The Tokyo Paralympics is easily India's most successful sport to date, there were a considerable number of notables recorded by Indian athletes.
Here's a pick of the best:
India at Tokyo 2021 Paralympics: All Results and Medals | full squad
19
The total number of medals won by India in Tokyo - five gold, eight silver and six bronze, is easily the most medals won in a single edition.
India had won 12 medals in the first 11 editions in which they participated. His earlier record for a singles edition was four medals, which he has won twice: in 1984 in Stoke Mandeville and New York and in 2016 in Rio de Janeiro.
5
India won five gold medals in Tokyo through Avani Lekhara, Sumit Antil, Manish Narwal, Pramod Bhagat and Krishna Nagar. He had previously won four gold medals in all editions, with the medalist Murlikant Petkar (1972). Devendra Jhajharia (2004 and 2016) and Mariyappan Thangavelu (2016).
5
India won five medals in a day on 30 August, which is the highest ever medal in a single day at the Paralympics. His previous best was two medals in a day in 2016.
5
India has won medals in the number of sports (table tennis, athletics, shooting, archery and badminton) at the Tokyo Games. His previous best was two sports - he won a medal each in swimming and athletics in 2004. This was the first time that India had won medals in the Paralympics in shooting, archery, table tennis and badminton. While other sports have previously been a part of the Paralympics, this was the first time badminton was part of the programme.
3Women won three of India's 19 medals, with Lekhara two and Bhavinaben Patel winning one. Before this edition the only Indian woman to win a medal in Paralympics was Deepa Malik in 2016.
2
Simharaj Adana and Lekhara both won two medals each in Tokyo, making it the first Paralympics where more than one Indian won multiple medals in the same edition.
Earlier the only Indian to have won multiple medals in a singles edition was Joginder Singh Bedi, who won three medals in 1984. Adana won silver and bronze, while Lekhara won gold and bronze.
3
India won five medals including two gold, one silver and two bronze in shooting in Tokyo, making it third in the shooting medal tally behind only China and Serbia.
4
India's badminton players impressed in the game's first appearance at the Games, winning four medals to finish fourth in the medal tally for the game. Only China, Japan and Indonesia won more medals in this sport than India.
24
India finished 24th in the overall medal tally. His previous best performance was 25th at the 1972 Paralympics in Heidelberg, where Petkar won India's only medal.
18
Praveen Kumar has become the youngest Indian in history to win a medal in Paralympics. The 18-year-old was overtaken by Lekhara, who is 19. The youngest Indian to win a medal at the Paralympics before this edition was Mariyappan Thangavelu, who was 22 when he won the gold medal at Rio 2016.
3
In a stunning performance, Sumit Antil rewrote the men's javelin throw F64 world record thrice in just six throws in the Games. The previous record was 66.18m, held by India's Sandeep Choudhary. Antill recorded throws of 66.95m, 68.08m and 68.55m.
1
Devendra Jhajharia became the first Indian to win a medal in three different Paralympic Games in Tokyo. He joined Bedi as the only Indian to win three Paralympic medals. He also became the first athlete in history to win three medals in the men's javelin throw F46 category at the Paralympics.
4
Bhavnaben Patel won the silver medal by defeating top 10 players in the women's singles C4 classification. He defeated world no. 2, 3, 8 and 9, among which there were 6 Olympic and 7 World Championship medals. His only two defeats came against the world. 1 Zhou Ying.
3
Harvinder Singh became the first Indian archer to win a medal at the Paralympics, and he did it quite in style – three of his four victories required an arrow shoot-off to decide the winner.
4
Krishna Nagar defeated a world medalist in the men's singles SH6 category on his way to a gold medal in each of his four matches. His four opponents have won a total of three gold, two silver and six bronze at the World Championships.
249.6
Lekhara's score in the women's 10m Air Rifle SH1 category final equaled the world record and set a new Paralympic record. She equaled the record of Irina Shetnik of Ukraine, who won a bronze medal in the event.