
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HRDS India Sports Academy (Chief Project Director)
His career is marked not only by positions held but by outcomes delivered. To date, he has mentored over 18 international athletes, guiding them to 22 international medals—an impressive record that few in India can match. His coaching prowess was on global display at the World University Games in Chengdu, China (2023), where his trainee, Bhavani Yadav Bhagavathi, made history by securing a Long Jump medal — India’s first-ever in the event at that level.
This milestone should have earned him nationwide acclaim. But even after such a feat, no national honor, award, or formal recognition came his way — a telling reminder of the many grassroots architects of Indian sports who remain in the shadows.
His coaching repertoire includes:
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Chief Coach, Indian Team – World University Games, Chengdu (2023)
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Coach, Indian Team – Asian Athletics Championships, Bhubaneswar (2017)
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Coach, World Police Games, China (2019)
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Chief Coach, Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB), Delhi (2018–2020)
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Kerala State Athletics Coach (2011 & 2015)
His excellence has been acknowledged within the athletic fraternity through accolades such as:
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Indian University Best Coach Award (2023)
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Best Coach Award by Sports Science India (2024)
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Amaruthavani Media Award, Karnataka (2023)
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Best Coach Award, SSB Central Police Department (2019)
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Kerala State Athletic Association Best Coach Award (2017)
Yet beyond awards, what sets Dr. Ajithkumar apart is his commitment to shaping human potential. He continues to work tirelessly in tribal and rural areas through HRDS India, identifying hidden talent and offering them structured coaching, education, and exposure.
A coach, a visionary, and a true patriot, Dr. Ajithkumar stands as a pillar of Indian athletics. His life’s work is a testament to the idea that true national progress in sports is built not only by stars, but by mentors who commit their lives to nurturing them.
In December 2023, when he visited Rashtrapati Bhavan with India’s medal-winning university athletes to meet the President of India, it was a proud moment—but also a quiet reminder of the vast gap between achievement and acknowledgment.
As India prepares to rise further in global athletics, the country must ask itself: Are we doing enough to honor those who build champions?
In the case of Dr. C. Ajithkumar, the answer is clear — it’s time.