logo
Chennai clinch inaugural Sevens title as rugby touches down in India

Chennai clinch inaugural Sevens title as rugby touches down in India

France 242 days ago

Kennedy scored two of Chennai's seven tries as they concluded the six-team rugby sevens franchise league with a 41-0 thrashing of Delhi Redz in Mumbai.
India's Olympic gold medallist shooter Abhinav Bindra was among the many stars who graced the finale although the crowds were understandably no match for the hordes that turned up to watch Virat Kohli's Bengaluru win the T20 Indian Premier League earlier this month.
However, the RPL's coverage on satellite television has given organisers hope that rugby could emerge as a major sport in India.
"No matter how big a sport may be, there is always space if you work hard enough if you create a product that's good enough," Rugby India president Rahul Bose told AFP.
"In that respect we are very happy and very secure in the knowledge that there is space for this game and it doesn't have to come by eating away at anybody else's space."
Just as the IPL focused on the shortest form of cricket, so the RPL has chosen to go for the shortest form of rugby, with the seven-a-side format in this tournament lasting 16 minutes -- four quarters of four minutes each -- and dispensing with the hard grunt of the 15-man game to showcase slick handling and blistering pace.
Kennedy is not the only top Sevens player to have been drafted in to the RPL.
His teammate Joseva Talacolo, who also scored a try in Sunday's final, won silver with Fiji at last year's Olympics in Paris while Scott Curry, whose Bengaluru Bravehearts finished fourth after losing the bronze medal match to Hyderabad Heroes, played 321 times for New Zealand's All Blacks Sevens team.
The American Perry Baker, now 39 and a two-time World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year, came out of retirement to play for Kalinga Black Tigers.
According to Bose, this first iteration of the tournament has gone down well with the public.
"What we have heard is that the game is easy to follow, very fast, very exciting and has got tremendous amount of likeability," said Bose who is also a successful Bollywood actor.
"Along with that, the athletic prowess of these men has come in for a lot of attention. We are happy with the connect we have made."
'Bigger and better'
The RPL is seen as a way for India to bolster their dreams of hosting the Olympics in 2036 - and given the continental qualifying system for the Olympics, India even has an eye on fielding a men's or women's team prior to that.
But it is more than an ideal. The RPL, which blends Indian players with international stars, is run by GMR Sports which, as owner of the IPL team Delhi Capitals, knows a thing or two about franchise competitions in India.
"The first season has gone very well for us," Satyam Trivedi, chief executive officer of GMR, told AFP.
"The sponsors are happy with what they see on the ground and on TV.
"However this is just the beginning for us. We are looking at the first season as a showcase event and take a lot of learnings from here.
"In every season this league will get bigger and better."
© 2025 AFP

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Germany eye return to women's football summit at Euro 2025
Germany eye return to women's football summit at Euro 2025

France 24

time4 hours ago

  • France 24

Germany eye return to women's football summit at Euro 2025

By far the most successful side in the history of the competition, eight-time winners Germany have not lifted the trophy since 2013. But with a core of young players eager to honour the achievements of past generations, Germany are hopeful of a return to the summit this summer. Germany open their campaign against newcomers Poland on July 4 in St Gallen, followed by matches against Denmark in Basel, which will host the final, and Sweden in Zurich. 'We can do it' Two-time World Cup winners, a run spanning more than 20 years as the dominant team in the women's game in Europe shaped Germany's history and identity as the continent's top side. Since winning their first European crown as West Germany in 1989, the Germans have hoovered up seven more titles. Norway, the next best, have won two titles while Sweden, England and the Netherlands have one apiece. In recent years however, the Germans have been inconsistent at major tournaments as other nations have started to catch up. After going out in the quarter-finals in 2017, Germany finished runners-up at Euro 2022 after losing 2-1 in extra time to England. At the 2023 World Cup, Germany suffered a shock group stage elimination for the first time in their history. A year later however, they rebounded at the Paris Olympics to finish third. Captain Giulia Gwinn scored the only goal as Germany beat world champions Spain to win bronze, finishing as the highest-placed European team. Coach Christian Wueck's side are young -- only two of the 23 squad members are over 30 -- but many have several years experience in the Germany set-up. Speaking last month in Berlin, striker Laura Freigang said her team was ripe for a shot at a record ninth European Championship. "We believe in the title... We know we can do it. That's the motivation," Freigang said, adding her side had "absolute conviction" they could go all the way. Her strike partner Lea Schueller mirrored those sentiments. "We're Germany. We definitely want to win a title," she said in an interview with last month. "We're not just taking part in the tournament for the sake of it." Red-hot form Forward Alexandra Popp's retirement last year could have hampered Germany's preparations, but the Germans are well stocked up front, with Schueller, Freigang and Klara Buehl posing a consistent threat. Germany boast impressive depth, but have also been hit by injuries. Midfield enforcer Lena Oberdorf failed to return from a cruciate injury in time, while Eintracht Frankfurt striker Nicole Anyomi also misses out. Wueck, who led Germany to the Under-17 boys' World Cup title in 2023, has been in the hot seat for less than a year but has the side in terrific form. Germany have five wins and a draw from six Nations League matches heading into the tournament, with their recent 4-0 win over the Netherlands and a 6-0 thumping of Austria particularly impressive. "It was important for us to have two games in which we delivered our full performance for 90 minutes," Freigang said. "We've learned a lot in the past few months about ourselves as a team. We know what we need... it's time to put it into practice." When announcing the squad, Wueck said Germany were "good and balanced" and that their recent form would "boost" their self-confidence. "We want to play with a mix of joy, enthusiasm, desire and conviction. That's what the team stands for," he said. "If we manage to do that, we'll go very far." © 2025 AFP

Le Coq Sportif: The bid backed by Xavier Niel and Teddy Riner 'hampered', according to their lawyers
Le Coq Sportif: The bid backed by Xavier Niel and Teddy Riner 'hampered', according to their lawyers

Fashion Network

time10 hours ago

  • Fashion Network

Le Coq Sportif: The bid backed by Xavier Niel and Teddy Riner 'hampered', according to their lawyers

What's going on with Le Coq Sportif? The singing gallinaceous sports brand, official supplier to the French Olympic and Paralympic Team for Paris 2024, placed in receivership last November, is the subject of two takeover bids. However, after a number of twists and turns in the timetable, a decision was expected on July 4, but on Monday one of the consortiums carrying one of the takeover bids denounced the way it had been treated. According to its lawyers, the bid from the team comprising the American group Iconix and Xavier Niel, and backed by French judo champion Teddy Riner, was "deliberately hindered" and "weakened." With a decision expected from the Paris Business Court only a few days away, its lawyers are calling for "a reopening of the proceedings." The court is due to take a decision in a particularly electric climate surrounding a company that remains a modest player in world sport. The brand is still 75% owned by the Swiss company Airesis, which acquired it 20 years ago and has yet to unveil its annual results for 2024. At the end of the first half of 2024, Le Coq recorded sales of 82 million euros, up 30%, for a net loss of 18 million euros. In 2023, total sales were 121 million euros, with a loss of 28 million euros. Yet the brand, which employs some 300 people and has a workshop in Romilly sur Seine near Troyes, is far more powerful than its sales would suggest, particularly in France. As a result, the French Ministry of the Economy has been keeping a close eye on the case, attracting a number of key players to the takeover. Since mid-May, both parties have been making a series of discreet announcements in an attempt to tip the balance in their favor. The most likely bid is that of Franco-Swiss businessman Dan Mamane. Born in Toulon, the entrepreneur, as described in his profile in the Swiss media outlet Le Temps, moved to Switzerland at the age of 18 and graduated from HEC Lausanne. The Vaud-born entrepreneur built up his fortune in the electronics trade with the creation of his Powerdata group. He moved into retail in 2021, with the takeover and turnaround of Conforama Suisse, and earlier this year acquired the Ogier ski brand. At his side is former Fusalp CEO Alexandre Fauvet. Les Echos reports that Cédric Meston, head of Tupperware France, may also join the project. Although the details are not known, the fact that he would maintain jobs at the group's head office in Troyes would be a factor, as would the issue of receivables, which would limit the impact on local authority finances. The second offer came from a consortium comprising French billionaire Xavier Niel, judoka Teddy Riner, investment company Neopar, American group Iconix, as well as the current boss of Airesis, parent company of Le Coq Sportif, Marc-Henri Beausire, and the Camuset family, founders of the brand. In a five-page letter dated June 26 and addressed to the president of the court and the Paris public prosecutor - which AFP has obtained - the business law firm August Debouzy "requests the reopening of the debates within the framework of the examination of the draft recovery plans, in that the process followed to date has, in many respects, been vitiated by breaches of the fundamental principles governing collective proceedings." "It appears that the plan presented by the consortium made up of Iconix, Neopar, Airesis and their partners, despite having been duly submitted within the prescribed deadlines, has been deliberately hindered, weakened and then effectively ousted from the examination process," asserts the firm, which denounces a "methodical obstruction by the court-appointed administrators." According to August Debouzy, "the plan presented by the consortium was not rejected because of its economic or legal characteristics, but because the court-appointed administrators decided, from the very first weeks of the procedure, to make the plan supported by Mr. Mamane their own plan." According to the takeover plan made public in May, the consortium is 51% owned by Neopar, an investment company specializing in "company turnarounds" and owned by the Poitrinal family, 26.5% by investors, and 22.5% by the American group Iconix. The consortium had told AFP that it planned to contribute a total of 60 million euros, which would be "injected immediately" into the company. With AFP

'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France
'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France

France 24

time14 hours ago

  • France 24

'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France

This year's riders will be gorging themselves like never before, taking on board the equivalent of a large plate of pasta per hour and even training their stomachs to cope with this influx of food. "Intake has doubled," Julien Louis, nutritionist for the Decathlon-AG2R team, told AFP. In fact, it's a 180-degree turnaround from the 2010s and the "low carb" fad popularised by four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome's Sky team. This method consisted of depriving the body of sugars during training in order to lose weight and encourage the body to use fat for energy. "Two eggs for breakfast and we were off for five-six hours of training, with water in the bottles. We were exhausted the whole time," recalls British veteran Simon Yates, winner of the last Giro. Climber Pavel Sivakov paints an even more dramatic picture. "Mentally, it was very hard," he says. "We were starving, with no energy, tapping into our fat." Those days are gone. "When there's nothing left in the tank the runner switches to using fat," explains Louis who used to work for English Premier League side Liverpool. "It works but it's much less effective than carbohydrates." 'Never eaten so much' One look at the map for the Tour de France which runs 3,338 kilometres over three weeks from Lille, all the way down south and back up to Paris for the finish, is a giveaway when it comes to a rider's nutritional needs. He will burn through roughly 7,000 calories on one of the lung-busting, muscle-crunching mountain stages. "You have to eat four times as much as a normal person," says Cofidis rider Simon Carr. "We've never eaten so much on a bike." Most riders now take in up to 120 grammes of carbohydrates per hour while racing, in some cases even more, which is enormous. "It's the equivalent of six bananas or around 200 grammes of dried pasta per hour," says Louis. Until recently, eating such large quantities, mainly in the form of gels and energy drinks, was unimaginable, as it would lead to too much intestinal distress. "Up until five years ago, 120g of carbohydrates per hour was impossible," Tadej Pogacar explained in a podcast in September, adding such an intake would have had him in dire need of a trip to the toilet. Intestinal training Since then, great progress has been made with energy products, which now contain a combination of two types of carbohydrate. "For a long time, we thought there was only one kind of carbohydrate transporter in the intestine," explains Louis. "Then we discovered that there was a second type that could transport fructose. As a result, by using these two pathways at the same time, we can push through twice as much sugar." According to all the parties interviewed by AFP, these advances in nutrition, along with developments in equipment and training methods, help to explain the increasingly high levels of performance in cycling, a sport which has often been associated with doping. Although products are now better tolerated by the body, making this revolution possible, riders still have to train their stomachs to cope with such quantities. "Otherwise you can't digest when you're asked to eat six gels an hour. Your body just can't cope," says Pauline Ferrand-Prevot, this year's winner of the women's Paris-Roubaix and gold medallist in the cross-country mountain bike at the Paris Olympics. She found this out the hard way when she gave up, ill, during the World Championships in September, unused to the longer distances after her switch from mountain bikes. During winter training, the riders now do "at least one session a week of intestinal training, or 'gut training'", says Louis. "At the very beginning, there may be a little discomfort," he adds. "But without it, you're at a huge disadvantage. It's as if you're not running on the same fuel." © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store