India opened their account with women's shot putter Manpreet Kaur grabbing the gold medal with a throw of 18.28m on the opening day of the 22nd Asian Athletics Championships.
Manpreet also qualified for the World Championship in London by virtue of being Asian Champion.
Seasoned Vikas Gowda, a last minute entry into the squad, won bronze medal in the men's discus throw event.
Manpreet, who turned 27 on Thursday, upstaged defending champion Chinese Guo Tianqian to give herself a perfect birthday gift at the packed Kalinga Stadium.
Tianqian took the silver with a best throw of 17.91m while Aya Ota of Japan got the bronze with 15.45m.
Manpreet though was expected to win the gold today as her 18.86m at Asian Grand Prix in Jianhua (China) was the season's best in the field of eight, in absence world No 4 Gong Lijiao of China (19.56m).
The Asian Championships winner get an automatic berth for the World Championships to be held in London next month but Manpreet, who originally hails from a village near Patiala in
Punjab, had already qualified for the global flagship event with her own national record-improving effort of 18.86, In China.
However, in the men's discus throw, Vikas Gowda failed to defend his title but grabbed a bronze with a best effort of 60.81m.
Gowda's long-time nemesis at the Asian circuit, Ehsan Haddadi of Iran took the gold with a best throw of 64.54m while Malaysia's Muhammad Irfan won the silver with 60.96m.
Earlier, Manpreet, who returned to the circuit last year after taking some time off due to the birth of her first child, said she was happy to have crossed the 18m mark.
"This is the second best throw of my career and I am very happy for this performance. Before the event, I told myself that I should go beyond the 18m mark and anything extra beyond that would be satisfied," she said after having a lap of honour of the Kalinga Stadium drapped wit the tri-colour.
Gowda, who turned 34 on Thursday, also briefly draped himself in tri-colour, posing for the shutterbugs, acknowledging the cheers from the crowd.