Here's the full medal tally, India highlighted in bold:
Here's the list of all medals India have won in the Hangzhou Asian Games (so far):
(Last updated on October 7 at 03:45 pm IST)
Archery
Compound Women's Individual - Gold - Jyothi Surekha Vennam
India's foremost compound archer won her third gold medal at the Asian Games with a confident 149
Compound Men's Individual - Gold - Ojas Praveen Deotale
Ojas Deotale only missed the ten once in an all-Indian final, as another superlative performance saw him claim gold and his third gold medal of the Games.
Compound Mixed Team - Gold - Jyothi Surekha Vennam and Ojas Praveen Deotale
Across the semifinal and final, Jyothi and Ojas only dropped one point in each match, to make it a dominant road to India's first archery gold medal at Hangzhou.
Compound Women's Team - Gold - Jyothi Surekha Vennam, Aditi Gopichand Swami, Parneet Kaur
A dominant Indian team showed why they are world champions with a comfortable win over Chinese Taipei in the final.
Compound Men's Team - Gold - Ojas Pravin Deotale, Prathamesh Jawkar, Abhishek Verma
The Indian men followed suit soon after the women's team won gold, by beating South Korea by five points in the final.
Compound Men's Individual - Silver - Abhishek Verma
An solitary eight and a nine were enough to deny Abhishek Verma in an all-Indian final, losing 147-149 to Ojas Deotale.
Recurve Men's Team - Silver - Atanu Das, Dhiraj Bommadevara, Tushar Shelke
The all-conquering South Korean team were too good for the Indians in the final, but it was a creditable effort from the three Indians to reach the final and win a silver medal.
Recurve Women's Team - Bronze - Ankita Bhakat, Bhajan Kaur, Simranjeet Kaur
In a low-scoring affair, India held their nerve at the end to pip Vietnam to bronze
Compound Women's Individual - Bronze - Aditi Gopichand Swami
The 17-year-old world champion lost to Jyothi Vennam in the semifinal, before earning bronze with a 146-140 win over Ratih Fadhly of Indonesia.
Athletics
Men's Javelin Throw - Gold - Neeraj Chopra
Neeraj Chopra was the overwhelming favourite in the absence of Arshad Nadeem, but he found a worthy competitor in his countryman Kishore Kumar Jena. Eventually though, a season's best of 88.88m gave him a second consecutive Asian Games gold.
Men's 4x400m Relay - Gold
The Asian record-holding team of Muhammad Anas Yahiya, Amoj Jacob, Muhammad Ajmal and Rajesh Ramesh took the lead very early in the race, set the pace, and won the Asian Games gold to cap an excellent season, that also saw them break the Asian record.
Men's 3000m steeplechase - Gold - Avinash Sable
He may have been expected to win but Avinash Sable turned in a Games record time of 8:19.50 to obliterate the field. Such was his dominance that we was celebrating the last 15 seconds of his race, strolling to the finish line.
Men's shot-put - Gold - Tajinderpal Singh Toor
The defending champion from the 2018 Asian Games was pushed all the way to his last throw, with a massive 20.36m effort to win gold and finish ahead of Mohamed Daouda Tolo of Saudi Arabia (20.18m). He became only the fourth Indian to win back-to-back golds at the Asian Games.
Women's 5000m - Gold - Parul Chaudhary
Parul Chaudhary ran a superb strategic race behind Japan's Ririka Hironaka and then with about 50m to go, produced a stunning final push that won India their third gold medal in athletics.
Women's Javelin Throw - Gold - Annu Rani
Annu Rani produced her best performance of the year at the perfect time, producing a season's best throw of 62.92m throw to win her second Asian Games medal, following her bronze in Incheon in 2014.
Men's Javelin Throw - Silver - Kishore Kumar Jena
Imagine putting almost three more metres to your personal best, giving the greatness of Neeraj Chopra a real scare, and qualifying for the Olympics. All in one day's work for Kishore Kumar Jena.
Men's Long Jump - Silver - Sreeshankar Murali
It was a slow start from Sreeshankar, and a situation that wouldn't have filled him with confidence with his recent form not being in the best shape. However, with his fourth jump, Sreeshankar produced a briliiant 8.19m jump, and eventually finished just 3cm behind the eventual winner, China's Wang Jianan.
Women's 100m Hurdles - Silver - Jyothi Yarraji
Jyothi Yarraji finished third in a dramatic race, but was then upgraded to a silver after China's Wanni Yu was disqualifed for a false start. The drama was before the start of the race, as Jyothi herself was iniitially disqualified for her part in the Yu's false start.
Men's Decathlon - Silver - Tejaswin Shankar
Tejaswin Shankar broke the decathlon national record by 8 points and finished second behind China's Sun Qihao. His total of 7666 points was 150 points behind Sun.
Men's 5000m - Silver - Avinash Sable
To cap off what was a memorable Games for him, Sable won his second medal in the 5000m following the gold in the 3000m steeplechase.
Women's 4x400m Relay - Silver - Vithya Ramraj, Aishwarya Mishra, Prachi, Subha Venkatesh
In the anchor leg, Subha Venkatesh nearly pinched the gold off Bahrain's Salwa Eid Nasser, but in the end, just fell short.
Mixed 4x400m Relay - Silver - Muhammed Ajmal, Rajesh Ramesh, Vithya Ramraj, Subha Venkatesan
The Indians finished the race in third place, 0.09 seconds begind the Sri Lankans. However, India's medal was upgraded to a silver after Sri Lanka were disqualified for a lane infringement.
Women's Long Jump - Silver - Ancy Sojan
This was supposed to be Shaili Singh's event from an Indian perspective, but the youngster did struggle while Ancy thrived under the pressure, finishing with a best jump of 6.63m, 10cm behind the eventual winner.
Women's 3000m Steeplechase - Silver - Parul Chaudhary
World champion Winfred Yavi was always the favourite in this event, and so it proved, but Parul Chaudhary managed to meet expectations and finished in second place.
Men's 10000m - Silver - Karthik Kumar
Karthik set the pace early in the race, then stayed with the lead pack, took advantage of a collision that left three runners behind, and then timed his final sprint to overtake his countryman Gulveer Singh.
Women's 1500m - Silver - Harmilan Bains
In her first major international competition representing India, Harmilan Bains finished a superb second as India won a glut of athletics medals on October 1.
Women's 800m - Silver - Harmilan Bains
Harmilan Bains emulated her mother Madhuri Singh in winning an Asian Games silver in 800m, and also won her second silver of the Hangzhou games.
Men's 1500m - Silver - Ajay Kumar Saroj
The Asian athletics championship winner once again ran an excellent race here, timing his charge in the last 200m to perfection, to finish second.
Men's 800m - Silver - Muhammad Afsal
Afsal took control of the race early on and led for most of it, but was pipped at the end by a sensational final sprint from the Saudi Arabian Essa Ali Kzwani.
Men's Triple Jump - Bronze - Praveen Chithravel
With a best jump of 16.68m, Praveen Chithravel finished third behind two Chinese jumpers, to win his biggest international medal, after just missing out in last year's Commonwealth Games.
Women's 3000m Steeplechase - Bronze - Priti Lamba
Priti Lamba was never in the top three until about the last 20 metres of the race, when she produced a final burst of acceleration to give India two medals from the steeplechase.
Women's Shot Put - Bronze - Kiran Baliyan
Baliyan, in her first international competition for five years, and her first time competing abroad, threw a massive 17.36m - her career's second-best throw to finish third, behind a Chinese 1-2.
Men's 10000m - Bronze - Gulveer Singh
Just like Karthik Kumar, Gulveer also kept pace with the lead pack throughout the race, and reaped the benefit of maintaining a consistent pace, as India won two medals in the same event.
Men's 1500m - Bronze - Jinson Johnson
The defending champion from Jakarta 2018 was on the podium again, as he timed his final sprint to perfection to put two Indians on the podium for the second time in two days in the athletics events.
Women's Discus Throw - Bronze - Seema Punia
The 40-year-old Seema Punia won the third Asian Games medal of her career, as she won another bronze medal to add to her gold from Incheon in 2014 and the bronze from Jakarta in 2018.
Women's Heptathon - Bronze - Nandini Agasara
Nandini Agasara was in fifth place heading into the final event of the heptathlon - the 800m. She produced a personal best time in it, to upstage compatriot Swapna Barman (defending Asian Games champion) and finish the third.
Women's 400m Hurdles - Bronze - Vithya Ramraj
After trying PT Usha's long-standing national record in the heats, Vithya Ramraj ran another excellent race in the final to finish in third place.
35km Race Walk Mixed Team - Bronze - Ram Baboo and Manju Rani
India finished behind China and Japan in a gruelling race in the heat of Hangzhou.
Badminton
Men's Doubles - Gold - Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty
After dealing with their usual nemeses, Aaron Chia and Soh Wooi Yik in the semifinal with a 2-0 win, Satwik-Chirag produced a superlative performance in the final, winning in straight games and thus earning India's first ever badminton gold in Asian Games history.
Men's Team - Silver
In the absence of the in-form star HS Prannoy, India went down to China 3-2 in the final. Lakshya Sen and the pair of Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty put India in a 2-0 lead, but the Chinese hauled it back, as Srikanth Kidambi, Mithun Manjunath and the pair of Dhruv Kapila and Sai Pratheek Krishna Prasad lost their matches.
Men's Singles - Silver - HS Prannoy
HS Prannoy battled a back injury to defeat Lee Zii Jia in an epic quarterfinal to reach the semifinal and confirm a medal for himself. It resulted in him losing his semifinal to China's Li Shifeng, but nonetheless Prannoy would be glad to win India's first men's singles medal in Asian Games badminton since Syed Modi in 1982.
Boxing
Women's 75kg - Silver - Lovlina Borgohain
The Indian Olympic bronze medallist made good use of a favourable draw to go through to the final but there she was outclassed by China's Li Qian in a unanimous decision, in what was India's last involvement in boxing at the Asian Games, as they finished without a single gold medal.
Women's 50kg - Bronze - Nikhat Zareen
The world champion and overwhelming favourite Nikhat Zareen did not win the Asian Games title, as she suffered an upset loss to her Thai opponent in the semifinals. However, she did end up with a quota place for the Paris Olympics.
Women's 54kg - Bronze - Preeti Pawar
After an impressive start to the campaign, Preeti's Asian Games campaign came to an end with a loss to a home favourite.
Men's 92+kg - Bronze - Narender Berwal
Narender (+92kg) went down to Tokyo Olympics bronze medalist Kamshybek Kunkabayev 0-5 in the semifinals but had done enough before to earn himself a bronze medal.
Women's 57kg - Bronze - Parveen Hooda
After comfortably making it through to the semifinals, Parveen was easily beaten by Chinese Taipei's Lin Yu Ting in the semi, but she finished her campaign with a bronze medal and a Paris Olympics quota.
Bridge
Men's Team - Silver
Jaggy Shivdasani, Sandeep Thakral, Rajeshwar Tiwari, Sumit Mukherjee, Raju Tolani and Ajay Prabhakar Khare finished second to Hong Kong in the final, but had beaten heavyweights China in the semifinal. The only medal from the bridge contingent at this Asian Games.
Canoeing
Men's 1000m Canoe Sprint - Bronze - Arjun Singh and Salam Sunil Singh
India's only medal in canoeing at the games came through the pair of Arjun and Sunil, who finished behind duos from Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan.
Cricket
Women's Team - Gold
After a facile win over Bangladesh in the semifinal, India proved too good for Sri Lanka in the final, on a tough wicket for batting. Jemimah Rodrigues and Smriti Mandhana got India to a competitive 116, before Titas Sadhu blew away the Sri Lankan top order, as India won by 19 runs.
Men's Team - Gold
India won gold on a technicality - being the higher seeded team after the final against Afghanistan was abandoned due to rain.
Equestrian
Dressage Team - Gold
The team of Anush Agarwalla, Hriday Vipul Chheda, Divyakriti Singh, Sudipti Hajela won India's first equestrian gold medal at the Asian Games since 1982. This was also India's first-ever dressage gold medal in Asian Games history.
Dressage Individual - Bronze
Anush Agarwalla won India's first-ever individual bronze in dressage at the Asian Games, after Hriday Vipul Chheda was eliminated from contention in the final due to blood on his horse's (Emerald) leg.
Golf
Women's Individual - Silver - Aditi Ashok
Aditi Ashok was in a seven-stroke lead at the beginning of the final round, but shot a five over par in the last round to lose the lead to Thailand's Arpichaya Yubol.
Hockey
Men's Hockey - Gold
Harmanpreet Singh and co. produced a superlative performance in the final, demolishing Japan in perhaps the best performance under Craig Fulton.
Women's Hockey - Bronze
The aim was gold, but as the tears from coach Janneke Schopman after the bronze playoff win over Japan showed, this was quite the cherished medal.
Kabaddi
Women's Team - Gold
India beat Chinese Taipei in the final to win gold, after having missed out in 2018. Yet, the nature of the system in India means we may never see them on television screens until the 2026 Asian Games.
Men's Team - Gold
After relinquishing the title to Iran in 2018, India won gold again against their Asiad rivals, but it was in a final marred with controversy and lengthy stoppages.
Roller Skating
Women's 3000m Speed Skating Relay - Bronze - Aarathy Kasthuri Raj, Heeral Sadhu, Sanjana Bathula, Karthika Jagadeeswaran
India's first medal in skating came after the team finished in third place behind Chinese Taipei and South Korea.
Men's 3000m Speed Skating Relay - Aryanpal Ghuman, Anandkumar Velkumar, Siddhant Kamble, VikramIngale
Just like in the women's race, Chinese Taipei and South Korea were running a race of their own, but India did enough to finish in third place ahead of Iran and Thailand.
Rowing
Men's Lightweight Double Sculls - Silver - Arjun Lal Jat and Arvind Singh
Arvind Singh was dealing with a back injury in the build-up to the Games, but managed a superb race with Arjun Lal Jat, as the Indians finished only behind the Chinese team.
Men's Eight - Silver - Neeraj, Naresh Kalwaniya, Neetish Kumar, Charanjeet Singh, Jaswinder Singh, Bheem Singh, Punit Kumar, Ashish, and Dhananjay Uttam Pande
India were in medal contention right from the start of this race, and even pushed China temporarily through the middle of the race, but eventually the hosts were too good, and India finished behind them in second place.
Men's Pair - Bronze - Babu Lal Yadav and Lekh Ram
As with the other rowing races, India again made a late push for a higher medal, in this case silver, but eventually the pairs of Hong Kong and Uzbekistan were just a little too good for the Indians to overhaul.
Men's Four - Bronze - Ashish, Bheem Singh, Jaswinder Singh, Punit Kumar
Of the races that involved China, this was the one where the Indians got closest to the host nation, eventually finishing 0.77 seconds behind the hosts. Uzbekistan took the gold in the event.
Men's Quadruple Sculls - Bronze - Satnam Singh, Parminder Singh, Jakar Khan, Sukhmeet Singh
Satnam Singh and Parminder Singh combined with Jakar Khan and Sukhmeet Singh to win bronze. The Indians started off a bit slow, but then overtook Indonesia around a quarter of a way into the race, and stayed there until the end, behind China and Uzbekistan.
Sailing
Girl's Dinghy - Silver - Neha Thakur
India's first medal in sailing at the Asian Games came through a 17-year-old from Madhya Pradesh, as Neha Thakur went through a gruelling 11 races within the space of a week, to finish second behind Thailand's Noppasorn Khunboonjan.
Men's Windsurfing RS:X class - Bronze - Eabad Ali
Thakur's medal was swiftly followed by Eabad Ali's in the men's windsurfing event, as the Indian finished with 57 points after 14 races to take the bronze. The sailor with the least points wins overall, with South Korea's Wonwoo Cho winning gold [14 points], while Thailand's Natthaphong Phonoppharat clinched silver [29 points].
Men's Dinghy ILCA7 - Bronze - Vishnu Saravanan
India's third medal in sailing at the Asian Games came through Vishnu Saravanan, who went through a gruelling week, and managed to find enough consistency to finish in third position, to win the country's 20th medal of the Games.
Shooting
Men's 10m Air Pistol Team - Gold - Sarabjot Singh, Arjun Singh Cheema, Shiva Narwal
The Indian trio combined to take the team gold with a score of 1733, beating China to second place by just one point and needing Narwal and Sarabjot to score a perfect 10 in their last shot.
Men's 10m Air Rifle Team - Gold - Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar, Rudrankksh Patil, Divyansh Singh Panwar
India's first gold medal of the Games came in the shooting range, in an event where all three Indians finished in the top eight of the qualification stage. Despite China's Sheng Lihao setting a world record in the qualifying stage, the Indian trip managed to upstage the hosts to set a team world record and take gold.
Men's 50m Rifle 3 Position Team - Gold - Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar, Swapnil Kusale and Akhil Sheoran
India dominated the team event right from the off with the trio scoring a world record 1769, and had mathematically claimed gold even before China could complete all of their shots.
Women's 10m Air Pistol Women - Gold - Palak Gulia
17-year-old Palak Gulia shot an Asian Games record score of 242.1, finishing ahead of compatriot Esha Singh to win gold. It was Palak's first major international competition and she claimed gold with a performance that belied her years.
Women's 25m Pistol Team - Gold - Manu Bhaker, Esha Singh, Rhythm Sangwan
India dominated this event right from the start, with Manu and Esha continually hovering around the top right from the start of the event. In fact, even Rhythm finished in a qualification position, but couldn't make the final due to only two shooters from a country being allowed in finals.
Women's 50m Rifle 3 Position - Gold - Sift Kaur Samra
After finishing second in qualification with a national record, Sift Kaur Samra dominated the final and eventually won by a massive 7.4 points, in an event which saw India win two medals. Samra also became India's first individual medalist at the Hangzhou Games.
Men's Trap Team - Gold - Kynan Chenai, Zoravar Sandhu, Prithviraj Tondaiman
The Indians finished with a games record of 361 out of 375 shots, to finish two points ahead of second-placed Kuwait.
Men's 50m Rifle 3 Positions - Silver - Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar
Tomar grabbed his fourth medal of these Asian Games with a stellar comeback to claim silver, with compatriot Swapnil Kusale fading badly to finish 4th after leading for large parts of the final. Tomar ended up beating the Games record with a 459.7, but that was eclipsed by Du Linshu of China, who claimed gold.
Women's 10m Air Rifle Team - Silver - Ramita Jindal, Mehuli Ghosh,
The Indians all had slow starts in the first series of qualification shots, but Ramita Jindal and Mehuli Ghosh recovered superbly, especially the former, who placed herself in between the Chinese domination at the top of qualifying, and ensured the collective finished in second place.
Women's 10m Air Pistol Team - Silver - Esha Singh, Palak Gulia and Divya TS
The Indian trio finished 5 points behind eventual gold-winners China, having to make a comeback after a slow start to score 1731 points and thus grab silver. Esha Singh and Palak Gulia shot 579 and 577 (fifth and seventh) to qualify for the final, in which they won silver and gold respectively.
Women's 10m Air Pistol - Silver - Esha Singh
Esha Singh took her medal tally for the games to four, holding off multiple opponents to finish second with 239.7 points, taking the silver medal.
Women's 50m Rifle 3 Positions Team - Silver - Sift Kaur Samra, Ashi Chouksey, Manini Kaushik
Chouksey won her second medal of the Asian Games, as the Indians finished only behind runaway eventual winners China. Both Samra and Chouksey also qualified for the final of the individual event.
Women's 25m Pistol - Silver - Esha Singh
After an inconsistent start to the final, Esha Singh produced a superb back-half in the final to upstage a Chinese and a Korean to finish with 34 points and in second place. For context, the Asian Games record before this final was 34, but that ended up being obliterated by China's Liu Rui who scored 38 points.
Men's Skeet - Silver - Anant Jeet Singh Naruka
The Asian Games record heading into this final was 52. Anant Jeet Singh Naruka finished with 58. His only problem? Kuwait's Abdullah Alrashidi finished with a perfect score of 60. How do you compete with perfection? You just doff your hat and take home a well-deserved silver medal.
10m Air Pistol Mixed Team - Silver - Divya TS and Sarabjot Singh
The Indians dominated the early exchanges, and even held the lead almost until the end. The Chinese pair of Zhang Bowen and Jiang Ranxin pipped the Indians to the gold medal in the final of the event, with some incredible shooting right at the end of the final.
Women's Trap Team - Silver - Rajeshwari Kumari, Manisha Keer, Preeti Rajak
India finished second in the trap team event, with a score of 337 out of 375, 19 points behind winners China who broke the world record.
Women's 10m Air Rifle - Bronze - Ramita Jindal
Just like the men's 10m Air Rifle, Indians finished third and fourth in the final. Mehuli finished just outside of the medals, because Ramita pulled off some clutch shots at crucial times.
Men's 10m Air Rifle - Bronze - Aishwary Pratap Singh Tomar
Tomar won his second medal of the Games, and it is one that would've meant more to him, as the 10m Air Rifle isn't even his most-prefered event. He eventually won the bronze medal after beating compatriot Rudrankksh Patil in a shoot-off.
Men's 25m Rapid Fire Pistol Team - Bronze - Vijayveer Sidhu, Adarsh Singh,
Vijayveer Sidhu's second phase catapulted him from 16th to 6th, but Anish Bhanwala endured a tough second phase that dropped him from 6th to 21st. However, that was enough for the team to win a bronze medal. They were tied with Indonesia, but won the medal due to hitting more inner tens.
Women's 50m Rifle 3 Position - Bronze - Ashi Chouksey
Chouksey won her third medal of the Asian Games with a bronze, but she will rue her final shot, when she was in command for a silver medal. Instead, she shot an 8.9 to be relegated to third position.
Men's Skeet Team - Bronze - Anant Jeet Singh Naruka, Angad Vir Singh Bajwa, Gurjoat Singh Khangura
The Indians put up an incredible performance in the second phase of the event. They finished tied with Kazakhstan in the end, on 355 points (out of a possible 375), but won the bronze medal on the countback.
Men's Trap - Bronze - Kynan Chenai
After qualifying in first place, Kynan Chenai didn't start well in the final, but fought back well through the middle of the competition to win bronze medal.
Squash
Men's Team - Gold - Saurav Ghosal, Abhay Singh, Mahesh Mangaonkar, Harinder Pal Singh Sandhu
In a tight, dramatic final, India beat Pakistan 2-1. Mahesh Mangaonkar lost the opening game to Nasir Iqbal, but Saurav Ghosal and Abhay Singh won their matches to win India's first squash gold of these Asian Games.
Mixed Doubles - Gold - Dipika Pallikal and Harinder Pal Sandhu
The top seeds lived up to their billing. After tough matches in the quarterfinal and semifinal, they won the final in straight games against their Malaysian opponents.
Men's Singles - Silver - Saurav Ghosal
The Indian veteran won his fifth straight Asian Games singles medal, and his ninth Asian Games medal, but that singles gold continued to remain out of his grasp.
Women's Team - Bronze - Joshna Chinappa, Dipika Pallikal Karthik, Tanvi Khanna, Anahat Singh
India's squash team put up a credible fight but lost to Hong Kong in the semifinals by a 1-2 score. Earlier, India won their ties against Pakistan, Nepal and Macao by 3-0 margins but suffered a reverse by the same scoreline against heavyweights Malaysia.
Mixed Doubles - Bronze - Abhay Singh and Anahat Singh
The young Indian duo began their semifinal really well against their Malaysian opponents, and were two points away from victory in the third game, from where they lose five straight points to lose the semifinal. It was 15-year-old Anahat's second medal of these Asian Games.
Table Tennis
Women's Doubles - Silver - Sutirtha Mukherjee and Ayhika Mukherjee
After a sensational win over the Chinese world no 2 pair of Chen Meng and Wang Yidi in the quarterfinals, the Indians came just short against their North Korean opponents Cha Su Yong and Pak Su Gyong in a close semifinal. Sutirtha and Ayhika became India's first women's doubles medallists in table tennis.
Tennis
Mixed Doubles - Gold - Rohan Bopanna, Rutuja Bhosale
In a dramatic final, Bopanna and Bhosale lost the first set but came back superbly in the second and then swept the match tie-break to keep India's streak of winning tennis gold medals at every Asian Games since 2002 alive.
Men's Doubles - Silver - Ramkumar Ramanathan, Saketh Myneni
Ramkumar won his first Asiad medal, while Saketh won his third after being defeated in the final of the men's doubles tennis event, losing out to Chinese Taipei.
Wrestling
Men's 86kg - Silver - Deepak Punia
Deepak Punia was in sterling form throughout the Games, right until he came up against wrestling legend Hassan Yazdani, and it was barely a contest in the final with Deepak losing 10-0.
Men's Greco-Roman 87kg - Bronze - Sunil Kumar
India's first medal in wrestling at the Asian Games came through Sunil Kumar, who beat his Kyrgyz opponent in the bronze medal bout.
Women's 53kg - Bronze - Antim Panghal
After a loss in the quarterfinal to the invincible Akari Fujinami, Antim Panghal produced a solid display in the bronze medal bout to win her first Asian Games medal.
Women's 62kg - Bronze - Sonam Malik
In the bronze medal bout, Sonam Malik fought superbly in a thrilling bout against China's Long Jia, and won by two points after pushing her opponent off the mat in the dying seconds of the bout.
Women's 76kg - Bronze - Kiran
Kiran, who had failed to medal at the 2018 Asian Games earned her redemption at this edition, defeating Ariunjargal Ganbat of Mongolia in her bronze medal bout by a 6-3 scoreline.
Men's 57kg - Bronze - Aman Sehrawat
Aman Sehrawat, who earned his spot in place of Ravi Dahiya, won bronze after defeating Minghu Liu of China by technical superiority.
Wushu
Women's Sanda 60kg - Silver - Naorem Roshibina Devi
Roshibina Devi became the most successful Wushu athlete in Indian history, claiming silver in addition to her bronze from the 2018 Jakarta Games. Xiaowei Wu of China proved too much in the final, but considering the off-mat factors Roshibina had to deal with, it was a stellar performance nonetheless.