Where is Paul Pogba now? FIFA World Cup winner looks to return to football after serving ban
Former France midfielder Paul Pogba, who wants to resume his career after a doping ban, said on French television on Sunday he is 'talking' with a club, which sources close to him said was Monaco.
The 32-year-old also said he had re-established contact with his brother Mathias, sentenced to a year in prison last December for his involvement in a plot to extort 13 million euros (USD 15 million) from the 2018 World Cup winner.
Pogba, who played for Manchester United and Juventus, is hoping to put three chaotic years behind him.
Pogba suffered through repeated injuries and patchy form that led to his departure from United in 2022. He returned for a second stint at Juventus, where his problems continued.
He failed a drug test after a game in Italy in August 2023 and was handed a four-year doping ban, which was reduced 18 months on appeal. It ended in March.
'It was very, very hard,' he said.
He said he was 'talking' to a club, which multiple sources said was Ligue 1 Monaco.
Pogba said he was determined 'to get back on the pitch, mentally ready, physically ready, it's just a matter of time'.
The extortion case involving six men linked to Paul Pogba shocked France because the perpetrators included three childhood friends and his own brother.
The five other defendants were found guilty of extortion, kidnapping and detention, as well as participation in a criminal association, and sentenced to up to eight years in prison. All six were also fined.
Paul Pogba said he was talking to Mathias who is being allowed to serve his sentence wearing an electronic bracelet rather than behind bars.
'We are in contact. We've spoken, among ourselves, with the family,' Paul Pogba said. 'It's a blood bond. There was a scar, of course. We're moving forward. Only time can give us answers.'
'All we want is to always be united as a family. That's the most important thing. It's hard. Of course it's very hard, I'm not going to lie. I was hurt. It's not the same as before, but we're in touch,' he added.
Paul Pogba was held at gunpoint in 2022 by two hooded men who demanded money.
He said on Sunday that he was initially willing to pay but 'afterwards, I cracked,' he said, deciding 'to speak out, even if it meant dying' and refusing 'to throw away my money like that'.
He said the ban and the court case had changed him
'I learned a lot during this period,' Pogba said. 'I did a lot of cleaning around myself too. I am also much closer to my family, my children.'

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Pink Villa
an hour ago
- Pink Villa
THROWBACK: When Lionel Messi sent a signed gift for MS Dhoni's daughter Ziva
In December 2022, Lionel Messi sent a souvenir with a personal message to Ziva Dhoni, immediately captivating fans everywhere. At seven years old, Ziva posed proudly with the memento, pointing at Messi's inscription and signature. The gesture truly brought into focus MS Dhoni's well-known love for football and introduced Ziva as a budding fan of the sport. Now, in June 2025, that moment feels even more significant after Messi and Dhoni recently appeared together in a popular advertisement. Here's what happened back then. What did Ziva Dhoni receive from Lionel Messi? Messi had celebrated Argentina's World Cup win by extending his joy beyond the field in late December 2022. He sent a signed Argentina jersey with a personal note saying 'Para Ziva,' meaning 'For Ziva.' The gift was shared on Ziva's official Instagram (managed by her parents) with the caption 'Like father, like daughter.' The jersey had arrived just days after Argentina's victory over France. For Ziva, it was more than a jersey. It was an introduction to football fandom inherited from her father. At the time, First Post had noted that the photo quickly gathered over two hundred thousand likes. Today, the post sits at over a million. Ziva's fandom and Dhoni's football roots Ziva's zest for the sport did not blossom overnight. It likely sprang from Dhoni's own passion for football, which runs quite deep. He once aspired to be a goalkeeper, and now co-owns Chennaiyin FC in the Indian Super League. According to the cited source, Dhoni has trained with the squad and supports clubs like Manchester United. Ziva has clearly inherited this interest. Seeing her point at Messi's signature made it clear she follows in Dhoni's footsteps. Jay Shah also received Messi's autograph Ziva wasn't the only Indian recipient of Messi's generosity. Around the same time, the six-time Golden Boot winner also sent a signed jersey to BCCI secretary Jay Shah. As reported by the mentioned publication, former Indian cricketer Pragyan Ojha posted a picture of Shah holding the autographed shirt, with 'GOAT sends his best wishes and signed match jersey for jay bhai!' written on it. Ojha even joked about hoping to get one for himself soon. From a viral 2022 post to an on-screen collaboration in 2025 Though the jersey made waves in late 2022, Dhoni and Messi's association didn't end there. In April 2025, Dhoni and Messi appeared together in an advertisement for a popular chips brand. This video had amassed nearly a million likes within 24 hours. Fans watched the two legends share playful football moments as they passed the ball through screens across the world.
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First Post
an hour ago
- First Post
'I was happy I won gold medal in Lima, not that I beat Manu Bhaker,' says teenage shooting sensation Suruchi Phogat
At just 19, India's Suruchi Phogat has emerged as a shooting prodigy. After winning the nationals, she became the first Indian shooter to claim three consecutive World Cup gold medals. In this interview, Suruchi talks about her rapid rise, beating Manu Bhaker and more. read more Prodigies are exceptional case studies, in any field. It's always so interesting to talk to and try to understand what is going on in the minds of people who take to something new like fish to water. It's like they were born to do just that. If you believe in destiny then you would say that 19-year-old Suruchi Phogat was born to be a shooting athlete. India is blessed with a number of teenage shooting prodigies, but Suruchi Phogat, in a very short period of time, has managed to carve out a very special niche for herself. And to think that she has just begun shooting at the senior international level, in World Cups. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Imagine being a Phogat in Haryana and going into sports. The obvious first choice is wrestling, right? It was the same with Suruchi. We all know about the celebrated Phogat sisters, who have made India proud on multiple global platforms. But it was another Indian wrestling hero – Virender Singh (who picked-up the nickname 'Goonga Pehelwan' and also had a documentary made on him, bearing the same name and has won 3 Deaflympics gold medals for India) who was the main wrestling inspiration_._ Virender is their neighbour in the village of Sasroli in the Jhajjar district of Haryana, and the one who inspired Suruchi's father, Inder Singh Phogat, to introduce his daughter to wrestling, at the age of 11. More from Sports Man City underline squad depth with 6-0 victory vs Al-Ain, reach FIFA Club World Cup knockout stage with Juventus But there was something else written in the stars for Suruchi. A painful collarbone injury saw the young girl being sidelined for almost a year. It was after that that Inder Singh Phogat decided to take his daughter to a shooting range. Suruchi was 13 at the time and despite being scared initially by the rather loud sounds of the guns going off, she realised this was the sport for her. In her own words – 'it is a fair sport'. And the rest, as they say, is history. In just about six years' time, since she first began training as a shooter, Suruchi has won multiple gold medals in the women's 10m Air Pistol event – in domestic as well as international events. Her rise has been nothing short of extraordinary, becoming the first Indian shooter to win three consecutive World Cup gold medals . This year, in the World Cups in Buenos Aires, Lima and Munich, Suruchi stood on the top of the podium in all three competitions, along with a gold (Lima World Cup) and a bronze (Buenos Aires World Cup) in the Mixed-Team 10m Air Pistol event. In Lima, in the women's event, she beat double Olympic medallist and Indian shooting's poster girl, Manu Bhaker, who finished second behind the 19-year-old. In the Munich World Cup, recently, Suruchi (while clinching the gold in the 10m Air Pistol event) beat 2024 Paris Olympics silver medallist in the women's 25m Air Pistol event, Camille Jedrzejewski of France. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Three Back to Back gold for India 🇮🇳 Suruchi Singh Phogat is Undefeated in 10m AP in 2025 What a talent she is at just 19 year old. — ई (@museofindia7) June 14, 2025 Suruchi is calm and composed and extremely consistent. She has been the standout shooter at the National level. She won the National Games gold in her pet event, as well as the selection trials, finishing on top in the qualification round, with a mind-boggling score of 586, beating the likes of Manu, Palak Gulia, who won the gold medal at the 2022 Hangzhou Asian Games and Olympian Esha Singh. She won gold medals in the youth, junior and senior categories at the National Championships in Delhi, in December last year. Suruchi in fact has been shooting 585 rather consistently. She shot that score in three straight senior competitions in India. In the Munich World Cup, she shot 588 in qualification. For a quick comparison (though this does not prove anything concrete) - at the 2024 Paris Olympics, the highest qualification score in the women's 10m Air Pistol event was 582, shot by Veronika Major of Hungary. Suruchi made her senior World Cup debut this year and in five World Cup event outings, so far, across individual and team events, she has five medals (four gold and one bronze). She has beaten the top Chinese shooters and has dominated seasoned shooters with almost effortless ease. There's a reason why every shooting expert in the country is talking about her. She is most definitely a natural. In fact, Suruchi's rise has been so meteoric, that most experts have been forced to compare her with Manu Bhaker and other top shooters in the 10m women's Air Pistol field. Ask Suruchi herself though and she says she was only happy to win the gold and it doesn't matter who she beat enroute to it. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Suruchi's father, Inder Singh Phogat is an ex-Army Havildar and has instilled the quintessential armed forces' discipline and focussed routine in Suruchi. This 19-year-old is more mature than most kids her age. She likes to focus on only what she is doing and nothing else. Ask her about wanting to win an Olympic medal and pat comes the reply – 'abhi mera next goal mera next match hai, mein zyaada door ki nahin sochti hoon (right now my next goal is the next match I am going to play, I don't like to think very far ahead).' It wasn't surprising also to hear from her that she is unfazed by reputation and doesn't watch any other shooter's match or event. At a time when another young Indian shooter who wowed the world a few years back, before fading away, Saurabh Chaudhary is also making a very promising comeback, Suruchi's achievements are an assurance of sorts of a very promising future for Indian shooting. The women's pool of 10m and 25m pistol shooters is in itself a very competitive one, with the likes of Manu, Suruchi, Rhythm Sangwan, Palak Gulia, Rahi Sarnobat etc. competing against each other. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Suruchi spoke to Firstpost in an exclusive interview – about her rise, how and why she doesn't feel pressure while she is at the firing point, beating Manu Bhaker at the Lima World Cup final, the role that her father and her coach – Mr. Suresh Singh, who was also Manu's first coach, has played in her career so far, how she is just focussed on what is coming up next and nothing else and much more. Suruchi Singh had also won gold at Buenos Aires and Lima legs of ISSF World Cup earlier. Suruchi Phogat is coached by ex-serviceman Suresh Singh. Image: @DeoKalikesh on X This young woman is not just talented and determined; she also has laser-sharp focus. Watch out for Suruchi Phogat. Someday, she could well rewrite Indian shooting history, much more than she already has. Excerpts of an exclusive interview with Suruchi…. You recently said in an interview that you don't feel pressure while competing. So, what do you feel? What goes on in your head when you are at the shooting point? Suruchi: When I compete, my mind is absolutely relaxed. There are no thoughts swirling around in my head about how I will do, whether I will shoot well or poorly, nothing. I stay completely free-minded. Some of it is natural and some of it is because of all the experience I have gathered so far from all the competitions that I have been to. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD You could have become a wrestler but instead chose shooting. How old were you when you decided to shift to shooting and what made you make that decision? Suruchi: I was 13 years old when I thought that I should become a shooter. My father took me to a shooting range and I liked the sport. I saw what was an individual and a fair sport. So, I decided to pursue a career in sports shooting and began my training from there on, at the age of 13. You began training as a shooter at the age of 13 at the Guru Dronacharya Shooting Academy in Bhiwani under coach Suresh Singh. I read that you would travel 100km a day by train. What do you remember about those days and how do you feel when you look at the World Cup medals you have won so far and think about those days at the Bhiwani Academy… STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Suruchi: When I think back to those days, I feel very happy. I feel satisfied about the hard work that I have put in and the fact that it's because of that hard work that I am getting the results that I am managing to secure these days. Were you 100% sure from the very beginning that you wanted to be a pistol shooter, or did you maybe consider rifle or shotgun? Suruchi: No, I always, from the very beginning, wanted to be a pistol shooter. I saw the rifles that are used in the sport for rifle shooting events also, but I thought the rifles were heavy and the overall equipment etc rather cumbersome. So, I knew that pistol shooting is what would suit me the most. Every single World Cup you have participated in, you have been on the podium. 4 golds and a bronze this year in World Cups alone. You say you don't feel pressure, but surely a global competition must feel different to you than say shooting at the Nationals? Almost every athlete feels that. What goes on in your head when you are, say, at a World Cup event vis-à-vis a domestic competition? STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Suruchi: No, I really don't feel there is anything different between a domestic competition and a World Cup event. The shooting ranges of course are different at the World Cups, but we do get time and opportunity to train at these ranges before the competition, so we get used to these ranges also and nothing seems very different, as such. Suruchi Phogat and Saurabh Chaudhary won the 10m air pistol mixed team gold medal at the Lima ISSF World Cup. Image: ISSF Official on X You are the first Indian shooter to win three consecutive World Cup gold medals. So far in your career, which competition has been the toughest for you and why? Suruchi: Tough or not tough is all in the head. I honestly haven't felt like the competition has been too tough, anywhere, so far. I can't recall any event where I felt like the competition was too tough. I have never thought that the competition is so tough, in any event so far, that I am under pressure. In the Munich World Cup recently, you beat the Paris Olympics silver medallist Camille in the 10m Air Pistol final, enroute to the gold. Are you also unfazed by big names around you? Do you think about reputations etc or don't pay any attention to things like that at all? Suruchi: Firstly, I never know anything, as such, about any other shooter at a competition, because I don't think about anything or anybody else except my own preparation and execution. I don't watch any other shooter's event or finals. And even if I find out something about a certain shooter's achievements or accomplishments after being introduced to them etc., their reputation doesn't make any difference to me or my game, because I can only control what is in my hands, which is my own game, nothing else. The other shooters will focus on their game, I will focus on mine. I just want to stay focused on my own target and my goals, absolutely nothing else. Talking about reputations, you beat Manu Bhaker in the Lima World Cup final. Not surprisingly there have already been quite a few comparisons between you and Manu. Your take on beating the only Indian athlete to win two medals in a single Olympic edition since 1900? Did you feel anything extra special, because you managed to beat Manu in that final? Suruchi: No, not at all. I didn't feel anything out of the ordinary because Manu was also in that final, which I won. I was happy about the fact that I had won the gold medal, not that I beat Manu Bhaker. You are only 19 years old. It's safe to say that you are a natural talent. But there must be facets of your game that you would want to work on, to improve further? Suruchi: Yes, there are definitely some facets of my overall game which I need to work on further. There are some weaknesses in my game. Which is why when it comes to training, these are the aspects that I want to focus on the most and put in the most amount of hard work into, so that I can iron out the chinks in my armour. Suruchi Phogat defeated Manu Bhaker at Lima World Cup to win 10m gold. Images: PTI You won gold medals across senior, junior and youth categories at the National Championships in December-January, then won the gold at the National Games in February, beating Asian Games champion Palak Gulia and the experienced Rahi Sarnobat. Now you have three individual World Cup gold medals in one year already. How do you rate yourself in terms of improvement and your progression when you look at your short but very successful journey, so far? Suruchi: I have definitely improved. No one really does very well right at the beginning, when they first start training. But I have improved and progressed quite a bit, quite fast, thanks to my parents and my coach. I have always put in a lot of hard work, but I have had their support and guidance always and that has been priceless. All the credit for where I am today goes to my mother, my father and my coach, Mr. Suresh Singh, who has trained me from the time I began my shooting journey, at the age of 13. Talk to me a little bit about Mr. Suresh Singh and his style of coaching. He has been your coach from the time you began shooting. He is your guru. He was also Manu's first coach… Suruchi: Suresh sir is an ex-Army man. He is a straight talker. Conversations with him are simple, natural and completely straightforward. There are no long-winded, convoluted conversations or instructions that come from him, ever. And I really like that about him. Your father is also an ex-Army man. I am assuming it would be fair to say that the guidance, the advice, and also the love and affection that you get from your father is also completely straightforward and uncomplicated? Suruchi: Yes, absolutely. And this facet of my father's personality has played a big role in my career so far. What is your take on the incredible talent pool in Indian women's pistol shooting - in the 10m and 25m events, currently? There's Palak, Esha Singh, Rhythm Sangwan, you and of course Manu. It's a strong pool and the competition is also fierce, you would say? Suruchi: Yes, that is absolutely correct. The women's competition in these two events in India is quite fierce and the Indian team therefore, is a very strong one. Indian female shooters are winning medals at the Olympics, the Asian Games etc. This is a correct assessment. There is a lot of healthy competition amongst all of us and we give each other mental strength as well. Have you and Manu talked a lot about shooting and other things? Do you have many conversations when you are competing together? Suruchi: No, we don't usually have any conversations, as such. Both of us focus on our individual games. Olympics are coming up again in 2028 in Los Angeles. You will be 22 at that time. But if the next Olympics were next year, would you say you are at a level where you could win an Olympic medal? Suruchi: I am not thinking about that. Right now, my next goal is the next competition I will be participating in, the next match I am going to play. I don't think too far ahead. Whatever lies next for me is my next target, my next goal, nothing else. Tell me about the support that you have been getting from the federation – the NRAI. Are you fully satisfied with that? Suruchi: The support from the NRAI has been very good. They send us for international competitions, they have ensured that the coaches for the National team are top-quality coaches, who give us great guidance and training at the National camps.


News18
an hour ago
- News18
'Ate And Left': Rohit, Harbhajan Reveal India Star Came To Their Weddings Empty-Handed
Last Updated: Harbhajan Singh and Rohit Sharma humorously recalled ex-India teammate attending their weddings, enjoying himself, but leaving empty-handed. Harbhajan Singh and Rohit Sharma have called out former teammate Shikhar Dhawan for coming empty-handed to their weddings and leaving after eating, drinking, and having an 'absolute blast'. Former spinner Harbhajan married his longtime girlfriend, actress Geeta Basra, on 29 October 2015 in Jalandhar. Rohit and Ritika Sajdeh got married on December 13 in the same year in Mumbai. Dhawan was Rohit's opening partner at that time, and the duo was considered one of the most feared in white-ball cricket, having found success in an overall disappointing 2015 World Cup. 'Shikhar Dhawan came to our wedding," Harbhajan recalled on his a YouTube show with Geeta called, Who's The Boss? 'He danced a lot, ate, drank, had an absolute blast. And while leaving, he slipped in an envelope in my pocket. Maine kaha, 'ye kya kar raha hai?'. Maine woh khola na, 101 chorh, ek rupiya nahi tha. Khaali. (I said there was no need. When I opened it, forget 101 rupees, it didn't even have one rupee. It was totally empty!) In Indian culture, shagun envelopes are given as a symbol of blessings. They are generally filled with cash, accompanied by a one-rupee coin. After narrating the story, Harbhajan asked Rohit and Ritika if Dhawan gave them anything. 'Kuch nahi. Naachke, khaake, aur peeke gaya tha (Nothing. He danced, ate, drank, and just left)," Rohit replied, prompting all four of them to break into laughter. But Rohit made sure to praise Dhawan, too, calling him a 'class' person. They scored 5,148 runs together in 115 innings, making them the fourth-highest opening partnership in terms of runs in ODI history 'Woh bhi kya banda hai, class! (What a guy he his, class) From childhood, we have been playing together, and we have done a lot of tours together. Before playing for India, we had done a tour to Australia for India A," Rohit said. Dhawan retired from all forms of competitive cricket in August last year. Rohit has also hung up his T20I and Test boots but continues to be available in ODI cricket, where he's also the team captain. He's said to be hoping to remain fit for the 2027 World Cup. First Published: June 23, 2025, 13:18 IST