India's provincial amazingness went unchallenged as the hosts were delegated general champions for the twelfth sequential time, in the wake of indenting up a record-breaking pull of 308 awards, at the South Asian Games. With ladies boxers scooping all the three gold decorations on offer and the judokas likewise stowing two gold and two silver on the most recent day of the Games, India's last count remained at 188 gold, 99 silver and 30 bronze awards. It was an enormous hop in decoration mean the Indians, who had won 175, including 90 gold, in the past version of the Games in 2010. At the far off second spot was Sri Lanka with a pull of 186 decorations (25 silver, 63 silver and 98 bronze). Pakistan clutched the third spot with a last tally of 106 awards (12 gold, 37 silver and 57 bronze). On the last day of rivalries, leading the pieces were the pugilists, who guaranteed that India scored an 'Immaculate 10' in boxing. After the men had scooped all the seven gold decorations on offer, the ladies made a decisive victory on Tuesday. London Olympics bronze-medallist M.C. Mary Kom (51kg), previous best on the planet L. Sarita Devi (60kg) and Asian Games bronze champ Pooja Rani (75kg) got the top respects in their separate classifications. The judokas too demonstrated great structure, sacking two gold and two silver decorations to complete on top at the Jawaharlal Nehru Indoor games corridor. Four occasions were hung on the most recent day of the judo rivalry and the Indians set up an overwhelming show by and by to complete on a high. Symbol Singh took only 49 seconds from the stipulated five minutes to beat his Afghan adversary Mohammad Ismail Kakar on the way to the gold decoration in the men's under 90kg. Pooja, then again, conquered a solid test from Beenish Khan of Pakistan in an equitably challenged duel before the Indian fixed off the issue in 3:03 minutes from the stipulated four in ladies' U-70kg. Ladies' U-78kg was precarious as there were just four challengers and Aruna (200 focuses) was defeated by gold medallist Fouzia Mumtaz (210) of Pakistan in the round-robin association. It was the fifth clash of the day between the two adversaries, and Mumtaz secured the issue in only four minutes. Set against Shah Hussain Shah in the men's U-100kg last, Shubham Kumar basically lost against the observed Pakistani, who won in only one moment and 29 seconds to secure the gold. Indian judokas developed general champs, with nine gold, three silver from 12 orders, to push Pakistan (2-2-8) and Nepal (1-2-6) to second and third places, individually. Nepal likewise asserted two silver and six bronze awards. Among alternate nations, Afghanistan took four silver and two bronze, while Sri Lanka took one silver and six bronze. Bangladesh completed with two bronze, while Bhutan, who sent an exceptionally youthful group involving just four individuals, finished with no decorations.
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