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India’s Rinku Singh (centre) lifts the trophy alongside Abhishek Sharma (left), Ishan Kishan (second from left), Harshit Rana (second right) and Axar Patel after their victory…
Australia’s Pat Cummins during practice ahead of their ICC World Cup semi-final against South Africa in Eden Gardens, Kolkata, India, Saturday. (Reuters) Star paceman Pat Cummins was ruled out of Australia’s Twenty20 World Cup campaign Saturday, while batsman Matthew Renshaw has come into the squad at the expense of Matt Short.Test skipper Cummins only played one of the five Ashes Tests against England over the Australian summer as he slowly recovers from a lower back injury.He was hoping to be fit for the tournament in India and Sri Lanka beginning on February 7, but has run out of time and been replaced by Ben Dwarshuis.”With Pat needing more time to recover from his back injury, Ben is a ready replacement who offers a left-arm pace option as well as dynamic fielding and late-order hitting,” selector Tony Dodemaide said.”We believe his ability to swing the ball at good pace, along with clever variations, will be well-suited to the conditions we expect and overall structure of the squad.”The only other change to the provisional squad named this month sees Renshaw come in for Short, who has paid the price for his ordinary performances in the Big Bash League.”Matt (Renshaw) has impressed in all formats of late, including in multiple roles in white ball formats for Australia, the Queensland Bulls and the Brisbane Heat,” Dodemaide said.”With the top order settled and spin-heavy conditions expected in the pool stages in Sri Lanka, we also feel Matt provides extra middle-order support, with Tim David completing his return to play programme in the early phase of the tournament.”Big-hitter David is on the comeback trail from a hamstring injury.The squad is spin-heavy in preparation for the sub-continent conditions, with left-armer Matt Kuhnemann and Cooper Connolly complementing chief tweaker Adam Zampa and part-timer Glenn Maxwell.Australia’s group-stage matches are all being played in Sri Lanka. They open their account against Ireland in Colombo on February 11.Squad: Mitchell Marsh (capt), Xavier Bartlett, Cooper Connolly, Tim David, Ben Dwarshuis, Cameron Green, Nathan Ellis, Josh Hazlewood, Travis Head, Josh Inglis, Matthew Kuhnemann, Glenn Maxwell, Matthew Renshaw, Marcus Stoinis, Adam Zampa. Related Story Source…
Qatari driver Nasser Saleh Al Attiyah clinched the Hail Toyota International Baja Rally 2026 title for the sixth time in his career at the 21st edition of the event. Al Attiyah, alongside his French co‑driver Max Delfino, piloting an OPTIMUS MD rally vehicle, finished first in the overall classification after accomplishing the final special stage of 323 km in a total time of 4 hours, 6 minutes, and 32 seconds. Saudi driver Yazeed Al Rajhi claimed second place overall, finishing 42 seconds behind Al Attiyah, while Saudi competitor Dania Akeel secured third place, trailing the leader by 14 minutes. In the Challenger class, Qatari driver Abdulaziz Al Kuwari finished third, behind Saudi driver Yasser Al Saeedan, who took first place, and Omani driver Hamad Al Wahaibi, who finished second. In the motorcycle category, British rider Alex McInnes won the title with a time of 4 hours, 55 minutes, and 17 seconds, with Emirati rider Mohammed Al Balooshi finishing second, 34 minutes and 24 seconds behind, while fellow Emirati Sultan Al Balooshi took third place, two minutes further back. In the local category, Saudi driver Faris Al Shammari earned first place, ahead of his compatriot Muteb Al Qanoun in second, with Khalaf Al Waj’an finishing third. Related Story Source link
IOC President Kirsty Coventry sits at the head of the table for the start of the IOC Executive Board meeting at the 2026 Winter Olympics in…
Al Sadd’s Firmino attempts to dribble past Al Gharafa players at the Thani Bin Jassim Stadium. Defending champions Al Sadd scored a comfortable 3-1 win over table toppers Al Gharafa in the Qatar Stars League at the Thani Bin Jassim Stadium to cut down the gap to two points. Goals from Roberto Firmino (47th minute), Giovani Henrique (55th minute) and Akram Afif (90th +5 minute) helped propel The Wolves to 29 points in the standings, just behind Al Gharafa on 31 points.After a goalless first half, Al Sadd, who were recently crowned winners of the Qatar-UAE Super Cup’s Super Shield following their thrilling 3-2 defeat of UAE’s Shabab Al Ahli, set the ball rolling for what ended up as an exciting win for Italian coach Roberto Mancini’s team.Firmino latched on to a cross from Giovani that somehow managed to elude all of Al Gharafa’s defenders to tap into a empty end. Al Sadd’s second and third goals were both beautiful display of fine teamwork that were perfectly finished to make the race for title more interesting. Al Gharafa’s consolation goal came from Ayoub Al Oui, who pulled one back for The Cheetahs in the 65th minute with a powerful header from a cross by Amro Abdelfatah Surag.Pedro brace in Qatar SC winEarlier, Brazilian Joao Pedro scored a brace while Mohamed Emad Aiash scored one goal as Qatar SC prevailed over Al Ahli 3-1 at the Al Thumama Stadium. Aiash opened the scoring for the Kings in the 16th minute before Joao Pedro struck in the 48th and 72nd minutes.Aiash made a successful header after Al Ahli goalkeeper had blocked a first Niall Mason attempt following corner kick. Pedro broke in into the striking zone first from the right, and later from the left to register his two goals.Al Ahli’s consolation goal came from Driss Fettouhi, who drilled home a long ranger in the 87th minute. The win saw Qatar SC move up seventh with 20 points whereas Al Ahli remained ninth on 15 points. Related Story Source link
Scott Brash capped a dominant run at Al Shaqab by claiming the CSI5* Grand Prix on the final day of the inaugural HH The Father Amir’s Prix series for the second time this month, guiding his long-time partner bay gelding Hello Jefferson to victory in the concluding 160cm class.The British rider delivered a faultless performance in a 12-horse jump-off, stopping the clock at 52.97 seconds aboard the 17-year-old BWP gelding to secure top honours. Britain’s Scott Brash clears a rail with 17-year-old bay gelding Hello Jefferson in the 1.60m class “Jefferson is an incredible horse. Even at 17, he feels young and full of energy,” Brash, who took home a whopping €195000 in prize money, said after the win. “He loves to jump, and Doha is one of his favourite arenas because of the space. I’m very grateful to my team. This result is the outcome of years of hard work.”Brash finished almost two seconds clear of France’s Megane Moissonnier, who produced a clear round in 54.90 seconds with the SF stallion Crooner Tame. Switzerland’s Nadja Peter Steiner completed the podium with another fault-free effort aboard Mila. Germany’s Philipp Weishaupt settled for fourth after collecting four faults in the jump-off with Oreo DR, while American rider Kristen Vanderveen rounded out the top five on Bull Run’s Jireh. His Excellency Sheikh Thani bin Hamad bin Khalifa…
Waajidd produced a polished late-running performance to land the Wadi Al Sail Cup at the Al Uqda Racecourse Thursday.The four-year-old bay gelding, owned by Khalid bin Ghanem al-Kuwari and trained by Zuhair Mohsen, bounced back to form to get off the mark with authority, drawing clear by 1½ lengths under Szczepan Mazur to win the Thoroughbred Premium Maidens contest for 3-7-year-olds over 1200m.Settling midfield after the break, Waajidd was ridden with patience as Fine Art Dealer pressed forward to assume control and dictate the pace through the early and middle stages. He was closely tracked by Mockirr, Saniyaat’s Star and Beach Breeze, with the leading quartet opening up a clear gap on the remainder of the field as they approached the final bend.Turning for home, Mockirr moved up assertively to take the lead from Fine Art Dealer and the pair appeared set to fight out the finish. However, the decisive move was still to come. From the middle of the pack, Waajidd was unleashed with a sustained and telling run, producing a sharp turn of foot to sweep past the leaders and assert quickly. Inside the final 100m, Waajidd extended his advantage with each stride, pulling clear to secure a decisive victory. Manos Arriba, racing for Al Eida Racing and trained by Jassim al-Ghazali, finished strongly from the rear under Marco Casamento to take second, edging Mockirr by a neck. The Al Jasra Stud runner, trained by Abdulla al-Mulla, stayed on under Ivan Rossi to claim third.Alnood asserts authority to complete stable doubleEarlier in the day, Alnood continued her solid run of form with a decisive success in the fifth race, a Purebred Arabian Handicap for fillies and mares rated 65–85, for four-year-olds and up over 2000m, Class 4, contested by five runners. The five-year-old bay mare, racing in the colours of Injaaz Stud and trained by Julian Smart, recorded her second win of the season from four starts, to go with a runner-up finish in between, scoring by 1¾ lengths. She was partnered by Pierre Charles Boudot, who, like her trainer, completed a double on the day.The penultimate Local Purebred Arabian Handicap produced a dramatic blanket finish, with Al Mutaghatris, also trained by Smart and ridden by Boudot, prevailing by a narrow margin. Waajidd’s authoritative success then provided a fitting highlight to an absorbing 43rd Al Uqda Race Meeting. RESULTS43rd Al Uqda Race Meeting – Wadi Al Sail CupWINNERS: (Horse, Trainer, Jockey)1 – Wadi Al Sail Cup, Thoroughbred Premium MaidensWaajidd, Zuhair Mohsen, Szczepan Mazur2 – Thoroughbred Handicap (0-60)Perfect Approach, Mohammed al-Ghazali, Lukas Delozier3 – Purebred Arabian Handicap (45-65)La Quyood, Julian Smart, Pierre Charles Boudot4 – Local Thoroughbred Handicap (0-55)Mallhog, Fahad bin Mubarak bin Jassim al-Groon, Salman Fahad al-Hajri5 – Thoroughbred Handicap (55-75)Future Man, Mohd Ahmed Mohd Hasan al-Sulaiti, Fayos Martin Borja6 – Purebred Arabian Handicap, Fillies and MareAlnood, Julian Smart, Pierre Charles Boudot7 – Local Purebred Arabian Handicap (65-85)Al Mutaghatris, Julian Smart, Pierre Charles Boudot Related Story Source link
Combat sports is set to make its much-awaited debut in Qatar on Saturday when two WBA Muay Thai titles will be decided alongside a couple of MMZ bouts also lined up. Two WBC Muai Thai fights are also on the playing roster on Saturday, this was announced by Sheikh Fahad bin Khalid Al Thani, President of the Qatar Boxing Federation (QBF), at a press conference that also featured the fighters, on Thursday. Ali Aliev will take on Chip Moraza-Pollard in the Cruiserweight WBC Muay Thai World Title fight while Sajad Sattari is lining up a potential win against Kaonar in the WBC Welterweight Muay Thai Diamond Title bout, Sheikh Fahad said. In two MMA bouts, Qatar’s Ruslan Satiev will take on Bairam Shammadov while Kerimkhan Kerimkhanov will fight against Abdulwahab Mashareqi. In two WBC Asia Boxing Title fights, Idriss Labidi will lock horns with Rivo Rengkung while Jadalie Medeiros vs Shirin Shabani is also on the list of fighters. “This is a dream come true for Qatar in combat sports,” Sheikh Fahad, Qatar’s retired professional boxer, said on Thursday. “It’s a great honour to host these fighters. Such an event has been a dream of mine for a long time. Every WBC fighter dreams of winning belts. There are four belts on offer. I am sure fighters will showcase a new era of combat sports in Qatar,” Sheikh Fahad said. Aliev, who is primed to take on Moraza-Pollard, said on Thursday: “It’s a dream to have such events in Qatar. It’s a unique and prestigious sport. Our vision is to promote combat sports. We want to go teach self-discipline to young fighters. We have great champions here. Before coming here, I had intense training. I am ready.” Moraza-Pollard said: “Ali is one of the best fighters in the world. I am ready for the 5 rounds and put on a good show. I’ve already had this belt. I lost it. It’s an honour to fight for it again.” Sheikh Fahad bin Khalid Al Thani, President of the Qatar Boxing Federation (QBF), and Ghanem Saleh al-Kuwari, Head of Boxing at the QBF, pose…
Aryna Sabalenka swept to her fourth successive Australian Open final with a 6-2 6-3 victory over Ukrainian Elina Svitolina Thursday in a semi-final overshadowed by geopolitical tension and will play familiar rival Elena Rybakina next.Rybakina set up a blockbuster rematch of the 2023 final at Melbourne Park by overcoming American Jessica Pegula 6-3 7-6(7), as the Russian-born Kazakh ramped up her own hunt for a second major title following her 2022 Wimbledon triumph.Top-seeded Belarusian Sabalenka will seek her third title at the tournament in four years and fifth Grand Slam trophy overall after another dominant display at what is now firmly her favourite hunting ground.”I just can’t believe that. It’s an incredible achievement but the job is not done yet,” world number one Sabalenka said.”I’m super happy with the win. She’s such a tough opponent and has been playing incredible tennis the whole week.”The defining moment for Sabalenka proved to be a hindrance call from the chair umpire mid-rally in the first set for a late non-standard grunt, a decision that stood following a video review and left the player fuming.”It was the wrong call, but whatever,” Sabalenka said.”She really – how do I say in a nice way – pissed me off, and it helped me and benefited my game.”I was more aggressive. I was not happy with the call.” SVITOLINA HOPED TO BRING UKRAINE ‘LIGHT’Since Russia’s invasion of its neighbour Ukraine in 2022, for which Belarus has been a staging ground, players from Russia and Belarus have been banned from representing their nations at the Grand Slams and tour events.Svitolina has been vocal about the strain of playing the countries’ players, and said that she hoped to bring her country “light” at the Australian Open amid a tough winter.The 27-year-old Sabalenka, however, crushed those hopes in a furious display of raw power.She became the third woman in the professional era to reach the Australian Open decider four times in a row following Evonne Goolagong Cawley (1971-76) and Martina Hingis (1997-2002), who each played six finals in a row.”Gutted not to make it through tonight,” Svitolina told reporters. “Of course it’s very difficult when you’re playing a world number one on fire.” SVITOLINA COMPREHENSIVELY BEATENWhile 31-year-old Svitolina was comprehensively defeated, she fought hard from the first ball to the last. The 12th seed started with tenacity, hitting a forehand winner down the line on the first point returning serve.Sabalenka wobbled, giving up two break points with a loose backhand, but blasted her way out of danger.There was tension at 2-1 when Svitolina was awarded a point mid-rally, with Sabalenka penalised for hindrance.Incensed, she demanded a video review but the point stood. She channelled her frustration into breaking Svitolina, and then held for a 4-1 lead.Pinning Svitolina well behind the baseline, Sabalenka grabbed three set points and converted the third, roaring “Let’s go!” after a sizzling cross-court backhand winner.After 41 minutes of earth-shaking power, Sabalenka’s weapons finally misfired.She dropped the opening service game of the second set with a clutch of errors, raising cheers from a crowd yearning for a contest.But Sabalenka steadied herself, breaking Svitolina twice in succession. Svitolina never dropped her head and earned a break point when trailing 4-2 to put the match back on serve.Sabalenka was not to be denied, though. After thrashing a forehand winner down the line to save the break point, she proved unstoppable.Grabbing two match points with a huge serve, Sabalenka closed it out in style, swooping forward with a forehand cross-court winner to book her chance of claiming a third trophy at Melbourne Park.RYBAKINA’S TRADEMARK HEAVY HITTINGFifth seed Rybakina later made a blazing start on Rod Laver Arena as the 26-year-old dictated terms with her trademark heavy hitting to pile the pressure on American Pegula, who looked out of sorts under the lights.Sixth-seeded Pegula settled her nerves and stayed in touch at 4-2 down after saving break points, but Rybakina dialled up the intensity again and took the opening set with a cross-court winner to put one foot in the final.Having finished her 2025 campaign by toppling Sabalenka in the season-ending WTA Finals to lift the trophy, Rybakina looked in a hurry to book her 15th clash with the Belarusian as she broke Pegula for a 2-1 lead in the second set.The clean forehand winner that put Rybakina ahead drew a frustrated response from Pegula, who composed herself to break back and later saved three match points to draw level at 5-5.Rybakina responded immediately, assisted by the net cord, but a determined Pegula did not give in and forced a tiebreak where she squandered two set points before finally fading away.”It was an epic second set. Jessica played so well, fought to the end and I’m happy to be in the final,” Rybakina said.”It was really, really stressful. I had an epic tiebreak here (in 2024) … a little flashback came to me. I’m happy it turned my way and looking forward to playing on Saturday.” Related Story Source link
US sprint star Sha’Carri Richardson was arrested on Thursday in Florida, where she was reportedly clocked driving over 100 mph.Jail records showed Richardson was booked on a charge of dangerous excessive speeding, the arrest made by officers of the Orange County Sheriff’s Office. Her bond was set at $500.Richardson, a former 100m world champion who won 100m silver and relay gold at the Paris Olympics, is no stranger to controversy.The 25-year-old Texan was arrested in July at Seattle-Tacoma Airport after shoving her boyfriend, fellow sprinter Cristian Coleman.She offered Coleman an apology via social media, and no charges ensued.Richardson was controversially barred from the delayed Tokyo Olympics in 2021 after testing positive for marijuana following her victory at the US trials and drawing a one-month suspension.Florida’s “super speeder law” aimed at combating a rise in traffic fatalities and serious crashes took effect last July.It criminalizes driving 50 miles per hour over a posted speed limit or driving over 100 mph.A first conviction can be punished by up to 30 days in jail and a $500 fine.bb/amz Source link
