&w=3840&q=100)
FIH Pro League: India denied late equaliser in dramatic penalty drama, lose 1-2 to Argentina
India suffered a heartbreaking 1-2 defeat to Argentina in their final match of the European leg of the FIH Pro League in Amstelveen. A dramatic penalty stroke drama involving Jugraj Singh and video referrals marked India's fourth consecutive loss. read more
Amstelveen (The Netherlands): India's late goal from penalty was disallowed in dramatic circumstances and Jugraj Singh failed to score after it was retaken as they lost 1-2 to Argentina for their fourth successive defeat in the European leg of FIH Pro League hockey here on Thursday.
Drag-flicker Jugraj struck in the fourth minute off the first penalty corner of the match to give India the lead but Tomas Domene (9th and 49th) scored a brace, both from PCs, to hand Argentina the win.
STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD
Down 1-2 in the fourth and final quarter, India earned a penalty stroke two minutes from the final hooter and Jugraj was successful in sounding the board. Argentina asked for a video referral on the ground that Jugraj's left foot was well ahead of the ball while he took the stroke.
The video umpire ruled in Argentina's favour but India captain Hardik Singh asked the referee to check whether the Argentina goalkeeper Tomas Santiago was already ahead of the goal-line before Jugraj took the stroke.
This time, India got a favourable decision from the video umpire. Jugraj was allowed to retake the stroke but his shot was saved this time by Santiago.
Hardik led India as regular captain Harmanpreet Singh is down with a finger injury.
Argentina got as many as eight PCs while India earned just three.
India had lost to the same opponents 3-4 on Wednesday.
Before that, India had lost 1-2 and 2-3 to Olympic champions Netherlands here during this European tour of the Pro League.
This was India's fourth and last match here, and they will now travel to Antwerp in Belgium to face formidable Australia on Saturday.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
37 minutes ago
- Indian Express
The story of how Fernando Rivas, Carolina Marin's coach, triggered a French revolution in Badminton
'No, tengo a Carolina.' No, I have Carolina. Said at speed in Spanish, this was like Shashi Kapoor's 'Mere pass Maa hai' mic-drop moment from the movie, Deewar. This was in response to being asked about Chinese champions in badminton. Fernando Rivas, the famously pathbreaking badminton coach of Carolina Marin, who took her to an Olympic title at Rio, and to a World Championship final after two ACL surgeries (she has 3 titles and 1 silver from 2014 – 2023), and back to the brink of an Olympic final before injury cruelly stopped her at the 2024 Games, had been speaking at the Yonex Legends Series right before Paris. He recalled the first stirrings of ambition that brought unprecedented success to a completely badminton-unknown nation, Spain. Now, over the years, Rivas, with multiple PhDs in topics central to sport but also skimming its periphery, has gone on to introduce new doctrines in elite training and high performance. This last week he announced he will move on from leading the French evolution in badminton, a sport that's most benefitted from Paris hosting 2024. Rivas worked with the French for three years and has put them on such a firm footing in leveraging sports science to achieve peak performance, that Europe is suddenly looking like an exciting, heaving hotbed of talent in a sport with its heartbeat in Asia. Rivas' announcement, after cordially ending the stint with the French, ended cryptically. 'It's time to return home where new and exciting projects await,' he wrote. Surely, 32-year-old Super Marin wasn't planning yet another comeback – though no one would be surprised if she did. But 'it's time to return….' had riffs off 'No, tengo a Carolina' (No…I have Carolina to turn into champion) from all those years ago. Rivas had been watching an Olympic men's doubles final – though it's not clear if this was Athens or Beijing or London. 'I was actually watching a men's doubles match, which was amazing. But in the middle of the third set, I told my colleague 'I have to be there. I have to be in the Olympic final,'' the Spaniard Shifu told the Legends Series. The colleague was gobsmacked. 'And she asked, 'Are you going to coach the Chinese?'' given their predominance in Olympic finals back then. Rivas calmly declared, 'No, I have Carolina'.' Along with Pullela Gopichand, Tai Tzu-ying's coach, Lai Chien-cheng and Ratchanok's longtime mentor Patapol Ngernsrisuk, Rivas formed a formidable counter to the Chinese women's singles domination of a decade and half ago. While there's lots of guessing about what exciting projects could possibly beckon Rivas back home ('It's time to…' is fairly ominous if there's another Marin, looming on the horizon), but what Rivas has also helped kickstart hugely is the French surge. 'A major European power that will become a global force,' Rivas declared soon after Thom Giquel and Delphine Delrue's Indonesia Open triumph (like winning a tennis Slam) in mixed doubles. Rivas had scribbled that he fondly remembered Giquel and Delrue's first European championship gold, followed by women's doubles victory of Anne Tran and Margot Lambert, a partnership whose dedication and development filled him with particular pride. Even as Marin healed from a second busted knee, Rivas had been busy putting up the French scaffolding that ensured they ended with most medals at the last European Championships. Rivas would call 'valuable', Toma Jr Popov's 'against the odds qualification for Paris', as well as Alex Lanier's first ever Super Series victory in 2025. 'The bittersweet taste of the 2023 European mixed team championship silver in Aire-sur-la-lys lingers, where we nearly beat Denmark in a thrilling match,' Rivas would write. At the Paris World Championships in the last week of August, Rivas will throw his last dice for the French, looking for a world's medal for the first time since Chinese-origin Pi Hongyan won at Hyderabad in 2009. It's not that Denmark is sliding, though it doesn't boast the quality across categories. Kenneth Larsen, now with Malaysia, is plotting quite an upsurge in Asia, and Anders Antonsen ensures that after Viktor Axelsen (who himself ain't quite done yet), the crowns are not directly headed to the likes of Li Shifeng and Kunlavut Vitidsarn. But you had to be stuck in the past to not notice how France are on the rise – and with a fairly steady, sustained program that's not a one-off. They're in here for the long haul, and Denmark felt the sting when pushed in the Euro finals, though 8 medals to top the charts including two titles of 5, was the arrival of a new power in town, with English badminton waning. Former French doubles shuttler, a World No 13 in his day, Vincent Laigle, leads the general direction and worked closely with Rivas who helped standardise elite performance after the French built uniformity in systems starting 2008. At the Paris Worlds in two months, Rivas and the team has ensured 15 French contenders will be in action, and fighting for podiums, not just making host numbers. Just like for Marin, Rivas deployed strategic growth charts that have seen Lanier and Delrue-Giquel win a Super 750 and Super 1000 title in recent times. But French badminton was always in an advanced orbit. India's Paralympics world champion Pramod Bhagat recalled the sophisticated drills that were at play for agility, strengthening and simply to improve reflex reactions. Giquel's recovery from a scary injury a few years ago had some cutting edge tech. But it was Rivas' independent streak, and ingenuity not unlike Gopichand, Lai chien and Patapol, that was crucial. Quite simply, he didn't believe in aping the Asians and Chinese blindly. Cyrille Gombrowicz, a director at French Federation, FFBaD, had noted, 'I thank Fernando Rivas for the direction he has greatly contributed to defining and implementing in the service of high performance. I remember that we will not succeed in beating the Asians by copying their method but by asserting our own singularity. The holistic approach to performance materializing in our own ecosystem is his legacy.' At Los Angeles, the French will likely compete not just as former Olympic hosts, but aim at badminton titles. No one quite expected Marin to be the force she eventually turned out to be till she claimed her first world crown at Copenhagen in 2014. It's unclear yet if Spain has unearthed more shuttlers like her, though the country is ambitiously challenging the might of NBA, nothing less, with a new basketball league that will stop talent drain to America. Their badminton chapter is far from done, as long as Rivas is back in the mix. China has little to worry about in the immediate future. But a little further down the timeline, things get a little ominous with the new-Denmark building up in France. Rivas raised Marin to slay Asian might and largely succeeded. Now in France, his blueprint gets 3D printed, scaled up and scaling the peaks being imminent. Le crack, the French called him in their testimonials – a wizard, a bit of a genius.


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Maaya wins her first ITF Junior tennis title on European clay
Pune: It might be just another title in the junior tennis circuit, but for Maaya Rajeshwaran Revathi, the trophy in the Grade 2 ITF event in Gladbeck, Germany, on Saturday was quite significant. The 16-year-old from Coimbatore, who set the courts on fire in the WTA 125 Mumbai Open by reaching the semifinals as an unranked, wildcard qualifier in February, defeated Switzerland's Noella Manta 6-2, 6-4 to capture her seventh title in the juniors. For once, the title was her first on European clay, a rare achievement for an Indian. She also finished runner-up in doubles in the company of Australian Koharu Nishikawa. Then, there is the context: It was her first week in action after the first-round loss in the qualifying of the French Open junior championships. "It definitely does matter to me a lot, because it's my first title in Europe as well (besides being on clay)," Maaya said after her win. "And I've been training on clay for the last one month, non-stop. I mean, with visa delays and all of that, I couldn't perform that well in the French even though I prepared very well," she said, referring to reaching Paris only hours before her match at Roland Garros. "But I'm happy to win the title on clay because I think there were so many people who were putting in the effort for me to train well on clay. I think that showed up. Yeah, I'm very happy that I had an opportunity to show that it worked." Maaya had won a Grade 1 junior event in January in New Delhi. So how would she rate her Grade 2 win in Europe? "It has been a while since I competed well in the first place. I think the last tournament that I played well was in Malaysia, probably a couple of months ago," she said. "So, for me, this is the last tournament on clay (this season), and it's a very positive finish to the clay season and to go on (to) grass. That is one thing. "And in India, I think over every tournament, my level was improving a little bit. Every match has been a learning, so I've been gradually climbing up the ladder. I think that's a very positive sign." Maaya trains at the prestigious Rafa Nadal Academy in Mallorca. The association began as an ad-hoc arrangement sometime in the middle of last year and a deal was officially signed in November. "The more I train with professional players, the more I'm surrounded by professional people, I'm learning to be a bit more professional," she said. "I think one of the main things is that you get really motivated. For example, I see a tennis match, a Grand Slam final, I'm like, I'm gonna go tomorrow and smack the ball. But you see a positive example in front of you every single day, that really motivates you. I think that motivation is very important, and I'm happy that I'm getting it." Maaya has trained outside India at various places earlier but Mallorca feels different in an ironic way. "This is a bit different because I haven't stayed at a place for a very long time outside India. And I'm studying here as well. So this feels a bit more like home now. I am kind of used to the place." Home but without friends. Constant travel to tournaments means she is not missed much by her school-mates. "Half of the school doesn't even know me. I'm hardly here. They know my name, but they don't know me in person." In keeping with the harsh realities of the sport, Maaya won't have time to celebrate her win either. "No, I have to, like rest, get back to training on Monday, because I have to go to London on Tuesday," where she is scheduled to play her next (Grade 1 junior) tournament in Roehampton. "I've never played on grass before, so it will be the first time for me." Knowing her ability to adapt to tough conditions, one can be sure Maaya will be slicing and volleying her way to more success.


Hindustan Times
5 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Olympic balloon rises again in Paris
A giant balloon that became a popular landmark over the skies of Paris during the 2024 Olympics rose again Saturday evening, as Parisians celebrated an annual street music festival. HT Image As locals danced to live music in and around the Tuileries garden in central Paris, the balloon made its return on a hot summer evening. Organisers are hoping it will once again attract crowds of tourists. During the Games, the Olympic cauldron was tethered to the balloon, flying above the Tuileries garden at sunset every day. Thousands flocked to see the seven-metre wide ring of electric fire. Last summer's version "had been thought up to last for the length of the Olympic and Paralympic Games," said Mathieu Lehanneur, the designer of the cauldron. After President Emmanuel Macron "decided to bring it back, all of the technical aspects needed to be reviewed", he told AFP on Thursday. Lehanneur said he was "very moved" that the Olympic balloon was making a comeback. "The worst thing would have been for this memory to become a sitting relic that couldn't fly anymore," he said. The balloon's return on Saturday kicks off a daily appearance each evening until September 14 a summer staple every year until the 2028 Los Angeles Games. "For its revival, we needed to make sure it changed as little as possible and that everything that did change was not visible," said Lehanneur. With a decarbonated fire patented by French energy giant EDF, the upgraded balloon follows "the same technical principles" as its previous version, said director of innovation at EDF Julien Villeret. The improved attraction "will last ten times longer" and be able to function for "300 days instead of 30", according to Villeret. The creators of the balloon also reinforced the light-and-mist system that "makes the flames dance", he said. Under the cauldron, a machine room hides cables, a compressor and a hydro-electric winch. That system will "hold back the helium balloon when it rises and pull it down during descent", said Jerome Giacomoni, president of the Aerophile group that constructed the balloon. "Filled with 6,200 cubic meters of helium that is lighter than air," the Olympic balloon "will be able to lift around three tonnes" of cauldron, cables and attached parts, he said. The Tuileries garden is where French inventor Jacques Charles took flight in his first gas balloon on December 1, 1783. He followed in the footsteps of the famed Montgolfier brothers, who had just nine days earlier elsewhere in Paris managed to launch a similar balloon into the sky with humans onboard. The website is to display the times when the modern-day balloon will rise and indicate any potential cancellations due to weather. burs-jj/acb This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.