Wrestling is perhaps the best place to begin an assessment of contemporary Indian sports. It is the only mainstream sport that has existed in India for several centuries without interruption. Traditional wrestling continues to flourish in akharas across north India as well as in dangals (wrestling tournaments). In 2011 when I visited the Chandgi Ram akhara in Old Delhi, named after the legendary wrestler who won a gold medal in the Asian Games and is now managed by his son, and the Bara Ganesh akhara in Banaras, one of the sites of Joseph Alter's pioneering study, it was obvious that wrestling is alive and well in India. Dangals —whose organization and political economy Alter has described in detail—also continue to be big draws in the villages of Uttar Pradesh, Haryana, Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, and Maharashtra, with the prize money sometimes rising to a substantial Rs 100,000 per bout.28 Alter distinguishes between "ticket" dangals , in which organizers sell tickets and aim to make a profit, and "khula" dangals , which are free and open to everyone.29 A body called the Indian Style Wrestling Association (as opposed to the Wrestling Federation of India, which is in charge of the wrestling in the Olympics and other international tournaments) nominally oversees the dangals.30 What is noteworthy is the patronage of dangals by politicians. The former Uttar Pradesh chief minister and prominent national politician, Mulayam Singh Yadav, who was a pehelwan in his younger days, sponsors an annual dangal in his home constituency of Etawah. Other politicians, like the Chautalas of Haryana, underwrite dangals in their state. This shows the powerful hold that traditional wrestling has over wide swaths of northern and western India, prompting politicians to be associated with competitions. As P. Sainath said about wrestling in Maharashtra, " Kushti is located at the intersection of sports, politics, culture and economy in the rural regions of this state."31