
India wins all three titles in Asian Squash Doubles Championships
The top-seeded men's pair of Abhay Singh and Velavan Senthilkumar lost the first set but made a comeback to beat their Pakistani opponents Noor Zaman and Nasir Iqbal 2-1 (9-11, 11-5, 11-5) in the summit clash that lasted 88 minutes.

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The Hindu
9 hours ago
- The Hindu
Of Munir Ali and shaping cricketing lives
Munir Ali breathes cricket. After helping shape the career of his nephew Kabir Ali, who represented England in one Test and 14 ODIs, and then making Moeen Ali the cricketer he was — World Cup winner and an all-format champion — his current pet project is creating internationals out of his four grandsons. The latest source of pride is 17-year-old Isaac Mohammed who scored a 28-ball 42 against the visiting Indian U-19 team on Friday to leave his 70-year-old grandfather chuffed. 'He's [Isaac] is similar to Moeen, the way he plays. I remember he got out a few weeks ago and his father said 'you could have played the right shot.' Isaac replied, 'if that ball had gone for a six you would have said well played'. So that is the attitude.' As rosy and happy as it all seems now, things were tough for Munir in his early days. Born to a Pakistani-origin father and British mother, Munir worked as a male nurse and did odd jobs even as he completed his coaching badges to nurture the next generation's cricketing aspirations. The race barrier was an added hurdle. 'I remember Bishan Singh Bedi, a family friend of ours, saying to Kabir, 'you need to be 20 times better than the white guys'. He also said 'when you're playing in the team, you have to believe that you're the number one. Think like that and everything comes automatically'.' Moeen followed this advice diligently, going on to represent England in 68 Tests, 138 ODIs and 92 T20Is. But Munir felt his son could have finished with better numbers. 'I always ask the question, why did Moeen bat so low (No. 8, 9)? Why couldn't anybody else bat at No. 8? Why the sacrifice? To accommodate others. But he's still very lucky. He scored 3000 Test runs [3094], 200 wickets [204]. He's one of few who've done that.' Munir, who runs the Moeen Ali Cricket Academy here, said that while his son's success had indeed made it better for children with immigrant backgrounds, challenges remained. The racism scandal at Yorkshire involving player Azeem Rafiq is still fresh in memory. Birmingham, in fact, has 31% population with Asian ethnicity. 'To be honest, apart from Worcestershire, there were a lot of other counties with similar things. Yorkshire was very obvious, yes. My home county is Warwickshire and I love it. That's where I do my cricket development. But even Moeen had to leave once, and he developed his game at Worcestershire.' 'So it's been a difficult journey. But it's getting better. Chief Executive [of Warwickshire] Stuart Cain is very good with me and very helpful. I am hoping only the best things happen.'


NDTV
19 hours ago
- NDTV
India-Pakistan Clash Likely In Asia Cup 2025 Despite Pahalgam Tragedy: Report
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New Indian Express
a day ago
- New Indian Express
Final against Pak pair more mental than physical: Squash player Abhay Singh
CHENNAI: 'IT was not a game of squash, it was a psychological war.' This was Abhay Singh's candid confession about the gruelling men's doubles final against the Pakistani duo of Noor Zaman and Nasir Iqbal. He was partnering Velavan Senthilkumar and won the match 9-11, 11-5, 11-5. On Thursday (June 26), India made history by winning all three events at the 2nd Asian squash doubles championships in Malaysia. Abhay, who won two of the events (men's doubles and mixed doubles), spoke about the challenges and what the wins mean to India. The men's final against Pakistani pair was a see-saw battle. Abhay and Velavan got momentum on their side in the second set after losing the first. 'It was just down to who was more mentally strong and patient," he told this daily. "In the hour-mark, I spoke to Velavan and we both decided that we can keep going for another 60 minutes if we wanted. I think that was the right call to take because we knew that over time both the Pakistan boys will fold. I knew we were both mentally stronger as a team and physically stronger as well.' After playing the men's doubles final, which lasted for 88 minutes, Abhay turned up to the mixed final pairing up with teen sensation Anahat Singh. He had to make do with a 15-minute break before facing the Malaysian pair of Ameeshenraj Chandran and Rachel Arnold. 'After that final, the whole team was worried about how I was going to come back. I quickly ran for a cold shower, had a few bananas and had a lot of electrolytes. The main concern was not to cramp,' he said.