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Story by AKSH GUPTA
Indian golf is facing a governance moment it cannot afford to ignore.
Over the past few weeks, leading golfers have found themselves pulled into an administrative dispute that has little to do with performance, preparation, or merit, and everything to do with authority, timelines, and process.

Golf at the Asian Games carries national stakes, where selection decisions shape careers and international pathways.
This editorial lays out the sequence of events, the official positions on record, and the questions that now confront the sport.
All documents referenced are official and attached, and the accompanying video explains the issue visually.
Indian golf currently operates amid competing centres of authority, creating uncertainty around decision-making.
At the heart of the issue is a split within the Indian Golf Union (IGU).
One group, led by Brijinder Singh, is officially recognised by the Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports and the International Golf Federation. Court orders and government acknowledgements confirm that this body is, on paper, the only lawful National Sports Federation for golf in India. This position has been reiterated in an official IGU statement issued in January 2026.
The second group, led by Harish Shetty, is backed by the Indian Olympic Association (IOA).
While the IOA oversees India’s participation in multi-sport events such as the Asian Games, this group does not have recognition from the Ministry of Sports.
The existence of these two power centres is not new.
But it became impossible to ignore once Asian Games 2026 selections entered the picture.

Fixed timelines and formal submissions leave little room for ambiguity in multi-sport events like the Asian Games.
January 15, 2026 was the deadline to submit a long list of golfers for the Asian Games in Aichi-Nagoya. According to multiple reports published by The Times of India, before any official selection trials were conducted, the IOA-backed group submitted a long list of golfers to the IOA. The IOA accepted these entries.
However, as of that deadline, the list had not been forwarded to the Olympic Council of Asia, the final authority for Asian Games entries.
This action immediately triggered objections from the officially recognised IGU, which termed the submission invalid and warned that any engagement outside the recognised framework could invite legal consequences.
For golfers, this was the moment confusion turned into concern.
To understand why this situation has raised so many questions, it is necessary to look at the Indian Golf Union’s Selection Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) for 2024–25.
The SOP clearly states that:
The Asian Games are a mandatory event
A defined selection process must be followed
Selection trials are to be held well in advance
Rankings such as OWGR, WAGR, and national orders of merit are inputs, but the process explicitly envisages trials as a core mechanism for selection.
Crucially, the SOP also states that final authority for team selection rests with the President and Chairman of the Selection Committee.
This is where the timeline begins to raise uncomfortable questions. As of the January 15 deadline, no official Asian Games selection trials had been conducted.
In its official statement, the Brijinder Singh-led IGU reaffirmed several key points.
It stated that it is the only recognised National Sports Federation authorised to send entries for multi-discipline events including the Asian Games. It warned that any parallel selection process is invalid and may attract legal proceedings. The statement also emphasised that the IGU has been actively conducting tournaments, sending teams abroad, and managing the sport’s administrative responsibilities during the 2024–25 season
IGU Statement Jan 2026 - REVISED
These are the official facts on record, and they establish legitimacy from a legal and administrative standpoint.
What they do not do is remove the uncertainty that players are now forced to navigate.
This situation is not about choosing sides. Courts and government recognition have already addressed that question. What remains unresolved is process.
These are not accusatory questions. They are procedural ones. And they matter because athletes plan careers around clarity, not conflict.

When governance falters, athletes are left navigating uncertainty far beyond the scorecard.
The impact of this dispute is already visible. Leading professionals have publicly opted out of Asian Games consideration due to professional commitments, a decision that also reflects the uncertainty surrounding selection and preparation. Multiple players named in published long lists now find themselves unsure of where they stand, or which authority to trust.
When governance falters, it is athletes who absorb the uncertainty.
Indian golf does not need louder statements or deeper factionalism. It needs transparent timelines, clearly communicated processes, and a system that insulates players from administrative disputes.
This episode should serve as a moment of reflection for everyone involved in the sport. Governance is not only about legality. It is about predictability, trust, and protection of athletes.
Governance is not only about legality.
It is about predictability, trust, and the protection of athletes.
All documents, SOPs, and official statements referenced in this editorial are attached.
The full video explainer walks through the issue step by step.
Readers are encouraged to examine the documents, watch the video, and form their own conclusions.
Because in elite sport, uncertainty is not just administrative. It is career-defining.
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