
Maharashtra government expands insurance coverage for Dahi Handi participants to 1.5 Lakh
(You can now subscribe to our
(You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel
Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis on Thursday directed the state's sports department to extend insurance coverage to 1.5 lakh govindas (participants) taking part in Dahi Handi celebrations this year, with Janmashtami scheduled for August 16.Until now, the Maharashtra government has been insuring around 75,000 govindas annually. The decision to expand coverage followed a meeting between the Dahi Handi Samanvay Samiti and Fadnavis, accompanied by culture minister Ashish Shelar. The delegation urged the CM to double the number of insured participants for 2024. Responding to the request, Fadnavis instructed the department to take the necessary steps.Dinesh Jadav, chief regional manager at Oriental Insurance—the company responsible for the coverage—confirmed that over one lakh govindas from 1,200 mandals across Maharashtra had already been insured this year.'A major contributor to this figure was the Maharashtra Rajya Dahi Handi Govinda Association through whom the state govt insured more than 75,000 govindas in Maharashtra,' he noted.The state had previously classified Dahi Handi as an adventure sport, resulting in increased participation. However, the Dahi Handi Samanvay Samiti has also expressed concerns over the higher risk of injury for govindas due to the growing competitiveness of the event.[With TOI inputs]
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
9 hours ago
- Time of India
Ind vs Eng 4th Test: With key players missing, Shubman faces the biggest test of leadership yet
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel Few roles in cricket come with as much scrutiny as leading India in a Test series in foreign conditions — and for Shubman Gill , the pressure has arrived in full Gill was appointed the captain of India's Test team, he had no prior experience of leading the national team. His only leadership experience at the top level came in the IPL, where he led Gujarat Titans for the last two seasons. And it showed in the first Test at Headingley where he let England chase down 371 in the fourth innings with such ease that it never felt like India were in the game at it didn't affect Gill's batting as he went on to score a brilliant century in his debut Test as captain in Leeds and followed it up with 269 and 161 in the second as India out-batted England in Birmingham to level the series. And it somewhat couched his captaincy flaws, the time the third Test moved closer to conclusion, though, the pressure of captaincy had started to show on Gill. It didn't help that he could only score a total of 22 runs across two innings. Usually not the one to indulge in on-field theatrics, Gill had a rare on-field exchange with Zak Crawley just before stumps on day three. That's what the pressure of a long Test series does to players, nudging them towards breaking their character."Honestly, physically it's been less tiring — mentally, it's been more exhausting. As a player, you're usually just waiting for something to happen, waiting for the ball to come to you. But as captain, you're thinking all the time. You're mentally more involved,' Gill said about his experience of leading the side in three began the series with a calm head and a mountain of runs to avoid the traps of expectation that often unsettle new Test captains, as well as the desperation to earn the respect of teammates. It showed that he could stay in the present, not allowing the anxiety about the future to muddle his thinking. Now, with India trailing 1-2 and the series on the line, he must show that he can also handle the pressure of to England, Gill didn't carry any scars. He had played only two Tests before he made his captaincy debut on June 20 — a one-off Test in 2022 against England and the World Test Championship final against Australia in 2023. India lost both of those Tests, but Gill was the youngest and least experienced player in that team, shielded from the criticism. In that sense, the Punjab lad entered the England series with a clean India head into the fourth Test, however, Gill's team is not only carrying mental bruises of recent defeats and disappointments that could have been avoided with slightly better application on the field, but also physical injuries that have forced the team management to rethink their playing will be without Nitish Kumar Reddy, a batting allrounder who bowls seam up, which could have been very helpful in Manchester where a pacer-friendly pitch awaits the two teams. Reddy, nursing a knee injury, will take no further part in the series and return home for the Deep, India's bowling hero in the second Test, has been ruled out with a groin injury. Left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh's long-awaited debut has been derailed due to hand injury he suffered in nets.'Never easy when there is a bit of injuries going on in the squad, but I think we have got enough good players in the team to be able to get 20 wickets,' said Gill at the pre-match press was some good news, too. Gill confirmed that his deputy Rishabh Pant's finger has healed enough for him to keep fourth Test has the potential of taking away the series from India. How Gill navigates this tough phase with a depleted squad, rising expectations and mounting pressure could be the first real test of his long-term captaincy credentials.


Economic Times
9 hours ago
- Economic Times
Ind vs Eng 4th Test: Can India script an injury-time comeback?
Live Events (You can now subscribe to our (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel England don't just hold the 2-1 lead in this series going into the fourth Test at Manchester, they seem to have the rub of the green as least when it comes to injuries. England announced early that they were making only one change to the team that won the third Test, bringing in Liam Dawson , the veteran left-arm spinner, into the eleven in place of Shoaib Bashir, who injured a finger on his left hand while fielding. Dawson will be playing only his fourth Test, at the age of 35, after eight years in the cricketing wilderness. Dawson has had decent returns at the domestic level over the last few seasons and was thought to be the best person to play a role in Bashir's absence. His first three Tests yielded seven wickets at an average of nearly meanwhile, have plenty to think about when it comes to team composition. Shubman Gill, the captain, confirmed that both Arshdeep Singh and Akash Deep were unavailable. Nitish Reddy has already been ruled out of the rest of the meant that Jasprit Bumrah would certainly play — and logic dictated that anyway with the series being on the line — and that Anshul Kamboj, the 24-year-old from Haryana, was likely to make his Test debut. Kamboj has played only 24 first-class matches, but he has 79 wickets at an impressive cost of 22 per scalp and is also handy with the other option was to play Prasidh Krishna, but he has not lived up to the billing thus far and offers little with the bat. India also confirmed that Rishab Pant was fit to keep wickets and Gill backed Karun Nair to come good, suggesting that all he needed was one decent score to turn things England wore a settled look, India were swirling a touch, but it was in similar circumstances that they pulled off victory in the second Test. So, they will not feel hugely disadvantaged. What was a bit unusual, however, was Gill's invoking of the spirit of cricket. Gill is only three Tests old as captain, one of which included his now well publicised exhorting of Zak Crawley for time-wasting tactics.'A lot of people have been talking about this, so let me clear the air for once and for all. The English batters on that day had seven minutes of play left. They were 90 seconds late to come to the crease,' said Gill. 'Not 10, not 20, 90 seconds late. Yes, most of the teams use this tactic. Even if we were in a position, we would have also liked to play fewer overs. But there's a manner to do it. But to be able to come 90 seconds late on the crease is not something that I would think comes in the spirit of the game.'This is a supremely slippery slope to be on. After all, the rules exist for a reason, and umpires are at hand to enforce them, even if perhaps they are not always as proactive or strict as they can be. When Gill says there's a 'manner' to do it, which would be acceptable, this is problematic. Different teams will see different things as acceptable, based on accepted practices growing up playing the game and cultural Gill was only stating his position to get under the skin of the opposition, that's a perfectly legitimate approach. After all, England made it clear that they had engineered a mindset shift of their own in this context. 'It was good fun, ' Harry Brook said of the fracas with Gill. 'We watched the Indians go hard at Creeps (Crawley) and Ducky (Duckett). We had a conversation, we thought it was the perfect opportunity to not be the nice guys that we have been in the past three years, to go out there and put them under more pressure than what they have probably had before.'Brook pointed to how this had come from within the set up. 'He (McCullum) actually said a few days before that we are too nice sometimes, and I brought it up the night before the last day: 'Baz said the other day we're too nice, I think tomorrow is a perfect opportunity to really get stuck into them'.England used this sense of outrage to funnel their aggression in the pointed end of the third Test and it worked for them. But, only because they did so from a place of calm, and as a strategy. If Gill is doing the same, there's no reason India can't be similarly galvanised. But, if he genuinely believes that it is the world against him and his team, it may well become a self-fulfilling prophecy


Economic Times
12 hours ago
- Economic Times
Harmanpreet Kaur joins elite club with record breaking century against England
Harmanpreet Kaur Synopsis Harmanpreet Kaur achieved a significant milestone, becoming the third Indian woman to surpass 4,000 ODI runs during a match against England. She marked the occasion with her seventh ODI century, propelling India to a total of 318/5. Kaur's impressive innings also secured her place as the second Indian, after Mithali Raj, to score 1,000 ODI runs in England. Harmanpreet Kaur became only the third Indian woman to score 4,000 One Day International (ODI) runs during the third and the final match against England at Riverside Ground in Durham on Tuesday. ADVERTISEMENT Batting at No 4, she also registered her seventh ODI century to help India score 318/5 in the first innings. The skipper reached the milestone off just 82 balls, the second fastest century for an Indian in the format. The 36-year-old joined her deputy Smitha Mandhana and the legendary Mithali Raj in the 4,000-run club. She crossed the 4,000-run mark in her 149th match (in 129 innings). Kaur also entered the history books by becoming only the second Indian after Mithali Raj to score 1,000 ODI runs in England. She has three centuries and five half centuries in 30 matches she has played in the country. Only six batters—Belinda Clark, Karen Rolton, Mithali Raj, Debbie Hockley, Charlotte Edwards, and Harmanpreet—have scored more than 1,000 ODI runs in a country away from middle-order batter made her ODI debut against Pakistan in the 2009 World Cup and is India's most capped international player, appearing in 337 matches. ADVERTISEMENT Her highest score in ODIs remains her unbeaten 171 off 115 balls against Australia, which she scored during the 2017 World Cup semifinals. Mithali Raj - 7805 runs (211 innings) Smriti Mandhana - 4588 runs (105 innings) Harmanpreet Kaur - 4000* (129 innings) Anjum Chopra - 2856 (112 innings) Deepti Sharma - 2300 (91 innings) ADVERTISEMENT (You can now subscribe to our Economic Times WhatsApp channel) (Catch all the Business News, Breaking News, Budget 2025 Events and Latest News Updates on The Economic Times.) Subscribe to The Economic Times Prime and read the ET ePaper online. NEXT STORY