
Smriti Mandhana, Shafali Verma break world record with stellar partnership vs England
India batters Shafali Verma and Smriti Mandhana etched their name in the history books with a stellar opening stand during the first T20I against England on Saturday, June 28 at Trent Bridge, Nottingham. The duo got involved in a massive 77-run stand for the first wicket after England captain Nat Sciver-Brunt won the toss and opted to bat first.It was the 21st fifty-plus stand between the Indian duo, the most by any pair in women's T20Is surpassing Australia's Alyssa Healy and Beth Mooney, who have 20 such partnerships to their name. Mandhana and Verma have collectively scored 2713 runs from 78 innings at an average of 36.17 with three hundreds and 15 fifties to their names.advertisementENG-W vs IND-W 1st T20I Updates
The duo began the partnership in emphatic fashion as Smriti Mandhana got off the mark on just the second ball with a classy cover drive against Lauren Bell. The India stand-in captain further added two more boundaries to her tally in the second over. At the other end, Verma, who was making a comeback to the Indian team after eight months, collected her first four against Lauren Filer.The opening batter also survived an early blow as she used DRS to overturn an on-field call after she was ruled caught out by the umpire despite the ball hitting her helmet instead of the bat. After getting the reprieve, Verma further collected another boundary on the last ball of the over.In no time both batters launched an all-out attack against the England bowlers. Mandhana brought up the half-century stand off 37 balls as she welcomed Sophie Ecclestone into the attack with a massive six. The India captain further hit her for a boundary and a six to collect 19 runs from the over, the most Ecclestone has conceded in a single over.Mandhana brought up her 31st half century off 27 balls as she cut Alice Capsey for a boundary through point. However, at the other end, Verma failed to capitalize on her start and was dismissed for 20 (22), caught at mid-off by Ecclestone.- EndsMust Watch

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Indian Express
26 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Praggnanandhaa to join Magnus Carlsen's Team Liquid ahead of chess' Esports World Cup debut
A day after R Praggnanandhaa won the 2nd UzChess Cup, the 19-year-old from Chennai was announced as the newest member of Team Liquid, a move that sees him join forces with the likes of five-time world champion Magnus Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana. Praggnanandhaa thus becomes the fourth Indian chess player to sign up with an esports franchise with chess making its debut at the Esports World Cup soon to be staged in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia from July 29 to August 1. Before Praggnanandhaa, his close friend Arjun Erigaisi was snapped up by Generation Gaming (Gen.G) while Nihal Sarin and Aravindh Chithambaram have been named on the roster of India-based S8UL. So far Arjun is the only player to have assured himself a spot in the Esports World Cup, which has spots for only 16 players. Both Carlsen and Caruana are also among the 12 grandmasters who have qualified. The others are Hikaru Nakamura (Team Falcons), Alireza Firouzja (Team Falcons), Ian Nepomniachtchi (Aurora), Nodirbek Abdusattorov (NAVI), Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (Team Vitality), Jan-Krzysztof Duda (Twisted Minds), Wei Yi (Weibo), Vladislav Artemiev (Team Spirit), Vladimir Fedoseev. Praggnanadhaa will represent Team Liquid for the Last Chance Qualifiers which will see some heavy-hitters in action trying to secure one of the four remaining spots. This includes former world champion Ding Liren (LGD), Wesley So (NAVI), Oleksandr Bortnyk (NAVI), Anish Giri (Team Secret) and Daniil Dubov (Team Spirit). 'Before chess conquered the world, it was born in India. For centuries, India has shaped the game. Now, it shapes the future. Praggnanandhaa R. carries that legacy forward — and today, he joins ours. Welcome to Team Liquid. The future of chess starts here,' the team posted on its X handle announcing the move. Before chess conquered the world, it was born in India. For centuries, India has shaped the game. Now, it shapes the future. Praggnanandhaa R. carries that legacy forward — and today, he joins ours. Welcome to Team Liquid. The future of chess starts here. 💙🇮🇳 Pragg உன்னை… — Team Liquid (@TeamLiquid) June 28, 2025 In response, Praggnanandhaa posted: 'Super excited to be part of Team Liquid! From India to the world, let's take chess to the next level together!' Carlsen's admiration for Praggnanandhaa is well documented. During the FIDE World Cup in 2023, where Praggnanandhaa had ended up reaching the final before losing to the world no 1 from Norway, Carlsen had famously patted the Indian teenager on the back and exchanged a few words while still in the middle of his own game after the boy from Chennai had upset Hikaru Nakamura via tiebreakers. Carlsen had revealed that at his club Offerspill in Norway, Pragg's coach RB Ramesh had used the phrase 'Be Like Pragg' while explaining to young players the level of dedication they needed to have to succeed. Carlsen had in turn reminded Praggnanandhaa about the 'Be Like Pragg' catchphrase when he had defeated Nakamura. Carlsen and Praggnanandhaa were also teammates in the first season of the Global Chess League. Team Liquid started off as a StarCraft clan in 2000, and then grew into a championship-winning team. It has three training facilities around the world, at Los Angeles, São Paulo and Utrecht (The Netherlands). The Esports World Cup will be an event where the world's biggest esports clubs compete across 24 of the most popular esports titles. For the first time, the World Cup will also feature chess, which will be played online. The first edition of the Esports World Cup was held in 2024 and saw teams compete over eight weeks. The Esports World Cup 2025 is set to be the largest multi-title esports event in history which is expected to have at least 2,000 players and 200 teams competing for a combined prize pool of $70 million (approx. Rs 602 crore). Chess was also included as an Esports at the Khelo India Youth Games 2025 in Patna.


News18
26 minutes ago
- News18
FIH Pro League: Indian Women Slump To Relegation Depths Following China Defeat
Last Updated: Chen Yang, Zhang Ying and Anhul Yu netted a goal each to help China to a 3-0 win over India in Berlin. The Indian women's hockey team were relegated from the FIH Pro League as they continued their dismal showing in the European leg of the on Saturday as they succumbed to China for their seventh straight defeat. Chen Yang, Zhang Ying and Anhul Yu netted a goal each to help China to a 3-0 win over India in Berlin. As a result, India relegated to the second tier FIH Nations Cup in the 2025-26 season. India were condemnded to the bottom of the nine-team standings with 10 points from 15 games in the aftermath of the defeat. England, who are set to play Germany in back-to-back matches on Saturday and Sunday, are just above India with 11 points from 14 games. If England wins against Germany on Saturday, India will remain at the bottom and will be relegated from the FIH Pro League to the FIH Nations Cup. However, if Germany wins, India will need to defeat China on Sunday to retain their spot in the Pro League. For China, Chen Yang scored from a penalty corner in the 21st minute, followed by Zhang Ying in the 26th minute, and Anhul Yu added a field goal in the 45th minute. India started brightly, creating good circle penetrations in the first quarter. Baljeet Kaur had the first real chance in the third minute, but her shot went wide. A minute later, India secured two consecutive penalty corners, but Deepika failed to convert on both occasions. Seconds before the end of the first quarter, China secured their second penalty corner but failed to capitalise. A minute into the second quarter, China earned two more consecutive penalty corners but couldn't convert. China dominated the second quarter, and in the 21st minute, Chen Yang scored from a set piece. They continued pressuring the Indian defence and, in the 26th minute, Zhang Ying scored from their fifth penalty corner, giving China a 2-0 lead at halftime. India created a few chances but lacked the finishing touch. They dominated the third quarter with persistent attacks but couldn't break the solid Chinese defence. China capitalised on India's lacklustre defence, tripling their lead in the 45th minute with a field goal by Anhul Yu. India continued to pressure the Chinese defence and earned a penalty stroke in the 55th minute, but Deepika missed the chance. The missed penalty stroke summed up India's day as China emerged victorious. First Published:


Economic Times
28 minutes ago
- Economic Times
Polo? People still play hockey on horses?
NOTHING GOOD CAN COME ABOUT WHEN HAN SOLO PLAYS POLO How many more people must die from the silly game of polo? India already has had three high-profile casualties. Jaipur's maharaja Man Singh II, who died on the polo field in Cirencester, Britain, in 1970, leaving his wife Gayatri Devi to live her life alone till she was 90. Jodhpur's Shivraj Singh, who went into a coma on a polo field at Rambagh in 2005 for some 11 months before slowly recovering. And its latest victim, industrialist Sunjay Kapur, who - and things don't get more macabre than this - reportedly swallowed a bee while playing polo at the Guards Polo Club at Windsor near London, leading to a heart attack. In 2022, the 71-yr-old Madhav Buchi Prakash, a polo star from Chennai, also suffered a heart attack during a chukker in Delhi. Why should the rich be allowed their own form of euthanasia de aristocrat, wrapped in horses and privilege? More importantly, why does (high) society still indulge a colonial residue of a sport- so what if its origins are said to be in the Persian 'chowgan' in ancient Iran - one that's deemed dangerous and seems to exist purely to preserve the aristocratic fantasy of danger being 'thrilling'? Animal rights groups have raised concerns over the treatment of polo horses. But the conversation never breaks through. Polo is a vanity sport that refuses to die. There's no real reason this so-called 'game of kings' and 'king of games' should not be the rest of the world moves forward, this 'elite' sport grows ever more outlandish. Britain's prince Harry Windsor's streaming docuseries, Polo, can be barely registered - it's just a blur of highly dull, buffed-up men bronzed and chapsticked beyond distinction. The cult terminology of 'chukkers' (pronounced 'chukka'), the hat parades in Europe, and the chiffon-and-pearls set at Indian grounds, are about as thrilling as the game itself, where one's never sure who's performing: horse or sport is not just absurd to watch, but it's also so cumbersome-horses needing to be bought and transported. So cumbersome, in fact, that the Olympics discarded it. Now, professional polo hangs suspended in a bubble of its odd, pointless game of man and horse, ball and stick, might have made sense in the Middle Ages - when horses were always hanging around for carriage duty, and there were enough royal spares and coteries to risk putting on their back without much consequence. Polo is exactly the kind of pastime that would be invented so the spare (human) could be given a function, ideally far from matters of state - or, in the event of a vacancy, prove he could fill shoes without tripping over men, or so the mythology goes, start to resemble their steeds. I know of a former polo player whose face has grown more equine as his hairline recedes. The closeness of man and beast is almost mythic. And who would want to encourage a breed of men for whom you have to compete with horses for company. The term for those afflicted with this syndrome is 'polo widows' - women, left alone for a long time while their men pursue (or, more correctly, pursue on) horses. And no one seems to bat an eyelid that this term applies to wives and partners left behind by 'polo martyrs'. It seems to be so noble for men to go off to get maimed or die playing a sport that no one (read: ordinary folk) the only game where amateur players can ride a horse and compete with professional players, simply because the former own a team. And what sort of rules does this game follow anyway? A 50-plus man playing a high-speed ball game while mounted is a disaster waiting to happen. Are there no age limits? No athletic thresholds? Or are we still pretending that money and lineage can override basic biology? Money can get you seven horses, a saddle stitched in Argentina, and a team of grooms. But really, to what end? (Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this column are that of the writer. The facts and opinions expressed here do not reflect the views of Elevate your knowledge and leadership skills at a cost cheaper than your daily tea. The bike taxi dreams of Rapido, Uber, and Ola just got a jolt. But they're winning public favour Second only to L&T, but controversies may weaken this infra powerhouse's growth story Punit Goenka reloads Zee with Bullet and OTT focus. Can he beat mighty rivals? 3 critical hurdles in India's quest for rare earth independence HDB Financial may be cheaper than Bajaj Fin, but what about returns? Why Sebi must give up veto power over market infra institutions These large- and mid-cap stocks can give more than 23% return in 1 year, according to analysts Are short-term headwinds from China an opportunity? 8 auto stocks: Time to be contrarian? Buy, Sell or Hold: Motilal Oswal initiates coverage on Supreme Industries; UBS initiates coverage on PNB Housing