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Bharuch plea highlights shrinking play spaces, wider concerns for grassroots sports culture

By Jag Jivan
 
A public appeal by local advocate Kamlesh S. Madhiwala has drawn attention to a growing crisis in urban India’s smaller towns—the steady disappearance of accessible sports infrastructure and its ripple effects on children and youth.
In a detailed representation addressed to Gujarat Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel and State Home and Sports Minister Harsh Sanghavi, along with district and municipal authorities, Madhiwala has demanded that each of the town’s 11 municipal wards be equipped with at least one dedicated sports ground. The plea underscores that a city of over 250,000 people—marked by rapid industrialisation and population growth—now offers severely limited open spaces for outdoor sports.
At present, Bharuch’s youth largely depend on a single ground, commonly referred to as the “hostel ground,” which is frequently overcrowded. Multiple cricket teams are often forced to share the same space simultaneously, blurring boundaries and compromising both safety and quality of play. The situation is worsened by the periodic allocation of this ground for commercial fairs, stalls, and events, effectively pushing players out.
For years, young residents in western localities such as Vejalpur, Kurja, and Tadia informally developed makeshift grounds along the banks of the Narmada River, funding and maintaining these spaces themselves. On weekends, the riverbed would host dozens of matches, serving as a vibrant hub of community sport. However, ongoing infrastructure work related to the Bhadbhut weir-cum-causeway project has disrupted these grounds, with excavation damaging pitches and limiting access. Once the project is completed, rising backwaters are expected to submerge the entire stretch, eliminating these informal sports spaces altogether.
The memorandum argues that the consequences extend beyond inconvenience. The lack of accessible sports facilities is increasingly constraining children’s physical development and narrowing their extracurricular exposure. In towns like Bharuch, this problem is compounded by the dominance of after-school “commercial classes,” where students spend long hours focused on rote learning, leaving little time—or energy—for sports and recreation.
Urban planners and educators have long warned that such trends weaken the foundations of a healthy sports culture. Without basic neighbourhood-level infrastructure, talent identification suffers, participation declines, and sports become an elite or inaccessible pursuit rather than a mass activity.
Madhiwala’s representation proposes a multi-pronged solution: immediate development of ward-level grounds on available public land, acquisition of private land where necessary, and interim access to existing government and institutional grounds—such as those belonging to police lines, colleges, and agricultural universities—until permanent facilities are created.
The appeal from Bharuch serves as a microcosm of a broader national challenge. As cities expand and academic pressures intensify, the shrinking of playgrounds risks producing a generation with fewer opportunities for physical activity, teamwork, and competitive sport—raising urgent questions about how India intends to nurture its sporting future from the grassroots up.

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