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From ‘Sweat’ To ‘Stats’: Governance Of Sports Wearables In India

From ‘Sweat’ To ‘Stats’: Governance Of Sports Wearables In India
Friday, 16 January 2026 Author: Sarthak Doshi, Prateek Joinwal 

“In God we trust, all others must bring data”

The quote often attributed to American statistician W. Edwards Deming, serves as a fitting manifesto for professional sports today. Decision making in sports is no longer driven by the gut feeling, intuition, or anecdotal experience of the athlete or coach, but by data-driven analytics and predictive tools.

Entry of wearables has only amplified this trend. Globally, data from sports wearables is often used to determine tactics and strategy, as well as inform recruitment and retention decisions. This naturally makes wearables an important subject of both sports and data governance. It raises important questions around their permissibility in live matches; the collection, processing, storage, and monetization of data; and most importantly, data ownership. In the west, some of these questions, if not all, have been addressed through dedicated data legislation or collective bargaining agreements between governing bodies and athletes. Back in India, while professional teams and athletes are increasingly using sports wearables like WHOOP and Catapult,[1] the regulatory framework is far from clear.

With the recent enforcement of the National Sports Governance Act 2025[2] (NSG Act) and the substantive provisions of the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023[3] (DPDP Act) soon to come in effect, India has a foundation to build a conducive and robust regulatory framework for the use of wearables in professional sports. It is hence crucial to assess their impact as well as address how stakeholders should prepare for data governance.

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Written by

Sarthak Doshi

Sarthak Doshi

Sarthak is a Principal Associate at Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas & Co. (SAM & Co.) in the TMT practice. He advises clients across e‑commerce, cloud services, fintech, gaming, crypto/Web3 and AI. He has contributed to the national data protection policy, and even worked with organisations assisting the BN Srikrishna Committee on India’s draft personal data protection laws and emerging domains.
Prateek Joinwal 

Prateek Joinwal 

Prateek is an Associate at SAM & Co. in the TMT practice. He advises clients across digital and regulated sectors, including banking, e‑commerce, cloud and CSP relationships, gaming and online lotteries, and crypto/Web3 on regulatory, compliance and commercial matters.

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