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Asian Athletics Championships 2025

Sachin Yadav wins silver in men's javelin at Asian Athletics Championships 2025

Farzan has been a sports journalist since 2020, closely following Olympic sports and kabaddi.
Published at :May 31, 2025 at 7:11 PM
Modified at :May 31, 2025 at 7:11 PM
Sachin Yadav wins silver in men's javelin at Asian Athletics Championships 2025

(Courtesy : @sachin_javelin_/Instagram)

With his last throw, Sachin Yadav also boosted his Personal Best by a massive distance.

Sachin Yadav won silver medal in men’s javelin throw at the Asian Athletics Championships 2025 with a best throw of 85.16m. He registered throws of 79.65m, 74.05m, 72.07m, 77.37m in his first four throws, respectively. Sachin finally crossed the 80m mark with a throw of 83.03 in his fifth attempt. In his final attempt, he threw 85.16m to finish second on the podium.

Meanwhile, Pakistan’s Arshad Nadeem clinched the gold medal with a best throw of 86.40m to set a new Asian Lead. He breached his own best of 86.34m that he had set during the men’s javelin throw qualification round a day earlier.

Arshad started with two below-par throws of 75.64m and 76.80m. His next three throws were 85.57m, 83.99m, and 83.44m before registering a gold-medal winning throw of 86.40m. The Olympic record holder missed a new Competition Record by 0.72m.

Yuta Sakiyama from Japan bagged the bronze medal with a personal best of 83.75m. He managed to breach the 80m mark on his final attempt to win a medal. Yash Vir Singh, on the other hand, finished fifth with a personal best of 82.57m, surpassing his previous best of 82.13m.

Also Read: Parul Chaudhary wins silver in women’s 5000m at Asian Athletics Championships 2025

Yash began the event with two foul throws and followed it up with a 77.24m throw on his third attempt. He registered twin throws of 80.23m in his next two attempts before his best of 82.57m.

Asian Athletics Championships 2025: men’s javelin throw final results

  • Arshad Nadeem (Pakistan) – 86.40 m
  • Sachin Yadav (India) – 85.16 m
  • Yuta Sakiyama (Japan) – 83.75 m
  • Rumesh Tharanga Pathirage (Sri Lanka) – 83.27 m
  • Yash Vir Singh (India) – 82.57 m
  • Hu Haoran (China) – 80.93 m
  • Sumedha Jagath Ranasinghe Ranasinghe Mudiyanselage (Sri Lanka) – 79.81 m
  • Muhammad Yasir (Pakistan) – 75.39 m
  • Ryohei Arai (Japan) – 74.21 m
  • Abdulrahman Alazemi (Kuwait) – 73.87 m
  • Ali Fathi Ganji (Iran) – 72.11 m
  • Taepoong Nam (South Korea) – 69.42 m

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Mohamed Farzan
Mohamed Farzan

Farzan is a journalist at Khel Now covering Indian Olympic sports and kabaddi. With five years of experience working with major sports organizations like Chennaiyin FC, Dabang Delhi K.C., Rajasthan Royals, and Yuva Kabaddi Series, he brings diverse expertise. Farzan has covered two Olympics, one Commonwealth Games, and one Asian Games, making his knowledge of Indian sports broad and versatile.

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