
Lucio in hospital after suffering multiple burns
Panaji: Brazil's World Cup winner and
football legend Lucio
has been placed in intensive care after suffering burns to various parts of his body.
The former Brazil captain, who had a stint with
FC Goa
in the Indian Super League (ISL) as their marquee player, is being treated at a hospital in Brasilia following the incident which occurred on Friday.
According to reports, Lucio sustained the burns in a domestic accident at home.
The hospital where Lucio is treated released a statement but did not provide details about the injuries. In a statement, the hospital said the patient 'is stable, conscious and under the care of a multidisciplinary team, receiving specialised medical monitoring for treatment of the burns'.
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A statement shared on Lucio's Instagram story revealed that the former defender is stable, conscious and receiving all necessary medical attention.
'Injuries are being treated with specialised care, and clinical framework is evolving positively. We are immensely grateful for the love, prayers and messages of support that we have received at this delicate time. We ask to respect our family's privacy and will inform you any relevant news via the official channels. With faith, strength and God's support, he will recover soon,' said the statement.
With over 100 appearances, Lucio is best known for being a staple in Brazil's defence from 2000-2011, helping them win the World Cup in 2002.
Lucio's football career took him to several clubs including Bayer Leverkusen, Bayern Munich, Juventus and Inter Milan, where he was part of Jose Mourinho's famous 2010 treble-winning side that lifted the Champions League that season.
He also spent two years in Goa as FC Goa's marquee player in the ISL. With Zico as coach, Lucio captained Goa to the final of the 2015 edition.

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That seven-year-old prophecy announced by the clickbaity headline of a YouTube video came true in Georgia, a country that has produced some of the world's earliest trailblazers of women's chess, like Nona Gaprindashvili and Maia Chiburdanidze. 'My turn,' she wrote on Instagram in a caption of a photo posing with the trophy. A post shared by Divya Deshmukh (@divyachess) In the last 13 months, the girl from Nagpur has become a world junior champion, helped the Indian women's team win the Chess Olympiad gold medal and now finally claimed a World Cup gold, while also becoming a grandmaster. What was remarkable about Deshmukh becoming a grandmaster was that, unlike the 87 Indians before her, she earned the title in a single tournament. In fact, before the World Cup started, Deshmukh hadn't earned any of the three norms a player needs to become a grandmaster. She came to Batumi hoping to collect one norm. 'My goals changed today,' she said in the FIDE interview. 'Time to find new goals.' 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And stands out. She'll apologise to the inanimate objects like the chess pieces and the match clock after accidentally knocking them over. She'll occasionally flash a wide smile at the camera even if there are just seconds left before the start of a crucial game, which is usually that time when the players are in their meditative zones, their faces as poker-faced as the wooden pieces on the board they're about to command into battle. Deshmukh is — there is no better word to describe it — chill, in a sport where many players can come across as deathly serious, impassive, restrained and bashful. She's so quick-witted and has such charisma in interviews that she's among those rare athletes who can be — and has been — asked about her fashion sense at chess games besides being asked borderline silly questions about why she brought a banana with her to every single game at the FIDE World Cup and never once took a bite of it. Her bubbly, extroverted personality is the perfect foil for the assassin that she is on the chessboard. Talk to anyone in the sport who has known her, and they will praise her aggression on the board. 'If you look at the approach she played with Humpy, it was so aggressive. She tried to dominate Humpy in a way,' pointed out Kushager Krishnater, who despite being in Team Humpy as a second (an aide) since 2022, could not help but marvel at Deshmukh's ambition. 'If you look at Game 1 and Game 2 of the World Cup final, Divya was the one who was pressing in very slow positions even when there was no chance of a result. Even in the first game of the tie-break (after the two classical games ended in draws), she did that. You don't do it against somebody who is stronger than you! A player does this when they think that their opponent is weaker than you. If you look at Divya's reaction after the first classical game against Humpy ended in a draw, she was visibly a bit angry with herself. That is not something you fake. So to believe that you are better than one of the best chess players in the world and that you could try and dominate her goes on to show how confident she is and how much ambition she has.' Here's just a little slice of what transpired in the final between Deshmukh and Humpy. There was a moment when five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand was on commentary and in the middle game, he said that a draw was coming. Then, when both players continued extending the game, trying to squeeze water out of stone, Anand got a little irritated, remarking: 'For some reason instead of repeating (the moves and ending the game as a draw) they keep changing. Why is Divya changing moves? Just repeat! I don't know what they want. Do they really believe they can do something here, because I don't even see how to play for a win if you want to.' Before the final, Anand had explained to The Indian Express how Deshmukh 'leaned towards playing aggressive chess'. Coach RB Ramesh, who has shaped the careers of players like Praggnanandhaa and Vaishali and also trained Deshmukh in her formative years, told The Indian Express: 'Divya is the most confident girl from the lot. As a young girl too she didn't have that negative side to her: the one that tends to create self-doubt. That inner chatter that wrecks things, fortunately, was missing in her.' Grandmaster Abhijit Kunte, who has worked extensively with Deshmukh, added: 'It never looked as if she's playing the finals or semi-finals or quarter-finals for the first time. She always showed that she was eager to win the match.' Kunte was the captain of the Indian women's team at the Chess Olympiad last year where they claimed the first-ever team gold in the most prestigious team event in the sport. Deshmukh claimed an individual gold too. Kunte said that before the tournament began, he had told the teenager that since she was in great form, she would have to play in all 11 rounds for India, while others were being substituted. Deshmukh agreed without a moment's pause. 'She has very strong psychology. Many players, when they're under pressure, they break. Some players don't convert their advantage. But she's not like that. When she's under pressure, she will make sure that she defends very tenuously,' Kunte said. 'At the same time, when she feels she is better, she will keep the advantage with her. She's very clever that way when she's playing chess.' In an interview with The Indian Express in 2023 after winning the title at the Tata Steel Chess India's rapid tournament in Kolkata, Deshmukh had mentioned that while she is inspired by many players like Humpy and Anand, she doesn't really have any 'role models'. She also admitted that she wasn't certain she wanted to pursue chess full-time and that she was 'still exploring' if she wanted to focus full-time on chess or on further studies. 'What stood out about Divya was her ability to strike a balance between academics and chess,' Anju Bhutani, former principal and current academic co-ordinator with the management at Bhavan's Bhagwandas Purohit Vidya Mandir where Deshmukh studied told The Indian Express. 'Even while competing in tournaments, she never neglected her studies. She did well in her exams, submitted her assignments on time, and always remained grounded despite winning big titles. Each time she returned after a win, she would quietly come and stand outside my cabin with her trophy. She didn't speak much, but she would come in, give a quick hug and click a picture together.' Now, as chess seems to have taken over, Deshmukh said she admires the current world no 1 from China Hou Yifan, who has won the women's world championship multiple times. Why? Because Hou won everything there was on offer in chess, then branched out into academics, earning a master's degree at Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar and then started working at Shenzhen University. While most grandmasters from India her age like world champion Gukesh and Praggnanandhaa started focussing solely on chess from a very early age, Deshmukh still harbours hope that one day the world of academics will open a portal into a different universe for her. Since the pandemic, the tectonic plates under chess have shifted as the sport has experienced tremors of an Indian earthquake. On the men's side, world champion Gukesh, Praggnanandhaa and Arjun Erigaisi are flagbearers of this golden generation, a trio capable of beating the world's best. With Gukesh already winning the world championship, there is hope that his opponent next year could be an Indian as well. On the women's side, this India vs India battle for the top prize — a true indicator of dominance in a sport — has already come true when Humpy played Deshmukh at the World Cup. The sight of two Indian women fighting for the title, while two Chinese players fought for the third place spot could be a turn-of-the-page moment for women's chess, which has so far been dominated by players from Russia and China. At the forefront of this is the 19-year-old once proclaimed the 'future of Indian chess'. That future is here. As Deshmukh wrote in her two-word mission statement on Instagram, it's now her turn. (With inputs from Ankita Deshkar) Amit Kamath is Assistant Editor at The Indian Express and is based in Mumbai. ... Read More