‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Games. إظهار كافة الرسائل
‏إظهار الرسائل ذات التسميات Games. إظهار كافة الرسائل

Russia Stages Scaled-down War Games With China, India

Russia is staging joint war games with China and India on Thursday, boasting far fewer troops and hardware than previously amid Moscow’s six-month campaign to capture territory in Ukraine. The 50,000 troops announced for the Vostok-2022 (East-2022) military exercises compare with 300,000 who had participated in the previous drills that took place in Russia’s Far East four years ago. Vostok-2022 will also deploy 140 warplanes and 5,000 pieces of military equipment, a fraction of the 1,000 military aircraft and 36,000 equipment involved in Vostok-2018. “This is going to be the smallest strategic-level exercise in years because the entire ground forces potential is engaged in operations in Ukraine,” Konrad Muzyka, director of the Poland-based Rochan military consultancy, told Reuters. Muzyka estimates that up to 80% of Russia’s eastern military district manpower had been deployed in Ukraine, saying it is more likely the Russian military has freed up 10,000-15,000 troops for the Vostok-2022 drills.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said Vostok-2022 brings together airborne troops, aviation forces, as well as Federal Security Service (FSB), Federal Guard Service (FSO) and interior and emergencies ministry representatives across nine firing ranges in Far East Russia. A total of 6,000 foreign troops from member states and partners of the China-led Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) and the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) of ex-Soviet republics, it added. India is sending a 75-member detachment for the drills, including Gurkha troops and navy and air force representatives, according to Bloomberg. China is deploying army, air and naval forces at Vostok-2022, which state-backed media say will focus on U.S. threats in the Pacific. Russia's Defense Ministry says the two countries' navies will "assist ground troops" in the coastal area of northern and central parts of the Sea of Japan, and "defend maritime communications and areas of maritime economic activity." Beijing and New Delhi have refused to criticize Moscow’s “special military operation” in Ukraine, though both countries have steered clear of incurring secondary sanctions by providing Russia with military assistance. “Today, soldiers and officers from 10 countries are standing in single formation, and a total of 14 countries are taking part in the exercise,” Russia’s Deputy Defense Minister Yunus-Bek Yevkurov said at the opening ceremony Wednesday. “We’re connected not only by the need to strengthen military security near our borders, but also by the long friendly relations between the countries,” Yevkurov said. The Sept. 1-7 war games are divided into two stages.  The first three-day stage will practice repelling enemy airstrikes, engaging them in fire and conducting defensive and offensive actions in Russia’s Primorye region. The second four-day stage will manage a “strategic operation in the eastern direction and during the defeat of the enemy.”


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Padres star Tatis suspended 80 games for positive drug test

WASHINGTON -- San Diego Padres dynamo Fernando Tatis Jr., one of the brightest, freshest stars in all of Major League Baseball, was suspended 80 games on Friday after testing positive for a performance-enhancing substance.

MLB said Tatis tested positive for Clostebol, an anabolic steroid. Tatis said he accidentally took a medication to treat ringworm that contained the banned substance.

The penalty imposed by MLB was effective immediately, meaning the shortstop — who had been out the entire season because of a broken wrist but was expected to return to the playoff contenders next week — cannot play in the majors this year.

Tatis will miss the remaining 48 regular-season games this year and the first 32 next year. Any postseason games the Padres play this year would count toward the 80 that Tatis must sit out.

“Shocked everybody,” Padres star Manny Machado said after a 10-5 win over Washington.

The 23-year-old Tatis, who signed a $340 million, 14-year contract before the 2021 season, became one of the most prominent players ever penalized for performance-enhancing drugs, along with Alex Rodriguez and Manny Ramirez. The penalty will cost Tatis about $2.9 million.

MLB said the suspension also will knock Tatis of playing for the Dominican Republic in the World Baseball Classic.

“Obviously, everybody’s very disappointed. Somebody that from the organization’s standpoint we invested time and money into,” Padres general manager A.J. Preller said at Nationals Park, where San Diego played Washington.

Flashy at the plate and in the field, Tatis was an All-Star last season when he led the National League with 42 home runs. He was set to soon rejoin the Padres to boost a lineup that added star outfielder Juan Soto this month right before the trade deadline.

In a statement released by the players' union, Tatis said he was “completely devastated” and apologized to Padres management, his teammates, MLB and “and fans everywhere for my mistake.”

“It turns out that I inadvertently took a medication to treat ringworm that contained Clostebol," he said. “I should have used the resources available to me in order to ensure that no banned substances were in what I took. I failed to do so.”

“I have no excuse for my error, and I would never do anything to cheat or disrespect this game I love,” he said.

Freddy Galvis and Dee Strange-Gordon are among the major leaguers previously suspended for using Clostebol, which can be used for ophthalmological and dermatological use. It is also banned by the World Anti-Doping Agency, and Olympic gold medal winning cross-country skier Therese Johaug was suspended in 2016 after testing positive for it.

Tatis was seventh player suspended this year under the major league drug program. Thirty-three have been suspended under the minor league drug program.

Players who test positive for PEDs are ineligible for the postseason that year.

Preller said he found out about the suspension late Friday afternoon. He said he hadn't spoken yet to Tatis, but had seen his player's statement.

“Again, that’s his story. I haven’t had a chance to talk to him about it yet. Ultimately that’s his explanation,” Preller said. “I think the biggest thing just from our standpoint, from a baseball standpoint, there’s a drug policy in place. He failed a drug screen. For whatever reason.”

“Ultimately, he’s suspended and can’t play. That’s the biggest thing. That’s a player’s responsibility to make sure he’s within compliance of that. He wasn’t. Ultimately supportive of that and want to make sure he understands that,” he said.

The son of a former big leaguer, Tatis made his MLB debut in 2019 and quickly became a smash hit. He has a career .965 OPS and has played shortstop and in the outfield.

Tatis became one of the biggest MLB players suspended for PEDs since testing with penalties started in 2004, joining Rodriguez (2014 season), Ramirez (50 games in 2009 and 100 games in 2011), Robinson Canó (80 games in 2018 and 2020 season) and Miguel Tejada (105 games in 2013).

Tatis had been on the injured list this season after breaking his left wrist — the accident is believed to have been in December in a motorcycle accident in the Domincan Republic. He had surgery in mid-March.

“I think we’re hoping that from the offseason to now there would be some maturity. Obviously with the news today it’s more of a pattern and something we’ve got to dig a little more into,” Preller said.

“I’m sure he’s very disappointed. At the end of the day, it’s one thing to say. You’ve got to start showing it with your actions,” he said.

Preller added: “I think what we need to get to is a point in time we trust (him). Over the course of the last six or seven months, that’s been something that we haven’t been really able to have there.”

“I think from our standpoint, obviously he’s a great talent, he’s a guy we have a lot of history with and do believe in, but these things only work when there’s trust both ways.”

On Aug. 6, Tatis began a minor rehabilitation assignment with Double-A San Antonio. He was 2 for 9 with a double and a triple in four games.

The Padres traded for Soto in hopes of making a run deep into October. They figured a roster that included Soto, Tatis and Machado could give them a better chance at the first World Series championship in team history — now, they'll have to make that try without one of those key pieces.

“Hearing that he’s going to get suspended for 80 games and not be a part of what we’re trying to accomplish here is something you don’t want to hear before a game and don’t want to hear overall. It’s just a terrible thing,” Machado said.

“We were waiting to get him back and for him to be a sparkplug,” he said.

Added manager Bob Melvin: “This is a blow for us. ... I’m glad we made the moves we did over the deadline.”

Tatis won’t be able to play for the Dominican Republic in the WBC next March. Dominican fans had been salivating at the prospect of a bruising lineup that included Tatis, Soto, Vladimir Guerrero Jr., Rafael Devers and José Ramírez.

Tatis will forfeit $1,510,989 of his $5 million salary this year, covering the final 55 days and 48 games of the season. He will lose approximately $1.39 million of his $7 million salary for the first 32 games of next season, with the exact number to be determined by how many days he misses.

“There is nowhere else in the world I would rather be than on the field competing with my teammates,” Tatis said. “After initially appealing the suspension, I have realized that my mistake was the cause of this result, and for that reason I have decided to start serving my suspension immediately. I look forward to rejoining my teammates on the field in 2023.”

“I have taken countless drug tests throughout my professional career, including on March 29, 2022, all of which have returned negative results until this test,” he said.

The penalty was announced shortly before the Padres played Washington. San Diego began the day at 63-51 and holding the final of the three NL wild-card spots.

Preller said the team had about 15 minutes to talk about Tatis' suspension before taking the field.

“We haven’t had (Tatis) for this season, so it’s not like we’ve had him in the lineup and now we won’t,” Preller said. “I think to a man all the guys in that clubhouse believe we can win. They know we can win. Never been about one player.”

———

More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/mlb and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports


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Erdogan opens 5th Islamic Solidarity Games in Türkiye's Konya

Fast News

The latest edition of the games will see more than 4,000 athletes from at least 55 member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation competing for 355 medals.

The first Islamic Islamic Solidarity Games were held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in 2005.
The first Islamic Islamic Solidarity Games were held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in 2005. (Murat Kula / AA)

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has officially opened the fifth edition of the Islamic Solidarity Games in the central Anatolian city of Konya, Türkiye.

Erdogan declared the games open on Tuesday at a dazzling opening ceremony, which was also attended by Azerbaijan's President Ilham Aliyev along with dignitaries from several nations.

The sporting event, which will be held from August 9-18, was originally planned to be held in 2021. 

It was postponed to 2022 due to the coronavirus pandemic. 

Light shows was held during the opening ceremony of the 5th Islamic Solidarity Games in Konya, Türkiye.
Light shows was held during the opening ceremony of the 5th Islamic Solidarity Games in Konya, Türkiye. (Mustafa Ciftci / AA)

More than 4,000 athletes from at least 55 member states of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation will compete in 24 sports, ranging from archery to basketball and judo to swimming for 355 medals. 

The Islamic Solidarity Games is an event held by the Islamic Solidarity Sports Federation (ISSF).

The games aim to "support the development of the athletes of the Islamic geography and to increase the culture of brotherhood and solidarity among the athletes," according to the event website

Non-Muslim citizens in member states are also able to participate in the games.

The first Islamic Islamic Solidarity Games were held in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, in 2005. The fourth edition was held in Baku, Azerbaijan in 2017. 

READ MORE: Women cricketers eye Olympics after successful Commonwealths debut

Source: TRT World


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Commonwealth Games 2022 - Bronze medal shows New Zealand's 'resilience'

For England, a potential bronze medal at the Commonwealth Games seemed a consolation prize. For New Zealand, it's "something really special" and the beginning of a "really exciting time" for their women's team.

Sophie Devine shared her delight as her side stunned hosts England to claim the bronze medal at Birmingham 2022, saying that they had defied expectations to win a spot on the podium.

"I think a lot of people probably wouldn't have expected us to make the semis," Devine said, "so to be able to take away bronze medal, it probably hasn't quite sunk in yet.

"In cricket it's usually just first and second and you don't even play a third-fourth playoff. So it's a bit unique to be able to take away a bit of, not quite silverware, but jewellery. It's really special for this group."

New Zealand had lost heavily to England in their last group-stage match on Thursday night before defeat against Australia in the semi-final barely 12 hours before the start of the bronze medal match. Suzie Bates had suggested after the semi-final loss that the lack of turnaround time could benefit New Zealand, with little time to dwell on their disappointment before playing again for a medal. Devine joked at the toss today that she had slept in the changing rooms at Edgbaston overnight.
New Zealand picked themselves up and bested the host country in all departments. Nat Sciver, England's stand-in captain, said: "The way that we played today we probably didn't deserve to get a medal." Devine, on the other hand, couldn't be more proud of how her side rebounded at Edgbaston on Sunday.

"I think that shows the resilience in this group to be able to bounce back," Devine said. "We were disappointed to lose to Australia last night and to be able to turn around in less than 12 hours and come out and put out a performance like that is something I'm really proud of this in group and shows that we've got a bit of ticker about us, which I think we can keep growing."

Success in Birmingham has at least partially healed the wounds of New Zealand's disappointing ODI World Cup campaign on home soil earlier this year, where they finished sixth in the group stage and failed to progress to the knockouts.

"We were pining over that World Cup at home. They don't come around very often at all, potentially once in your lifetime, career-wise," Devine said. "We were really gutted about that, but I think to be able to come here and represent New Zealand and to be able to take away a medal, that was certainly our aim."

While the experienced heads of Devine and Bates played a huge part in New Zealand's success at the Games - they sat first and third on the run-scorers chart ahead of the final - this was a youthful New Zealand side that has clinched a spot on the podium. Four players made their T20I debuts in the tournament - Izzy Gaze, Eden Carson, Fran Jonas and Georgia Plimmer.

Only two other sides had debutants at the tournament - India (one) and Barbados (six) - and head coach Ben Sawyer praised their impact on the campaign.

"The roles that the girls have played - Fran, for her to bowl the first over in every match and to bowl to Danni Wyatt and Alyssa Healy and some of the greats and she had to bowl a big over to Chloe [Tryon] against South Africa, that's put her under a bit of pressure and she's responded really well," Sawyer said.

"Georgia to run at Darcie Brown the other day and Izzy to keep wicket, the three debutantes we've had just haven't made up the numbers, they've played really big roles. That's going to put us in really good shape."

For 18-year-old Jonas, who bowled an excellent spell of 2 for 22 in the bronze-medal match, the overall experience was "unreal".

"I can't really fathom that we've just won a bronze medal at the Commonwealth Games, it's super exciting," she said.

"It's been such a good opportunity and a really good experience just to develop my bowling.

"The support we had last night in our game [the semi-final] was unreal and just the roar when there are boundaries and stuff, it's really, really cool. Surreal."

New Zealand will get their moment on the podium alongside India and Australia following the final, but the celebrations had begun swiftly after their victory against England, with group photos, beers on the outfield and a singalong to New Zealand's own pop superstar Lorde on the balcony.

Devine, who is 32 years old and whose international career has spanned almost exactly half her lifetime, assumed the role of "mother hen".

"I think I have to keep an eye on the young ones, because they can be rowdy, and be the old mother hen," she said. "We'll certainly celebrate accordingly and spend some real quality time together because we've been over here for close to a month now and, amazingly, we're not sick of each other. It's just special to be able to spend some time and just reflect on what's been a pretty awesome couple of weeks."

With a new generation of players coming through and now a medal win, Devine was confident of a bright future for New Zealand.

"The really exciting thing is this group is only going to go up," she said. "They're obviously bloody young and they remind me about it too. But yeah, it's a really exciting time for New Zealand cricket and a fantastic result here, but we know that there's a lot more hard work and hopefully a lot more silverware to come."

As women's cricket gains more exposure through the Commonwealth Games, along with hopes of its inclusion in the 2028 Olympics and growing professionalism around the world, it's an exciting time for young female cricketers.

"I sort of wish I was Amelia Kerr or Fran Jonas' age to be able to come through on this but, it's a hell of lot of hard work that goes with it too," Devine said. "It's been built on years and years of female players doing the hard yards, working full-time jobs, and we wouldn't be where we are today, reaping the rewards, without those females laying the platform and the foundation for us to be here.

"So it's a really proud moment, but we need to acknowledge where we've come through. We've also got a really long way to go as well. But I think hopefully everyone that's watched the last couple of weeks sees the value in women's sport and women's cricket and I'm really excited to see where women's cricket can go."

Paul Muchmore is ESPNcricinfo's Social media editor. @paulmuchmore


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Match Preview - IND Women vs AUS Women, Commonwealth Games Women's Cricket Competition 2022, Final

Big picture

Two years after they played the T20I World Cup final in front of 88,000 fans at a packed MCG, Australia and India will square off in the gold-medal match at the Commonwealth Games 2022.

The setting is perhaps a little less intimidating, but Edgbaston will likely be sold out to its 25,000 capacity. This is a rivalry that is fast gaining ground as the second biggest in women's cricket after England vs Australia.

Having laid their hands on every trophy of significance in the game, Australia are overwhelming favourites. For India, it's another shot at trying to win a major global crown, five years after they came closest to winning one, at Lord's at the 50-over World Cup final against England.
The core of both squads remains the same as it was in 2020. Australia may have aged a bit, but their never-say-die spirit, as was evident in their jailbreak in the tournament opener, makes them a formidable force in any conditions.
India have backed their strengths of batting first and putting opponents under scoreboard pressure. Australia nearly wilted in the first game but found a saviour in Grace Harris, who played a match-turning knock in her first game in six years.
The 171* she made in the 2017 semi-final was pathbreaking in every way. Another impact performance to deliver a win here could spur a revolution. Purely given the novelty and the fascination India attaches to gold medalists, a win on Sunday could be as big, if not bigger, than a World Cup win.

Form guide

India WWWLW (last five matches, most recent first)
Australia WWWWW

Players to watch

India are blessed to have three quality allrounders in Deepti, Pooja Vastrakar and Sneh Rana. Deepti has lent much needed batting depth and has been Harmanpreet's go-to bowler to restrict run-flow, while Rana has been the banker. Vastrakar's inclusion has given the team the balance they missed when they played Australia in the opener. She is a useful medium-pacer and can wield the long handle down the order. This is firmly a team that is carving out an identity that isn't always superstar centric.
Alyssa Healy knows a thing or two about turning up and slaying nerves in crunch games. But since that T20 World Cup final in 2020, where she blew India away with a stunning assault, her form hasn't quite been the same. She has passed 25 just once in 16 innings and averages a shade over 10. Sunday is as good an opportunity as any to once again remind the world of her prowess.

Team news

The only question dilemma India may have is between picking a makeshift wicketkeeper who offers batting depth in Yastika Bhatia or an out-and-out wicketkeeper in Taniya Bhatia. The spate of run outs under pressure on Saturday made it amply clear it helps to have a proper wicketkeeper in crunch moments.

India (possible): 1 Smriti Mandhana, 2 Shafali Verma, 3 Jemimah Rodrigues, 4 Harmanpreet Kaur (capt), 5 Deepti Sharma, 6 Taniya Bhatia (wk), 7 Sneh Rana, 8 Pooja Vastrakar, 9 Radha Yadav, 10 Meghna Singh, 11 Renuka Singh

She has bowled plenty in the nets lately, but game time remains elusive for superstar allrounder Ellyse Perry. Barring an injury or a late change owing to short turnaround time, it's likely she may have to settle for watching Australia's entire CWG campaign from the bench. Moreover, Meg Lanning has gone in with the same XI in all of their four games in the tournament.

Australia (possible): 1 Alyssa Healy (wk), 2 Beth Mooney, 3 Meg Lanning (capt), 4 Tahlia McGrath, 5 Rachael Haynes, 6 Ashleigh Gardner, 7 Grace Harris, 8 Jess Jonassen, 9 Alana King, 10 Megan Schutt, 11 Darcie Brown

Pitch and conditions

Forty overs of cricket would have already been played on the surface by the time the final comes around, with the bronze medal playoff between New Zealand and England having finished. On Saturday, the adjacent surface, prepared similarly with an even grass cover that aids consistent bounce, remained good for batting right through. Expect more of the same on Super Sunday.


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China’s massive war games continue, Taiwan hits out at ‘evil neighbour’

China has encircled Taiwan with a series of huge military drills — now into their second day — that have been condemned by the United States and other Western allies.

Set to last until Sunday, the exercises will take place in multiple zones around Taiwan — at some points within just 20 kilometres (12 miles) of the shore.
Set to last until Sunday, the exercises will take place in multiple zones around Taiwan — at some points within just 20 kilometres (12 miles) of the shore. (AFP)

Taiwan says Beijing's fighter jets and ships have crossed the median line that runs down the Taiwan Strait as part of its latest military drills, calling China "the evil neighbour next door".

China has been holding huge drills encircling Taiwan, which Beijing considers as its own territory, since Thursday to protest this week's visit to the island state by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The drills involve live firing on the waters and in the airspace near the self-ruled island state, with as many as four missiles believed to have flown over the capital Taipei in an unprecedented escalation during the exercises.

"This Chinese military exercise, whether it be the launch of ballistic missiles or the deliberate crossing of the median line of the strait, is a highly provocative act," Taiwan's defence ministry said in a statement on Friday.

"...multiple batches of Chinese warplanes and warships conducted exercises around the Taiwan Strait and crossed the median line of the strait."

The median line is an unofficial but once largely-adhered-to border that runs down the middle of the Taiwan Strait, which separates Taiwan and China.

It was previously rare for military jets and ships to cross the median line, although Chinese incursions have become more common after Beijing declared in 2020 that the unofficial border no longer existed. 

And there has been a spike in median-line incursions during this week's drills.

Crossings of the line are sensitive because the Taiwan Strait is narrow, just 130 kilometres (81 miles) at its thinnest point, and incursions raise the risk of military accidents. 

READ MORE: Pelosi vows US will 'not allow' China to isolate Taiwan

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5hXU_LRgpU[/embed]

Show of strength

The latest drills are expected to continue until midday Sunday, and have sparked outrage from the United States, Japan and the European Union, as well as Taipei.

China defends the drills as just countermeasures in the face of provocations by the United States and its allies in Taiwan.

Taiwan's premier Su Tseng-chang called for allies to push for de-escalation on Friday.

"(We) didn't expect that the evil neighbour next door would show off its power at our door and arbitrarily jeopardise the busiest waterways in the world with its military exercises," he told reporters.

The military exercises have straddled some of the busiest shipping lanes in the world. Airlines too have cancelled flights to Taipei and rerouted others to avoid airspace nearby that has been closed to civilian traffic during Chinese military exercises.

Beijing is yet to formally confirm whether missiles overflew the island state during the drills, while Taipei has refused to confirm or deny the flight paths, citing intelligence concerns.

But Japan's defence ministry said of the nine missiles it had detected, four were "believed to have flown over Taiwan's main island".

Meng Xiangqing, a professor at China's military-affiliated National Defence University, told state broadcaster CCTV that the drills represented the People's Liberation Army's closest-ever exercises to the island, its first encirclement and the first time it set up a shooting range east of Taiwan.

"That's unprecedented," Bonnie Glaser, a Washington-based Asia security specialist at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, said of statements that four ballistic missiles had been fired over Taiwan.

"In my view, the larger threat is that China is doing a rehearsal for a blockade, demonstrating it can block Taiwan's ports and airports, and prevent shipping," she said.

READ MORE: What are key developments in US-Taiwan ties?

Source: TRTWorld and agencies


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Commonwealth Games 2022: India to take on South Africa in badminton mixed team quarterfinals

India kicked off their campaign by blanking Pakistan 5-0 on the first day and carried the momentum on the second day as they outclassed Sri Lanka 5-0 before edging past Australia 4-1 to enter the quarters.

Ace India shuttler PV Sindhu in action during a CWG match

Ace India shuttler PV Sindhu in action during a CWG match. (Courtesy: AP)

HIGHLIGHTS

  • India defeated Australia 4-1 in their final league match of mixed team event
  • PV Sindhu and Kidami Srikanth comfortably won their matches against Australia
  • India's quarter-final match against South Africa will take place on Sunday

India will take on South Africa in the quarter-finals of the badminton mixed team event in the ongoing Commonwealth Games (CWG) in Birmingham.

Having already secured their quarter-finals berth, the defending champions India continued their rampaging run as they defeated Australia 4-1 in their final Group A match of the mixed team competition on Saturday (July 30).

India kicked off their campaign by blanking Pakistan 5-0 on the first day and carried the momentum on the second day as they outclassed Sri Lanka 5-0 before edging past Australia to enter the quarters.

The World Championships silver medallist Kidambi Srikanth started India's fixture against Australia, defeating Lin Xiang Ying 21-14, 21-13 and handing India a 1-0 lead. The two-time Olympic medallist PS Sindhu doubled India's advantage as she beat Chen Wendy Hsuan-Yu 21-10, 21-12.

India took an unassailable 3-0 lead over Australia, with B. Sumeeth Reddy and Chirag Shetty sending off Tran Hoang Pham and Jack Yu 21-16, 21-19 in the men's doubles match.

Australia pulled one back in the losing cause as Hsuan-Yu Wendy Chen and Gronya Somerville defeated Treesa Jolly and Gayatri Gopichand 21-13, 21-19 in the women's doubles match.

India then finished off the day by winning the last match of the fixture, with B. Sumeeth Reddy and Ashwini Ponnappa beating Ying Xiang Lin and Gronya Somerville 21-14, 21-11.

India will take on South Africa in the quarter-finals on Sunday. The match will begin at 5.30 pm IST.

--- ENDS ---


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Indonesia blocks Yahoo, Paypal, games over licence breaches

Indonesia has blocked search engine website Yahoo, payments firm Paypal and several gaming websites due to failure to comply with licensing rules, an official said on Saturday, sparking a backlash on social media.

Registration is required under rules released in late November 2020 and will give authorities broad powers to compel platforms to disclose data of certain users, and take down content deemed unlawful or that “disturbs public order” within four hours if urgent and 24 hours if not. read more

Several tech companies had rushed to register in days leading to the deadline, which had been extended until Friday, including Alphabet Inc’s (GOOGL.O), Meta Platforms Inc’s (META.O) Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp and Amazon.com Inc (AMZN.O). read more

Samuel Abrijani Pangerapan, a senior official at Indonesia’s Communications Ministry, said in a text message websites that have been blocked include Yahoo, Paypal and gaming sites like Steam, Dota2, Counter-Strike and EpicGames, among others.

Paypal, Yahoo’s parent private equity firm Apollo Global Management and U.S. game developer Valve Corporation, which runs Steam, Dota and Counter-Strike, did not immediately respond to requests for comment. EpicGames could not be reached for comment.

Hashtags like “BlokirKominfo” (block Communication Ministry), Epic Games and Paypal trended on Indonesian Twitter, with many writing messages criticising the government’s move as hurting Indonesia’s online gaming industry and freelance workers who use Paypal.

Pangerapan did not respond to a request for comment.

Also Read: PayPal allows crypto transfer to external wallets

With an estimated 191 million internet users and a young, social-media savvy population, the Southeast Asian nation is a significant market for a host of tech platforms.

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Commonwealth Games 2022 - Heather Knight to miss England's CWG 2022 opener due to hip trouble

Heather Knight will miss England's opening match of the Commonwealth Games, against Sri Lanka on Saturday, with a hip injury.
Knight, the England captain, suffered the injury during the first T20I against South Africa on July 21 and subsequently missed the remaining two matches of that series, which her side won in her absence.

Knight is hopeful of being fit for England's second game, against South Africa on Tuesday.

That means Nat Sciver, Knight's deputy, will captain England on their maiden appearance at the Commonwealth Games.

England swept the T20I leg 3-0 in their multi-format series against South Africa, which the hosts won by 14 points to two, having also won all three ODIs and drawn the Test match.

They managed comfortably in Knight's absence, winning the second T20I by six wickets with six balls remaining, Sciver, the stand-in captain on both occasions, top-scoring for England with 47 alongside Danni Wyatt's 24-ball 39 as England overhauled a target of 149.
In the final match, they promoted 17-year-old Alice Capsey, playing just her second international match and batting for the first time, to No. 3 when opener Sophia Dunkley fell for a first-ball duck. Capsey impressed with 25 off 17 balls, which included four consecutive fours, and spinner Sophie Ecclestone helped seal a 38-run victory with her unbeaten 33 off just 12 before taking 2 for 24.

Speaking before being ruled out of the Games opener, Knight said she believed her side would take a "massive amount of confidence" from their performances in the South Africa series.

"The main thing is we take that same mindset into a big world event, we take what we've done so well and perform it under pressure," Knight said. "You know that if you don't start well in those sorts of events you can be under the pump so it's so important that what we've done, we build on and we continue to have that mindset.

"There's still ways I think we can improve and I'd love to see us piece it all together in a big world event."

Capsey is one of two 17-year-olds in the England squad, along with left-arm seamer Freya Kemp, who took two wickets on debut in their last ODI bowling alongside another newcomer to the bowling ranks, 20-year-old quick Issy Wong.

"It's really exciting," Knight said. "The young girls have really added something to the squad. They've added that energy, that rawness, that fearlessness and for us older girls it's keeping us young and keeping us excited.

"I'm loving being part of the early stage of their careers and trying to help as much as I can and just let them loose and give them the confidence to do what they do and show off. I think we've got that nice combination of excited youth and hopefully a few wise old heads as well."


Source https://www.globalcourant.com/commonwealth-games-2022-heather-knight-to-miss-englands-cwg-2022-opener-due-to-hip-trouble/?feed_id=4054&_unique_id=62e47250a9545