When IAS officer Gargi Jain was posted to Chhotaudepur, a tribal district tucked in the eastern part of Gujarat, she saw more than just numbers, schemes, and administrative challenges. What she noticed was potential — raw, untapped, and waiting for a stage. “Most tribal children here have natural athleticism,” she observed. “They have the energy, agility, and inclination… but there are no platforms.”
That one gap between ability and opportunity became the starting point of something much bigger. Today, the 2015-batch Gujarat cadre officer is working on a dream: to transform Chhotaudepur into the Sports Capital of Gujarat. In an exclusive conversation with Indian Masterminds, she shared details about her vision.

WHY CHHOTAUDEPUR? WHY SPORTS?
Chhotaudepur is predominantly tribal. Many families here are rooted in agriculture and forest-based livelihoods. While education has seen gradual progress, sports have largely remained on the sidelines, limited to dusty grounds and makeshift games.
“But if you observe the kids,” Jain says, “they climb trees effortlessly, they run with stamina, and they have this sense of rhythm and control in movement. These are all signs of a strong base for sports. But the infrastructure? That was missing.”
So, instead of waiting for opportunities to trickle in, she decided to bring them in, with a long-term vision centered around the 2036 Olympics.

A GROUND-LEVEL GAME PLAN
The plan isn’t a lofty one confined to paper. It’s detailed, phased, and entirely rooted in ground realities.
“We’ve broken the project into three phases,” she explains. “The first focus is on tribal residential schools like EMRS and GLRS. These have 1500 to 2000 students at a single campus. We’re starting with six such schools, which means nearly 15,000 students will get access to proper sports facilities in the first phase.”
From archery and athletics to football, table tennis, badminton, lawn tennis, volleyball, basketball, and even swimming, no sport has been left out. “We’re not filtering sports based on what we think is easy or cheap to set up. We want children to try everything first, then decide what they want to pursue,” she told Indian Masterminds.

FROM SCHOOLS TO STADIUMS
Beyond school campuses, the district administration is building a central mini-stadium in Chhotaudepur. The idea is to create a sporting hub not just for students, but for the community as a whole. This stadium will also allow the district to host state-level events, starting with the upcoming Khel Mahakumbh competitions.
“This will be a first,” she says. “We’re planning to hold block and district-level events right here, so our youth don’t have to travel far to compete or watch.”
A district marathon is also scheduled for October, expected to draw 2,000 to 3,000 participants. “We want to make it a calendar event,” Jain says. “Something the entire district looks forward to every year.”

MORE THAN MEDALS
For Gargi Jain, this isn’t just about podium finishes. It’s about changing attitudes.
“In many places, people don’t consider sports a priority. They’ll focus on textbooks, tuition, and jobs, and rightly so. But physical activity, competition, and teamwork — these are essential life skills too. Sports brings confidence. It teaches you to lead, to lose, and to try again,” she shares.
That mental shift, she says, is just as important as building a football field or buying racquets. And slowly, she’s seeing it happen. “Students are excited. Teachers are asking questions. We’re getting support from political leaders, too. The buzz is growing.”

WHAT’S NEXT?
While the sports project is her current focus, Jain hints that more developmental initiatives are in the pipeline. “Give it two to three months,” she says, “you’ll hear more.”
For now, though, her team is busy laying down courts, marking tracks, installing equipment, and conducting meetings with coaches. “It’s like setting up a movement: one school, one ground, one game at a time.”

FINAL WHISTLE? NOT EVEN CLOSE
The story of Chhotaudepur’s transformation through sports is still in its early chapters. But the intent is clear. Under Gargi Jain’s leadership, what was once seen as a quiet tribal district could soon become a training ground for Gujarat’s and perhaps India’s future athletes.
Because sometimes, it just takes one person to look at a child climbing a tree and think, this could be a future gymnast.