Football and archery are the sports which kickstart even before the official opening ceremony of the Games.
Tomorrow, the four-member Indian team will step into Rio's landmark Sambadrome Marques de Sapucai, with an aim to break a jinx and prove the naysayers wrong.
An Olympic medal at the highest level has eluded Indian archers who have achieved almost every other feat, including winning a bronze at the youth level of the Summer Games, courtesy Atul Verma in Nanjing, China 2014.
In the individual section, Satyadev Prasad pulled off the best finish among Indians by advancing to the pre-quarters 12 years ago.
Since then the archery landscape has changed, thanks to the individual brilliance of Deepika Kumari, who at a young age of 15 burst into limelight by becoming the cadet world champion in Ogden (2009) competing in a field of under-18 age group.
At last count, she had more than 10 gold medals at the world level including winning the team and individual finals at the Commonwealth Games, New Delhi (2010) when she stunned five-time Olympian and bronze-medallist Alison Williamson of Great Britain.
By the 2012 Olympics, she had become world No.1, along with her team, and expectedly the hopes from her skyrocketed.
But all the hype fizzled out in a few seconds when Deepika lost to Amy Oliver of Great Britain, while the team -- which also had Bombayla Devi Laishram and Chekrovolu Swuro -- went down to Denmark, both in first rounds.
It was a fresh start for the archers since the London debacle as their rankings dropped and Deepika battled inconsistent form which forced her out of the team for some time in 2015.
But she peaked at the right time to help the women's team clinch the quota berth in World Championship last year followed by an individual qualification in the men's section.
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London Olympics silver-medallist Aida Roman, who defeated Deepika in the World Cup Final two years ago, may once again stand in her way in the individual section.
Deepika will have the experienced L Bombayla Devi, who is making her third successive Olympic appearance, to fall back on. Laxmirani Majhi, on the other hand, will be competing in her maiden Olympics.
Daughter of a coal-mine worker of santhal tribe, Laxmirani did not know about Olympics before taking up archery.
Making her third successive Olympic appearance, Bombayla, 31, is the seniormost member of the Indian squad and keeps a low profile.
She has not looked back after winning the team gold in the 2010 Commonwealth Games.
The men's trio, however, failed to qualify for the Olympics for the first time since 2000 and Champia, who had earned the individual quota, was favourite to head to Rio.
But Das had impressed in Antalya with a silver in mixed pair with Deepika and narrowly missed his maiden World Cup individual bronze but not before scaring two-time World champion Kim Woo-jin.
It will really be a milestone for him if he betters Satyadev Prasad's pre-quarterfinal finish of Athens-2004.
The ones to watch out for will be the heavyweights Koreans, the USA, Mexico and Italy, while China and Japan would be the dark-horses.
Koreans are ranked the best in the world and the total number of medals they have won in the Olympic Games so far is 34, including 18 gold, followed by USA's eight gold, in an overall tally of 14.
"Hopefully it's us who will celebrate on the samba street of Brazil," Tiwari said.
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