79th Senior National Aquatic C'ships: Aryan Nehra, Saanvi Deshwal shine as Karnataka sweeps team titles
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Karnataka completed a commanding double at the 79th Senior National Aquatic Championships in Ahmedabad, clinching both the men's and women's team titles to finish as the overall swimming champion with 334 points. The six-day meet, which concluded on 22 June, also produced a record-breaking haul of 22 new national records and 17 Indian Best Performances.
Individual Stars of the Meet
Aryan Nehra of Gujarat was adjudged Best Swimmer in the men's category after a dominant campaign that yielded three gold medals and a bronze, along with two National Meet Records and an Indian Best Performance. Nehra's consistency across events underlined Gujarat's growing depth in competitive swimming at the senior level.
In the women's draw, Saanvi Deshwal of Maharashtra took centre stage, winning the Best Female Swimmer award with three gold medals, a silver, a National Meet Record, and an Indian Best Performance. At just 14 years of age, she became one of the youngest swimmers ever to claim the Best Female Swimmer title at a Senior National Aquatic Championships.
Saanvi's Historic 200m Individual Medley
The defining moment of the entire championship arrived in the Women's 200m Individual Medley — widely regarded as the ultimate test of aquatic versatility, demanding excellence across butterfly, backstroke, breaststroke, and freestyle. Saanvi touched the wall in 2:19.15, rewriting the national benchmark and producing what officials described as a historic Indian Best Performance.
She also took gold in the 100m Breaststroke and 200m Breaststroke, adding a silver in the 400m Individual Medley. Competing against India's most experienced senior swimmers — many of whom have represented the country internationally — Saanvi's dominance across four events was, by any measure, exceptional.
Record-Breaking Championships
The meet set a new benchmark for Indian swimming productivity. Of the 22 records established, 10 came in men's events and 12 in women's events. The 17 Indian Best Performances were split between seven in the men's category and 10 in the women's, reflecting a particularly strong showing from female athletes across the board.
Notably, this concentration of records at a single domestic championship signals a generational shift — younger swimmers are not just competing at senior level but actively resetting the performance ceiling.
What This Means for Indian Swimming
The depth on display in Ahmedabad offers genuine optimism ahead of upcoming international fixtures. Karnataka's team dominance points to a sustained state-level infrastructure advantage, while individual breakthroughs from a 14-year-old like Saanvi suggest that India's pipeline of elite aquatic talent is maturing faster than anticipated. The federation will now look to channel these performances into international qualification campaigns.