Sports

Six Indian badminton players barred from World University Games over alleged administrative lapse


The Indian badminton squad that won the mixed team bronze medal at the ongoing World University Games in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany has been hit by a controversy over selection after six of the 12 chosen players were barred from participating due to an alleged administrative lapse.

Twelve players were selected and sent to represent India, but only six were allowed to compete as officials failed to submit all names correctly during the managers’ meeting on July 16.

“This is not just mismanagement – it’s career sabotage. We demand answers, accountability, and that our voices be heard. We didn’t lose a match — we lost our right to even participate,” wrote Alisha Khan, one of the players left out, on Instagram.

“This isn’t just a mistake. It’s career sabotage by AIU and our team officials. We demand justice.” According to sources, BV Rao and Ajit Mohan were the Association of Indian Universities (AIU) officials who attended the meeting. The AIU, which is the nodal body for university-level sports in the country, acknowledged the incident.

“We have been informed about this and the matter is being investigated,” AIU Secretary Dr Pankaj Mittal told PTI while refusing to comment any further.

According to a source, the issue was not just an error but stemmed from “systematic irregularities” starting from the selection trials held at Kalinga Institute of Industrial Technology (KIIT), Bhubaneswar.

“During the managers’ meeting, officials were given a letter listing all 12 players from India. It was their responsibility to read it carefully, check for missing or injured players, and confirm or adjust the names accordingly. However, they took it lightly,” the source said.

“The names of players who hadn’t attended trials were there. They came here only to enjoy. In the meeting, they also made a basic mistake. They were supposed to declare which player would play singles, doubles, and mixed, but didn’t process it properly.” Saneeth Dayanand, Sathish Kumar Karunakaran, Devika Sihag, Tasnim Mir, Varshini Viswanath Sri, and Vaishnavi Khadkekar were the six who competed in the mixed team event.

India defeated Macau but lost to Hong Kong in the group stage, then beat the USA in the round of 16 and Malaysia in the quarterfinals before losing to Chinese Taipei in the semifinals.

Rohan Kumar, Darshan Pujari, Aditi Bhatt, Abhinash Mohanty, Viraj Kuvale, and Alisha Khan were part of the 12-member squad but did not get to play.

Pujari has written to the Badminton Association of India (BAI), demanding a thorough investigation.

“This level of mismanagement has caused significant emotional distress to the affected athletes, especially when Team India went on to win a historic medal at the Games. The players who were left out of the nomination list have been unfairly denied the chance to contribute on the field and be acknowledged as part of this achievement,” he wrote in his email.

“To date, there has been no accountability or concrete explanation provided by the managers. A mere apology cannot suffice at this level of international representation, where the careers, dreams, and morale of athletes are at stake.

“Through this email, I respectfully urge the concerned authorities to take this matter seriously, conduct a thorough review, and ensure that such avoidable and damaging incidents are never repeated in the future.” Expressing frustration over the incident and apathy of the Indian officials, a player said, “It’s a historic achievement that our team won a bronze with just six players, but that certificate and medal will change their lives, not ours, when we were supposed to be there as a team.

“The frustrating thing is the officials don’t even admit their mistakes or show any remorse,” he said on condition of anonymity.

“The AIU can at least issue certificates acknowledging all 12 as team members to protect our career prospects and rights.” The selection trials were held in April at KIIT, Bhubaneswar, with over 210 players, including top-tier national and international university athletes, participating.

However, the source alleged that the players who actually topped the trials were left out of the mixed team event despite being part of the squad.

“The team manager made the blunder. The officials didn’t focus during the meeting, and after the trials they didn’t follow the proper process. They just submitted six names, so the other six were not allowed by FISU,” the source said.

“I don’t know whether to call it a technical error or sheer misfortune. Entries were mailed, confirmations received, the team travelled all the way, and yet in the manager’s meeting they missed out names. I don’t know how it is possible to overlook such a basic responsibility.

“Players have been misled throughout. Now that they couldn’t stand on the podium, officials are giving them false hopes about participation and medals in the individual events. The players worked really hard, and if they are robbed of their chance like this, it is unacceptable.” A player also alleged that officials goofed up the team jerseys, leading to a fine, an issue highlighted by Pujari in his letter as well.

“They printed full names instead of surnames, and the jerseys didn’t carry the country name properly. The team was fined 1000 euros per match for incorrect jerseys. Only from the semifinals onwards did we get proper jerseys sent from India,” the player said.

“There wasn’t even a proper coach. Players were sitting court-side, coaching each other during matches.”

Published – July 21, 2025 06:59 pm IST



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Mikimoto obliges in the feature event


Trainer D. Netto’s ward Mikimoto, ridden by Kuldeep Singh (Sr), claimed the Osman Sagar Cup (Div. I), the chief event of the opening day’s races of the Hyderabad monsoon races here on Monday (July 21).

The winner is owned by Mr. Rajendra rep. Rapar’s Galloping Stars LLP, Mr. P. Ranga Raju & Mr. Tripuranenivenkata Aditya Chowdary. Jockey A. Ashad Asbar stole the limelight by riding three winners on the day.

1. CON AMORE PLATE (Div. I) (1,100m): DASHING CHARM (A. Ashad Asbar) 1, Certanity (Gaurav) 2, Moonlite Rose (Afroz K) 3 and Cypress (Kuldeep Sr.) 4. 3/4, 3 and Neck. 1m, 7.85s. ₹17 (w), 12, 39 and 14 (p). SHP: 132, THP: 41, SHW: 16 and 75, FP: 491, Q: 301, Tanala: 1,305. Favourite: Dashing Charm. Owners: Mr. Champaklal Zaveri & Mrs. Bindu C. Zaveri rep. Zaveri Stud Farm Pvt. Ltd, Miss. Harsha N. Desai & Miss. Niti N. Desai. Trainer: L.V. R. Deshmukh.

2. OSMAN SAGAR CUP (Div. II) (1,200m): BORN BRAVE (Varun) 1, Espionage (Santosh Raj) 2, Imperia (P. Ajeeth K) 3 and Calistoga (Vivek G) 4. Neck, 2-1/2 and 1-1/4. 1m, 13.51s. ₹66 (w), 20, 13 and 15 (p). SHP: 49, THP: 47, SHW: 47 and 22, FP: 318, Q: 185, Tanala: 983. Favourite: Calistoga. Owners: Mr. Donald Anthony Netto & Mr. Rajendran rep. Rapar’s Galloping Stars LLP. Trainer: D. Netto.

3. CON AMORE PLATE (Div. II) (1,100m): CATCH THE WORM (B.R. Kumar) 1, Foxy Girl (H.M. Akshay) 2, Gusto’s Baby (Afroz K) 3 and N R I High Power (Varun) 4. Not run: La Quinta. 2, 3/4 and Neck. 1m, 7.67s. ₹26 (w), 11, 16 and 14 (p). SHP: 39, THP: 33, SHW: 17 and 35, FP: 194, Q: 105, Tanala: 437. Favourite: N R I High Power. Owner: Mr. H.S. Srikanth. Trainer: R.H. Sequeira.

4. ADILABAD PLATE (1,100m): BRILLIANT LAD (P. Sai Kumar) 1, Dubai Touch (S. Shareef) 2, Perception (G. Naresh) 3 and Pacific Heights (Vivek G) 4. 3/4, 1-1/4 and 3-1/4. 1m, 6.99s. ₹20 (w), 12, 17 and 31 (p). SHP: 56, THP: 70, SHW: 21 and 32, FP: 110, Q: 81, Tanala: 1,166. Favourite: Brilliant Lad. Owner: Mr. Teja Gollapudi. Trainer: M. Srinivas Reddy.

5. WWW.HYDRACES.COM CUP (1,200m): DIABLO (P. Sai Kumar) 1, Glorious Power (Likith Appu) 2, High Heels (Gaurav) 3 and Sangreal (S. Shareef) 4. 2, 2-3/4 and 1. 1m, 13.72s. ₹12 (w), 10, 33 and 11 (p). SHP: 83, THP: 39, SHW: 12 and 21, FP: 123, Q: 91, Tanala: 389. Favourite: Diablo. Owners: M/s. Ashok Ranpise, Seshadri Reddy Pochana, Teegala Sumant Reddy, Teegala Vijender Reddy, Satish Kumar Reddy Poondla, Giri Prathamesh Mahadev, Bollineni Krishnaiah & Teja Gollapudi. Trainer: K.S.V. Prasad Raju.

6. OSMAN SAGAR CUP (Div. I) (1,200m): MIKIMOTO (Kuldeep Singh Sr.) 1, Ragnarok (Santosh Raj) 2, Miss Maya (B.R. Kumar) 3 and Hurricane Bay (Vivek G) 4. 1-1/4, 2-3/4 and 1-1/4. 1m, 13.74s. ₹17 (w), 13, 26 and 16 (p). SHP: 107, THP: 49, SHW: 12 and 54, FP: 147, Q: 157, Tanala: 723. Favourite: Mikimoto. Owners: Mr. Rajendran rep. Rapar’s Galloping Stars LLP, Mr. Ranga Raju & Mr. Tripuranenivenkata Aditya Chowdary. Trainer: D. Netto.

7. SCARLET PRINCE PLATE (1,400m): GLORIA (A. Ashad Asbar) 1, Lifes Journey (Gaurav) 2, Total Control (Surya Prakash) 3 and Sargent (Sonu K) 4. 3-1/4, 5-3/4 and 6. 1m, 27.54s. ₹37 (w), 13, 17 and 72 (p). SHP: 31, THP: 90, SHW: 17 and 16, FP: 119, Q: 74, Tanala: 1,909. Favourite: Lifes Journey. Owners: Mr. Aditya P. Thackersey & Col. S.B. Nair. Trainer: L.V.R. Deshmukh.

8. TENACITY PLATE (1,200m): LEGO (A. Ashad Asbar) 1, Battle On (P. Sai K) 2, Pinatubo (B. Nikhil) 3 and Golden Inzio (Kuldeep Sr.) 4. Not run: Always Special and Hoping Queen. 5-3/4, 3-3/4 and 2-1/2. 1m, 16.43s. ₹20 (w), 15, 17 and 83 (p). SHP: 67, THP: 273, SHW: 14 and 41, FP: 145, Q: 82, Tanala: 6,123. Favourite: Lego. Owner: Mr. G.V. Reddy. Trainer: G. Sandeep.

Jackpot: 70%: ₹573 (948 tkts.) & 30%: 101 (2,298 (tkts.). Treble: (i) 361 (142 tkts.), (ii) 123 (269 tkts.), (iii) 110 (403 tkts.). Mini Jackpot : 689 (95 tkts.).



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


Pioneer: Narain says he wants to show ‘Indians can compete in F1’ through this story.

Pioneer: Narain says he wants to show ‘Indians can compete in F1’ through this story.
| Photo Credit: FILE PHOTO

Twenty years ago, Narain Karthikeyan made history when he became the first Indian to race in Formula One at the 2005 Australian GP for Jordan Grand Prix team and broke the glass ceiling.

Now, his inspiring and pioneering journey is set to be immortalised on the silver screen through a feature film. The Tamil-language biopic, to be directed by Mahesh Narayanan, is expected to hit the screens next year. 

“People understand what F1 is now after Drive to Survive (documentary series on F1 championships) on Netflix, and now the F1 movie as well. So it’s great to tell the story about India’s first F1 driver. To break all the barriers to get there coming from India, there is a lot of drama in it,” said Narain in a chat with The Hindu.

Wild journey

“You can see how tough it is, and F1 has always been like this. It is tough to be one of the elite 20 drivers. To then break other barriers, it was tremendously difficult. However, it was exciting as well. Formula One was my dream, and I think it was a fantastic and wild journey,” added the former F1 driver who started 46 races over three seasons (2005, 2011-12).

Narain revealed that the project has been in the works for the last 18 months, and he will be involved in ensuring the on-track action is filmed realistically, which will include training the lead actor in the basics of racing.

“Through this story, we want to show Indians can compete in F1. If it could be done 20 years ago, it can be done now, and hopefully, this inspires the next generation of sportspersons and racers,” said Narain.



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Encino, Spanish Eyes and Trigger impress


Encino, Spanish Eyes and Trigger impressed when the horses were exercised here on Monday (July 21) morning.

Inner sand:

600m: Liam (T.S. Jodha) 38. Moved freely. Fighton (D.A. Naik) 37. Worked well. Turn And Burn (Parmar) 36. Pleased. Renaissance (Yash), Hooves Of Thunder (Mosin) 39. They finished level freely. Wild Child (Parmar), Jetfire (Kishore) 39. Former ended two lengths in front. Legacy (Yash) 40. Easy.

800m: Pyrite (Mosin) 53, 600/40. Moved fluently. Zarak (Bharat) 55, 600/40. Easy. Exotic Star (Mosin) 54, 600/41. Moved freely. Attained (app) 57, 600/42. Easy. La Dolce Vita (A. Prakash) 54, 600/40. Moved fluently. Higher Love (T.S. Jodha), Empower (app) 54, 600/39. Pair moved level freely. Northern Singer (Umesh) 51, 600/39. Moved well. Come September (Umesh) 53, 600/40. Pressed. Azure (Hamir) 52, 600/39. Worked freely. Muskoka (Sandesh), Zendaya (Walkar) 51, 600/38. They were urged and ended level. New Yorker (Umesh) 55, 600/41. Urged. Divine Star (A. Gaikwad) 57, 600/42. Easy. Spanish Eyes (Sandesh) 51, 600/38. Good. Foujita (Shahrukh) 52, 600/37. Stretched. Vincero (Aditya) 53, 600/39. Moved well. Trail Blazer (Gore), Algonquin (Navnath) 51, 600/38. Former was two lengths better. Johnny Mac (Shahrukh) 55, 600/41. Worked freely. Cinderella’s Dream (Sandesh) 53, 600/39. Slightly urged. Aeon Flux (Zameer), Valtat (Merchant) 53, 600/40. Former ended two lengths in front. Trigger (Merchant) 50, 600/37. Responded well. Note.

1000m: Ultimo (Ajinkya) 1-6, 800/51, 600/38. Good work. Mirae (Umesh) 1-9, 800/54, 600/41. Pushed.

1200m: Demetrius (T.S. Jodha), Land Of Plenty (app) 1-22, 800/53, 600/40. They moved neck and neck freely. Golden Kingdom (Santosh) 1-25, 800/54, 600/41. Worked freely.

Gate practice — inner sand:

1000m: Encino (Santosh) Multiverse (Gagandeep) 1-5, 800/50, 600/37. Former was well in hand, while the latter was pushed to finish level. Former to note. Adeya (Bhawani), Daddy’s Blessings (T.S. Jodha) 1-8, 800/52, 600/39. Former was slowly off by four lengths and they were urged to end level. Highground (Prasad) 1-6, 800/51, 600/38. Urged in the last part. You (Mosin), Chandrayaan (Neeraj) 1-7, 800/52, 600/40. Both moved neck and neck freely. Enchanting (Gagandeep) 1-8, 800/53, 600/39. Jumped out well and worked freely.



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Ranking Series wrestling event: Sumit and Anil Mor win medals


Image used for representation purpose only.

Image used for representation purpose only.
| Photo Credit: Getty Image/iStockphoto

Sumit (60kg) took a silver, while Anil Mor (55kg) claimed a bronze medal in Greco Roman competitions at the Ranking Series wrestling event in Budapest.

Asian under-23 champion Sumit got past Worlds bronze medallist Sadyk Lalaev 9-3 before pinning Korean Dahyun Kim and Kazakh Galym Kabdunassarov to enter the final. He lost to 63kg World champion and 60kg European champion Nihat Zahid Mammadali 5-1 in the title clash to settle for the silver.

After losing 6-1 to World and European champion Emin Sefershaev in his first bout, Ulaanbaatar Open champion Anil bounced back to beat two-time European medallist Moldovan Artium Deleanu 7-0 in repechage and Asian bronze medallist Uzbek Ikhtiyor Botirov 7-4 in the bronze medal contest.



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India to host FIDE Chess World Cup in October-November


Twitter logo image of FIDE chess.

Twitter logo image of FIDE chess.

India will host this year’s chess World Cup from October 30 to November 27 with a host city for the event to be named in “due course”, the sport’s global governing body FIDE announced on Monday (July 21, 2025).

The tournament that will see 206 players battling for the coveted title and qualification spots in the 2026 FIDE Candidates Tournament. India last hosted the event in 2002 in Hyderabad where Viswanathan Anand won the title.

The players will compete in a knockout format, where the losing player in each round is eliminated.

  

“The event has used several formats over the years, but since 2021, it has followed a single-elimination format. Each round spans three days: two classical games on the first two days, followed by tie-breaks on the third day, if necessary,” FIDE stated.

In the first round, the top 50 players receive byes, while players seeded from 51 to 206 compete, with pairings based on the principle of the top half versus the reversed lower half.

“The top three finishers of the 2025 World Cup will earn direct qualification for the 2026 Candidates Tournament, which determines the challenger for the World Chess Championship,” FIDE said.

Reigning world champion D Gukesh, R Praggnanandhaa, the runner-up of the 2023 World Cup, and Arjun Erigaisi, currently ranked world number five, are among the stars who would be seen in action. World number one Magnus Carlsen has also qualified to compete in the biennial event that he won in 2023.

India has recently hosted major events, including the 2022 Chess Olympiad, Tata Steel Chess India, the 2024 World Junior U20 Championships 2024, and the 5th leg of the FIDE Women’s Grand Prix in April this year.

“We are thrilled to bring the FIDE World Cup 2025 to India, a country with a deep-rooted passion and support for chess. Indian chess fans’ enthusiasm has always been remarkable, and we anticipate great interest in the event among local chess lovers, both on-site and online,” FIDE CEO Emil Sutovsky said in a press release.





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Tryst with history as India seeks to break Old Trafford jinx


Until a fortnight ago, India hadn’t won a Test match at Edgbaston. Shubman Gill’s men created history in Birmingham with their commanding 336-run win in the second Test, correcting one anomaly. This week, they will get a chance to set another record straight at Old Trafford, a ground where nine previous Tests have failed to yield a victory.

For various reasons, India have played a mere two Tests in Manchester in the preceding 35 years, the last of them 11 years ago. They were scheduled to play the fifth and final Test here in 2021 until the outbreak of Covid-19 in the ranks and the fear of what it might lead to forced Virat Kohli’s men to fly out to Dubai holding a 2-1 lead. When India returned 12 months later, the Test was moved to Birmingham. By then, Rohit Sharma had replaced Kohli as the all-format captain but couldn’t play the ‘decider’ due to Covid. In his first Test as stand-in skipper, Jasprit Bumrah oversaw a crushing seven-wicket loss with England hunting down a target of 378 with consummate ease, thanks to centuries from Joe Root and Jonny Bairstow as the hosts provided an early example of the ‘Bazball’ style of play that has since become their USP.

The worst of India’s four losses dates to July 1952 when Vijay Hazare’s side was battered by an innings and 207 runs by an English outfit under Len Hutton. The skipper’s century headlined an England tally of 347 for nine declared, after which India had two disastrous outings with the bat. In the first innings, with the fiery Fred Trueman (8/31) scything through their line-up, the visitors were shot out for 58 – a dubious record that went out the window in 1974 when Ajit Wadekar and his men were skittled for 42 at Lord’s by Chris Old and Geoff Arnold. In the second innings, Alec Bedser and Tony Lock complemented Trueman by sharing nine wickets, India collapsing in a heap for 82 with Hemu Adhikari’s 27 the highest score by an Indian across the two innings. In all, the double-figure mark was breached just five times and there were six ducks.

India’s last Test here was in August 2014, marked by further forgettable batting displays that netted them 152 and 161, which ensured that England’s 367 was enough to drive them to an innings-and-54-run win. That was the series during which Kohli struggled to buy a run, aggregating just 134 in ten innings with a combination of James Anderson and the corridor of uncertainty his perennial bugbear. Kohli perished to the English swing king for 0 and 7, his travails mirroring that of his team’s as they crashed and burned to a 1-3 hammering.

Big disappointment

The captain during that unedifying campaign was Mahendra Singh Dhoni, who was also at the helm when India wiped the floor 0-4 on the preceding tour in 2011 despite Rahul Dravid amassing 461 runs, studded by three centuries. That was just a few months before Dhoni abruptly announced his retirement from Test cricket during the tour of Australia over the winter, though the innings loss to Alastair Cook’s men in 2014 wouldn’t be the Jharkhandi’s Old Trafford swansong.

Dhoni returned to Manchester for the 2019 50-over World Cup, making 1 and an unbeaten 56 in comfortable league wins over Pakistan and West Indies respectively. Then came the big one, the semifinal against New Zealand which spilled over to the reserve day.

When rain halted proceedings on the original match day (July 9), the Kiwis had laboured to 211 for five with Ross Taylor and Tom Latham holding fort. India’s batting had been in roaring form throughout the tournament, propelled by an unprecedented five centuries in a single World Cup by Rohit Sharma. There was belief within the camp that even if New Zealand posted 250, they had the resources to overhaul that total – the depth in the batting was illustrated by Ravindra Jadeja’s presence at No. 8.

At breakfast on the reserve day, Rishabh Pant – interestingly, one of four stumpers in that XI alongside Dhoni, K.L. Rahul and Dinesh Karthik – sought to know Dhoni’s plans for the trip to London, ostensibly for the final. Some of the players intended to make the most of the early finish on the reserve day to drive individually to the English capital. Dhoni is supposed to have told his successor-in-waiting that he’d rather travel by the team bus ‘one last time’, the earliest indication that he was done with international cricket. As it transpired, it wouldn’t be another 13 months until he’d formally announce his retirement through social media.

New Zealand scrambled to 239 for eight on the reserve day when they ran out of time, setting their opponents a challenging target magnified by the overhead conditions that were exactly what Trent Boult, Matt Henry and Lockie Ferguson were praying for. In no time, the cream of the Indian batting, including Rohit and Kohli, were back in the hutch. At 24 for four in 10 overs with Henry breathing fire (he took three of those four wickets), India needed their famed depth to bail them out even if the odds were seriously stacked against them.

Pant and Hardik Pandya ground out 32 apiece but when the left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner accounted for the latter, India were all but out for the count, 92 for six after 30.3 overs. Jadeja’s arrival at the crease brought the last recognised pair together, India needing 148 at more than seven over. Then began an extraordinary counter-attack with Jadeja in the forefront. Where Dhoni was content to play second fiddle and bide his time, the left-hander from Saurashtra cut loose uninhibitedly. There were four fours and as many sixes in his 59-ball 77 which easily dominated the seventh-wicket stand of 116.

The duo had brought the equation down to 32 off 20 when, against the run of play, Jadeja was foxed by a Boult slower delivery and holed out to Kane Williamson, the calmest man on the park. But Dhoni was still around and when Dhoni’s around, there is still hope, isn’t there? It was during this year’s IPL, when Dhoni was 43; how could it not have been there when he was 37, no longer at his peak but still a fearsome force of nature?

Thirty-one were required off the last two overs when Ferguson fronted up for the 49th. Boult, Henry and Santner had all bowled out, Jimmy Neesham would bowl the last over. Dhoni was the master of taking it to the last over and everyone at the ground, all Kiwis included, believed Dhoni would mentally and psychologically stare Neesham down even if 20 were needed off the final six deliveries. It was a question of not getting out to Ferguson; instead, Dhoni went airborne as he scythed the first ball over point for six, after which he patted a yorker back to the bowler.

M.S. Dhoni is caught short of his crease by a Martin Guptill direct hit in the semifinals of the 2019 World Cup.

M.S. Dhoni is caught short of his crease by a Martin Guptill direct hit in the semifinals of the 2019 World Cup.
| Photo Credit:
FILE PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

The third ball was short, banged into the pitch from wide of the crease, the line impeccable. Dhoni could only bunt it behind square, but he saw an opportunity to come back for the second. He did come back for the second, but fell fractionally short as an extraordinary direct hit, off-balance, from Martin Guptill charging in from the boundary shattered the stumps at the striker’s end. It also shattered Indian hopes and aspirations. Dhoni was run out for an even 50 but no one cared, not least the protagonist himself. There was no applause for a half-century, just the deafening sound of silence while the Kiwis celebrated with gusto. If there was one moment that encapsulated India’s Old Trafford travails, it was that.

Happy memories of the cricket ground that lies just half a mile across from the largest Premiership football stadium of the same name are few and far between, so why not reflect on potentially the most far-reaching of the lot, the first of an incredible 51 Test centuries by the little big man of Indian cricket? Sachin Tendulkar had been dismissed for 88 in Napier in February 1990, caught by future India coach John Wright off Danny Morrison. Had he reached three-figures, he would have become the youngest Test centurion at the time.

Tendulkar wasn’t to be denied his maiden tryst with a hundred six months later. India were in a scrap for survival on the last day of the second Test, stumbling to 183 for six after being set 408 for victory. All the big guns – Ravi Shastri, Navjot Singh, Sanjay Manjrekar, Dilip Vengsarkar, skipper Mohammad Azharuddin and Kapil Dev – had come and gone, and only Kiran More and leggies Anil Kumble and Narendra Hirwani were to come when Tendulkar, batting at No. 6, was joined by No. 8 Manoj Prabhakar. England had nearly two and a half hours to winkle out the last four wickets and they believed if they split this alliance, the end would only be a few deliveries away.

The 17-year-old Tendulkar was in the early 20s at Prabhakar’s arrival. He had shown glimpses of his genius in the first innings with a polished 68 that convinced the English that he was the real deal. But the second innings was a different kettle of fish.

Sachin Tendulkar en route his maiden Test hundred at Old Trafford in 1990.

Sachin Tendulkar en route his maiden Test hundred at Old Trafford in 1990.
| Photo Credit:
FILE PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES

The target was beyond India’s reach, their only hope was to grind out a draw but against Devon Malcolm, Angus Fraser, Chris Lewis and veteran off-spinner Eddie Hemmings, that was easier said than done. Despite his tender age and his lack of experience – it was just his ninth Test – Tendulkar instinctively knew that going into a shell was fraught with danger. And so he played his shots, not recklessly or on a song and a prayer, but with assurance and control with a stoic Prabhakar for company. A pushed three to long-off catapulted him past hundred, the thunderous ovation just the first of thousands that would accompany him till his last day as an international cricketer. Not quite ‘Sa-chin, Saaaa-chin’, though there’s no prizes for guessing where the genesis of that chant lies.



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ICC forms working committee to explore two-tier Test system; Champions League T20 to re-launch next year


An eight-member working group, headed by ICC’s new chief executive officer Sanjog Gupta, has been formed by the game’s global governing body to explore the possibility of restructuring Test cricket into a two-tier system.

An eight-member working group, headed by ICC’s new chief executive officer Sanjog Gupta, has been formed by the game’s global governing body to explore the possibility of restructuring Test cricket into a two-tier system.

An eight-member working group, headed by ICC’s new chief executive officer Sanjog Gupta, has been formed by the game’s global governing body to explore the possibility of restructuring Test cricket into a two-tier system.

The committee was set up during ICC’s annual general meeting in Singapore under the all-Indian leadership of the chair, Jay Shah and Gupta, who was appointed as CEO earlier this month.

Other members of the panel include England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) chief executive Richard Gould and the Cricket Australia (CA) chief executive Todd Greenberg, according to a report in ‘The Guardian‘.

“Any changes would be introduced for the next cycle of the World Test Championship, due to run from 2027 to 2029, and involve an expansion from the current nine-team format to two divisions of six,” the report read.

The working party has been asked to submit its recommendations to the board by the end of the year.

The presence of Gould and Greenberg indicate that there is strong possibility of the new two-tier system being introduced as CA and ECB have been major advocates of it.

Currently, nine teams compete in the World Test Championship, but if the proposed two-tier system is implemented, the structure would shift to two divisions of six teams each, featuring a promotion and relegation mechanism.

CA and ECB discussed the two-tier concept last year. CA has been a key proponent, pushing for a model where Australia, England, and India face each other twice every three years, an increase from the current format of two series every four years.

Champions League T20 reboot on the cards

More than 10 years after its last edition, the Champions League T20 (CLT20), a club-based international T20 competition, could make a comeback next year, with the ICC actively exploring its revival.

Discussions around re-launching the competition have been ongoing, with cricket boards from India, Australia, and England leading the conversations.

The proposal to revive it has reportedly received backing from key member nations at the AGM, according to ‘Sydney Morning Herald’.

The last edition of the CLT20 was held in India in 2014 with Chennai Super Kings winning the title after defeating Kolkata Knight Riders in the final at Bengaluru. That edition involved three teams from India, two each from Australia and South Africa, and one side each from Pakistan, West Indies, and New Zealand.

As many as six editions of the CLT20 were played between 2009-10 to 2014-15, with four of these being organised in India and two in South Africa. The tournament was won twice each by Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians, while Australia’s New South Wales and Sydney Sixes won it one time each.



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Pakistan hockey body tells FIH it is not willing to send team to India for Asia Cup


Twitter logo of Asian Hockey Federation. Pakistan Hockey Federation has written to FIH and AHF expressing their reservations over sending hockey team to India for the Asia Cup.

Twitter logo of Asian Hockey Federation. Pakistan Hockey Federation has written to FIH and AHF expressing their reservations over sending hockey team to India for the Asia Cup.

The Pakistan Hockey Federation (PHF) has informed the sport’s global governing body FIH that it will be “difficult” for them to send a team to India for the Asia Cup next month because of “security concerns”.

Tariq Bugti, who heads the PHF, said they had written to the FIH and Asian Hockey Federation (AHF), expressing their reservations over sending the team to India.

“We have informed them that in the existing scenario, our team will face security risks playing in India,” he said.

“We have informed them our players are also not keen to travel to India for the Asia Cup which is also a direct qualifying tournament,” he added.

The PHF chief said the ball is now in the court of the FIH and AHF to decide about the event and Pakistan’s matches.

“We have asked them to let us know what guarantee is there that our players will be safe in India and will be able to focus on the tournament,” he said.

The Pakistan government is yet to come out with an official statement on the issue but recently a senior government official said the team would not travel to India.



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WI vs AUS first T20I: Mitchell Owen shines on debut as Australia beats West Indies


Australia’s Mitchell Owen plays a shot during the first T20 international against West Indies in Kingston on July 20, 2025.

Australia’s Mitchell Owen plays a shot during the first T20 international against West Indies in Kingston on July 20, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AFP

Mitchell Owen made an impressive debut as Australia beat West Indies by three wickets to take a 1-0 lead in the five-match Twenty20 International series in Jamaica on Sunday (July 20, 2025).

Owen took a wicket with his medium pace bowling before returning to smash 50 off 27 balls as Australia chased down a 190-run target with seven balls to spare.

West Indies, who lost the preceding test series 3-0, got off to a strong start after being put into bat at Sabina Park.

Captain Shai Hope (55), Roston Chase (60) and Shimron Hetmyer (38) laid the platform for a 200-plus score but the late flourish they expected never materialised.

Andre Russell, who will quit international cricket after the second T20 on Tuesday, made only eight.

Australia’s Ben Dwarshuis (4-36) mowed down the middle and lower order as West Indies were forced to settle for a modest 189-8.

While Australia lost both their openers, captain Mitchell Marsh and Jake Fraser-McGurk, inside the powerplay they were propped up by a breezy 80-run stand by Cameron Green (51) and Owen.

Green belted five sixes in his 26-ball blitz, while Owen smacked six of them before holing out in the 17th over with Australia on the cusp of victory.



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