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Srihari and Dhinidhi among the participants in National aquatics championships

Srihari and Dhinidhi among the participants in National aquatics championships

The Hindu8 hours ago

Top swimmers of the country, including Paris Olympians Srihari Natraj and Dhinidhi Desinghu, Sajan Prakash, Aryaan Mehra, Kushagra Rawat, Shoan Ganguly and Hashika Ramachandra, will be seen in action in the National aquatics championships starting at the Kalinga Stadium Aquatic Centre here on Sunday.
While Dhinidhi will return to the Nationals after skipping the last edition, to prepare for the Olympics, Srihari will compete in only one event, 50m backstroke, as he will train for next month's World University Games (WUG) in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany.
'The timing of the Nationals does not suit me as I am looking at peaking for the World University Games in two weeks. Had I competed in all five days, I would have lost a minimum of 10 days of training for the WUG,' said Srihari, who recently set the best Indian time for 200m freestyle.
Following a sensational performance of winning 11 medals, including nine gold, in the Uttarakhand National Games in January, Dhinidhi will be brimming with confidence.
Sajan, who made a comeback in the National Games after a break, wants to clock a sub-two-minute time in his main event, 200m butterfly.
The championship assumes importance as it will serve as the last qualifying event (before the cut-off date of June 29) for the World championships to be held in Singapore next month.
Besides, it will serve as a screening event for the selection of swimmers for the National camp leading up to the Asian championships to be held in Ahmedabad from October 1 to 15.

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Srihari and Dhinidhi among the participants in National aquatics championships
Srihari and Dhinidhi among the participants in National aquatics championships

The Hindu

time8 hours ago

  • The Hindu

Srihari and Dhinidhi among the participants in National aquatics championships

Top swimmers of the country, including Paris Olympians Srihari Natraj and Dhinidhi Desinghu, Sajan Prakash, Aryaan Mehra, Kushagra Rawat, Shoan Ganguly and Hashika Ramachandra, will be seen in action in the National aquatics championships starting at the Kalinga Stadium Aquatic Centre here on Sunday. While Dhinidhi will return to the Nationals after skipping the last edition, to prepare for the Olympics, Srihari will compete in only one event, 50m backstroke, as he will train for next month's World University Games (WUG) in Rhine-Ruhr, Germany. 'The timing of the Nationals does not suit me as I am looking at peaking for the World University Games in two weeks. Had I competed in all five days, I would have lost a minimum of 10 days of training for the WUG,' said Srihari, who recently set the best Indian time for 200m freestyle. Following a sensational performance of winning 11 medals, including nine gold, in the Uttarakhand National Games in January, Dhinidhi will be brimming with confidence. Sajan, who made a comeback in the National Games after a break, wants to clock a sub-two-minute time in his main event, 200m butterfly. The championship assumes importance as it will serve as the last qualifying event (before the cut-off date of June 29) for the World championships to be held in Singapore next month. Besides, it will serve as a screening event for the selection of swimmers for the National camp leading up to the Asian championships to be held in Ahmedabad from October 1 to 15.

India tops doping charts, sports ministry promises to fight the menace
India tops doping charts, sports ministry promises to fight the menace

Hindustan Times

timea day ago

  • Hindustan Times

India tops doping charts, sports ministry promises to fight the menace

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Can India fall in love with rugby? The Rugby Premier League bets big on speed, power and spectacle
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Mint

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  • Mint

Can India fall in love with rugby? The Rugby Premier League bets big on speed, power and spectacle

Arun Janardhan A new Indian rugby league backed by GMR, foreign Olympians, and grassroots ambition is betting on the game's speed, spectacle, and a short format. Can the RPL succeed in Ind where so many other leagues have failed? Bengaluru Bravehearts' Spanish player Pol Pla is tackled by Delhi Redz's Spanish player Alejandro Laforga. Gift this article 'It's four minutes per quarter. There are tackles, running, muscle, shouting, grunting, people fall, blood is oozing out—kabaddi will not see that. Kabaddi only has some holding." 'It's four minutes per quarter. There are tackles, running, muscle, shouting, grunting, people fall, blood is oozing out—kabaddi will not see that. Kabaddi only has some holding." Srinath Chittoori's description of rugby 7s is not a criticism of kabaddi, but as a reference marker of what he wants audiences to expect. 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A match is 14 minutes long—or 22 minutes, including breaks. Its brevity, the RPL's organisers believe, is its superpower. The RPL has six teams, each with 13 players, including eight foreigners, playing up to 12 matches over 15 days. Of the 48 international players participating, more than 20 are Olympians or world champions. Teams are owned by some of the leading investors in sport, like Dream Sports (Mumbai Dreamers), KLO (which has teams in Ultimate Kho Kho, Legends League Cricket), besides newcomers like real estate developers RMZ (Delhi Redz) and mining company AvidSys (Chennai Bulls). PLAYING BALL From the moment he enters the sporting arena, Rahul Bose gets accosted—for a photograph, for a quick instruction, for a deep discussion. For years, as a player, he has been the face of Indian rugby. Over the last few years, he is also the president of the Indian Rugby Football Union (IRFU) or Rugby India, the governing body of the sport. The actor known for films like English August, Mr and Mrs Iyer, among others, has been explaining rugby's fine virtues to whoever is willing to listen from the time he went to Sri Lanka for the Indian national team's first international 7s match, two-and-a-half decades ago. The RPL, almost everyone who spoke to Lounge says, is the result of his efforts—finding the schedule window from World Rugby, getting some well-known names to play in it, convincing GMR and the others to put in the money. 'The kind of preparation we have done," Bose says, 'has been marked by intellect, by analysis and by heart." Also Read Reliving India's historic 1975 Hockey World Cup win The reason Bose has been at the forefront of pursuing a league is because, as one stakeholder says, 'just because you don't see it (rugby) does not mean it doesn't exist". Bose avers to the over a 100,000 registered players, over 250 districts that play the sport across 25 states as a sign of its popularity. 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For Turner, familiar with the IPL and what it has done for the sport, the RPL presents an opportunity to be in the forefront of something nascent. Bollywood actor and President of Rugby India Rahul Bose. Mumbai also got Jerry Tuwai, a Fijian with two Olympic gold medals and World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year in 2019, 'the most decorated 7s player in the world," according to Mumbai's Australian coach Tim Walsh. 'I want to use his knowledge, share it with other players. Sevens is a game of moments, small moments that make big differences." For some players, the league provides an opportunity to stay in touch with the game when in many parts of the world this period is considered to be the off-season. Others want to ride the wave—if there is one—of a rugby revolution. 'My coach Paco (Francisco Hernandez, coach of Bengaluru) was coming too," says Spaniard Manuel Moreno, who plays for Hyderabad Heroes. 'He said to me, it's an opportunity to improve. It (RPL) was an easy choose." Also Read Harsh Jain of Dream Sports: Living the fantasy All teams practised for just two weeks prior to the start of the league. For the players, the challenge is not just to adjust to a short window of two weeks, but also the city's hot-humid-wet weather, which makes the air heavy, the ball slippery. 'All the marquee players equal each other out—give or take. The winner would be decided by how well the Indian boys play," says Turner, who signed up for Mumbai. THE LONG RUN Bose presents a rosy picture for the future, believing that at the end of this season, the teams would send scouts to scour the country for young talent, returning with 30-35 promising young men for next year. There would be 200 male—soon female—players training for the next season. When the ISL started over a decade ago, the inaugural season had some of the sport's biggest names—retired and semi-retired. Robert Pires, David James, Nicolas Anelka, Alessandro del Piero among others joined in, before the wave fizzled out. RPL's true test would be to sustain the flow, going past the initial momentum of season one. 'If you ask owners for RoI (returns on investment), the league will die," says Sanjith Shetty, one of the owners of the Bengaluru Bravehearts team and the president of Rugby Karnataka. 'Nobody will make crores—we will all lose money. But there is some business sense to it." Most team owners are looking for a 5-10-year run. Some talk of investing in the grassroots, others want to break the hegemony of cricket. There is perhaps a sense of altruism, while for Mihir Menda, a member of RMZ's supervisory board, RPL gives them a foot into the world of sport. 'The responsibility here is to grow the game," says Walsh. 'So that I can sit back and watch the Indian rugby team compete at the Olympics (which India has bid for) in 2036 for a medal." 'I can be smiling then, whether India wins it or Australia does." Arun Janardhan is a Mumbai-based journalist who covers sports, business leaders and lifestyle. Also Read The quiet triumph of D. Gukesh Topics You May Be Interested In

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