10 August,2022 07:16 AM IST | Birmingham | PTI
Apache Indian performs during the closing ceremony of the Birmingham Commonwealth Games on Monday. Pic/AP, PTI
From the beats of Bhangra to the power-packed performance of Apache Indian, it was a carnivalesque atmosphere at the refurbished Alexander Stadium here, as a dazzling closing ceremony brought the curtains down on the high-octane edition of the 2022 Commonwealth Games.
More than 4,500 athletes competed from 72 countries over the past 11 days. India finished with 61 medals, five less than their tally four years ago at Gold Coast. As per the tradition, the flag of the Commonwealth Games Federation, was lowered to officially mark the end of the Birmingham Games and handed over to the state of Victoria, Australia, the host of the next edition of the Commonwealth Games in 2026.
Prince Edward "proclaimed Birmingham 2022 closed" and made a formal invitation to the Australian state of Victoria for the 2026 Commonwealth Games.
Also Read: CWG 2022: Sania Mirza congratulates Indian contingent for fine performance
Indian-origin Steven Kapur, a singer-songwriter and a reggae DJ, popularly known as Apache Indian delivered a power-packed performance, belting out chartbusters âBoom Shack-A-Lak', âPass the Dutchie' and âRed Red Wine' to celebrate sound system culture of the city.
ALSO READ
"Truth stands tall": Congress' Pawan Khera after Court closes ED investigation in CWG money laundering case
Kejriwal, BJP teamed up to create "false Commonwealth Games scam", should apologise to Congress: Jairam Ramesh
CWG medallist shuttler Sumeeth Reddy retires
Priyanka walks into new record
Commonwealth Games Federation changes its name to Commonwealth Sport
It was followed by model-cum-activist Neelam Gill, who was driven in a yellow MG, while Punjabi MC played out 'Mundiyan To Bach Ke' to a packed stadium, celebrating Birmingham âdaytimers' culture - the 80s and 90s cultural phenomenon.
There were 20 musical performances, which included musical legends Goldie and Beverley Knight collaborating on the iconic âInner City Life' in a tribute to Wolverhampton's pioneering role in rave culture and 80s street art.
This story has been sourced from a third party syndicated feed, agencies. Mid-day accepts no responsibility or liability for its dependability, trustworthiness, reliability and data of the text. Mid-day management/mid-day.com reserves the sole right to alter, delete or remove (without notice) the content in its absolute discretion for any reason whatsoever