Sport

WE KNOW HOW STRONG THEY ARE AND THE DEPTH THEY HAVE: WILLIAMSON ON PLAYING AGAINST INDIA

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New Zealand skipper Kane Williamson is “excited” to lock horns with “top-ranked” Team India at a neutral venue in the upcoming World Test Championship (WTC) final.India and New Zealand will face each other in the finals of the WTC at the Ageas Bowl, Southampton, beginning June 18. Williamson said the concept of WTC has pushed teams to go for a win rather than a draw in the past couple of years.“They have looked to bring about more context to the Test format and I think we saw it at the end of the competition, teams trying to push their case for qualifying which made way for a lot of exciting results,” Williamson said in an ICC release.“We saw in Australia, in New Zealand, a lot of teams had a chance to get through thought it proved to be great adding that context and for us to see ourselves in the position we are in the finals now. It is exciting.“We are looking forward to that when we are taking on the top-rank side in the world. We know how strong they are and the depth they have. So exciting to be playing against each other at a neutral venue,” he added.New Zealand and England are currently locking horns in a two-match Test series of which the first game ended in a draw on Sunday. The Kiwis are looking at the WTC final as the third Test match of the mini-series.“There is a carrot at the end that has taken a long time to, I suppose, to accumulate points and have the opportunity to be involved in it,” said Williamson.“To get that chance is exciting and the guys know it. You know it’s sort of the third Test match of the mini-series I suppose, and they are really excited to be involved,” he added.The New Zealand skipper feels WTC has helped ensure the longevity of Test cricket as it helps in keeping the relevance of the longest format alive.“Yeah, that is obviously the idea behind the tournament structure of Test championship and added points and these sorts of things to entice and improve the brand of the game and I think when it came to the crunch time, you could see the equation of what they had to do to be involved in the final,” said Williamson.“You saw sides play that way which is what they are after. Hopefully, that has generated a lot of interest from the public and enjoyment of the Test game, which is obviously what cricketers are involved in. It is the pinnacle and I certainly enjoy playing it. It has added a good element to the Test format,” he added.

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IPL to resume on 19 September in UAE, final on 15 October

BCCI is confident that the remaining IPL games will be held successfully in Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi, says an official.

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The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has zeroed in on the date for the resumption of the 14th edition of the Indian Premier League to be held in UAE. The first game on resumption will be played on September 19 while the final will be hosted on October 15 — the day India will be celebrating Dussehra this year. Speaking to ANI, a BCCI official in the know of developments of the recent meetings between the BCCI and the Emirates Cricket Board (ECB) said the discussions went well and the Indian board is confident that the remaining IPL games will be held successfully in Dubai, Sharjah and Abu Dhabi.“The discussions went really well and with ECB already giving us the oral nod to host the event ahead of the BCCI SGM, it was about closing the deal over the last week. The first game after the season resumes will be held on September 19 while we will have the final on October 15. The BCCI was always keen on a 25-day window to finish the remaining matches,” the official said.Asked about the situation with regards to availability of the foreign players, the official said talks are on and the Indian board expects positive outcomes.“The discussions have started and we are keeping fingers crossed that the foreign players will be mostly available. If a couple of them do not manage to turn up, we shall then decide on the future course of action. But keeping fingers crossed for now and hoping to have an action-packed end to the 14th edition in UAE,” the official said.In fact, franchises are also confident that the BCCI will engage in positive discussions with the foreign boards and make players available for the remaining games.“What we were made aware after the BCCI SGM is that the board will be speaking to the foreign boards and check on the availability of the foreign cricketers. We are confident that the BCCI will find the best possible solution and honestly it is a matter of the BCCI officials speaking to the respective board officials, so we should wait to hear from the board on this.“Yes, if we do end up missing some of the foreign stars, that is an area which would need some attention when it comes to picking replacements as the foreign players are also integral to the teams. Team balance can go for a toss, so keeping fingers crossed on that one,” the franchise official said.

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PUNJAB CM AMARINDER SINGH WISHES SPEEDY RECOVERY TO MILKHA SINGH

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Punjab Chief Minister Captain Amarinder Singh on Saturday spoke to Milkha Singh’s son Jeev Milkha Singh to enquire about the condition of the legendary athlete.

Amarinder Singh also wished Milkha Singh a speedy recovery and said that everyone is praying for the track legend’s well-being. “Spoke to @JeevMilkhaSingh son of ‘Flying Sikh’ & national icon Milkha Singh Ji to enquire about the condition of his father who is admitted in ICU due to #Covid19. Conveyed my best wishes to him for his speedy recovery. All of us in Punjab are praying for his well-being,” Capt. Amarinder Singh tweeted.

Meanwhile, Milkha Singh is doing better as he battles COVID-19 in the ICU of the NHE block of the Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research (PGIMER) hospital.

“On the basis of all the medical parameters today i.e 5th June 2021, his condition has been observed better than yesterday,” Prof. Ashok Kumar, Spokesperson, PGIMER, Chandigarh confirmed on Saturday.

The former Indian sprinter had tested positive for coronavirus two weeks ago and was in isolation at his home in Chandigarh before he was admitted to the ICU on Thursday. He is currently being monitored by a team of three doctors at PGIMER.

Earlier on Friday, PM Narendra Modi spoke to Milkha Singh and expressed hope that the iconic former athlete will be back soon to “bless and inspire athletes, who will be participating in the Tokyo Olympics.”

The legendary athlete is a four-time Asian Games gold-medallist and 1958 Commonwealth Games champion. He still is the only Indian athlete to win Gold in the Asian and Commonwealth Championship.

He was awarded the Padma Shri, India’s fourth-highest civilian honor, in recognition of his sporting achievements.

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JOE ROOT’S CAPTAINCY SHOULD BE A CAUSE FOR CONCERN, SAYS IAN CHAPPELL

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Former Australia skipper Ian Chappell has said that Joe Root’s captaincy lacks imagination which might haunt England during the Ashes slated to be played later this year.

The first Men’s Ashes Test will begin at Brisbane’s Gabba from December 8-12 ahead of a day-night Test at the Adelaide Oval from December 16-20. Chappell said in Australia there are situations when a skipper has to be imaginative which isn’t the strength of the England skipper.

“Root’s captaincy often lacks imagination and reason. His tendency to have long discussions with senior players is reminiscent of Alastair Cook at his worst,” Chappell wrote in his column for ESPNcricinfo. “There’s a difference between a captain who consults and one who is uncertain; dithering is a bad look for a captain. There are times in Australia when a captain has to be imaginative in order to force the issue and this is not one of Root’s strengths,” he added.

Chappell said England has a group of fast bowlers who can win a series but the team lacks strength in the batting lineup.

“England possesses a potential series-winning group of fast bowlers. It is the top-order batting and Joe Root’s captaincy that should be cause for concern,” said Chappell.

The former Australia skipper highlighted how pacers Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc, and Josh Hazlewood can easily tear apart English batting.

“The opening combination of Dominic Sibley and Rory Burns is both ungainly and unconvincing. Pat Cummins, Mitchell Starc and Josh Hazlewood should rejoice if both names appear in the top slots on the team sheet at the Gabba,” said Chappell.

“Given the skill of Australia’s pace trio, poor starts could be a death sentence for England,” he added. For the first time in 26 years, the final Ashes Test will not be staged in Sydney.

The traditional Boxing Day and New Year’s Tests will be played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (December 26-30) and Sydney Cricket Ground (January 5-9) respectively, with the final Test scheduled for Perth’s Optus Stadium (January 14-18).

The fifth and final match of the 2019 Ashes was won by England by 135 runs to level the series 2-2. However, Australia retained the urn as they had previously won the Ashes in the 2017/18 season.

This was the first time in 47 years that the Ashes ended as a draw. The last series which ended as a draw between England and Australia was in 1972.

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Five Olympic-bound athletes yet to receive first dose of Covid-19 vaccine

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Boxer Simranjeet and shooter Saurabh Chaudhary are among the five Olympic-bound athletes who are yet to be given their first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine.

Around 120 athletes and 27 para-athletes have received their first dose of the vaccine while 58 athletes and four para-athletes have got their second dose. Moreover, 114 coaches and support staff have got their first dose while 37 members have received their second dose as well.

“Of the actual Olympic bound Athletes only 5 are left for their 1st dose. All five were Covid positive and have since recovered,” sources in the known developments told ANI.

“Boxer Simranjeet, Four Shooters Saurabh Chaudhary, Rahi Sarnobat, Deepak Kumar and

Mairaj Ahmed Khan are ones who have been left. Request Boxing and Shooting to get needful done urgently and revert,” the source informed.

Earlier this week, Indian Olympic Association (IOA) president Narinder Batra said that the upcoming Tokyo Games will be a level playing field for everyone involved and opined that there is no country that has a significant advantage heading into the Games.

“Athletes have been preparing well, they are as fit as any other in the world. They are raring to go, preparation is going on. Some athletes are here in India, some are abroad, some will reach Tokyo directly. It would be a level playing field for all. The entire contingent is preparing well. When every stakeholder (NSFs, SAI) is on the same page, the work is streamlined,” Batra had told ANI.

When asked about the vaccination of Olympic-bound athletes, Batra said: “From IOC’s side, there is nothing mandatory, they have some guidelines in Tokyo, if you reach the finals and then you test positive for COVID-19, so nobody knows what will happen. But why wait for such a situation, the best solution is that we get every party associated vaccinated. It is our duty to get our athletes vaccinated.”

Tokyo Olympics will begin on July 23 and the Games will run up to August 8 this year. The event was slated to be held last year, but it was postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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INDIA SHIFTS FOCUS TO CRUCIAL MATCH AGAINST BANGLADESH AFTER LOSS AGAINST QATAR

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The focal point has shifted, it’s no more about the fight put up against Qatar. That’s the past. Rather, it’s now about the forthcoming match against Bangladesh in the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022, and AFC Asian Cup China 2023 preliminary joint round qualification round. That’s the present, also the future.

Call it the beauty or the tragedy of the bio bubble, the Indian and Bangladeshi contingent despite being in the same team hotel haven’t exchanged pleasantries in Doha so far – they haven’t met as yet. Different floors, different venues for meals, dedicated timings for gym sessions, and different venues for training.

Both teams had mixed results – while Bangladesh came back from behind to hold Afghanistan 1-1 and earn a point, India, despite fighting it out with 10-men against Asian champions Qatar did manage to win hearts, but returned empty handed.

Coach Igor Stimac is very meticulous. He never shouts, but simplifies and explains. He is patient, understanding. The boys feel it, nod, and work their hearts out.

Brandon Fernandes states, “We are moving as a team and we need to back each other. We are aware that we have specific roles in the team. The next match is extremely crucial as we need to sustain the momentum gained in the first match. The first match is history.”

You take a sneak peek into the Bangladesh camp, not in a direct face-to-face meet, but over the phone. “I am very pleased with the performance against Afghanistan. The players did very well on the field, and worked extremely hard. It reflects the attitude which this team possesses – to come back from behind and get back into the game,” Bangladesh coach Jamie Day mentions.

Captain Jamal Bhuyan, also the poster boy of Bangladesh football, who has played for Mohammedan Sporting in the Hero I-League, feels it’s “going to be an intense match” when the two teams take the field.

“It will be intense – with a lot of battles. It’s a beautiful match to be a part of. Last time in Kolkata we were disappointed not to get the 3 points as India scored very late in the game. We have that hunger in us, and we know we can do some damage,” he avers.

“The confidence in our team is good at the moment. We had our chances to win against Afghanistan. We take that confidence with us into the India game,” Jamal adds.

Day, nevertheless, mentions the difference in the ranking between the two teams. “India is a very good team. They are a much higher-ranked team than us who should be beating the likes of Bangladesh. The difference in ranking and quality is huge. In Kolkata, we did play very well. I look back and feel that India had an off-day on that night at the majestic YBK,” he expresses.

“You look at India’s last match against Qatar – with 10-men they fought like warriors and lost 0-1. It only depicts the quality in their side. We are looking forward to the game. We are aware that we need to play to our maximum, and hope India have another off-day.”

Defender Subhashish Bose, however, was quick to point out that the rankings don’t matter once you take the field. “We are aware of the quality of the Bangladesh team. They are a side that plays a lot of counter-attack football, and that is very dangerous. India versus Bangladesh have always been exciting and close matches. We have huge respect for Bangladesh,” Bose maintains.

Meanwhile, Bhuyan did admit that there are talks of him playing in the Hero ISL, but did clarify that “nothing is concrete as yet”.

“At the moment there is nothing concrete. But I think if I join the Hero ISL it would be a good move, and also there would be a huge following into the ISL from Bangladesh fans because they are crazy about football.”

India’s match against Bangladesh is scheduled for June 7 (Monday), the kick-off of which is slated for IST 7.30 pm. The match will be telecasted live on Star Sports Network and Disney + Hotstar.

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Bad boys or vicious crooks?

It is said that fame, wealth and glamour are not easily digested by everyone. From James Snook to Sushil Kumar, history is full of sportspersons whose careers ended in disgrace.

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Do you know that 92 Olympians have been convicted for criminal acts so far? Out of whom 33 are Olympic medalists. Now the 34th name going to be added in this list is of India’s all-time great wrestler Sushil Kumar, a wrestler who was once an icon of Indian sports or a role model for the youth across the country.

Sushil KumarMike TysonO.J. SimpsonJames SnookOscar PretoriusBruce Kimball

He has received such a feat in the Olympics which no other Indian could get. He also holds the distinction of being the only world champion in wrestling and has won the most gold medals at the Commonwealth Games. But today, he is accused of killing Sagar Dhankhar of his own akhada.

It is said that glare of fame, wealth and glamour is not digested by everyone. When influence builds, the scope also increases. In such a situation, the selection of a good person is important, but Sushil failed in that, due to which his years of penance got mixed in the dust. Despite losing his first wrestling in the 2008 Olympics, the formula of repechage gave Sushil an opportunity where Sushil after losing his first bout, won a bronze medal. With this victory, he got more respect and money than Abhinav Bindra, the only gold medalist of the Olympics till now.

But after converting Bronze to Silver in the next Olympics, he was in touch with some influential people and not caring about right and wrong, he got trapped in the world of darkness. He forgot that this is a quagmire to earn money. If his wife or any of his relatives had made him understand, then such a situation would not have occurred today. Now the question is whether he will get a chance of repechage round like the Beijing Olympics (where Sushil had won his first Olympic medal) in his life so that he can wash all his allegations and start a new life. Actually, repechage rounds take place between the losers to the finalists.

Here, the case is of the murder of fellow wrestler Sagar Dhankhar, his disciple. From James Snook to Sushil Kumar, history is full of such vicious people from the sports world. Actually, he did not even realize when he finally turned from a star player to a vicious crook.

James Snook won gold in the shooting team event at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics. He had killed the woman he had an extra-marital affair with. Snook was put to death by electrocution. In the 70s, American football star O.J. Simpson murdered his wife and her boyfriend. The incident also tarnished his Hall of Fame image.

Similarly, Bruce Kimball, who won the gold in platform diving in the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics, became a star after this success, but he also could not digest this success. Two years later, driving with alcohol proved to be costly for him as he crushed two people under his car.

Who can forget the name of Mike Tyson in the boxing world. It would not be wrong to call him the greatest heavyweight boxing champion of all time. This man was imprisoned for six years in a rape case. He was arrested for drugs in 2006. Tyson was such an aggressive boxer that on one occasion he chewed the ear of his opponent Evander Holyfield. Sushil was also accused of chewing the ear of a Kazakhstan wrestler in the semi-final wrestling of the London Olympics.

Argentine star Diego Maradona was awarded the FIFA Player of the Century award. The captain of the team that won the 1986 World Cup is remembered for two brilliant goals in a match against England. One goal was named ‘Hand of God’ and the other goal was called ‘Goal of the century’. He had become addicted to cocaine and his critics started calling him a drug addict.

Golf world’s biggest star Tiger Woods has also been arrested for drunken driving, while this golfer had relationships with many women and he had to pay a big price of getting divorced from his wife. American swimmer Clat Keller, who won five medals, including two golds in Olympic swimming, was arrested for inciting a riot in the US.

In recent years, Oscar Pretorius of South Africa has been found guilty of murdering his girlfriend. This player was popularly known as Blade Runner and was a worldwide brand ambassador of sports for the disabled. The player had prosthetic legs and created a flutter by winning six gold, one silver and one bronze medals at the Paralympics. He later argued that he had killed his girlfriend under a misunderstanding. He was first sentenced to six years and then it was increased to 17 years.

It was a relief for all these bad boys that their medals were not taken away. The Olympic Committee or the organizers took decision to take away medals only if they are caught in doping during the Games and found guilty of indecent behavior on the playground. So far, a hundred athletes have been stripped of their medals for doping alone, including star athletes like Ben Johnson and Marion Jones.

Russian weightlifter Ibragim Samadov was stripped of his Olympic bronze medal at Barcelona 1992 after he refused to lean forward to accept it on the podium and, after taking it in his hand, dropped it onto the floor and walked away. Swedish Greco-Roman wrestler Era Abrahamian refused to accept her bronze medal at the 2000 Sydney Olympics against a referee’s decision, but there have been instances when a player has been awarded a medal at the Olympics despite having a professional contract. There have been cases of disqualifications.

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