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Sreeja Akula's Jaipur Patriots Qualify For UTT Season 6 Semis After 9-6 Victory Over Pune Jaguars

Sreeja Akula's Jaipur Patriots Qualify For UTT Season 6 Semis After 9-6 Victory Over Pune Jaguars

News1811-06-2025
Meanwhile, Pune were put out of the reckoning for the playoffs, with only one berth remaining ahead of tomorrow's final league stage game between U Mumba TT and Dabang Delhi TTC.
Jeet Chandra kicked things off in thrilling fashion for Jaipur, blocking out Anirban Ghosh's counter-punching style to secure a 2‑1 victory.
Dutchwoman Britt Eerland followed with a similar flair, taking the first two games before Pune's Reeth Rishya took the third on Golden Point.
These tight victories gave Jaipur a critical buffer heading into the mixed doubles, where Jeet and Eerland responded to a setback and a 0‑1 deficit to take games two and three 11‑6, 11‑7.
Their win confirmed Jaipur's spot in the semi-finals, marking their first-ever qualification into UTT's final four.
Pune's Alvaro Robles struck back with a composed 2‑1 victory over Yashansh Malik in the second men's singles, adding urgency to their playoff pursuit.
However, Sreeja closed the tie in style and ended Pune's hopes of a semis berth; undefeated through all five league-stage matches, she dominated her clash with South Korea's Zion Lee 2‑1, securing Jaipur's 9‑6 win.
For their starring role in Jaipur's victory, Jeet was named the Indian Player of the Tie and Eerland the Foreign Player of the Tie.
Zion's round-the-net shot in her singles rubber versus Sreeja earned her the Shot of the Tie honour.
Final Scores
Jaipur Patriots 9-6 PBG Pune Jaguars
Jeet Chandra bt. Anirban Ghosh 2-1 (11-8, 11-9, 10-11)
Britt Eerland bt. Reeth Rishya 2-1 (11-9, 11-6, 10-11)
Jeet Chandra/Britt Eerland bt. Alvaro Robles/Reeth Rishya 2-1 (9-11, 11-6, 11-7)
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Soccer-From the sidelines: One player's fight to return from ACL injury
Soccer-From the sidelines: One player's fight to return from ACL injury

Hindustan Times

time6 hours ago

  • Hindustan Times

Soccer-From the sidelines: One player's fight to return from ACL injury

By Lori Ewing Soccer-From the sidelines: One player's fight to return from ACL injury MANCHESTER, England, - Hanna Glas had never heard of an anterior cruciate ligament before the Seattle Reign defender tore one of hers for the first time at age 17 during a Sweden national team development camp. It would happen three more times over a roller-coaster career for the now-32-year-old Glas, once considered one of the best right backs in the women's game and now a walking encyclopaedia on ACL recovery. "I remember I was very fatigued, especially in my head mentally," Glas said in an interview with Reuters. "I was performing really well but I just passed the ball, got a late tackle from the striker and my knee kind of pivoted." ACL injuries have become a hot topic in women's football, with studies showing that women are up to eight times more likely to suffer the injury than men. The quality of pitches, access to physiotherapy, hormonal fluctuations during the menstrual cycle and properly-fitting boots have all been highlighted among potential contributing factors, with players such as England's Beth Mead, Dutchwoman Vivianne Miedema and Australian Sam Kerr all grudging members of the "ACL club." Swiss striker Ramona Bachmann and England defender Ella Morris will both miss the July 2-27 European Championship in Switzerland after suffering ACL tears. Glas will not play at the Euros for Sweden, announcing her international retirement last October to focus on her club career after her string of ACL injuries. "Two is very tough. Three is extreme. Four, not many people I know have gone through that," she said. The long recovery time makes the injury a devastating one. Four ACL injuries means about four years off the pitch in a professional career that typically lasts 10 to 15 years. "I knew something had happened in my knee because it was painful, I remember screaming and crying," Glas said of her first knee injury. "But I never knew the seriousness of it or what it meant for me afterwards." Glas agreed with experts who say the mental aspect of ACL recovery is crucial for a successful return. BIGGEST BLOW "It was tough because I was young. I did my best, but you also get separated from the team, you're not in the training sessions. And going through it a few more times, it's hard," she said. "But I'm very competitive, so it was having all these small goal settings: able to walk, able to bike, run, jump, and then doing something with the ball those small goals helped me for my long-term goal to be returning to play football." Glas suffered the same injury in the same knee in 2013. Number three in her other knee in 2015 was the biggest blow of the four, she said, having just received her first call-up for Sweden's senior team. "Sometimes, in the moment you just want to give up," she said. "The third time, my dream was there and it got pulled away before I even had time to make it to camp. So there was feelings of 'Why?' "But I'm better at understanding myself and allowing myself to feel sad, but knowing the next day I'm still going to do my best to be better." She bounced back to have a terrific couple of seasons for Sweden and at Bayern Munich, helping the German side to the 2021 Champions League semi-finals. Her game-winner against Chelsea in the first leg was selected as the competition's best goal. Glas was also a key part of the Sweden team that won silver at the 2020 Olympics and who were third at the 2019 World Cup, but a fourth torn ACL in September 2022 cost her the entirety of 2023 including the World Cup and half the 2024 season. "I have a degree in physical therapy now," she joked. "Obviously, I learned a lot about the human body because I'm also very interested and curious." Glas has cursed the spiteful football Gods a few times, and wondered: 'what if?' "I've had a really successful career, so I'm still proud," she said. "But sometimes I'm really curious, what would have happened if I hadn't had all these seasons taken away from me, and been playing continuously. I think I could have been even better, because you get that with continuity. "But it's shaped me too as a human. The difficult moments are when you learn and grow and improve as a person. I know I can get through tough situations; if something is coming at me, I know I can handle it." This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

Krisha in line for twin doubles title, loses singles QF to Raigad's Prakriti
Krisha in line for twin doubles title, loses singles QF to Raigad's Prakriti

Time of India

time4 days ago

  • Time of India

Krisha in line for twin doubles title, loses singles QF to Raigad's Prakriti

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Ultimate action and a golden show by young Indian paddlers
Ultimate action and a golden show by young Indian paddlers

The Hindu

time23-06-2025

  • The Hindu

Ultimate action and a golden show by young Indian paddlers

Twenty-three exciting matches. Sixteen days of power-packed action. Eight teams going all guns blazing. Two nail-biting semifinals. And a new champion — U Mumba TT. That's how the sixth edition of Ultimate Table Tennis — the franchise-based table tennis league that's getting bigger and better with every passing season ever since its post-pandemic return in 2023 — can be summed up. While the Amdavadis, traditionally more interested in the business of sport than enjoying live sport, hardly thronged to the EKA Arena, those who did returned with memories worth cherishing. After following the tournament, the paddlers, the coaching staff and the organisers from close quarters over 17 days in Ahmedabad, here is how the tournament panned out. UTT or UMTT Being a young sibling of the U Mumba outfit in the Pro Kabaddi League arena, a lot was expected of the U Mumba paddlers. But just like its kabaddi counterpart, which last won a title nine seasons ago, the five editions saw the table tennis lot earn the tag of 'underachievers.' The team led by Bernadette Szocs — the Romanian who entered UTT as the highest-ranked paddler this season — shed the tag in style. After the first-ever player auction in UTT, where U Mumba was the first to complete its squad of six players, a lot of eyebrows were raised over its choices, especially with regard to Indian male paddlers. But Szocs — with meticulous planning by coaches John Murphy and Jay Modak, assisted by Nishant Kulkarni — got the best out of every single individual to wipe off the 'under' from its tag and lead the team to glory. In fact, besides being the champion, U Mumba ended up being the only team to give at least one match to each of the six players in the squad. Having heavily relied on youngsters — with all four Indians in Akash Pal, P.B. Abhinandh, Yashaswini Ghorpade and Swastika Ghosh being either in teens or the early 20s — U Mumba banked on their zest. And Lilian Bardet, the Frenchman who was Szocs' teammate in UTT 2024, brought in the maturity of an overseas paddler to form a perfect combination that went all the way. While Szocs upped the ante when it mattered, in the big final against Jaipur Patriots, it was Yashaswini — the Bengalurean with Maharashtrian roots — that lived up to the table tennis legacy of her surname. If her becoming the first paddler to stun Fan Siqi, who became only the second Chinese paddler to be part of UTT, was an achievement in itself, Yashaswini went one step ahead in the semifinal. Trailing 7-5 against senior Krittwika Sinha Roy, she displayed exemplary control over her long-pimpled backhand to win all three games, with the third off the 59th golden point of the season, and helped U Mumba enter its maiden final. With Yashaswini playing a major role in ending Goa Challengers' title defence, it was clear that the tournament will have a new champion. And U Mumba ensured that it didn't have to wait longer to carve its name on the glittering trophy. New kids on the block For most of the last three seasons, ever since UTT switched from an eight to six-member squad format, promising Indian paddlers had to warm the bench on match days. They would be happy to be a part of the entourage and learn by training with seasoned pros, with very little — or virtually none — game-time. Season six witnessed a welcome change on that front as eight Indian paddlers made their UTT debuts over the fortnight. They were Akash Pal, Abhinandh and Swastika Ghosh (U Mumba), Divyansh Srivastava (Ahmedabad SG Pipers), Sayali Wani (Dempo Goa Challengers), Ananya Chande (Kolkata ThunderBlades), Taneesha Kotecha (PBG Pune Jaguars) and Payas Jain (Chennai Lions). The fact that most of these eight paddlers — barring Swastika, Divyansh and Ananya — had spent at least a season in UTT earlier speaks about the desperation and the desire of teams to try out new talent on the big stage. It also indicates the rising quality of young Indian talent. 'It's a great sign for Indian table tennis. The more young talent on display at UTT, the better it is. The youngsters are right up there when it comes to skills, are confident irrespective of the opponents and are fearless in their approach. It's a great sign for the future,' said Sachin Shetty, the Jaipur Patriots coach. Top Indian paddlers MIA While the promising youngsters were making a splash and some of the top global paddlers were in action, the absence of India's star paddlers was a bit of a dampener for UTT. Three of the top Indians — Manav Thakkar and the new National men's champion Manush Shah along with Commonwealth Games queen Manika Batra — did not feature in the season. With A. Sharath Kamal having hung up his boots after a glittering career, Manush and Manav — a Barodian and a Surti — could have drawn a local crowd in their home state. But both opted against registering for the auction. While the Indian table tennis corridors are abuzz with multiple theories for the bespectacled duo's decision to skip UTT 2025, the UTT organisers clarified that was only due to the clash of the tournament schedule with the duo's commitments in European leagues. Manika, on the other hand, pulled out at the last-minute due to an injury after featuring in the World Championship towards the end of the last month. It jeopardised Ahmedabad SG Pipers' season, although the lanky paddler did turn up to support the team for its inaugural match. 'It's critical for all the top Indian players to feature in UTT. It helps them raise their stature and also the tournament's,' said Sweden's Tobias Bergman, the Kolkata ThunderBlades coach. 'In my home country, and all over Europe, there is a lot of interest about UTT and if the top European players get to compete with the best from India, it will be an ideal scenario.' The fact that the trio featured in a WTT event during the UTT's latter stages also did not send a right signal to the table tennis fraternity. It will hopefully be taken care of in the seasons to come. Amending the format Despite the final qualification spot being sealed on the last day, for a league like UTT that's still trying to attract interest from general sport fans, a simpler format would augur well. At the moment, the eight teams play five league matches. Not only is it confusing for a fan trying to keep pace with the line-ups, it also creates a not-so-ideal situation for the franchises, both in terms of form and fixtures. No doubt an all-play-all format will mean there will be 28 league games instead of the existing 20, but with double-headers on most days, the three-week tournament window can be respected. While the idea can be food for thought, John Murphy, coach of U Mumba, had another suggestion. 'Instead of following the set sequence of men's singles, women's singles, mixed doubles, reverse men's singles and reverse women's singles, the team winning the toss should be allowed to choose whether to start with a male or female player,' Murphy said. 'For a team like us with Bernadette Szocs, we'd want her to open the tie. It could also prevent the final singles from always being a women's match.' If implemented, the tournament will add another dimension to the planning of the teams and may keep most matches alive till the end. Vitamin M A franchise league is nothing but a commercial product. For most non-cricket sports leagues in India, it results in the owners and the promoters bleeding to death. UTT is an exception, since it's backed by co-promoters who are passionate about the sport and not all interested in making money through the league. 'Let the franchise owners break even first. And making money is not the only objective of UTT' seems to be the motto of Niraj Bajaj and Vita Dani – two of the leading industrialists who have joined hands for UTT. Thanks to its consecutive titles, Dempo Goa Challengers became the first team to enter the green on the balance sheet. Steady growth While two others are likely to break even in the next edition, Vita is pleased with the steady growth of the league in terms of numbers – both financial and in terms of viewership. At least a couple of teams, including new entrants Kolkata ThunderBlades, managed to raise in excess of ₹50 lakh through jersey sponsorships. It is a welcome sign for a relatively small-scale league like UTT. 'It will take a little time but we are moving in the right direction and quickly. For us, as league owners, our ROI is in how Indian table tennis does more than financials because we are not here to only make money. It is more important that as a country, we do well,' Vita said.

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