Mann Government Says Khelo India Rule Shift Has Hurt Guru Nanak Dev University Ranking
The article examines how recent rule changes to KIUG and the MAKA Trophy scoring system may favour certain private universities, with data suggesting a shift in medal tallies and concerns about transparency and fairness. It calls for impartial investigation by the relevant authorities to restore credibility.

Serious allegations over changing rules in university sports are now drawing national attention. Critics say new guidelines for Maulana Abul Kalam Azad Trophy and Khelo India University Games have tilted results. Data trends suggest private institutions, including a university linked to a BJP leader, gained clear advantage, while many public universities, especially from Punjab, slipped back.
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Punjab’s government universities argue that long-term sporting performance now matters less than one short event. Guru Nanak Dev University has filed a formal complaint and demanded an inquiry. The university warns that, under the present system, both the credibility of competitions and the prestige of the MAKA Trophy face serious damage.
Khelo India University Games rules and MAKA Trophy scoring
For almost 65 years, the MAKA Trophy has relied on season-long performance data. Earlier scoring models counted international tournaments, Association of Indian Universities championships and consistent results across sports. According to officials, this historic structure rewarded broad strength, not isolated bursts. That baseline changed after the 2023-24 season ended, when rules were revised retrospectively.
The most significant shift concerns Khelo India University Games weightage. Previously, KIUG contributed about 10 to 15 percent to the MAKA Trophy calculation. Officials then raised this share to almost 100 percent, and applied it to the already completed 2023-24 cycle. As a result, points from international participation and AIU events almost lost effect.
Khelo India University Games medals and private university gains
Data from recent seasons shows how one private university moved up sharply. Before the rule changes, this institution had only three medals. During the previous session, its medal tally jumped from 3 to 32. In the current session, that figure rose further to 42 medals, coinciding with the KIUG-based scoring emphasis.
Critics allege these outcomes are not random variations. The same private university, reportedly linked to a BJP leader, had already benefitted from last-minute rule tweaks in the previous year. Observers argue that when a single event dominates the MAKA Trophy formula, any university excelling at KIUG gains disproportionate benefit, distorting comparative performance tables.
Khelo India University Games events, canoeing data and participation gaps
Another contested shift appears in the 2024-25 sports calendar. Canoeing and kayaking were suddenly added to the Khelo India University Games. These decisions came during or after the sports session, when most universities had frozen their plans and budgets. Many public universities, including those in Punjab, say they lacked time and funds to respond.
Disparities widen further when event counts are examined. Internationally, canoeing and kayaking together feature around 10 recognised Olympic events. At KIUG, organisers stretched this to about 30 events, including many non-Olympic categories. These sports are rare in most Punjab universities and many public institutions nationwide, due to high costs and infrastructure needs.
Analysts claim that universities with strong existing facilities, often foreign-linked or better funded, could enter numerous canoeing and kayaking events. More events meant more medal opportunities, skewing the medal table. According to allegations, this expansion of niche events was designed to favour the private university associated with the BJP leader, by multiplying its medal chances.
Concerns are not limited to event selection and point systems. Questions also arise over basic compliance. Some players were allegedly allowed to participate despite crossing entry deadlines. Their names were reportedly missing from approved official lists. Yet these athletes still competed and even won medals, raising doubts about transparency and adherence to competition rules.
Another debate focuses on public money used for Khelo India events. Government funds support these tournaments, but current rules are seen as benefiting a few chosen universities. Critics argue that sports policy should create equal opportunity, not outcomes driven by resources. They warn that, without corrective action and impartial investigation by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports and the Sports Authority of India, trust in university sports rankings will keep eroding.
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