
Neeraj Chopra eyes MASSIVE record at Golden Spike Ostrava, looks to join…
Indian javelin star Neeraj Chopra. (Source: X)
Forced to skip the last two editions due to fitness issues, Indian javelin throw superstar Neeraj Chopra will look to claim the title when he makes his debut at the Golden Spike Athletics meet on Tuesday, an event that his coach Jan Zelezny won nine times in a storied career. The 27-year-old Chopra has had an impressive season so far, having won his first Diamond League title in two years in Paris after also breaching the elusive 90m mark during his second place finish in Doha DL in May.
He was to take part at Golden Spike — a World Athletics Continental Tour Category A event — in 2023 and 2024 but had to skip the meet on both occasions. In 2024, he was present as a guest after opting out of competition due to an adductor muscle niggle. Neeraj Chopra is aiming to match his coach Jan Zelezny
The double Olympic-medallist will be all the more eager to win the title as the Golden Spike was world record holder Zelezny's happy hunting ground during his playing days. The Czech legend, now 59, won nine titles between 1986 and 2006 – few of them with 90m-plus throws – in this prestigious event which was first held in 1961.
Chopra has competed in Ostrava in the past but not at Golden Spike. He was part of the Asia Pacific team that competed in the IAAF Continental Cup in 2018 and had finished sixth with a throw of 80.24m.
'When I was kid, I watched a lot of videos and photos of athletes such as Usain Bolt competing here. I came last year but I didn't compete because of injury. Now I feel good, but I don't want to put any pressure on myself for 90m. But I'll try really hard,' Chopra said ahead of the competition on Tuesday.
'Recently we've done a good training in Nymburk (near capital Prague) so I'll do my best here in Ostrava.'
Happy Olympic Day! 🇮🇳
Together, #LetsMove and build a happier, healthier future. 💪 pic.twitter.com/q7935ObXoF
— Neeraj Chopra (@Neeraj_chopra1) June 23, 2025 Paris Diamond League winner Neeraj Chopra is working on his 'core muscles'
The Indian, after winning the Paris DL, had spoken about the need to work on his core muscles for better control on his throws after admitting that his run-up was perhaps a shade too fast. In the absence of his German rival Julian Weber, the field in Ostrava is thin and Chopra will, no doubt, be the favourite for the title.
Weber had beaten Chopra in Doha DL on May 16 and in Janusz Kusocinski Memorial meet on May 23 in Poland but the Indian upstaged him in Paris on June 20 with his first round throw of 88.16m. Before Paris, Chopra had won his last DL title in Lausanne in June 2023 with a throw of 87.66m.
Anderson Peters will also be in the fray in Ostrava but the two-time world champion from Grenada has been struggling to get the big throws. He finished third in both Doha DL and Janusz Kusocinski Memorial meet, behind Weber and Chopra, and ended even lower at fifth in Paris with a modest 80.29m.
Another German, 2016 Rio Olympics gold winner Thomas Rohler, will also compete though he is yet to gather steam in the season. The 30-year-old has a season's best of 80.79m. In fact, Rohler, who has a personal best of 93.90m, achieved way back in 2017, has been struggling for a long time. Between 2020 and 2024, he managed just one 80m-plus throw.
Interestingly, Rohler won the javelin title in the 2018 IAAF Continental Cup in Ostrava with a throw of 87.07m with Chopra finishing sixth. On Tuesday, Chopra will be hoping to go even. Among the other six in the nine-man field in Ostrava, Tony Keranen of Finland has the best personal best of 85.27m. Chopra will be up against Peters and Rohler again at the NC Classic which he is hosting in Bengaluru on July 5.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Indian Express
29 minutes ago
- Indian Express
With high-striking shuttles, Tanvi Sharma makes US Open badminton final with imperious march over seventh seed Burhova
Tanvi Sharma has some exceptional variety from the back court and her aggressive intent has been stunning opponents' at the Super 300 US Open in Council Bluffs, Iowa this whole week. The 16-year-old shuttler announced an imminent breakthrough season by reaching the finals by beating Ukrainian Polina Burhova 21-14, 21-16 late on Saturday night. In beating the 21-year-old, Sharma from Hoshiarpur in Punjab and training at the Guwahati National Centre in just over 34 minutes in a show of blistering badminton. Burhova is World No 40, but Sharma, ranked 66, has beaten World Nos 23, 58 and 50 respectively in making the finals. The arena in mid west America was near-empty and fellow semifinalist Ayush Shetty sat in the coaching chair for Sharma. But she was in such impervious form that the Indian barely needed any guidance as she unfurled her wide variety of strokes in beating the older opponent who was often left staggered and pinned down by Sharma's raging strokes. A high serve that she uses to buy some time before she comes charging at the net did the trick till she was faulted on one midway through the second set. She would briefly settle for the short serve, but regain her composure to go back to the tall serve. But Sharma's winning game is her variety from the back. She strokes the shuttle nice and high and early and has the capability to open up the court with ease solely because of the options at her disposal. The punch in her shots carries them cross or down the line with a special fizz and besides the body smashes on Burhova, she has a solid straight zipping hit that travels with speed. Not only is Sharma adept at hitting the lines with precision, she also plays from the wide flanks and conjures angles that scatter opponent defenses. Her drop shots are extremely cerebral, and she uses the deep smashes to the back to set up the curling drop that falls very close to the net. It's how she's beaten world no 23 in Round 1, and how she's made her first big final. Her frame beliefs the strength she can summon in her shots though Burhova would've felt the ping as Sharma went for the body smashes pretty often. But most often there were the follow-ups where she charged the net, didn't bother with dribbles and killed at will. The second set got a little close when Burhova took 5 points straight to level at 16, but Sharma responded by taking 5 of her own thereafter, never letting up on the intensity. Her game is compared to Sindhu's for the attack she can unleash, though her net will get tested by the Top Tenners. But she easily and non-chalantly matches the firepower of opponents and is managing to generate far more power than her frame lets on by sheer timing of striking the shuttle. Winning in straight sets also showed she can dictate the pace and assert her stomping rhythm on the match never quite allowing opponents to snatch her leads. Sharma plays the winner of Beiwen Zhang and Line Christophersen.


Hindustan Times
34 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
England T20I: Smriti's majestic ton powers India to big win
Chandigarh: T20Is isn't really the Indian women's forte but Nottingham celebrated a Super Saturday as they started their five-match series with a thumping 97-run win over England at Trent Bridge. India's Smriti Mandhana on way to scoring a 62-ball 112 in the first T20I against England at Trent Bridge, Nottingham on Saturday. (AP) Smriti Mandhana set up brilliantly with a fluent century, becoming the only Indian player with a century in each format – Tests, ODIs and now T20s. She led from the front in some style after skipper Harmanpreet Kaur was rested as a precaution after suffering a head injury during a warm-up match against an ECB eleven. She was on the balcony cheering as Mandhana stroked a boundary to reach a 51-ball century. The left-handed opener took charge and made full-use of a good pitch to hit a 62-ball 112, (16x4, 3x6). It took India to a huge 210/5 and the hosts never recovered from early setbacks to be dismissed for 113 in 14.5 overs. The Indian innings also saw valuable contributions from No. 3 Harleen Deol (43 off 23) after Shafali Verma (20 - 22 b), on a comeback, raised 77 runs for the first wicket with Mandhana. Mandhana played shots all around the wicket and none of the England bowlers had any impact on her until she was caught in the final over. With Mandhana having set it up, it was the turn of Indian spinners to pile on the home team's misery. It looked as if the hosts were taken by surprise. Skipper Nat Sciver-Brunt's 66 off 42 balls provided some resistance, but England were never in the chase. Left-arm spinner Shree Charani had a memorable outing, scalping four for 12 on T20I debut as England surrendered meekly. The 20-year-old from Andhra Pradesh has played five ODIs. The Indian bowlers were impressive, sticking to their task. Spinners Radha Yadav and Deepti Sharma took two wickets each, after seamer Amanjot Kaur had opener Sophia Dunkley caught behind chasing a wide ball. Mandhana had hit 30 T20I fifties before finally converting it to triple figures. 'It has taken a long time to get it, I had this habit of getting out in the 70s, 80s. We were talking before this tour that it is high time I got a century,' she said after the match. 'We had a good preparation, and these wickets are really good to bat on. We kept the wind factor in mind, just had to time the ball. Harleen got the momentum going after Shafali's wicket.' On India's bowling, she said: 'We discussed after the first innings if we are bowling against the wind, we have to bowl slower. The bowlers, the way they executed the plans was outstanding. We have four more matches, so we need to keep the momentum going.' Brief scores: India 210/5 (Smriti Mandhana 112, Harleen Deol 43, Lauren Bell 3/27); England 113 in 14.5 overs (Nat Sciver-Brunt 66, Shree Charani 4/12, Deepti Sharma 2/32, Radha Yadav 2/15). India won by 97 runs
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
an hour ago
- Business Standard
FIFA Club World Cup R016: Benfica vs Chelsea live match time, streaming
Chelsea will lock horns with Portuguese giants Benfica in the last 16 of the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 on Saturday evening, with a quarter-final place on the line. The match, set to take place in Charlotte, brings together two of Europe's most historic clubs in what promises to be a closely contested encounter. Having finished second in Group D, Chelsea may consider themselves fortunate with their draw. A group-stage loss to Flamengo meant they avoided a more difficult path that would have seen them face German champions Bayern Munich. Instead, they take on a Benfica side that topped Group C, highlighted by a strong victory over Bayern in their final group match. Despite being favourites on paper, Chelsea know they must approach the tie with focus. Benfica have a wealth of experience in European knockout competitions, particularly in the UEFA Champions League, and possess players capable of turning a game in an instant. With both teams bringing high-quality squads and plenty of motivation, this clash could be one of the standout fixtures of the round. Benfica Team News Benfica remain without long-term absentees Alexander Bah and Manu Silva, both of whom continue their recovery from injury. Midfielder Florentino Luís is also set to miss out, having not featured since sustaining a shoulder injury on matchday one. On a positive note, Andrea Belotti is available again after serving a suspension and will look to reclaim a starting spot ahead of in-form striker Vangelis Pavlidis, who netted his 30th goal of the season against Auckland. Veteran Ángel Di María is expected to continue in attack after scoring three penalties in three games, with Schjelderup also likely to start. In midfield, Renato Sanches and Leandro Barreiro may keep their places, although Orkun Kökçü is pushing for a recall. Chelsea Team News Wesley Fofana has joined Chelsea's camp in the United States but remains unavailable as he continues recovering from a thigh injury. Nicolas Jackson will serve the second and final match of his suspension, meaning Liam Delap is expected to start up front. Cole Palmer and Pedro Neto could return to the starting XI, likely replacing Kiernan Dewsbury-Hall and Christopher Nkunku. Enzo Fernández is poised to face his former club Benfica in midfield, alongside Moisés Caicedo. In defence, Reece James, Levi Colwill and Marc Cucurella are in contention to start alongside Tosin Adarabioyo, shielding goalkeeper Robert Sánchez. Benfica vs Chelsea Starting 11 (Probable): Benfica starting 11 (probable): Trubin; Aursnes, Silva, Otamendi, Carreras; Barreiro, Sanches; Di María, Prestianni, Schjelderup; Pavlidis Chelsea Starting 11 (Probable): Sánchez; James, Tosin, Colwill, Cucurella; Caicedo, Fernández; Neto, Palmer, Madueke; Delap FIFA Club World Cup R016: Benfica vs Chelsea – Live Telecast and Streaming Details When will the FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea be played? The FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea will be played on June 29. What time will the FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea begin on June 29? The FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea will kick off at 1:30 AM IST (June 29). What will be the venue for the FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea? The FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea will take place at Bank of America Stadium, Charlotte, North Carolina. Where will the live telecast of the FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea be available in India? The live telecast of the FIFA Club World Cup R016 match between Benfica and Chelsea will not be available in India. The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup R016 clash between Benfica and Chelsea will be streamed for free on DAZN's website and app, both in India and across the globe.