
Chennai clinch inaugural Sevens title as rugby touches down in India
Kennedy scored two of Chennai's seven tries as they concluded the six-team rugby sevens franchise league with a 41-0 thrashing of Delhi Redz in Mumbai.
India's Olympic gold medallist shooter Abhinav Bindra was among the many stars who graced the finale although the crowds were understandably no match for the hordes that turned up to watch Virat Kohli's Bengaluru win the T20 Indian Premier League earlier this month.
However, the RPL's coverage on satellite television has given organisers hope that rugby could emerge as a major sport in India.
"No matter how big a sport may be, there is always space if you work hard enough if you create a product that's good enough," Rugby India president Rahul Bose told AFP.
"In that respect we are very happy and very secure in the knowledge that there is space for this game and it doesn't have to come by eating away at anybody else's space."
Just as the IPL focused on the shortest form of cricket, so the RPL has chosen to go for the shortest form of rugby, with the seven-a-side format in this tournament lasting 16 minutes -- four quarters of four minutes each -- and dispensing with the hard grunt of the 15-man game to showcase slick handling and blistering pace.
Kennedy is not the only top Sevens player to have been drafted in to the RPL.
His teammate Joseva Talacolo, who also scored a try in Sunday's final, won silver with Fiji at last year's Olympics in Paris while Scott Curry, whose Bengaluru Bravehearts finished fourth after losing the bronze medal match to Hyderabad Heroes, played 321 times for New Zealand's All Blacks Sevens team.
The American Perry Baker, now 39 and a two-time World Rugby Sevens Player of the Year, came out of retirement to play for Kalinga Black Tigers.
According to Bose, this first iteration of the tournament has gone down well with the public.
"What we have heard is that the game is easy to follow, very fast, very exciting and has got tremendous amount of likeability," said Bose who is also a successful Bollywood actor.
"Along with that, the athletic prowess of these men has come in for a lot of attention. We are happy with the connect we have made."
'Bigger and better'
The RPL is seen as a way for India to bolster their dreams of hosting the Olympics in 2036 - and given the continental qualifying system for the Olympics, India even has an eye on fielding a men's or women's team prior to that.
But it is more than an ideal. The RPL, which blends Indian players with international stars, is run by GMR Sports which, as owner of the IPL team Delhi Capitals, knows a thing or two about franchise competitions in India.
"The first season has gone very well for us," Satyam Trivedi, chief executive officer of GMR, told AFP.
"The sponsors are happy with what they see on the ground and on TV.
"However this is just the beginning for us. We are looking at the first season as a showcase event and take a lot of learnings from here.
"In every season this league will get bigger and better."
© 2025 AFP
Hashtags

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


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
'Starvation' days over as cyclists prepare to gorge on Tour de France
This year's riders will be gorging themselves like never before, taking on board the equivalent of a large plate of pasta per hour and even training their stomachs to cope with this influx of food. "Intake has doubled," Julien Louis, nutritionist for the Decathlon-AG2R team, told AFP. In fact, it's a 180-degree turnaround from the 2010s and the "low carb" fad popularised by four-time Tour de France winner Chris Froome's Sky team. This method consisted of depriving the body of sugars during training in order to lose weight and encourage the body to use fat for energy. "Two eggs for breakfast and we were off for five-six hours of training, with water in the bottles. We were exhausted the whole time," recalls British veteran Simon Yates, winner of the last Giro. Climber Pavel Sivakov paints an even more dramatic picture. "Mentally, it was very hard," he says. "We were starving, with no energy, tapping into our fat." Those days are gone. "When there's nothing left in the tank the runner switches to using fat," explains Louis who used to work for English Premier League side Liverpool. "It works but it's much less effective than carbohydrates." 'Never eaten so much' One look at the map for the Tour de France which runs 3,338 kilometres over three weeks from Lille, all the way down south and back up to Paris for the finish, is a giveaway when it comes to a rider's nutritional needs. He will burn through roughly 7,000 calories on one of the lung-busting, muscle-crunching mountain stages. "You have to eat four times as much as a normal person," says Cofidis rider Simon Carr. "We've never eaten so much on a bike." Most riders now take in up to 120 grammes of carbohydrates per hour while racing, in some cases even more, which is enormous. "It's the equivalent of six bananas or around 200 grammes of dried pasta per hour," says Louis. Until recently, eating such large quantities, mainly in the form of gels and energy drinks, was unimaginable, as it would lead to too much intestinal distress. "Up until five years ago, 120g of carbohydrates per hour was impossible," Tadej Pogacar explained in a podcast in September, adding such an intake would have had him in dire need of a trip to the toilet. Intestinal training Since then, great progress has been made with energy products, which now contain a combination of two types of carbohydrate. "For a long time, we thought there was only one kind of carbohydrate transporter in the intestine," explains Louis. "Then we discovered that there was a second type that could transport fructose. As a result, by using these two pathways at the same time, we can push through twice as much sugar." According to all the parties interviewed by AFP, these advances in nutrition, along with developments in equipment and training methods, help to explain the increasingly high levels of performance in cycling, a sport which has often been associated with doping. Although products are now better tolerated by the body, making this revolution possible, riders still have to train their stomachs to cope with such quantities. "Otherwise you can't digest when you're asked to eat six gels an hour. Your body just can't cope," says Pauline Ferrand-Prevot, this year's winner of the women's Paris-Roubaix and gold medallist in the cross-country mountain bike at the Paris Olympics. She found this out the hard way when she gave up, ill, during the World Championships in September, unused to the longer distances after her switch from mountain bikes. During winter training, the riders now do "at least one session a week of intestinal training, or 'gut training'", says Louis. "At the very beginning, there may be a little discomfort," he adds. "But without it, you're at a huge disadvantage. It's as if you're not running on the same fuel." © 2025 AFP

LeMonde
2 hours ago
- LeMonde
Wimbledon: Frenchman Bonzi knocks out former world No. 1 Medvedev in first round
Benjamin Bonzi during his match against Russian Daniil Medvedev in the first round of the Wimbledon tournament in London, June 30, 2025. KIRILL KUDRYAVTSEV / AFP The first shock upset on the grass courts of Wimbledon came on Monday, June 30, as the main draw of the tennis tournament got underway: Russia's Daniil Medvedev, former world No. 1 and a two-time recent semifinalist at the event, was eliminated in his opening match by France's Benjamin Bonzi. World No. 64 Bonzi won in four sets, 7-6 (7-2), 3-6, 7-6 (7-3), 6-2, against the current ATP No. 9. Medvedev, who won the US Open in 2021 and was a recent finalist on the grass courts of Halle, Germany. At 29, Bonzi claimed the second top-10 victory of his career. On Court No. 2, Bonzi, who hails from Nîmes, started strongly, serving well and showing remarkable composure on big points (7-6, 7-2). Medvedev then raised his level, mixing up angles and increasing the power of his shots, and took the second set as anticipated (6-3). The third set proved decisive: Closely contested, it ultimately went to the Frenchman (7-6 [7-3]). Valentin Royer advances after Stefanos Tsitsipas retires Seizing his first chance to pull ahead in the fourth set, Bonzi relied on his excellent footwork to earn two match points (6-2). Medvedev, hampered by unforced errors, conceded defeat in the opening round. He totaled 12 double faults – compared to just one for Bonzi – and 47 unforced errors. The Nîmes native equaled his best result at Wimbledon. Another French player through to the second round is Valentin Royer, who came through qualifying. The 24-year-old from the western Paris suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine, ranked No. 113 in the ATP rankings, advanced after Greek player Stefanos Tsitsipas, the tournament's No. 24 seed, was forced to retire with a back injury. Royer was leading two sets to love (6-3, 6-2) after just an hour and 10 minutes of play. He will next face Adrien Mannarino (No. 123), who defeated Australia's Christopher O'Connell (No. 77) in straight sets. This guarantees that at least one French player will reach the third round of the London tournament. In the women's draw, France's Diane Parry, age 22 and world No. 118, progressed to the second round. On Monday, she overcame Croatian Petra Martic, ranked No. 138, in three sets (4-6, 6-3, 6-2). She will face either Russia's Diana Shnaider (the No. 12 seed) or Japan's Moyuka Uchijima, world No. 72, in the next round. Mouna El Mokhtari Translation of an original article published in French on the publisher may only be liable for the French version. Reuse this content


France 24
5 hours ago
- France 24
Tearful Jabeur forced to retire from Wimbledon first-round clash
Tunisia's Jabeur was trailing 7-6 (7/5), 2-0 when she brought a premature end to her clash with the Bulgarian world number 111 at the All England Club. The 30-year-old, beaten in the 2022 and 2023 Wimbledon finals, looked uncomfortable throughout the match in sweltering temperatures in London. The world number 59 wiped away tears after losing a long fifth game in the first set and took a lengthy medical timeout, with staff attending to her before taking her off court. Jabeur, who repeatedly used ice towels in a bid to cope with the heat, eventually returned to Court 14 after a 14-minute delay, but was unable to finish the match. "I wasn't expecting not to feel good. I have been practising pretty well the last few days," said Jabeur, who did not specify the reason for her withdrawal. "These things happen. I'm pretty sad. It doesn't really help me with my confidence." The former world number two's Wimbledon exit was the latest blow in a disappointing spell. Jabeur, a three-time Grand Slam runner-up, has slipped down the rankings over the past year after injury problems. Earlier this year she had breathing difficulties in the Australian Open second round after suffering an asthma problem. "I keep pushing myself even though it was a very tough season for me, so I hope I can feel better and see what is going to happen," she said. "Try to disconnect a little bit from tennis and try to enjoy life outside tennis. "Try to recover and spend time with the family. Hopefully that can recharge me. Definitely rest is the word for it." © 2025 AFP