Sports

Amadeo and El Greco show out


Amadeo and El Greco showed out when the horses were exercised here on Sunday (July 20) morning.

Inner sand:

800m: Pyrite (Mosin) 55, 600/41. Moved fluently. Escape Velocity (Nirmal) 53, 600/39. Moved freely. Among The Stars (Yash), Heaven’s Rhythm (S.J. Sunil) 52, 600/38. Former was superior. Chagall (Siddharth) 1400/600m 51. Worked freely.

1000m: Sands Of Dubai (Nirmal), Substantial (Santosh) 1-6, 800/52, 600/39. They moved neck and neck freely. Giant Gold (Aditya) 1-7, 800/52, 600/39. Moved well. Amadeo (Nirmal) 1-7, 800/52, 600/39. Responded well. El Greco (Ajinkya) 1-6, 600/39. Moved attractively.



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Ranking series wrestling event: Priya Malik gets silver, Manisha clinches bronze


Image used for representation purpose only.

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

Priya Malik picked up a silver medal after being beaten 4-3 by Brazil’s Pan-American silver medallist Thamires Machado in the women’s 76kg final at the Ranking Series wrestling event in Budapest.

The 20-year-old Indian, a former World under-20 champion and a two-time Asian under-23 champion, performed well to upset 2016 Olympics bronze medallist Elmira Syzdykova of Kazakhstan 7-2 and World under-23 bronze medallist Valeriia Trifonova 11-1 to book a place in the final.

Asian champion Manisha Bhanwala (62kg) bagged a bronze medal.

India topped the women’s team ranking with two gold, two silver and two bronze.



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Sreeshankar wins long jump title in Portugal


Star Indian long jumper Murali Sreeshankar clinched the title with a leap of 7.75m at the Meeting Maia Cidade do Desporto in Maia, Portugal, a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze-level meet. File.

Star Indian long jumper Murali Sreeshankar clinched the title with a leap of 7.75m at the Meeting Maia Cidade do Desporto in Maia, Portugal, a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze-level meet. File.

Star Indian long jumper Murali Sreeshankar clinched the title with a leap of 7.75m at the Meeting Maia Cidade do Desporto in Maia, Portugal, a World Athletics Continental Tour Bronze-level meet.

The Asian Games silver medallist registered his best effort in the second round on Saturday night.

Sreeshankar opened with a 7.63m jump, followed it up with his winning leap of 7.75m in the second round, and then recorded a solid 7.69m. His third attempt was a foul, while his final two jumps were measured at 6.12m and 7.58m.

Poland’s Piotr Tarkowski matched Sreeshankar’s 7.75m effort but his second best jump — 7.58m — was less than the Indian’s 7.69m.

According to the World Athletics rules if two competitors tie, their second longest legal jump is used as a tie-breaker.

The meet marks the 26-year-old’s second outing since returning from a long injury layoff following knee surgery. He had announced his comeback with a solid 8.05m win at the Indian Open Athletics Meet earlier this month.

Sreeshankar will be aiming to qualify for the World Championships in Tokyo in September for which the direct qualifying distance is 8.27m.

The Commonwealth Games silver medallist will be competing in Europe and Central Asia till August 14 for which the government has approved ₹5.58 lakh.

In 2023, the Kerala athlete had become only the third Indian to finish in the top three in a Diamond League Meeting — after Vikas Gowda and Neeraj Chopra — with a third-place finish in Paris, but his Olympics hopes went up in smoke after an injury early in the 2024 season.



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Opener K.L. Rahul on verge of completing 9,000 international runs for India


As the fourth Test against England at Manchester scheduled to be on July 23, Indian opener K.L. Rahul is just 60 runs away from completing 9,000 international runs.

As the fourth Test against England at Manchester scheduled to be on July 23, Indian opener K.L. Rahul is just 60 runs away from completing 9,000 international runs.
| Photo Credit: AP

As the fourth Test against England at Manchester draws closer, a key point of attention will be the Indian opener KL Rahul, who has had a potentially career-defining series in England so far and stands just 60 runs away from completing 9,000 international runs.

With the series in favour of England by 2-1, India will have to play out of their skins to defy this equally competitive English unit.

For that, it is important that Rahul absorbs all the pressure while opening the batting, makes the new ball old, balances out his classy cover drives with some careful leaves.

In his international career so far, Rahul has scored 8,940 runs in 218 matches in 254 innings at an average of 39.73, with 19 centuries and 58 fifties. His best score is 199. He is the 16th-highest run-getter for India in all-time lists.

Despite his elite technique, composure and variety of shots, Tests has surprisingly been his least unsuccessful format, with 3,632 runs in 61 matches and 107 innings at an average of 35.26, with 10 centuries and 18 fifties, with a best score of 199. His inconsistency and consequent stagnation of batting average have come under scrutiny, to the point even KL admitted that looking at his batting average “hurts him”.

He has been much more successful in ODIs, with 3,043 runs in 85 matches and 79 innings at an average of 49.08, a strike rate of 88.17, with seven centuries and 18 fifties. In T20Is, he is India’s fourth-highest run-getter, with 2,265 runs in 72 matches and 68 innings at an average of 37.75 and a strike rate of almost 140, with two centuries and 22 fifties.

However, he has not played T20Is since a disastrous T20 WC 2022 in Australia, as his scoring rate has at times looked outdated in comparison to a younger, fearless and hard-hitting lot of T20I specialists in India. In the ongoing series, Rahul has scored 375 runs in three matches and six innings at an average of 62.50, with a best score of 137, two centuries and a fifty. He is the fourth-highest run-getter in the series. This series has greatly improved his batting average in England, taking it from the 30s to the early 40s. In 12 Tests in England, he has made 989 runs at an average of 41.20, with four centuries and two fifties in 24 innings. His best score in England is 149.However, he is one of India’s most dependable batters outside Asia in spite of ups and downs in his form, as nine of his ten Test tons have come away from home. Most importantly, seven of his Test centuries have come in South Africa, England, New Zealand and Australia (SENA) countries, with a century in Australia and two in South Africa.

With two matches remaining, Rahul has every chance to make this series his best-ever in Test statistically. His best Test series has been the 2016-17 series against Australia at home, with 393 runs in four matches and seven innings at an average of 65.50, with six fifties to his name and best score of 90.So far during this tour, KL has faced 670 balls, the fourth-highest by an Indian opener in England during a tour since 1990. With two more matches left, he has every chance to overtake his own tally of 735 deliveries during 2021 tour, Rohit Sharma’s 866 deliveries faced during the same tour and Murali Vijay’s all-time record of 1,054 balls back in 2014.

As a senior within the team, Rahul has served as a perfect link between the youngsters and the old generation. While critics rightfully bashed him earlier for losing momentum and runs with each passing away Test match, Rahul has silenced them with his bat this time around, registering a fifty-plus score at least in every Test.



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Feel completely out of place when I see myself alongside Tendulkar with the trophy: James Anderson


Sachin Tendulkar and James Anderson pose alongside the newly unveiled Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy ahead of the India vs England series, on Thursday. (X/@BCCI)

Sachin Tendulkar and James Anderson pose alongside the newly unveiled Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy ahead of the India vs England series, on Thursday. (X/@BCCI)

England pace legend James Anderson confessed that seeing his name alongside the iconic Sachin Tendulkar on a trophy feels “completely out of place,” calling it an incredible honour to be associated with “one of the greatest cricketers to have ever lived”.

The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has rechristened the Test series between India and England as the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, paying tribute to the two titans of the sport.

Previously, the contests on English soil were played for the Pataudi Trophy, named after former Indian captains Iftikhar Ali Khan Pataudi and his son Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi.

“It’s not necessarily just how huge it is to have a trophy named after you, but alongside Sachin Tendulkar, who, for me, is one of the greatest ever cricketers to have lived.

“I feel completely out of place when I see myself alongside him with the trophy. I hold him in such high regard.” Anderson told Sky Sports’

Also Read | Anderson impresses even as Tendulkar finds some form

“I watched him as a kid, played against him. He’s just such an iconic cricketer who’s carried the weight of a nation on his shoulders throughout his career and past it as well. So, to share something like this with him is an incredible honour.”

Both Anderson and Tendulkar are widely regarded as all-time greats. They are the most-capped players in the history of Test cricket. Tendulkar played 200 matches, and Anderson appeared in 188 Tests.

Anderson, who claimed 704 wickets in 188 Tests, faced Tendulkar on several occasions during the late 2000s.

The 42-year-old also reflected on how detached he sometimes feels from the legacy he’s created.

“It is strange that when people talk about what I have achieved in cricket, like when I hear about it as if someone’s talking about someone else if that makes sense like I don’t feel it is me who has achieved all this,” he said.

Anderson brought the curtain down on his illustrious career last year, stepping aside to make way for England’s next generation of fast bowlers.

England currently lead the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy 2-1 with the fourth Test slated to begin on Wednesday at Manchester.



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IND vs ENG Test series: Anshul Kamboj added to India squad as cover for Akash Deep, Arshdeep


Anshul Kamboj has been added to the India squad in England as cover for Akash Deep and Arshdeep singh who are racing against time to be ready for the fourth Test beginning on July 23.

Anshul Kamboj has been added to the India squad in England as cover for Akash Deep and Arshdeep singh who are racing against time to be ready for the fourth Test beginning on July 23.
| Photo Credit: The Hindu

Pacer Anshul Kamboj has been added to the India squad in England as cover for Akash Deep and Arshdeep Singh, who are racing against time to be ready for the fourth Test beginning in Manchester at the Old Trafford on July 23.

Akash Deep, who is dealing with a groin niggle, played in the second and third Test against England at Birmingham and Lord’s respectively, while left-arm pacer Arshdeep is yet to feature in a match in the on-going series.

There is no clarity as yet on Akash Deep’s availability, while Arshdeep is unlikely to be available for selection for the Manchester Test, and therefore the selectors decided to call Kamboj, PTI has learned.

Arshdeep copped a blow on his left hand while trying to stop a shot from Sai Sudharsan on his follow through during the net session at Beckenham on Thursday, which necessitated the bandaging of his bowling arm.

“We’ll take a call on the combination we play, particularly given the Arshdeep situation as well, we’ll make that call closer to Manchester,” assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate had said.

“He took a ball while he was bowling…it’s just a cut, so we have to see how bad the cut is. Obviously the medical team has taken him off to see a doctor and obviously if he needs stitches or doesn’t need stitches that’s going to be important to our planning for the next few days,” he added.

The 24-year-old Kamboj is a worthy addition to the squad after his impressive effort for India A against the England Lions in two side games prior to the Test series.

He took five wickets across four innings at Northampton and Canterbury while moving the ball appreciably and finding disconcerting bounce on occasions.

The Haryana pacer is a hit the deck seam bowler and is being looked as a future prospect as Mukesh Kumar is already on the wrong side of 30s while Harshit Rana is yet to find his strides in red ball cricket.

Kamboj shot into fame after taking all 10 wickets in an innings against Kerala last year in a Ranji Trophy match at Lahli.

He is only the third bowler to achieve that feat in the Ranji Trophy after Bengal’s Premangsu Chatterjee (1956-57) and Rajasthan’s Pradeep Somasundaram (1985-86).

Overall, he took 34 wickets from six matches in the last edition of the premier domestic red-ball tournament.



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Lionel Messi, Telasco Segovia each score 2 goals as Inter Miami beat the Red Bulls 5-1


Lionel Messi of Inter Miami CF shoots during the MLS match between New York Red Bulls and Inter Miami CF at Sports Illustrated Stadium on July 19, 2025. Photo: Getty Images via AFP

Lionel Messi of Inter Miami CF shoots during the MLS match between New York Red Bulls and Inter Miami CF at Sports Illustrated Stadium on July 19, 2025. Photo: Getty Images via AFP

Lionel Messi had two goals and two assists, Telasco Segovia also scored twice, and Inter Miami beat the New York Red Bulls 5-1.

It was Messi’s sixth multi-goal game in his last seven matches.

Messi became the fifth player in MLS history to record at least 35 goals and 25 assists over a two-year span, joining Robbie Keane (2013-14), Sebastian Giovinco (2015-16), Carlos Vela (2018-19), and Cucho Hernández (2023-24).

Miami scored two goals in three minutes midway through the first half to take the lead. Messi’s beautiful pass to Jordi Alba tied it at 1-all in the 24th minute. Then Messi’s lofted pass over the defense led to Segovia’s first goal.

Messi scored on a breakaway in the 60th and he chested down Luis Suárez’s pass for a left-footed blast in the 75th for his 18th goal of the season.

Miami (12-4-5) has dominated the past three matchups with the Red Bulls, winning 6-2 on May 3, 2024 and 4-1 on May 3, 2025.

New York (9-9-6) lost for just the second time at home this season, dropping to 8-2-2. The Red Bulls’ 26 points through their first 11 home matches this season had ranked second in franchise history.

It was the most goals allowed by New York this season.



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WCL cancels India-Pakistan legends match after Indian stars boycott game


A veterans’ cricket match involving India and Pakistan in the World Championship of Legends in Birmingham on Sunday has been cancelled after Indian players, including Shikhar Dhawan, refused to be a part of it citing the Pahalgam terror attack in April.

The second edition of the tournament started on June 18 at Edgbaston and is scheduled for an August 2 final. World Cup winner Yuvraj Singh is the captain of the India legends, while the squad also features the likes of Harbhajan Singh, Irfan Pathan, Suresh Raina, Robin Uthappa and Varun Aaron among others.

The WCL organisers shared a statement on their X account, detailing the decision of cancellation and said their intention while conducting the match was to recreate some “happy memories”.

“After hearing the news that the Pakistan hockey team will be coming to India this year, and seeing the recent India vs Pakistan volleyball match along with a few other fixtures between the two nations in different sports, we thought of continuing with the India vs Pakistan match at WCL, just to create some happy memories for people around the globe.

“But maybe in the process, we ended up hurting the feelings of many and stirring emotions,” the WCL statement read. The organisers also apologised for “unintentionally causing discomfort” to Indian legends.

“Hence, we have decided to call off the India-Pakistan match. We sincerely apologise again for hurting the sentiments and hope people will understand that all we ever wanted was to bring a few happy moments to the fans,” it read.

Former India opener Shikhar Dhawan also shared a statement on X, announcing his stand not to participate in the match against Pakistan.

“This is to formally reiterate and confirm that Mr. Shikhar Dhawan will not be participating in any matches against the Pakistan team in the upcoming WCL League. This decision was communicated earlier during our discussion on call and WhatsApp dated 11th May 2025,” read his statement.

Dhawan made it clear that he has taken the call in view of the current “geopolitical” situation between India and Pakistan in the aftermath of Pahalgam terror attack and the ensuing Operation Sindoor carried out by the country.

“In view of the current geopolitical situation and the prevailing tensions between India and Pakistan, Mr. Dhawan and his team have taken this position after due consideration.

“We respectfully request the league’s understanding and cooperation on this matter,” he said in the statement.

India had defeated Pakistan by five wickets to win the inaugural edition of the six-team legends tournament last year in Edgbaston.



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Germany through to Women’s Euro semis after shootout win over France


Germany goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger makes a save during the Women’s Euro 2025 quarterfinals soccer match between France and Germany at St. Jakob-Park in Basel, Switzerland, Saturday, July 19, 2025.

Germany goalkeeper Ann-Katrin Berger makes a save during the Women’s Euro 2025 quarterfinals soccer match between France and Germany at St. Jakob-Park in Basel, Switzerland, Saturday, July 19, 2025.
| Photo Credit: AP

Ann-Katrin Berger pulled off a stunning final save as Germany beat France 6-5 in a penalty shootout to set up a Euro 2025 semi-final showdown with world champions Spain after a bruising encounter that ended 1-1 after extra time on Saturday (July 19, 2025).

The Germans pulled off a stunning comeback from a goal down and a straight red card for defender Kathrin Hendrich after 13 minutes, battling their way back into the game and eventually getting the better of their opponents in a thrilling shootout.

Hendrich was sent off after a VAR review established that she had pulled the hair of Griege Mbock Bathy in the box, and Grace Geyoro’s subsequent penalty had the power to get over the line despite Berger getting a strong hand to it.

On the ropes and struggling, the Germans suddenly levelled, Sjoeke Nuesken catching the defence napping by darting towards Klara Buehl’s near-post corner and flashing a header into the net in the 25th minute.

With the well-organised Germans defending doggedly, France had two goals ruled out for offside and Nuesken had a second-half penalty saved, and neither side managed to score in extra time.

The game went to penalties, and Berger got the shootout off to a great start for the Germans by saving from Amel Majri, but they were brought back to level pegging when Sara Daebrtiz struck her spot kick off the crossbar and over the goal.

Berger then fired home from the spot herself before diving to her left to deny Alice Sombath, sending the Germans through to the last four.

They will face Spain on Wednesday, a day after England face Italy in the other semi-final.



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Jannik Sinner | Rising like a phoenix


In September 2022, on a glitzy, starry night in New York, Jannik Sinner and Carlos Alcaraz met in a high-stakes quarterfinal at the U.S. Open. Though still in his teens, Alcaraz was the more pedigreed, having built up to that stage by winning the Miami Masters and Madrid Masters.

In fact, in the Spanish capital, he had beaten Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic back-to-back, a statement performance. Sinner, on the other hand, was ranked outside the top-10 and had lost all five of his combined matches against Nadal and Djokovic until then.

Over five pulsating sets at Flushing Meadows, Alcaraz beat Sinner, with the tie finishing at 2.50 a.m. local time. The Spaniard, after having edged the five-hour, 15-minute fixture, went all the way to bag his maiden Slam and become the youngest men’s World No. 1. At 19, he was also the first teenager to secure a Major since Nadal at the 2005 French Open.

As fans and commentators were busy heralding of the changing of the guard from the Big Three of Roger Federer, Nadal and Djokovic to the younger lot, and appeared eager to anoint Alcaraz as the new tennis king, lost in the din was the fact that Sinner, in that contest, had a match-point in the fourth set and was up a break up in the fifth.

The Italian may not have gone on to win but he had shown enough to be considered a near-equal.

Almost three years since that titanic tussle, Sinner followed through on the promise by beating Alcaraz in four sets last Sunday for his maiden Wimbledon title. Coming as it did after the heartbreak in the Roland-Garros final a month earlier, where Sinner lost despite having not one but three championship points against Alcaraz, it was the ideal balm for his hurting soul. The accomplishment also snapped a run of five straight reverses against his 22-year-old generational rival.

Editorial | Courting grass: On Wimbledon 2025

“It was important for many, many reasons,” Darren Cahill, Sinner’s coach, said after the triumph. “Carlos had the wood over him for the last five matches. They have played amazing matches, and Jannik had chances in maybe four of the five, but hasn’t been able to get the victory.

“So it was important not just because it was a Grand Slam final, not just because it was Wimbledon, and not just because Carlos had won the last five matches against him. He knew the importance of closing this one out when he had the opportunities,” the Aussie added.

Three-month pause

Turning the tide in their 13-match rivalry aside, Sinner’s success over Alcaraz also comes at an important time in his career. Though the 23-year-old has inarguably been the world’s best player since he won the first of his four Majors at the 2024 Australian Open, the suspension he served earlier this year for having traces of banned anabolic steroid clostebol in his system has threatened to take the sheen off every achievement of his.

In mid-February, Sinner paused for three months after entering into a case-resolution agreement with the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) for two positive tests in March 2024. Though he was cleared of intentional doping, many players, past and present, thought he had gotten away lightly and that the whole saga reeked of favouritism.

But such was his resilience, that through all this, Sinner conjured one of the best 18-month periods in tennis history. Starting January 2024, he has a stupendous 99-9 win-loss record, has won 10 Tour-level titles, defended the Davis Cup and has been the undisputed World No. 1 for 58 straight weeks from June 10, 2024.

He is now the holder of three of the four Slams and has reached the summit clash at each of the past four Majors. That he remained the world’s best-ranked player through his ban showed the incredibly high levels he had elevated his tennis to. His ATP points tally right now is 12,030, nearly double that of third-ranked Alexander Zverev (6,310).

“(It’s been) very emotional, even if I don’t cry,” Sinner said after Wimbledon when asked to sum up the last few months. “It feels emotional because only me and the people who are close to me know exactly what we have been through on and off the court. It has been everything except easy.

“We’ve tried to push (through) every practice session, even (when) I was struggling at times mentally. Maybe (I struggled) even more in practice sessions because I feel like when I play the match, I can switch off and just play. I believe that this helped me a lot,” the two-time Australian Open champion added.

The victory at the All England Club is also an important marker in Sinner’s growth as an all-round player. He is undoubtedly the best on synthetic surfaces, having won 13 of 20 hard-court events he has entered (including two Davis Cups) since the 2023 Toronto Masters, and finished a worthy finalist in two others.

But his development this season, first on clay and then on grass, threatens the territorial supremacy of Alcaraz, a two-time winner of both the French Open and Wimbledon. It is not that Sinner earlier had negative returns on the sport’s two natural surfaces. He even beat Alcaraz at Wimbledon 2022 in their second-ever career meeting. But proving one’s worth on the grandest of stages counts for more.

“My favourite surface is hard court, but in my mind I also know that I can play well on other surfaces,” Sinner said. “I knew that I could potentially play well here (at Wimbledon) because of my groundstrokes. They’re quite flat, and the ball goes through.

“Clay is different because I felt like the physical shape was not there. But this year, it was great. I played five-and-a-half hours against Carlos (in Paris). It was super physical and different, but a good move forward.”

In a sense, Sinner finds himself in a similar position to Nadal years ago when the latter’s style was seen through the lens of Federer’s ethereal shot-making and thus judged a tad harshly.

Precise strokes

Sinner’s razor-sharp focus, methodical approach and precise strokes do not please the crowd the way Alcaraz’s flair, invention and free-spiritedness do. Sinner plays with controlled aggression and emotions rarely overflow. For Alcaraz, the court is like a playhouse and he feeds off the audience’s energy. Where Sinner can be clinical, Alcaraz teases and toys before shutting the door.

But after the Italian’s trophy-winning fortnight in southwest London — where he also ousted the legendary Djokovic, among the greatest returners the sport has seen, for a fifth consecutive time — the gap in perception is bound to shrink.

“The rivalry, I think, is amazing already,” said Cahill. “And I think it can get better with both these players pushing each other. Jannik watches more Carlos matches than he does (of) anybody else.

“He’s fascinated with the improvements that are coming in his (Alcaraz) game, and he’s pushing us as coaches to make sure that he’s improving as a tennis player as well. So the rivalry is real. It’s there. And hopefully it’s going to be there and real for the next 10 or 12 years.”



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