Sports

Asia Junior Badminton Championships: Tanvi, Vennala assure India of first-ever double in women’s singles


Indian shuttlers Tanvi Sharma and Vennala Kalagotla assured the country of two medals after storming into the singles semifinals at the Badminton Asia Junior Individual Championships here on Friday (July 25, 2025).

With both shuttlers assured of at least a bronze, India has secured an unprecedented two women’s singles medals in a single edition of the tournament.

Second seed Tanvi maintained her dominant form by defeating fifth seed Thalita Ramadhani Wiryawan of Indonesia 21-19, 21-14 in a swift 35-minute quarterfinal.

Tanvi has been in sublime touch throughout the tournament, securing all her wins in straight games so far.

Joining her in the last four is Vennala, who braved a strong challenge from Thailand’s Janyaporn Meepanthong to claim a 21-18, 17-21, 21-17 victory.

Vennala took the opening game 21-18 with some sharp rallies, but Janyaporn fought back to edge the second 21-17, forcing the match into a decider.

In the final game, Vennala pulled ahead in the closing stages, eventually sealing a three-game victory to earn her semifinal berth.

Both Indians now face Chinese opponents in the semifinals, with Tanvi set to take on eighth seed Yin Yi Qing and Vennala going up against Liu Si Ya.



Source link

Indian compound archers win three medals in World University Games


Parneet Kaur and Kushal Dalal made crucial contributions as Indian compound archers claimed three medals, including a gold, a silver and a bronze, in team events at the World University Games in Essen, Germany, on Friday (July 25, 2025).

Parneet and Kushal joined hands to rally from being a point down in the second end to defeat the Korean duo of Park Yerin and Seunghyun Park 157-154 (39-39, 38-39, 40-36, 40-40) in a closely fought mixed team event title clash and win the gold.

Kushal, Sahil Jadhav and Hritik Sharma had a bright start against Turkey, comprising Batuhan Akcaoglu, Yunus Arslan, Yakup Yildiz, in the men’s team summit clash, but slipped in the final end to be beaten 232-231 (57-58, 57-59, 60-57, 58-57).

World championships women’s team gold medallist Parneet, Madhura Dhamangaonkar and Avneet Kaur dispatched the United Kingdom, consisting of Hallie Boulton, Chloe A’Bear, Grace Chappell, 232-224 (59-51, 58-58, 56-56, 59-59) to take the bronze medal.

Parneet, Kushal and Sahil will compete for individual medals on Saturday (July 26, 2025).



Source link

Sumit Nagal sails into semifinals


Sumit Nagal sustained his fine run and beat qualifier Nicolas Kicker of Argentina 6-4, 6-3 in the quarterfinals of the €91,250 Challenger tennis tournament in Tampere, Finland, on Friday (July 25, 2025).

The results:

€181,250 Challenger, Zug, Switzerland

Doubles (quarterfinals): Nam JiSung (Kor) & Takeru Yuzuki (Jpn) bt Siddhant Banthia & Alexander Donski (Bul) 6-4, 6-2.

$160,000 Challenger, Bloomfield Hills, USA

Doubles (quarterfinals): Jason Jung (Tpe) & Reese Stalder (USA) bt Niki Poonacha & Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan 6-1, 6-2; Stefan Dostanic & Benjamin Kittay (USA) bt Anirudh Chandrasekar & Ramkumar Ramanathan 4-6, 6-4, [10-7].

€91,250 Challenger, Tampere, Finland

Singles (quarterfinals): Sumit Nagal bt Nicolas Kicker (Arg) 6-4, 6-3.

$30,000 ITF men, Champaign, USA

Singles (pre-quarterfinals): Dhakshineswar Suresh bt Evan Bynoe (USA) 6-3, 7-5.

$15,000 ITF men, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand

Doubles (quarterfinals): Sai Karteek Reddy & Tomohiro Masabayashi (Jpn) bt Krittin Koaykul & Jirat Navasirisomboon (Tha) 6-3, 6-1.

€100,000 WTA, Palermo, Italy

Doubles (quarterfinals): Renata Jamrichova (Svk) & Tara Wuerth (Cro) bt Rutuja Bhosale & Peangtarn Plipuech (Tha) 7-5, 6-4.

$100,000 ITF women, Evansville, USA

Doubles (pre-quarterfinals): Fiona Crawley & Sara Daavettila (USA) bt Wakana Sonobe (Jpn) & Sahaja Yamalapalli 6-4, 6-4; Arianne Hartono (Ned) & Prarthana Thombare bt YeXin Ma (Chn) & Himeno Sakatsume (Jpn) 6-4, 6-0.

$30,000 ITF women, Monastir, Tunisia

Doubles (quarterfinals): Dayeon Back (Kor) & Vaidehee Chaudhari bt Kanon Sawashiro (Jpn) & Beatrise Zeltina (Lat) 6-1, 7-6(4).

$15,000 ITF women, Huamantla, Mexico

Doubles (quarterfinals): Kaitlyn Carnicella (USA) & Amanda Elkin (Mex) bt Gala Arangio (Arg) & Diva Bhatia 6-2, 6-2.

$15,000 ITF women, Nakhon Pathom, Thailand

Singles (quarterfinals): Yuno Kitahara (Jpn) bt Zeel Desai 4-6, 6-4, 6-2.

$15,000 ITF women, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, Spain

Doubels (quarterfinals): Sravya Shivani & Emma Kamper (Den) bt Warona Mdlulwa & Wozuko Mdlulwa (RSA) 6-3, 6-4.

Published – July 26, 2025 05:10 am IST



Source link

Messi and Alba suspended for one match for missing MLS All-Star


Inter Miami defender Jordi Alba, left, and forward Lionel Messi. File

Inter Miami defender Jordi Alba, left, and forward Lionel Messi. File
| Photo Credit: AP

Lionel Messi has been suspended for one game after sitting out the MLS All-Star Game without prior approval, the league said on Friday (July 25, 2025).

The Inter Miami forward and his teammate, Jordi Alba, did not compete on Wednesday (July 23, 2025) despite not being injured, even though they were included in the All-Star roster.

“Per league rules, any player who does not participate in the All-Star Game without prior approval from the league is ineligible to compete in their club’s next match,” MLS said in a statement.

The suspension will see Messi, the league’s main attraction, miss Inter Miami’s match against FC Cincinnati on Saturday (July 26, 2025). Cincinnati lead the Eastern Conference standings.

Messi has scored 18 goals so far this season.

“I know Lionel Messi loves this league. I don’t think there’s a player – or anyone – who has done more for Major League Soccer than Messi. I fully understand, respect, and admire his commitment to Inter Miami, and I respect his decision,” MLS Commissioner Don Garber said in a statement.

“Unfortunately, we have a long-standing policy regarding participation in the All-Star Game, and we had to enforce it. It was a very difficult decision.”

All-Star competitions are a mainstay of North American sports, where the men’s “Big Four” leagues use the exhibitions to boost their players’ profiles, but a rarity in professional soccer.

“We’re going to take a hard look at the policy moving forward. I’m committed to working with our players to determine how the rule should evolve,” said Garber.

Messi rested this week, according to Inter Miami coach Javier Mascherano.

“Look, players always have discomfort, especially when they play every three days,” Mascherano was quoted as saying by ESPN.



Source link

Time And Tide may score an encore in the Bangalore City Sprint Championship Gold Cup


Time And Tide, who is in rousing form as evidenced by his track movements, may score an encore in the Bangalore City Sprint Championship Gold Cup (1,200m), the feature event of the races to be held here on Saturday (July 26).

False rails (width about 3.5m from 1,600m to the winning post) will be in position.

1. BRAVE DANCER PLATE (1,800m), rated 00 to 25, 2.00 p.m.: 1. Highland Dream (3) Abhishek Mhatre 62, 2. Sea Diamond (1) Vinod Shinde 60.5, 3. Royal Whisper (2) S. Sachin 59 and 4. Double Scotch (4) Antony 53.

1. DOUBLE SCOTCH, 2. SEA DIAMOND

2. RED DIVINE PLATE (1,100m), maiden 3-y-o only, (Terms), 2.30: 1. Efficacy (12) Shreyas S 56, 2. Jersey Garden (4) Antony 56, 3. Larson (1) Rayan 56, 4. Midnight Blue (8) A.A. Vikrant 56, 5. Sea Legacy (3) A.S. Peter 56, 6. Agrima (-) (-) 54.5, 7. Lysandra (5) Vinod Shinde 54.5, 8. My Honey (6) L.A. Rozario 54.5, 9. Power Pilot (7) R. Pradeep 54.5, 10. Razzmatazz (11) Siddaraju P 54.5, 11. Sea Charm (2) B. Dharshan 54.5 and 12. White Secret (10) A. Ramu 54.5.

1. EFFICACY, 2. MY HONEY, 3. MIDNIGHT BLUE

3. HONEY DAY PLATE (1,400m), rated 20 to 45, 5-y-o & over, 3.00: 1. Disruptor (3) S. Sachin 62, 2. Springsteen (8) Pavan 61, 3. Super Kind (4) Abhishek Mhatre 60.5, 4. Elveden (2) Aleemuddin 59.5, 5. Able One (1) Salman Khan 56, 6. War Trail (9) Arman Khan 56, 7. Baltimore (5) Asirvatham 55, 8. Double Vision (7) G. Vivek 54.5 and 9. Gandolfini (6) Akshay K 54.5.

1. ELVEDEN, 2. GANDOLFINI, 3. DOUBLE VISION

4. LUMBINI STUD PLATE (1,200m), rated 40 to 65, 4-y-o & over, 3.30: 1. Macron (3) R. Pradeep 61.5, 2. Felisa (9) Pavan 57, 3. Straordinario (2) Hindu S 57, 4. Corinthian (5) Akshay K 56.5, 5. Knotty Scotty (1) G. Vivek 56, 6. Storm Shadow (6) Dhanu S 55, 7. Run For The Sun (8) Antony 54.5, 8. Darrion (7) L.A. Rozario 54 and 9. Defence Counsel (4) Abhishek Mhatre 54.

1. CORINTHIAN, 2. KNOTTY SCOTTY, 3. RUN FOR THE SUN

5. LT. COL. GAUNT MEMORIAL TROPHY (1,200m), rated 40 to 65, 4.00: 1. Knotty Blush (6) Srinath 60.5, 2. Don Carlos (7) G. Vivek 60, 3. Perfect Legend (8) Abhishek Mhatre 59.5, 4. Knotty One (5) Asirvatham 58, 5. Sassy (4) Vinod Shinde 56.5, 6. Ebotse (3) Antony 54.5, 7. Gloriousness (9) Suraj 54, 8. Dufy (1) Shreyas S 53.5 and 9. Whirlwind (2) Hindu S 51.

1. PERFECT LEGEND, 2. GLORIOUSNESS, 3. WHIRLWIND

6. BANGALORE CITY SPRINT CHAMPIONSHIP GOLD CUP (1,200m), 3-y-o & over, (Terms), 4.30: 1. Aldgate (4) Antony 60, 2. Crown Drive (5) Hindu S 60, 3. Imperial Blue (2) Arvind K 60, 4. Knotty Charmer (1) G. Vivek 60 and 5. Time And Tide (3) Sandesh 60.

1. TIME AND TIDE, 2. CROWN DRIVE

7. XISCA PLATE (1,500m), rated 20 to 45, 5.00: 1. Hyperdrive (6) Pavan 60, 2. Kiss Of Grey (2) Suraj 60, 3. Sunlit Path (4) Srinath 57.5, 4. Imperial Star (8) M. Prabhakaran 57, 5. Thrill Of Brazil (5) Antony 56.5, 6. Breeze Bluster (1) Koshi K 55.5, 7. Anchorage (7) S. Sachin 53.5, 8. Assurances (3) Siddaraju P 53.5 and 9. Sling Shot (9) Vinod Shinde 51.

1. KISS OF GREY, 2. THRILL OF BRAZIL, 3. HYPERDRIVE

Day’s best: TIME AND TIDE

Double: EFFICACY – KISS OF GREY

Jkt: 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7; Tr (i): 2, 3 and 4; (ii): 5, 6 and 7.

Published – July 26, 2025 12:55 am IST



Source link

R. Praggnanandhaa summons his best and shows why Magnus Carlsen sees a lot of himself in the Indian


In the latest World rankings released by FIDE, three of the top 10 are from India. The only other country that has more than one player in that list, published at the beginning of the month by the world chess governing body, is the United States, which has two.

R. Praggnanandhaa is ranked fourth, making him the highest ranked Indian; he is followed in fifth and sixth places by Arjun Erigaisi and D. Gukesh, respectively. It is the first time that the 19-year-old from Chennai is the India No. 1.

Not a big deal

Not that he considers it a big deal. “I am just [three points] ahead [of Arjun and Gukesh],” he stressed while talking to The Hindu recently over the phone from Zagreb, one of several international cities he has been crisscrossing through of late. 

He, however, admits he is rather happy with the way he has been playing over the last few months. His current Elo rating also reflects that happiness. It is his career-best — 2779.

ALSO READ | Meet Eugene Torre, the pioneering Asian GM who beat Karpov and befriended Fischer

He truly seems to have pushed past the disappointments of 2024, which wasn’t a great year for him, especially by the high standard he has set himself. Yes, he did play his part in India’s stunning triumph at the Chess Olympiad in Budapest, but he wasn’t as consistent last year as he would have liked.

This year, though, he has been playing quite superb chess, some of the best in his career. He has already won three important classical tournaments, including the prestigious Tata Steel at Wijk aan Zee in the Netherlands.

“It was a very important win for me because I was coming from not a great 2024,” says Praggnanandhaa. “I had finished the previous year missing a medal at the World Rapid Championship; I was so close. I lost a game from a winning position in the penultimate round. So coming from that, starting the year with such a win certainly gives you confidence.”

This looks familiar: Magnus Carlsen has often spoken highly of Praggnanandhaa. ‘Magnus did say that Pragg plays the most similar to him,’ Ella Victoria, Carlsen’s wife, said recently

This looks familiar: Magnus Carlsen has often spoken highly of Praggnanandhaa. ‘Magnus did say that Pragg plays the most similar to him,’ Ella Victoria, Carlsen’s wife, said recently
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

And Wijk aan Zee was one event he always wanted to win, from the time he was a kid. “It has so much history, of 87 years, and it was won in the past by several World champions,” he says. “So winning that tournament was very special for me.”

He followed it up by winning the Superbet Chess Classic in Romania and the UzChess Cup in Uzbekistan. “Tashkent was special because I wasn’t thinking about winning it till the last couple of rounds,” he reveals. “I was one and a half points behind the leader, and it didn’t look like I had much of a chance, but things went my way. I managed to take my chances, against Arjun and Nodirbek Abdusattorov, two of the strongest players in the world right now. Then suddenly, I was in the tiebreakers, and I won.”

ALSO READ | Should chess be an Olympic sport?

In Romania, too, it was through the tiebreakers that he emerged as the champion, overcoming challenges from Alireza Firouzja and Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. And it was his maiden title on the Grand Chess Tour.

“Yes, this is one of the best phases of my career,” says Praggnanandhaa. “I have tried to change a few things about my game, and they have gone my way. I am much more confident and I push myself more in those critical games.”

Handling time pressure

He is also happy with the way he has handled the tiebreakers. “I needed to push myself in those games and I was able to do that,” he says. “They are blitz games and they go down to these few seconds, which can go any way. I did need some luck in some of those games, but pushing myself certainly helped.”

He is hoping to continue his form for the rest of the year, which has many major tournaments coming up, including the FIDE Grand Swiss, the Sinquefield Cup and the World Cup, which India will host.

“It is nice that the World Cup is being held in India,” he says. “It will be an exciting event as there is a lot of interest in India in chess, and people can get to watch such a big tournament. And I am also excited to play the World Cup in India.”

Praggnanandhaa is, of course, not going to be the only serious contender from India. He says being part of a group of strong Indian players definitely helps.

“I was following Gukesh’s World Championship match in Singapore and his victory over Ding Liren was exciting,” he says. “Arjun crossing the 2800 mark in Elo rating was also inspiring. With our performances, we all motivate each other. And it is nice to see other young Indian players are also doing well. Nihal Sarin is now playing more classical events, and he is winning tournaments too. And there is Aravindh Chithambaram, too.”

ALSO READ | FIDE confirms World Cup in India, host city yet to be announced

Gukesh, Nihal, Arjun and Praggnanandhaa have benefited from significant support from corporates. “Sponsorship is very important,” he says. “You have to travel a lot for tournaments, and training, too. And these things are not easy, and are expensive.

“For instance, when I prepared for the Candidates tournament, I needed to have a team and have training camps in person. All that requires financial support. I have been fortunate that Adani Group has been supporting me in a huge way. And they were there even when I was not having a good time last year. They were there supporting me throughout.”

He is encouraged by the fact that more corporates in India are investing in chess. “And we need more strong events like the Chennai Grandmasters,” he says. “I don’t mind playing anywhere but playing in India is always special to me.”

Praggnanandhaa is also happy to find chess becoming even more mainstream. He will feature in the Esports World Cup, where chess will make its debut on July 29. He has joined Team Liquid, which boasts World No. 1 Magnus Carlsen and No. 3 Fabiano Caruana.

The Magnus effect

He says he is really glad to be part of that team. Carlsen, the five-time World champion from Norway, has often spoken highly of him, and the Indian has scored some memorable wins against the all-time great over the last few years.

Last week in Las Vegas, in fact, he beat Carlsen twice inside four days at the Freestyle Grand Slam. During the live stream of that event, Carlsen’s wife Ella Victoria made an interesting remark while talking about Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa and Arjun. “Magnus did say that Pragg plays the most similar to him,” she said.

High praise indeed.



Source link

Max Verstappen’s Red Bull future in the air, following Christian Horner’s sacking and Mercedes interest


If there is one truism that has stood the test of time, it is that empires always fall. Some crumble quickly, while others wither away slowly, even as the rulers fail to realise the erosion of power and influence. This applies to history, big businesses and sporting outfits.

Sport, in particular, has seen many rises and falls, given the relatively short playing careers of professional athletes and how that impacts team fortunes. 

Past glory

The West Indies did not lose a Test cricket series from April 1980 to April 1995. It has since continued to plummet to new lows. Manchester United hasn’t won the Premier League since legendary manager Alex Ferguson retired after guiding the club to its 20th top-flight title in 2013. Last season, the Red Devils finished 15th in the standings, their lowest in five decades.

In the world of Formula One, Ferrari hasn’t won a title since 2008, a period following the departure of its famous axis of Ross Brawn, Michael Schumacher and Jean Todt, which had powered the Scuderia to stupendous success from 1999 to 2004.

ALSO READ | Will Piastri vs. Norris go the way of Formula One’s other stormy intra-team battles?

However, unlike most other sports, where bringing in a few exceptional players can quickly transform a team’s fortunes, turning the ship around is more complex in motorsport. It takes years to establish the team structure required to compete for wins and titles. So, when a successful outfit starts to fall apart, it can go off the rails spectacularly.

Earlier this month, Red Bull, which has won four drivers’ and two constructors’ titles over the last four seasons, hit the news for the wrong reasons when team boss Christian Horner was sacked.

Horner has been at the helm of the energy drink giant’s main F1 team since it entered the sport in 2005. In the cut-throat world of competition, his 20-year stint is one of the longest tenures at the helm for someone who is not an owner.

Horner was instrumental in the team’s success, luring design genius Adrian Newey away from McLaren in the first year. Newey went on to lay the foundations for the squad’s tremendous run of triumphs from 2010 to 2013 and from 2021 to 2024.

In all, Red Bull has won eight drivers’ and six constructors’ titles, and its 124 race wins make it the fourth-most successful team in the sport’s 76-year history.

Horner’s exit comes on the back of other high-profile Red Bull departures over the last year, including that of Newey, who joined Aston Martin, and sporting director Jonathan Wheatley, currently team principal at Sauber.

Horner has been in the eye of the storm since February last year, when he was accused of sexual harassment by a female employee. He was cleared of the claims by an internal investigation, but his position has been tenuous. Red Bull’s drastic drop in form since the middle of last year also weakened his hand. There are reasons to believe that his underplaying of Newey’s influence forced the legendary designer to leave.

ALSO READ | Madrid’s new street circuit to debut in 2026, replacing Imola on F1 schedule

Newey also indicated that the engineering team did not heed his warnings about the capricious nature of the car as early as 2023, when Red Bull won 21 of 22 races. Only Verstappen has been able to live with the car’s handling. The reigning champion is almost heroically keeping Red Bull afloat, having scored 165 of the team’s 172 points. He is third in the drivers’ standings, 69 behind leader Oscar Piastri.

Not sustainable

The fact that Verstappen has managed two wins and consistently fights for the podium, even occasionally securing pole, demonstrates his exceptional ability behind a problematic car. However, the 27-year-old has made clear his frustrations of having to wring its neck to extract miraculous results every weekend.

As it often happens, whenever there is trouble in the kingdom, it attracts enemies who sense an opportunity to strike gold. Since last year, Mercedes and its part-owner team boss Toto Wolff have made no secret of courting the four-time champion.

Coveted target: Toto Wolff missed the chance to sign a teenaged Verstappen in 2015, but has always hoped to one day get his man.

Coveted target: Toto Wolff missed the chance to sign a teenaged Verstappen in 2015, but has always hoped to one day get his man.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

Wolff missed the chance to sign a teenaged Verstappen in 2015, as Red Bull offered the Dutchman a seat immediately in its sister team Toro Rosso, something Mercedes couldn’t guarantee. Smarting from that snub, Wolff has always hoped to one day get his man.

Another factor that was in play until recently was the simmering tension between the Verstappen camp and Horner. Max’s father Jos attacked the now-sacked team boss publicly last year after the harassment allegations, saying the team was in danger of being torn apart as long as Horner remained in the hot seat. Seen in this light, could Red Bull’s sacking of Horner have been a means of placating the Verstappen camp into staying, given the significance of next season?

In 2026, F1 will transition to new sustainable power units. Red Bull is taking a step into the unknown by building its own powertrains. Traditionally, engines are built by OEMs and not independent racing teams, which prefer to focus on the chassis and partner with a major auto manufacturer for engine supply.

But when Red Bull’s current partner Honda pulled out in 2021, Horner pushed for Red Bull to become an engine manufacturer. Despite hiring heavily from rival teams, there are now murmurs that Red Bull’s engine is behind Mercedes in terms of competitiveness.

ALSO READ | India’s first F1 driver Narain Karthikeyan’s life to be immortalised on screen

The annual summer break (after the Hungarian GP on August 3 this season) is around the time when most driver contracts are renewed, and even though Verstappen has a deal until 2028, there are always get-out clauses.

Mercedes has a potential opening next year, with George Russell’s contract ending at the end of 2025. The Briton has revealed his situation is dependent on Verstappen.

In any other scenario, Russell, who proved faster than Lewis Hamilton in their years as teammates and is performing at a high level this season, would have been a shoo-in for an automatic renewal. The fact that it has not happened shows how seriously Wolff believes he has a chance to land the big fish.

Into the unknown: Red Bull is building its own powertrains for F1’s new regulations regime — not a task independent racing teams typically undertake.

Into the unknown: Red Bull is building its own powertrains for F1’s new regulations regime — not a task independent racing teams typically undertake.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

Before Verstappen’s reign, Mercedes ruled F1 from 2014 to 2021, winning eight constructors’ titles on the bounce in one of the longest periods of dominance in any sport worldwide. The foundation for that success was laid in 2014, when the current hybrid power units emerged, and Mercedes gained a significant lead over its rivals.

Interestingly, in preparation for the new era, Wolff and Niki Lauda, then a director at Mercedes, convinced Hamilton to leave McLaren at the end of 2012.

Doing a Hamilton?

It proved a masterstroke, with Hamilton securing six more world titles. If there is truth in the rumour of Mercedes nailing the new engines, Verstappen could be tempted to do what Hamilton did and jump from a ship that has a lot of holes.

While any move is fraught with risk, Mercedes has a track record of producing fast, reliable engines, and could offer Verstappen a shot at shattering even more records. If he does jump ship, it could deal a fatal blow to Red Bull and send the F1 silly season into overdrive during the summer break.



Source link

F1 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve believes Lando Norris Norris, who is eight points behind championship leader and teammate Oscar Piastri, has built a bit of momentum with wins in the last two races.


F1 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve believes Lando Norris, who is eight points behind championship leader and teammate Oscar Piastri, has built a bit of momentum with wins in the last two races.

F1 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve believes Lando Norris, who is eight points behind championship leader and teammate Oscar Piastri, has built a bit of momentum with wins in the last two races.
| Photo Credit: Getty Images

This weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix will be the first time in 20 years Red Bull Racing will not be led by Christian Horner, who was sacked two weeks ago following the British Grand Prix.

As the team embarks on the post-Horner era, former F1 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve, said the team is set for some tough times ahead, having lost its team boss, who was instrumental in all its success.

“It was very sudden, unexpected, but it’s been brewing in the background for quite a while. It is destabilising for the team because Christian ran the factory, so this will have an effect, and it will take a bit of time to rebalance everything,” said Villeneuve.

“It’s been a little bit difficult for the team. Adrian Newey (former technical boss) and some other key team members have left. But Christian Horner brought the team to where it is now. So it’s very tough on him, this situation, and it’s difficult from the outside to understand the reasoning behind the whole situation.”

Commenting on this year’s championship, the 1997 drivers’ champion believes Lando Norris, who is eight points behind championship leader and teammate Oscar Piastri, has built a bit of momentum with wins in the last two races.

“Lando seems to have recovered a bit. He seems to be more emotional than Piastri, but he has a slight edge in speed. So when you take the two into account, it’s hard to know which one has the better shot at winning.”

“There’s a big difference between being the team leader, the championship leader or being the underdog. Lando seems to be better when he’s a little bit behind and has to fight back to come forward. So he is in a good position right now,” said Villeneuve.

(FanCode is the official broadcaster for F1 in India).



Source link

Vaishnavi Adkar wins tennis medal in World University Games


Vaishnavi Adkar went down fighting 6-2, 4-6, 4-6 in a three-hour duel in the women’s tennis semifinals to Eszter Meri of Slovakia in the World University Games in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany.

It was a fine run by the 20-year-old Vaishnavi who had dropped only 19 games in all in winning the earlier four rounds in a draw of 64. The effort fetched her a rare tennis medal in the Games.

In fact, it was the only individual medal so far for the Indian contingent.

Vaishnavi was close to winning another medal in the mixed doubles with Atharva Sharma but the duo got beaten in the quarterfinals by the Japanese pair of Natsuki Yoshimoto and Jay Friend. Vaishnavi and Atharva had won two rounds earlier without dropping a set against teams from Colombia and USA.

India has won five medals so far including one gold and one silver, but all the other four medals, apart from Vaishnavi’s tennis effort, were team medals in archery and badminton.

The results: Women: Singles (semifinals): Eszter Meri (Svk) bt Vaishnavi Adkar 2-6, 6-4, 6-4; Quarterfinals: Vaishnavi bt Sina Herrmann (Ger) 6-1, 6-4; Pre-quarterfinals: Vaishnavi bt Angella Okutoyi (Ken) 6-3, 6-4; Second round: Vaishnavi bt Venla Elisa Ahti 6-2, 6-4; Li Zongyu (Chn) bt Anjali Rathi 6-1, 6-4; First round: Vaishnavi bt Jollen Geels (Ned) 6-1, 6-0; Anjali bt christina Owomuhangi (Uga) 6-0, 6-0.

Mixed doubles (quarterfinals): Natsuki Yoshimoto & Jay Friend (Jpn) bt Vaishnavi Adkar & Atharva Sharma 6-0, 7-5; Pre-quarterfinals: Vaishnavi & Atharva bt Olivia Center & Jerry Barton (USA) 6-2, 7-5; First round: Vaishnavi & Atharva bt Angie Castillo & Camilo Torres (Col) 6-1, 6-4.



Source link

IND vs ENG Test series: Root, Pope dominate Indian attack as England make 332/2 at lunch


India’s Washington Sundar celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of England’s Ollie Pope on day three of the fourth test cricket match between India and England, at the Old Trafford Cricket Ground, in Manchester, Friday, July 25, 2025.

India’s Washington Sundar celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of England’s Ollie Pope on day three of the fourth test cricket match between India and England, at the Old Trafford Cricket Ground, in Manchester, Friday, July 25, 2025.
| Photo Credit: PTI

The Indian bowlers did not pose enough threat for the seasoned Joe Root and Ollie Pope who brought up fluent half-centuries, steering England to 332 for two in a wicketless morning session on day three of the fourth Test here on Friday (July 25, 2025).

After a forgettable evening session on day two, the Indian bowling attack once again failed to make inroads into the England batting.

Root (63 batting off 115 balls) and Pope (71 off 123) forged an unbeaten 135-run stand that threatened to take the game away from India, who led only by 26 runs after posting 358 in their first innings.

Besides an odd ball keeping low from the James Anderson end and another jumping from the opposite side, Jasprit Bumrah and Co did not trouble Root and Pope.

Guilty of offering too many freebies on the leg side on Thursday, the Indian pacers continued to offer loose balls to release pressure on the opposition.

Bumrah bowled a full ball into Root’s pads to start his day and the England veteran duly flicked it for a four. Later in his spell, Pope and Root were quick to pull Bumrah for a boundary each when the Indian pace spearhead pitched it short.

Resuming the day at 225 for two, England eased to 266 for two in the first hour of play.

Anshul Kamboj, who had an underwhelming start to his Test career on day two, created a chance in his opening spell but stumper Dhruv Jurel could not hold on to a tough chance. Pope was on 48 at the time, Root took a single off Mohammed Siraj in the 58th over to become the third highest leading run scorer in Tests.

He is expected to surpass Ricky Ponting in the series and when that happens, he would only be behind the great Sachin Tendulkar, who amassed 15921 runs.

Washington Sundar was introduced as late as the 69th over and Root put him under pressure straightaway by reverse sweeping him for a boundary.

Brief scores:India 1st innings: 358 all out in 114.1 overs (Sai Sudharsan 61, Yashasvi Jaiswal 58; Ben Stokes 5/72).

England 1st innings: 332/2 in 74 overs (Ben Duckett 94, Zak Crawley 84, Ollie Pope 70 batting, Joe Root 63 batting; Ravindra Jadeja 1/59 ).



Source link