Revanth Reddy Scores Four Goals, Wins Man of the Match at Legislators Sports Meet
HYDERABAD — Forget the assembly floor. Forget the heated debates, the political point-scoring, and the relentless grind of governance.
On Saturday, Telangana's legislators traded their suits for sports kits — and LB Stadium has never seen anything quite like it.
The first-ever Legislators Sports and Cultural Meet 2026 threw open its doors at the iconic Lal Bahadur Shastri Stadium in Hyderabad, bringing together MLAs, MLCs, MPs, ministers, and the Chief Minister himself in a spectacle that was one part sporting competition, one part political theatre, and entirely, gloriously, human.
It was history. And it was a lot of fun.
Eleven Years in the Making
Think about this for a moment.
Telangana has existed as a state for over a decade. In that time, its legislators have debated budgets, passed laws, fought elections, and argued across the aisle with the full-throated passion that Indian democracy demands.
But never — not once in eleven years — had the state's MLAs and MLCs come together for a sporting and cultural event of their own.
Until Saturday.
Chief Minister A. Revanth Reddy, Legislative Assembly Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar, and Legislative Council Chairman Gutta Sukender Reddy jointly inaugurated the meet in a ceremony that set the tone for an evening of laughter, competition, and genuine cross-party warmth. Deputy Chief Minister Bhatti Vikramarka, cabinet ministers, MPs, MLCs, and MLAs filled the stadium with an energy that felt less like a government function and more like a school sports day — the best possible kind.
Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar captured the mood perfectly. "Leaders who are constantly busy with public issues and politics can relieve stress and relax through sports and cultural activities," he said. "When members of all parties play and perform together, a festive atmosphere is created — and we send a positive message to society."
He was not wrong. The atmosphere was festive. Infectiously so.
The Chief Minister Has Four Goals to His Name
Here is something you do not read in political dispatches every day: the Chief Minister of Telangana scored four goals in a football match on Saturday evening.
Four. Goals.
Revanth Reddy — already known for his boundless energy and his love of sport — threw himself into the football competition with an enthusiasm that left the crowd thoroughly entertained. In a move that drew equal parts applause and amusement, the Chief Minister switched teams mid-game to bolster Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar's side — a gesture of solidarity that said more about the spirit of the evening than any speech could.
By the final whistle, he had four goals to his name and the Man of the Match award in his pocket.
Not bad for a Chief Minister.
The kabaddi competition was no less entertaining. Speaker Prasad Kumar flagged off the contest with suitable ceremony, and Team A claimed a spirited victory over Team B in a match that had the crowd roaring. Sports Minister Srihari's team also tasted victory — the minister presumably feeling rather vindicated given his portfolio.
Meanwhile, Nagarjunasagar MLA Jaiveer scored the opening goal of the football match for the CM's team — a moment that will presumably feature prominently in future campaign materials.
MLAs, MPs, and MLCs who probably last laced up a pair of sports shoes during their college days rediscovered muscles they had forgotten they had. Some were graceful. Some were enthusiastic. All of them were smiling.
The Message Beneath the Medals
But strip away the fun and the football, and there is a serious point at the heart of Saturday's event — one that Chief Minister Revanth Reddy made with characteristic bluntness.
Telangana's youth are at a crossroads. And the Chief Minister has chosen his side.
"Leave the path of intoxication. Take the path of the field."
That is the message Revanth Reddy has been carrying across the state — through the CM Cup competitions that his government has run from village level all the way up to the state level, and now through Saturday's legislators' meet. The philosophy is simple: give young people a reason to run toward something, rather than escape into something.
"We are keeping youth away from pubs, feasts, farmhouse parties, drugs, cannabis, and intoxication," the Chief Minister said, his tone sharpening noticeably as he addressed the opposition's decision to boycott the event. Some opposition MLAs and MLCs had announced they would not participate — a choice Revanth Reddy dismissed with barely concealed disdain.
"They are only thinking about farmhouse parties," he said. "We are steering youth away from all of that."
His address to the state's students was passionate and personal. "Develop an interest in sports. Excel in them. Enhance the recognition and honour of the country. You will also have the opportunity to build your own future," he urged — words that carried the weight of a government that believes sport is not a luxury but a lifeline.
The CM Cup programme, he explained, was designed specifically to "unearth diamonds hidden in the soil of rural areas" — a recognition that sporting talent in Telangana does not only grow in city academies and expensive coaching centres, but in dusty village fields where children play barefoot under the afternoon sun.
Promises From the Podium
The Chief Minister did not leave the stadium without making commitments.
The Begumpet Hockey Stadium, he announced, will be developed and upgraded by the state government — a pledge that will be welcomed by hockey enthusiasts across Telangana who have long called for better facilities.
He also revisited one of his government's more colourful political controversies — the furore that erupted when his administration invited global football icon Lionel Messi to Telangana. The opposition had criticised the move as an expensive vanity project. Revanth Reddy, characteristically, was unapologetic. It was about inspiration, he maintained — about showing young Telangana what the world's best looks like, and daring them to dream accordingly.
Athletes who excel in sport, he added, will be honoured and recognised by his government. In Telangana, he made clear, a gold medal and a government job are not mutually exclusive ambitions.
Politics on Pause
Perhaps the most striking image of Saturday evening was not the Chief Minister's fourth goal, or the kabaddi final, or the opening ceremony. It was something simpler and more profound.
It was the sight of legislators from rival parties — people who spend their professional lives arguing, debating, and opposing each other across the assembly chamber — standing on the same field, playing the same game, and cheering for the same moments.
Speaker Gaddam Prasad Kumar put it best. "Elections are for politics," he said. "The rest of the time, we should all live together in harmony."
For one Saturday evening at LB Stadium, they did exactly that.
Telangana's lawmakers showed up, laced up, and played — and in doing so, reminded a watching state that behind every political title and every assembly seat is a human being who once played cricket in the street, kicked a football in a field, and felt the simple, uncomplicated joy of sport.
That joy was back on Saturday. And Hyderabad loved every minute of it.
The Legislators Sports and Cultural Meet 2026 continues with additional sporting and cultural events at LB Stadium. Chief Minister Revanth Reddy's Man of the Match award is, we are told, already framed.

