"There is a lot of lobbying that happens (for the awards). You need to get people (on selection panel) who are extremely fair and take it as it comes and judge performances of athletes equally," said Advani days after Sania Mirza received the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, country's highest sporting honour.
Just when it seemed there would be no controversy in the lead up to this year's function, para-athlete H N Girisha approached the Karnataka High Court challenging Sania's last-minute recommendation for Khel Ratna.
Advani said he was not a fan of taking legal route to get awards and hopes the government does enough to restore the credibility of the awards.
"I am sure government will find a way to restore sanctity of the awards. I am not too happy with the idea of taking the legal route. I am not a fan of that," said the 30-year-old, whose last world title came in the six-red snooker format last month.
"What I want to say to the government is that let's treat every sporting achievement in a pure way. Not based on the popularity of the sport. I don't think the intention of the government is to give awards to people who don't deserve it. I remember when I got Khel Ratna it was a very fair process. I was up against two strong candidates, Mahesh Bhupathi and Rahul Dravid, I had the most number of points and I got it. We should not be swayed by the popularity of the sport," he said.