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RCB stampede aid, Rafale fuselages in India, Jeetendra's land deal, & more

RCB stampede aid, Rafale fuselages in India, Jeetendra's land deal, & more

RCB stampede aid, Rafale fuselages in India, Jeetendra's land deal, & more
Royal Challengers Bengaluru on Thursday announced ₹10 lakh compensation for each of the 11 people who died in the stampede outside M Chinnaswamy Stadium during the team's victory parade. Meanwhile, the Karnataka High Court issued a notice to the state government, seeking answers on the cause of the tragedy.

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Two books on B.R. Ambedkar released in Karnataka's Shivamogga dist.
Two books on B.R. Ambedkar released in Karnataka's Shivamogga dist.

The Hindu

timean hour ago

  • The Hindu

Two books on B.R. Ambedkar released in Karnataka's Shivamogga dist.

Two books on B.R. Ambedkar, the architect of the Indian Constitution, were released in a function in Karnataka's Shivamogga on Saturday, June 21. The books released were Mookanayaka and Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Dinachari. Mookanayaka is a collection of editorials written by Ambedkar for his periodical, which had the same name. Writers Renuka Nidagundi and Ramesh Aroli translated the work into Kannada. Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar Dinachari, a book on Ambedkar's routine life, has been translated by P. Aradimalliah Kattera. Aharnishi, a publishing house in Shivamogga, has published both the books. Justice H.N. Nagamohan Das, retired judge of Karnataka High Court and head of the commission on internal reservation of the Scheduled Castes, released the books. Writers V.L. Narasimhamurthy and Vrinda Hegde spoke about the books. M. Gurumurthy, State convener of the Dalit Sangharsha Samiti presided over the programme. Authors Ramesh Aroli, P. Aradimallaiah and publisher Akshata Hunchadakatte were present.

"India will miss his energy, positivity, and aggression": RCB head coach Andy Flower reflects on Virat Kohli's test retirement
"India will miss his energy, positivity, and aggression": RCB head coach Andy Flower reflects on Virat Kohli's test retirement

India Gazette

time2 hours ago

  • India Gazette

"India will miss his energy, positivity, and aggression": RCB head coach Andy Flower reflects on Virat Kohli's test retirement

Rishikesh (Uttarakhand) [India] June 22 (ANI): Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) head coach Andy Flower reflected on Indian veteran batter Virat Kohli's retirement from test cricket. He felt 'Men in Blue' would miss Kohli's energy, positivity, and aggression on the field, but also said 'India are lucky' that they have lots of young talent. Kohli announced his retirement from Test cricket on May 12, marking an end to an illustrious 14-year career which saw him dominate a variety of conditions, regions, and opponents, both as a batter and captain. While speaking to ANI, Andy Flower said, 'I think it will have on the Indian team, not only his (Kohli's) runs, but his energy, positivity, and aggression. It is always nice having those influences in teams, where you have a few individuals that are super aggressive like he [Virat Kohli] is, in a good way. So, I think they might miss that.' 'This is the reality of these situations when great players move on, is that time moves on and teams move on and India are lucky in that they have lots of young talent coming through,' he added. Flower said India still has experienced cricketers around, such as Jasprit Bumrah and Ravindra Jadeja, and felt the Indian Premier League sets young players up quite nicely for pressure cricket. 'India still has some very experienced cricketers around who have played a lot of cricket. Bumrah is obviously one of them, and Jadeja is still playing. And the young boys are playing so much cricket, and the IPL sets them up quite nicely for pressure cricket,' he said. In his Test career, Kohli made 123 appearances in white clothing, scoring 9,230 runs at an average of 46.85, with 30 centuries and 31 fifties in 210 innings and the best score of 254*. He is India's fourth-highest run-getter in the format, behind Sachin Tendulkar (15,921 runs), Rahul Dravid (13,265 runs) and Sunil Gavaskar (10,122 runs). India is touring England for a five-match test series, which started on June 20. This is the first test series since the legendary batter announced his retirement. This series also marks the beginning of the World Test Championship (WTC) cycle 2025-27 for both nations. (ANI)

Rishabh Pant "Had Three Celebrations In Mind" After Scoring Ton vs England
Rishabh Pant "Had Three Celebrations In Mind" After Scoring Ton vs England

NDTV

time3 hours ago

  • NDTV

Rishabh Pant "Had Three Celebrations In Mind" After Scoring Ton vs England

Wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant, who hit his seventh Test century in the first Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy Test against England at Headingley, said he initially considered three celebrations but ultimately chose a familiar one - the front handspring. On Saturday, Pant hit an astonishing 134 and now holds the record for most Test hundreds as a wicketkeeper for India, going past the legendary MS Dhoni's tally of six centuries. It was also Pant's third Test hundred in England - which is a mammoth feat no other visiting wicketkeeper has more than one Test century in the country. "I had three celebrations in mind - of an OK sign on the eye (which footballer Dele Alli does), another was 'let bat do the talking'. Then I thought, I will quietly do the one I know well. I have been doing it from my childhood (handspring)." "I trained in gymnastics in school. I am very used to it since childhood. Even if you wake up me up in the middle of the night, I can do this. After the accident, I had to work harder for doing this. I worked on it and it's now easy for me to do it," said Pant in a chat with veteran India batter Cheteshwar Pujara ahead of day three's play. He also revealed what was going through his mind when he was on the verge of getting the century, which he got with a one-handed six off Bashir over mid-wicket. "When (Shoaib) Bashir was bowling in the previous over, I thought I should get to the hundred. I didn't want to play percentage cricket and take a risk. He was bowling well, so I respected it and took a single." "In the next over when he came, I told him before 'if you keep the field close-in, I will hit the big shot'. Luckily, I was batting on 99 and I was confident. The pressure was there, but I wanted to play on the merit of the ball." Pant had come on the back of an indifferent IPL 2025 for Lucknow Super Giants, though he did sign off with a century against Royal Challengers Bengaluru. He spoke about the changes he made to his game for excelling in the Test series opener. "In my mind, I wanted to cut down on a few shots (in preparation for Tests after IPL). I wanted to play in the V. If you have seen it, I haven't played a lot of shots to balls that were bowled wide. I wanted to play straight and rest of it would be seen after. In my mind, the thought process is always to try read the bowler's thinking - like what is he trying to do." "Once an idea is made, the thought from me is to put the bowler under pressure as I can hit him out. So playing with the bowler's mindset and trying to disturb him is important, as if you allow the bowler to hit the right areas, so he's always on the top. So playing with that, and then coming back to your zone - this balancing act is just getting more refined - and I am enjoying this a lot." Quizzed over his solid defensive game, Pant said, "Mostly it's about the area - if the ball is in a good area, I try not to do too much. Like if a bowler is in a good spell or is working on a set-up, its fine. But when the bowler is not in rhythm, then I try to capitalise on it towards my side. When a bowler is bowling well, I try to defend well against him or leave, as that's the mindset."

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