
Zheng Qinwen Announces Short Break From Tour Following Elbow Surgery
Zheng was eliminated in the first round of this year's Wimbledon by Czech player Katerina Siniakova. She later revealed that she had undergone arthroscopic surgery on her right elbow on Friday.

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The Hindu
18 minutes ago
- The Hindu
11th edition of Malabar River Festival to begin in Kozhikode on July 25
The 11th edition of the Malabar River Festival, an international white-water kayaking championship, will begin at Chalippuzha in the Kodenchery grama panchayat in Kozhikode on Friday (July 25, 2025). The three-day event is being organised by the Kerala Adventure Tourism Promotion Society (KATPS) and the Kozhikode District Tourism Promotion Council (DTPC), with technical support from the Indian Kayaking & Canoeing Association (IKCA) and the support of the three-tier panchayat, according to a press release. The championship will take place on the Iruvazhinjipuzha and Chalippuzha rivers till Sunday (July 27, 2025). Linto Joseph, MLA, will inaugurate the festival at Pulikkayam at 9 a.m. District Collector Snehil Kumar Singh, district panchayat president Sheeja Sasi, grama panchayat presidents Alex Thomas Chempakassery (Kodenchery) and Bindu Johnson (Thiruvambady), elected representatives, and prominent social and political figures will attend the event. The Olympic events, including men's and women's slalom and extreme slalom, will be held at Chalippuzha in Pulikkayam, while the extreme slalom final, downriver, and boater cross events will take place at Pulloorampara on the Iruvazhinjipuzha river. Tourism and Public Works Minister P.A. Mohamed Riyas will inaugurate the closing ceremony and present prizes to the winners at 5 p.m. on July 27. As part of the festival, music performances by the Gramophone Music Band will be held at Pulikkayam at 5 p.m. on July 25, followed by performances by local artists on Saturday (July 26, 2025) and the Mersey Music Band on Sunday at Elanthakadavu. Following the death of former Chief Minister V.S. Achuthanandan, the freestyle demonstration competition scheduled to be held at Meenthullippara in Chakkittapara on the Kuttiady river on Thursday (July 24, 2025) was cancelled. Kayakers from foreign countries and northern Indian States are currently training on the Chalippuzha and Iruvazhinjipuzha rivers. Pre-events were also organised in various panchayats as part of the festival's promotion.
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Business Standard
18 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Winning ways: Delhi must study global best sports management practices
Though encouraging, this news-making spending from one of India's richest among the states and Union Territories may also be viewed as an attempt at constructive competitive federalism Business Standard Editorial Comment Mumbai Listen to This Article The Delhi government's decision to substantially increase cash rewards and government jobs for medal-winning sportspeople from the city representing the Union Territory and the country at national and international levels is a laudable attempt to build a healthy sporting culture. Under the Mukhyamantri Khel Protsahan Yojana (Chief Minister Sports Encouragement Scheme), the rewards for Olympic and paralympic gold medallists have been raised from ₹3 crore to ₹7 crore, silver medallists will get ₹5 crore, and bronze medallists ₹3 crore. Asian and Para-Asian Games gold medallists will be given ₹3 crore, silver medallists ₹2 crore and bronze medallists ₹1 crore. For


Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
India vs India in FIDE World Cup final: Koneru Humpy beats China's Lei Tingjie to set up Divya Deshmukh battle
With a march of her king in the penultimate blitz game against China's Lei Tingjie, Koneru Humpy, the undisputed queen of Indian chess, barged into the FIDE Women's World Cup Final. In doing so, Humpy set up an India vs India battle for the title, with 19-year-old Divya Deshmukh having confirmed her qualification just yesterday with a win over another Chinese combatant, former women's world champion Tan Zhongyi. At 38, Humpy is twice Divya's age, which sets up a fascinating clash of generations. Humpy has seen a resurgence in her career over the last year, kick-started by her winning the FIDE World Rapid Championship in December last year, her second rapid title after the one in 2019. She had eased up on her events over the past few years to focus on her daughter and family life. 'This is one of the happiest moments for Indian chess fans. The title is coming to India for sure,' Humpy told FIDE in an interview after her win. 'In the final, it will be a tough game, Divya has played tremendously well in this whole tournament.' The presence of two Indian women in the FIDE Women's World Cup final at Georgia's Batumi also means that there will be two Indians at least in the FIDE Women's Candidates Tournament. The Candidates is an eight-player royal rumble to decide the challenger to the women's world champion. Other players like Vaishali Rameshbabu, Harika Dronavalli and Vantika Agrawal will also have further chances to qualify for the Candidates in the coming months, like at the FIDE Grand Swiss or through other pathways. India had its best head count at the previous Candidates tournament when Humpy and Vaishali had qualified. That record is already set to be matched at the upcoming Candidates. Humpy's win was remarkable because it took her eight games over three days to breach the challenge put up by Lei Tingjie in the semi-final. Humpy and Lei played out two draws on Tuesday and Wednesday in the classical format, before tiebreaks on Thursday became necessary. There, the first two games, played with 15 minutes (with a 10 second increment per move) also ended as draws before Lei landed the first punch by winning the first game of the 10 minute (+10 second per move increment) tiebreak. Now, Humpy had to win on demand, or else she would have to battle for the third spot against Tan later this week. Humpy didn't just win the next game, she won the next three. The first win sent the battle into another best-of-two tiebreak, this time to be played in the blitz format with both players having five minutes on the clock with a three-second increment per move. There, both set of queens and rooks marauded the board, smiting and killing at will. At some stage in the middle game, Humpy had an advantage, then the advantage corroded away as the eval bar settled in the middle, then Lei had the edge. Both players were playing with just seconds on their clock. In the heat of this battle, on move 44, came the decisive error from Lei: she pulled back her rook (44… Ra6) instead of moving her queen closer to the king to create an air-tight defence. Humpy capitalised, and soon Lei's queen was off the board. Now came Humpy's moment, with both players having four pawns each, on the same side of the board, Humpy's queen proved too overpowering for Lei's remaining rook. When the resignation came on move 70 from the Chinese GM, Humpy's king had marched down the board and was sitting on the sixth rank with the queen waiting to pounce and deliver a crushing checkmate. Now Lei had to win on demand with white pieces, but she lost instead in 33 moves. 'It was a very tough match, initially I played very badly with black pieces. She always had the advantage. After the loss, it was a very difficult situation but I was able to come back. The blitz portion was in my control. I played a bit shaky in the rapid portion,' admitted Humpy.