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Australian Open champion Carlos Alcaraz of Spain is unbeaten in the new season but the 22-year-old is no mood to relax ahead of this week’s Qatar ExxonMobil Open where he is the top seed. Alcaraz beat Grand Slam ‘king’ Novak Djokovic in the final of the Australian Open two weeks ago to be 7-0 in the new season that has just completed six weeks of top flight tennis. “Coming here, these days, my team and I, just we set up some goals for this tournament,” Alcaraz said during a pre-event news conference Sunday. “We are not talking about results at all. It’s just more about the process to be better, still in the process to grow up. There are some things that I really want to be better and (I want to) develop my game in a way that I really want to show up and to pull off here in this tournament. “That would be a really successful week for me, besides results. I (want to) see myself that I’m just doing the right things on and off the court,” the 25-time Tour-level champion said. Alcaraz will take on France’s Arthur Rinderknech in their opening match in Doha where his chief opponent is second seed Jannik Sinner of Italy. The Doha field also includes former champions Andrey Rublev, Daniil Medvedev and Karen Khachanov. Alexander Bublik is seeded third, followed by Medvedev in fourth and Rublev in fifth. Jakub Mensik, Khachanov and Jiri Lehecka complete the top eight seeds at the $2,833,335 tournament. The singles champion will get richer by $529,945 while the winning doubles team will split $174,050. “I know how difficult every match is. Every match is different, our play is totally different,” Alcaraz said yesterday. “I think this draw is a really tough one for a 500 tournament. We can see the first matches how good matches that we have in the first round. So (I’m) just thinking about a match at a time, and let’s see how far I can go. Obviously my mind is trying to go as far as I can. If it’s possible to play a final, obviously that would be great, and that’s what I’m looking for, so let’s see. I’m not thinking about playing or just putting myself in the final too early. I want to think day by day,” he added. Alcaraz said recent successes have made him more determined to work harder and not take his opponents lightly. “Obviously I can see myself that (I have had) a lot of success so far, winning the biggest tournaments in the world,” Alcaraz said. “But I just see myself with weaknesses. A lot of players, I know that they’re trying to catch me up in terms of they are studying my game, they study how I play, trying to beat me, trying to challenge me,” he said. “I have to be ready for that, and I have to see where my level is, where my tennis is. I have to try to put myself in their minds and think what they could do when playing against me.“So that’s what I mean about saying I have to improve some things. “Obviously, you cannot be lagging in the level, you just have to keep it going,” he explained. Prior to arriving in Doha, Alcaraz enjoyed a short stopover in Bahrain where he met fellow Spaniards superstars Fernando Alonso and Carlos Sainz at an F1 pre-season testing week. Related Story Source link
The Lusail International Circuit (LIC) has revealed the FORMULA 1 QATAR AIRWAYS QATAR GRAND PRIX 2026 Show Car, aligning the launch with its early bird ticket offers and debuting a bold new livery. The design embodies the start of Formula 1’s next chapter, as the sport gears up for its fifth consecutive year at LIC. From 2026, the FIA Formula One World Championship will enter a groundbreaking era defined by new technical regulations. The upcoming generation of cars will be shorter, lighter, and more agile, promising closer racing and greater sustainability. At the core of these innovations are Active Aerodynamics systems, enabling drivers to dynamically adjust their car’s setup to boost overtaking and on-track performance. Related Story Source link
Lusail International Circuit (LIC) unveiled the Formula 1 Qatar Airways Qatar Grand Prix 2026 show car, in line with early bird ticket offers, showcasing its striking new livery. The 2026 Car reflects Formula 1’s new era of racing, ahead of ticket sales opening for the milestone fifth year of Formula 1 at LIC. The FIA Formula One World Championship will enter a new era in 2026 with a comprehensive overhaul of its technical regulations. The next-generation cars have been designed to be shorter, lighter, and more agile, improving racing quality and sustainability. Central to the new rules are advanced Active Aerodynamics systems, allowing drivers to adjust aerodynamic configurations to enhance overtaking opportunities and overall performance. The 2026 regulations also introduce a new power unit formula, featuring increased electrical power deployment and the use of 100% sustainable fuels, marking a significant step forward in Formula 1’s environmental commitment. Reflecting this transformative moment for the sport, Lusail International Circuit (LIC) has unveiled its 2026 Formula 1 show car livery.This 2026 Show Car embodies the sport’s technical evolution, pairing the new car’s dynamic proportions and Active Aero concept with a striking visual identity. The livery features a flowing gradient from the nose to the rear wing. Dynamic speed lines and Formula 1 Qatar Airways Qatar Grand Prix’s branding colours are integrated alongside LIC’s visual elements, capturing the energy and unique atmosphere of night racing.Following the show car reveal, Lusail International Circuit launched ticket sales for the Formula 1 Qatar Airways Qatar Grand Prix 2026, taking place from November 27 to 29, 2026. Fans can take advantage of a 10% early bird discount across all three-day ticket categories:Main Grandstand: QR1,800 (Regular price: QR2,000)North Grandstand: QR ,350 (Regular price: QR1,500)T2, T3 & T16 Grandstands: QR900 (Regular price: QR1,000)General Admission: QR540 (Regular price: QR600)Tickets are available on the Lusail International Circuit website, with travel, accommodation, and visa information supported by Visit Qatar for international fans.The 2026 Qatar Grand Prix marks a significant milestone, celebrating five years of Formula 1 racing at Lusail International Circuit. Since joining the calendar in 2021, the race has become a signature night time event, known for its high speed layout, flowing corners, and dramatic wheel to wheel racing.As the championship enters this bold new era, the 2026 Qatar Grand Prix promises a weekend of innovation, speed, and celebration, combining the thrill of racing with Qatar’s unique cultural identity. Related Story Source link
India and Pakistan will clash in the Twenty20 World Cup in Colombo today, still feeling the aftershocks of a tumultuous fortnight in which Pakistan’s boycott threat – later reversed – nearly blew a hole in the tournament’s marquee fixture. With bilateral cricket a casualty of their fraught relations, emotions run high whenever the bitter neighbours lock horns in multi-team events at neutral venues. India’s strained relations with another neighbour, Bangladesh, have further tangled the geopolitics around the World Cup.When Bangladesh were replaced by Scotland in the 20-team field for refusing to tour India over safety concerns, the regional chessboard shifted. Pakistan decided to boycott the Group A contest against India in solidarity with Bangladesh, jeopardising a lucrative fixture that sits at the intersection of sport, commerce, and geopolitics. Faced with the prospect of losing millions of dollars in evaporating advertising revenue, the broadcasters panicked. The governing International Cricket Council (ICC) held hectic behind-the-scenes parleys and eventually brokered a compromise to salvage the tournament’s most sought-after contest. Strictly on cricketing merit, however, the rivalry has been one-sided. Defending champions India have a 7-1 record against Pakistan in the tournament’s history and they underlined that dominance at last year’s Asia Cup in the United Arab Emirates. India beat Pakistan three times in that single event, including a stormy final marred by provocative gestures and snubbed handshakes. Former India captain Rohit Sharma does not believe in the “favourites” tag, especially when the arch-rivals clash. “It’s such a funny game,” Rohit, who led India to the title in the T20 World Cup two years ago, recently said. “You can’t just go and think that it’s a two-point victory for us. You just have to play good cricket on that particular day to achieve those points.” Both teams have opened their World Cup campaigns with back-to-back wins, yet India still appear to hold a clear edge. Opener Abhishek Sharma and spinner Varun Chakravarthy currently top the batting and bowling rankings respectively. Abhishek is doubtful for the Pakistan match though as he continues to recover from a stomach infection that kept him out of their first two matches.Ishan Kishan has reinvented himself as a top-order linchpin, skipper Suryakumar Yadav has regained form, while Rinku Singh has settled into the finisher’s role in India’s explosive lineup. Mystery spinner Chakravarthy and the ever-crafty Jasprit Bumrah anchor the spin and pace units, while Hardik Pandya’s all-round spark is pivotal. For Pakistan, opener Sahibzada Farhan has looked in fine form but Babar Azam’s strike rate continues to polarise opinion. Captain Salman Agha will bank on spin-bowling all-rounder Saim Ayub, but the potential trump card is off-spinner Usman Tariq, whose slinging, side-arm action has intrigued opponents and fans alike. Source link
South Africa’s Marco Jansen (L) gestures alongside captain Aiden Markram during the 2026 ICC Men’s T20 Cricket World Cup group stage match between New Zealand and…
Karolina Muchova captured her first WTA 1000 crown and her first title since 2019 with an impressive 6-4, 7-5 victory over Canadian teen sensation Victoria Mboko in the Qatar Open final yesteday. After battling back from a set and a break down in the semi-finals against Maria Sakkari the previous night, Muchova, 29, was in fierce form against Mboko to clinch the biggest title of her career. “It’s been a while since I won a tournament, so it’s nice to get that feeling again, to be reminded of that victory feeling again,” said Muchova during the trophy ceremony. “I’d like to congratulate Victoria, you’re still a teenager but you play with so much maturity. I’m sure you have many titles ahead of you.” A former French Open finalist, Muchova’s career has been hampered by injuries but she has started 2026 in fine fashion, amassing a 12-2 win-loss record over the past six weeks. Her title run in Doha will lift her from 19 to 11 in the world rankings, while Mboko guaranteed herself a top-10 debut tomorrow by making the final. Muchova put together a clean opening set, landing an impressive 75 percent of her first serves, and dropping just three points behind that first delivery. The Czech faced zero break points across the 43-minute set and showcased her prowess at the net to take a solid step towards the title. Mboko made adjustments on return in the second set, and managed to decode her opponent’s serve to carve a 4-2 gap but her advantage was short-lived as Muchova broke twice and wrapped up the contest in 94 minutes. The 19-year-old Mboko has the most match wins on the women’s tour this season with 13 to just three defeats. She will rise to number 10 in the world tomorrow. “It’s not the outcome I wanted but I think there’s many positives to take away,” said Mboko, who was competing in her fourth WTA final, and second at the 1000 level. Danilina and Krunic win doubles crown Anna Danilina of Kazakhstan and Aleksandra Krunic of Serbia claimed the women’s doubles title at the Qatar TotalEnergies Open 2026, after defeating Latvia’s Jelena Ostapenko and China’s Hsieh Su-wei in three sets. Held on the main court at the Khalifa International Tennis and Squash Complex, Danilina and Krunic secured the final with a scoreline of 0-6, 7-6, 10-8. The honoring ceremony after the final was headlined by the Qatar Tennis Federation’s Secretary General Tariq Zainal and its Executive Director Saad al-Mohannadi, who is also the Tournament Director of the Qatar TotalEnergies Open 2026. Source link
The draw for the 2026 Qatar ExxonMobil Open was released Saturday, positioning top seed Carlos Alcaraz of Spain and second seed Jannik Sinner of Italy for a potential meeting in the final. Alcaraz, 22, enters the ATP 500 event as the top seed and will play his first match since winning the Australian Open last month. That victory made him the youngest man in history to complete the Career Grand Slam. The Spaniard opens his Doha campaign against Arthur Rinderknech. If the seeds hold, Alcaraz is projected to face 2023 champion Daniil Medvedev in the semi-finals. On the other side of the draw, Jannik Sinner is set to make his tournament debut. The 24-year-old Italian has not competed since reaching the semi-finals in Melbourne. He begins play against Tomas Machac, an opponent he holds a 2-0 record against. Sinner’s projected semi-final opponent is third seed Alexander Bublik. Bublik, who is currently competing in the Rotterdam semi-finals, will face a qualifier in the first round. His path could include a second-round match against former World No. 14 Arthur Fils, who is returning to the tour after an eight-month absence due to a back injury. The field also features several other Top 20 players in the PIF ATP Rankings, including defending champion Andrey Rublev, 2024 finalist Jakub Mensik and Karen Khachanov. Rublev is a two-time Doha champion, having also lifted the trophy in 2020 when the event was still an ATP 250. Khachanov claimed the title in 2024. Alcaraz and Sinner lead the field as the top two seeds. Bublik is seeded third, followed by Daniil Medvedev in fourth and Rublev in fifth. Jakub Mensik, Khachanov and Jiri Lehecka complete the top eight seeds. Three former champions are competing this year: Rublev, Medvedev and Khachanov. Source link
France’s Lara Tryba produced a superb performance aboard Chageorge to win the CSI3*-W 150cm Grand Prix on the final day of the HH The Amir’s Sword Showjumping Championship at Al Shaqab. The feature class on the final brought together 38 combinations, with 13 progressing to the jump-off where precision and pace proved decisive. Tryba delivered a flawless round in 33.28 seconds to secure top honours. Fellow French rider Megane Moissonnier finished second aboard Qoup de Coeur de Muze in 34.12 seconds, while Germany’s Hans-Dieter Dreher claimed third with Harley de La Cense after four faults in 40.72 seconds. On Friday, Saudi Arabia’s Abdullah Alsharbatly aboard the 13-year-old mare Diriyah had captured the CSI5* 160cm Grand Prix to claim the prestigious Amir’s Sword. The blue-riband class, which carried total prize money of €1.5mn, attracted 44 combinations in a demanding two-round contest, with 13 advancing to a decisive jump-off. Last to go, Alsharbatly produced a flawless round in 36.29 seconds to seal victory. Fellow Saudi rider Khaled Almobty had set an early benchmark with a clear effort in 37.45 seconds on Diana du Plevau Z, while Belgium’s Pieter Devos completed the podium aboard Casual DV Z in 39.20 seconds. Yesterday, in CSI5* 150cm Faults and Time competition, Great Britain’s Millie Allen guided Quick Diamant HR to victory with a clear round in 62.47 seconds. Spain’s Sira Martinez Cullell finished second aboard Texas in 64.95 seconds, with France’s Ines Joly third on Come On Z in 65.51 seconds. The class featured 27 combinations in a tightly contested battle against the clock. The CSI3*-W 145cm Accumulator saw Britain’s Oliver Fletcher take the win aboard Krack Bleu C with a maximum 65 points in 48.71 seconds. Tryba added another podium finish, placing second on Falko Ste Hermelle, while Qatar’s Saad Ahmed al-Saad finished third with Craquante de Mazin. In the CSI1* 130cm Grand Prix, Qatar’s Khalid Jassim al-Suwaidi claimed victory aboard E.T’s Queeny Z after a clear jump-off round in 35.34 seconds. Saad Ahmed al-Saad secured second on Fashion des Douits, while Bahrain’s Sultan Abdulaziz Mayoof Alromaihi took third with Grappa. Qatar’s Ibrahim Yousuf al-Mahmoud topped the CSI3*-W 140cm Faults and Time class with a faultless effort aboard Perle Van Dorperheide in 63.73 seconds. France’s Jean Francois Rondoux finished second on Inter-Larus, followed by Egypt’s Abdallah Haitham in third with Consagros. In CSI1* 120cm Accumulator action, Qatar’s Jassim al-Kuwari claimed victory aboard Cesar des Marquets, ahead of Saudi Arabia’s Faisal Fahad Alodah and Halah Alrasheed. The CSIY-B 130cm Group VII series qualifier was won by Sheikh Fahad Jassim al-Thani riding Lavesther, with Hend Abdulhadi al-Hajri second and Mohammed Jassim al-Thani third. The CSIJ-B 120cm qualifier saw Hadi Mansour al-Shahwani take top honours aboard Monopoly, followed by Nasser Hamad al-Maadheed and Mohammed Faisal al-Marri. National classes also produced competitive finishes. Sultan Jassim al-Suwaidi won the Special Two-Phase 100cm class on Ardfry Apollo, while Saif Nasser Ali claimed the Optimum Time 60cm class aboard Roubignac, ahead of Sultan Mohd al-Suwaidi and a joint third for Sheikh Nasser Hamad Khlifa al-Thani and Nawal Bahamdan. Related Story Source link
Tom Banton’s unbeaten 63 led England to a five-wicket T20 World Cup victory over Scotland in Kolkata yesterday that kept Harry Brook’s side on course for the Super Eights. Victory in their final Group C match against Italy tomorrow at the same Eden Gardens stadium will see England safely into the next round. After bowling Scotland out for 152, England racked up 155-5 in 18.2 overs, with Jacob Bethell scoring 32, Sam Curran 28 and Will Jacks (16 off 10 balls) hitting a six and a four to finish the job. “I think our full focus was on tonight and then obviously on to Italy in two days’ time,” said Banton, who hit form after scoring just four runs in England’s first two matches. “It’s T20 cricket. It’s a high-risk game. And you’ve got to keep backing yourself. At times it goes against you. And it’s hard. “You’ve got to keep coming back, keep trying hard, keep practising. Luckily, today’s my day.” England wobbled at the start of their chase as the new white ball swung under the floodlights with the sun going down. Phil Salt fell third ball to Brandon McMullen for just two and when Jos Buttler picked out McMullen off Brad Currie they were 13-2. Scotland bowled tightly until Bethell broke the shackles by hitting McMullen for a six and two fours in the fifth over. Spinner Mark Watt also came in for some punishment, conceding 22 off his first over as Banton took him for three huge sixes. A 66-run partnership ended when the left-handed Bethell on 32 helped a leg-side delivery from Oliver Davidson into the grateful hands of Brad Wheal at short fine leg. Captain Brook did not last long, scooping Michael Leask over his shoulder to Wheal to make it 86-4 but England were always in control and got home with 10 balls to spare. BRIEF SCORES England 155 for 5 (Banton 63*, Bethell 32, Davidson 1-12) beat Scotland 152 (Berrington 49, Rashid 3-36, Archer 2-24) by five wickets. IRELAND THRASH OMAN In yesterday’s first game, Ireland beat Oman by 96 runs after stand-in captain Lorcan Tucker blasted an unbeaten 94 off 51 balls to set up a total of 235-5, with support from Gareth Delany (56) and late fireworks from George Dockrell (35 off 9). BRIEF SCORES Ireland 235 for 5 (Tucker 94*, Delany 56, Shakeel 3-33) beat Oman 139 (Kaleem 50, Mirza 46, Little 3-16) by 96 runs. Source link
France’s Lara Tryba produced a superb performance aboard Chageorge to win the CSI3*-W 150cm Grand Prix on the final day of the HH The Amir’s Sword Showjumping Championship at Al Shaqab.The feature class on the final brought together 38 combinations, with 13 progressing to the jump-off where precision and pace proved decisive. Tryba delivered a flawless round in 33.28 seconds to secure top honours. Fellow French rider Megane Moissonnier finished second aboard Qoup de Coeur de Muze in 34.12 seconds, while Germany’s Hans-Dieter Dreher claimed third with Harley de La Cense after four faults in 40.72 seconds. France’s Lara Tryba aboard Chageorge en route to winning the CSI3*-W 150cm Grand Prix at HH The Amir’s Sword Showjumping Championship at Al Shaqab. On Friday, Saudi Arabia’s Abdullah Alsharbatly aboard the 13-year-old mare Diriyah had captured the CSI5* 160cm Grand Prix to claim the prestigious Amir’s Sword. The blue-riband class, which carried total prize money of €1.5mn, attracted 44 combinations in a demanding two-round contest, with 13 advancing to a decisive jump-off.Last to go, Alsharbatly produced a flawless round in 36.29 seconds to seal victory. Fellow Saudi rider Khaled Almobty had set an early benchmark with a clear effort in 37.45 seconds on Diana du Plevau Z, while Belgium’s Pieter Devos completed the podium aboard Casual DV Z in 39.20 seconds.Saturday, in CSI5* 150cm Faults and Time competition, Great Britain’s Millie Allen guided Quick Diamant HR to victory with a clear round in 62.47 seconds. Spain’s Sira Martinez Cullell finished second aboard Texas in 64.95 seconds, with France’s Ines Joly third on Come On Z in 65.51 seconds. The class featured 27 combinations in a tightly contested battle against the clock.The CSI3*-W 145cm Accumulator saw Britain’s Oliver Fletcher take the win aboard Krack Bleu C with a maximum 65 points in 48.71 seconds. Tryba added another podium finish, placing second on Falko Ste Hermelle, while Qatar’s Saad Ahmed al-Saad finished third with Craquante de Mazin.In the CSI1* 130cm Grand Prix, Qatar’s Khalid Jassim al-Suwaidi claimed victory aboard E.T’s Queeny Z after a clear jump-off round in 35.34 seconds. Saad Ahmed al-Saad secured second on Fashion des Douits, while Bahrain’s Sultan Abdulaziz Mayoof Alromaihi took third with Grappa.Qatar’s Ibrahim Yousuf al-Mahmoud topped the CSI3*-W 140cm Faults and Time class with a faultless effort aboard Perle Van Dorperheide in 63.73 seconds. France’s Jean Francois Rondoux finished second on Inter-Larus, followed by Egypt’s Abdallah Haitham in third with Consagros.In CSI1* 120cm Accumulator action, Qatar’s Jassim al-Kuwari claimed victory aboard Cesar des Marquets, ahead of Saudi Arabia’s Faisal Fahad Alodah and Halah Alrasheed.The CSIY-B 130cm Group VII series qualifier was won by Sheikh Fahad Jassim al-Thani riding Lavesther, with Hend Abdulhadi al-Hajri second and Mohammed Jassim al-Thani third. The CSIJ-B 120cm qualifier saw Hadi Mansour al-Shahwani take top honours aboard Monopoly, followed by Nasser Hamad al-Maadheed and Mohammed Faisal al-Marri.National classes also produced competitive finishes. Sultan Jassim al-Suwaidi won the Special Two-Phase 100cm class on Ardfry Apollo, while Saif Nasser Ali claimed the Optimum Time 60cm class aboard Roubignac, ahead of Sultan Mohd al-Suwaidi and a joint third for Sheikh Nasser Hamad Khlifa al-Thani and Nawal Bahamdan. …
