Read moreJamsetji with the Kathiawar Cricket Team.
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1902
|Sports at Tata
“Reserve large areas for football, hockey and parks,” Jamsetji writes to his son, envisioning a city with a sporting culture before even a brick is laid at Jamshedpur.
Read moreAn aerial view of Jamshedpur in the 1950s
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1920
|Sports at Tata
Dorabji Tata, now the Tata chairman, sponsors a six-member Indian contingent to the Antwerp Olympics. He works towards creating an Olympic movement and becomes President of the provisional Indian Olympic Committee thereafter.
Read MoreJRD Tata with the Tata Sports Club cricket team in 1964
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1939
|Sports at Tata
The multipurpose Keenan Stadium, named after JL Keenan, a General Manager of Tata Steel is inaugurated in Jamshedpur. It hosts national and international cricket fixtures till date.
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1941
|Sports at Tata
Inter-company Annual Athletic Championship instituted; other sports being included all through the 1940s and 1950s
Read MoreJRD Tata at the closing ceremony of the 1953 Tata Athletics Meet
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1946
|Sports at Tata
Naval Tata becomes president of the Indian Hockey Federation (IHF). He holds the position till 1958, during which India wins Olympic golds in London 1948, Helsinki 1952, and Melbourne 1956
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1947
|Sports at Tata
Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru requests Naval Tata to create a blueprint for Indian sports; this leads to the formation of All India Council of Sports in 1954 to advise the Central Government on policy. Tata serves as its first chief.
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1948
|Sports at Tata
Three members of the Tata Sports Club – Leo Pinto, AS Gentle and Lawrie Fernandes – contribute to India’s Hockey gold at the London Olympics. Tata Textile Group’s Baldev Singh represents India in athletics
Read moreThe winning goal against Great Britain (wiki commons)
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1951
|Sports at Tata
Lavy Pinto of Air India and later IHCL earns the sobriquet “scorcher of the cinder tracks” as he wins 100m and 200m gold in the inaugural Asian Games at Delhi
Read moreLavy Pinto at the Asian Games 1951
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1956
|Sports at Tata
Chuni Goswani, SS Narayan, PK Banerjee and Arun Ghosh are part of the team that reaches the semifinals in Football at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics. Narayan and Tata employees M Devdas and F Franco would represent India in the 1960 Olympics
Read moreThe 1956 Indian football team in action (Wiki Commons)
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1957
|Sports at Tata
JRD Tata rarely missed a sporting event and often participated in several sports including slow cycling
Read moreJRD at the Dorabji Tata sports meet, Mumbai, 1957.
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1963
|Sports at Tata
Athlete Edward Sequeira, who joined Tata Steel in 1964, sets a national record for 1500m that stands for 25 years; and dominates the national middle-distance scene
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1968
|Sports at Tata
JRD Tata offers Bombay Ranji player Milind Rege a job with Tata Steel. This begins a strong involvement of Tata Sports Club with cricket, with Nari Contractor, Dilip Vengsarkar, Ravi Shastri, Sandeep Patil and Sourav Ganguly among beneficiaries
Read moreMilind Rege with fellow Bombay cricketer Sunil Gavaskar
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1973
|Sports at Tata
Bahadur Singh of TELCO (now Tata Motors) wins three gold, two silver, and three bronze at the Asian level, including golds in the 1978 Bangkok and 1982 Delhi Asiads. He retires from Tata Motors in 2002 and serves as India’s chief athletics coach till 2020
Athletes from Tata Motors and Tata Steel – TC Yohannan, Shivnath Singh, VS Chohan, Suresh Babu and Satish Pillai win medals at the Tehran Asian Games. Yohannan sets a national long jump record that stands for 18 years
M K Kaushik of Tata Steel is part of the Indian team that wins the hockey gold in the Moscow Olympics
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1982
|Sports at Tata
Several Tata sportspersons dominate the Indian performance at the Delhi Asian Games. These include Mercy Kuttan (long jump silver), Bahadur Singh (Shot Put gold), Charles Borromeo (800m gold), and others.
On May 23, Tata Steel’s Bachendri Pal becomes the first Indian woman to summit Mt Everest. She later becomes the founding president of Tata Youth Adventure Centre, the precursor to Tata Steel Adventure Foundation
Geet Sethi, who joined Tata Oil Mills (TOMCO) as a trainee in 1983, wins his first World IBSF Billiards title. He goes on to win in 1987 and 2001 and becomes the World Professional Billiards champion in 1992, 1993, 1995 and 1998
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1986
|Sports at Tata
Tata Steel steps in to support chess player Dibyendu Barua, the second Indian to achieve the FIDE Grandmaster norm, highlighting the group’s tradition of supporting emerging young talent
1986
Tata Steel Adventure Foundation set up, with Bachendri Pal at the helm. TSAF today organizes several schools, programs, and expeditions that encourage adventure sport, and help develop personal and organizational leadership skills through outdoor activities
Tata Football Academy set up in Jamshedpur. Chuni Goswami, who led the gold-winning Indian team at Asian Games in Jakarta in 1962, serves as its first head
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1991
|Sports at Tata
JRD Tata Sports complex with world class facilities for many sports opens at Jamshedpur. Access is free for athletes and open to all residents of Jamshedpur
1991
Tata Steel Sports Foundation sponsors tennis star Leander Paes for three years and helps kick start his illustrious career which include an Olympic medal, several doubles Grand Slams and victories in Davis Cup ties.
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1996
|Sports at Tata
Tata Archery Academy founded at the JRD Tata Sports Complex in Jamshedpur. The academy has nurtured several national, Asian and world champions since then
The Tata group takes over the sponsorship of India’s only ATP Tennis championship in Chennai for three years. Tata Motors resumes the title sponsorship for the event, renamed Tata Open Maharashtra, after it moves to Pune in 2018
read moreCarlos Moya, the winner of the 2005 edition
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2002
|Sports at Tata
The Tata group signs Narain Karthikeyan, starting with his participation in Telefonica World Series, as a member of Tata RC Motorsport. In 2005, Karthikeyan becomes the first Indian to break into Formula 1 as part of Team Jordan
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2003
|Sports at Tata
Tata Steel sponsors the Indian contingent for the Special Olympics in Dublin. Three participants from Jamshedpur win medals
read moreThe 2003 Special Olympics Opening Ceremony (Wiki Commons)
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2004
|Sports at Tata
Tata Athletics Academy is set up in Jamshedpur on the lines of the football and archery academies
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2006
|Sports at Tata
Tata group associates with Williams F1 as sponsor with Narain Karthikeyan as second test and reserve driver. An Indian logo is seen on the Formula 1 circuit for the first time
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2007
|Sports at Tata
Tata Steel acquires the title sponsorship of the chess tournament at Wijk aan Zee in the Netherlands. First organized in 1938, it attracts the best names in chess. Magnus Carlsen holds the record for most wins with eight titles
read moreGrandmaster R Praggnanandhaa at a Tata Steel Chess match
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2008
|Sports at Tata
Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) becomes Technology Partner to Ferrari’s Formula 1 team
read moreThen CEO S Ramadorai and Ferrari CIO Antonio Calabrese
2008
Then TCS CEO and present Tata group chairman N Chandrasekaran completes his first marathon at Mumbai, accelerating a culture of fitness at TCS and later the Tata group. TCS becomes an associate sponsor of the Mumbai Marathon
2008
Tata becomes title sponsor for the Tata Open India International Challenge, in association with the Prakash Padukone Badminton Academy. The sponsorship continues till 2018.
read moreThe winner, Lakshya Sen of India in action in the 2018 final
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2009
|Sports at Tata
The Tata group enters the Indian Premier League (IPL) for the first time when TCS associates with the cricket team Rajasthan Royals as a technology partner
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2011
|Sports at Tata
TCS becomes the title sponsor for the TCS Amsterdam Marathon. It goes on to partner the New York Marathon in 2013. Other cities include London, Boston, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Sydney, Clark (Philippines), Stockholm (Lidingöloppet), and Toronto
Tata Capital inducts Saurav Ghosal to ensure he can concentrate on his Squash career. Ghosal breaks into the top ten PSA ranking in 2019, the first Indian to do so. His titles include Asian Games and Commonwealth golds
Tata Steel and Tata Trusts set up the Naval Tata Hockey Academy in Jamshedpur, followed by the Odisha Naval Tata Hockey High Performance Centre in Bhubaneshwar in 2019.
Archer Komalika Bari becomes the world u/19 recurve champion, highlighting the academy’s work at the grassroots. Several cadets, such as Deepika Kumari, Atanu Das, Dola Banerjee and V Pranitha have been world recurve champions
Led by Bachendri Pal, 12 women over 50 undertake a 4700-km long trek from Pang-Sau Lang Pass in Arunachal Pradesh to Tiger Hill/Dras in Ladakh, to emphasize that age is no bar for women’s fitness
Tata Archery Academy’s Bhajan Kaur, Ankita Bhakat and Deepika Kumari form the entire Indian Women’s Archery contingent to the 2024 Paris Olympics, including the coach Purnima Mahato