The Dil Kabaddi Full Movie In Hindi 720p

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It is popular in the Indian subcontinent and other surrounding Asian countries. Although accounts of kabaddi appear in the histories of ancient India, the game was popularised as a competitive sport in the 20th century. It is the national sport of Bangladesh.[2] It is the state game of the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Haryana, Karnataka, Kerala, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, and Uttar Pradesh.[3]

There are two major disciplines: "Punjabi kabaddi", also called "circle style", comprises traditional forms of the sport that are played on a circular field outdoors, and the "standard style", on a rectangular court indoors, is played in major professional leagues and international competitions such as the Asian Games.

The Dil Kabaddi Full Movie In Hindi 720p


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This game is known by numerous names in different parts of the Indian subcontinent, such as: kabaddi or chedugudu in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana; kabaddi in Maharashtra, Karnataka and Kerala; kabaddi, komonti or ha-du-du in West Bengal and Bangladesh; baibalaa in Maldives, kauddi or kabaddi in the Punjab region; hu-tu-tu in Western India, ha-do-do in Eastern India; chadakudu in South India; kapardi in Nepal; kabadi or sadugudu in Tamil Nadu; and chakgudu in Sri Lanka.[4]

There are accounts of Gautama Buddha having played the game recreationally.[7][8][9] According to another version of this sport's origins, kabaddi originated in Tamil Nadu over 4,000 years ago.[10] There are also accounts of kabaddi having been played in Iran 2,000 years ago.[11][12]

Modern kabaddi is a synthesis of the game played in various forms under different names in the Indian subcontinent.[13] India has been first credited with having helped to popularise kabaddi as a competitive sport, with the first organized competitions occurring in the 1920s,[14] their introduction to the programme of the Indian Olympic Games in 1938, the establishment of the All-India Kabaddi Federation in 1950,[14] and it being played as a demonstration sport at the inaugural 1951 Asian Games in New Delhi. These developments helped to formalize the sport, which had traditionally been played in villages, for legitimate international competition.[7][8][9]

In the international team version of kabaddi, two teams of seven members each occupy opposite halves of a court of 10 by 13 metres (33 ft 43 ft) in case of men and 8 by 12 metres (26 ft 39 ft) in case of women.[14] Each has five supplementary players held in reserve for substitution.[14] The game is played with 20-minute halves with a 5-minute half time break in which the teams exchange sides.[14] During each play, known as a "raid", a player from the attacking side, known as the "raider", runs into the opposing team's side of the court and attempts to tag as many of the seven defending players as possible. The raider must cross the baulk line into the defending team's territory, and then return to their half of the field without being tackled. (If an attacker touches a defender and hasn't yet reached the baulk line, they do not need to reach the baulk line to score points and may return to their half of the court.)[18] While raiding, the raider must loudly chant kabaddi, confirming to referees that their raid is done on a single breath without inhaling. Each raid has a 30-second time limit.[19][20][21][22]

There are four major forms of Indian kabaddi recognised by the amateur federation.[4] In Sanjeevani kabaddi, one player is revived against one player of the opposite team who is out. The game is played over 40 minutes with a five-minute break between halves. There are seven players on each side and the team that outs all the players on the opponent's side scores four extra points.

After the establishment of a new kabaddi organization named World Kabaddi Federation,[31] a 2019 Kabaddi World Cup was held in April 2019 at Malacca, Malaysia. It was the largest world cup in kabaddi history, consisting of 32 men's teams and 24 women's teams.[32]

The Indian national team won every men's and women's kabaddi competition in the Asian Games from 2002 through 2014. At the 2018 Asian Games, Iran became the first country other than India to win gold medals in kabaddi, with India's men's team winning bronze, and India's women's team being beaten by Iran to win silver.[33]

Yuva Kabaddi Series (YKS) is a franchise-based junior-category kabaddi tournament in India.[47][48] It is for players who are under 23 years old and below 80 kg (180 lb).[49][50] The inaugural Yuva Kabaddi Series was conducted in Jaipur in June 2022,[51] and was broadcast on OTT platform FanCode.[52][53][54] It is the second-largest kabaddi tournament in India, and the largest tournament in India in terms of number of matches played per year.[55]

Four seasonal editions are held every year.[56] Three tournaments were conducted in 2022: Summer Edition in Jaipur, Monsoon Edition at Ranchi,[57] and Winter Edition at Pondicherry; and two in 2023: the KMP YKS[58] in Maharashtra[59] (which was won by Ahmednagar) and Summer Edition Mysore.[60] For the first time in the history of Indian kabaddi, players from the North East will be playing in a tournament of this stature.

Each edition is contested over several rounds, with teams eliminated in each round, and the Summit Round acting as the playoffs of the tournament and leading to the final.[61][62][63] Several players who started off in YKS have gone on to play at higher levels of kabaddi competition, such as the Pro Kabaddi League (through the New Young Player initiative)[64] and the Junior Kabaddi World Cup.[65][66][67]

Kabaddi is a popular sport in the Indian subcontinent.[74] The governing federation for kabaddi in India is the Amateur Kabaddi Federation of India (AKFI), which was founded in 1973 and compiled a standard set of rules. Kabaddi is the second-most popular sport in India, with the Pro Kabaddi League being watched by hundreds of millions of people each year.[75]The governing body for kabaddi in Pakistan is Pakistan Kabaddi Federation.

Similarly, a raider is also out of the game if they are tackled by the opposition defenders during a raid. A successful tackle earns the defending team one point, also called points earned through defending are often termed as tackle points in modern kabaddi.

If a knockout kabaddi match ends in a tie, a seven-minute-long mini match, with two halves, is played to determine the winner. If the extra time fails to establish a winner, the match is decided by a sudden-death Golden Raid, where the baulk line moves up to the baulk line.

Kabaddi playing positions like corners (defenders on the extreme ends of the defending chain) and covers (the defenders playing just inside the corners) have also been coined. Kabaddi moves like the frog jump, ankle hold, toe touch, dubki, etc are also fast becoming a part of the kabaddi vocabulary courtesy the Pro Kabaddi innovations.

Speaking on the announcement, Anupam Goswami, Head Sports Leagues, Mashal Sports and PKL's League Commissioner said, "We have witnessed kabaddi spreading across India as a sport people love to watch and play through the success of the last nine seasons of PKL. Now, with our landmark tenth edition, we are excited to grow the sport and continue to be the platform that has seen talent emerge from across the world to shape the future of kabaddi."

While PKL 10 will begin on December 2, India's biggest kabaddi stars will be in action before that at the Asian Games. The Indian team, led by coach Ashan Kumar and captain Pawan Sehrawat, will look to wrestle back the Asian Games gold medal that they had lost to Iran in 2018. India is the most successful team at the Asian level - having won gold in every edition of the Asian Games since 1990. The team recently beat Iran to win the Asian Kabaddi Championships and is currently training in Bengaluru.

Taipei, Oct. 7 (CNA) The Taiwan women's team in kabaddi, a contact team sport originating in India, won a silver medal at the Asian Games in Hangzhou, China on Saturday after falling a solitary point behind their opponents.

"Currently, there are no high school-level athletes in Taiwan," Chuang continued. "Perhaps it is due to academic obligations that people just stopped practicing. But there's also a lack of high schools with proper (kabaddi) teams in Taiwan."

We look forward to working with organisations such as Sport England and Sporting Equals to use the World Cup as a catalyst to introduce kabaddi into more schools, colleges and universities across the West Midlands, inspiring our young and diverse population to be more physically active and engaged in sport.

Though in the PKL, the first rule has vanished. Seems mildly blasphemous to me, because the whole point of kabaddi, as I played it in a distant youth, was that you held your breath. You rushed into enemy territory trying to tag one or more of them out, muttering kabaddi, kabaddi" all the while to show you were not taking a second breath. And if you did take a second breath, you were liable to be tagged out yourself. That was the essence of kabaddi. In fact, my uncle grew up in rural Tamil Nadu playing a version in which, instead of kabaddi, kabaddi", you told a little story as you roamed enemy territory. What a game!

In the year 1918, kabaddi was given national game status. All rules and regulations were also formulated in the same year but officially implemented after 1923. It would take until 1938 to be introduced into the Olympics as a demonstration sport. BKL is affiliated with World Kabaddi and supports its aim to achieve International Olympic Committee (IOC) Status.

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