
England eyeing India upset at Kabaddi World Cup
Kabaddi's fast-paced international expansion could be bad news for the sport's traditional powerhouse as England captain Hardeep Singh plots a sensational end to the 2025 World Cup in the West Midlands.
Fans of a certain age may well recall a brief period in the mid-1990s when the breathless Indian sport was broadcast across the UK on Saturday mornings as part of Channel 4's popular Trans World Sport show.
Kabaddi – which involves teams of players who earn points by crossing into their opponent's territory to tag them and return safely – is the second most watched sport in India behind cricket, regularly hauling in over 200 million TV viewers.
Unsurprisingly India have dominated every international tournament to date, and their men's team, who hail from the fully professional Pro Kabaddi League, are unbackable favourites to extend that run in the first World Cup ever to be staged outside Asia.
But having thumped Hungary by a record-breaking 101-25 on the tournament's opening day, Singh believes his England team – who play in the much more modest British Kabaddi League, which was inaugurated three years ago – can push India close.
'We think we can get to the final and give India a good game,' Singh told the PA news agency. 'They are seen as invincible because it's their national sport and they have so much heritage. But we will be ready to have that fight.'
Singh, who is from Wolverhampton where he works as a medical sales rep, took up the sport four years ago after giving up a career in freestyle wrestling.
'When I started playing kabaddi I never thought it would get this far, and hosting a World Cup in my home town makes it particularly special,' he added.
'It's a crazy sport and it's got everything. There's so much potential for kabaddi in this country, provided there is enough support and funding at grass-roots level.'
England's women's team made a winning start in the initial round-robin phase on Tuesday, beating Hungary 85-15. Men's and women's teams from Scotland and Wales are also taking part.
England women's captain Athira Sunil took up the sport at school in Kerala after changing from badminton. Now living in Newcastle where she works in the medical profession, she frequently undertakes a seven-hour round trip to train with her team in Birmingham.
'The sport is gaining so much more interest across the world these days, and England are gaining players from sports like rugby and wrestling, so they already come with good speed and techniques,' said Sunil. 'I think the future for the sport in this country is very good.'
There is already hope that kabaddi's expansion beyond its traditional strongholds in South Asia could result in kabaddi ultimately being included on the Commonwealth Games or even Olympic programme.
Commonwealth Games Federation president Chris Jenkins was an enthusiastic spectator on the second day of the event in Wolverhampton on Tuesday, and plans are understood to have been made to showcase the sport within the truncated Games programme in Glasgow next year.
Jenkins said: 'It's the first time I've been to a kabaddi event and it's blown me away. The atmosphere and the chanting, and the match itself is really physical and very exciting.
'Throughout the Commonwealth there are lots of traditional sports, but this one is huge in India and here too. It's been a really exciting event.'
Hashtags

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


The Herald Scotland
16 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Monday's briefing: Ronaldo wins Nations League as Spalletti leaves Italy
Former Premier League referee Uriah Rennie died at the age of 65, while Jobe Bellingham looks set to walk in older brother Jude's footsteps after Borussia Dortmund agreed a fee with Sunderland for his services. One more for Ronaldo Cristiano Ronaldo showed he still has it as he scored Portugal's second equaliser (AP Photo/Martin Meissner) Skipper Cristiano Ronaldo made it 2-2 in the 61st minute but had to leave the field through injury before the end of normal time. Martin Zubimendi opened the scoring at Allianz Arena, with Paris St Germain left-back Nuno Mendes getting Portugal back on level terms, before Mikel Oyarzabal put Spain in front once again. Goncalo Ramos, Vitinha, Bruno Fernandes and Nuno Mendes all slotted home their spot-kicks in the shootout, and after Alvaro Morata's nonchalant effort was stopped by goalkeeper Diogo Costa, Joao Neves' effort secured Portugal a second Nations League title following their win in 2019. Not so lucky Luciano? Luciano Spalletti is to manage his final Italy match on Monday (Nick Potts/PA) Luciano Spalletti, who took over as Italy coach in September 2023, revealed in a press conference that Italian Football Federation president Gabriele Gravina had informed him of his departure following their heavy World Cup qualifying loss to Norway. First-half goals from Alexander Sorloth, Antonio Nusa and Erling Haaland dealt a blow to the Italians' hopes of participating at their first World Cup since 2014. 'Last night we were very together with president Gravina. He told me that I will be relieved of my position as coach of the national team,' Spalletti said ahead of Monday's clash with Moldova. 'I had no intention of giving up. I would have preferred to stay in my place and continue doing my job. I'll be there tomorrow evening against Moldova, then we'll resolve the contract.' A Bellingham back in yellow and black? Jobe Bellingham is on his way to the Bundesliga (Nick Potts/PA) Jude Bellingham's younger brother Jobe is on the verge of joining Bundesliga giants Borussia Dortmund. The 19-year-old, who has been named in Lee Carsley's England Under-21 squad for this summer's Euros in Slovakia, could yet be in contention for Dortmund in the Club World Cup in the United States should the deal be completed before June 10. Trailblazer Uriah Rennie dies aged 65 Uriah Rennie, the Premier League's first Black referee, has sadly died aged 65. A trailblazer who broke down barriers, faced down football's fiercest competitors and took no nonsense. Went on to ref 175 PL games, after floodlight failure forced him to abandon his first. RIP 🖤 — Men in Blazers (@MenInBlazers) June 8, 2025 Uriah Rennie, the first black referee in the Premier League, took charge of over 300 games across an 11-year career between 1997 and 2008, with 175 of those matches in England's top flight. Jamaican-born Rennie, who had been suffering from a neurological condition, oversaw Derby's clash with Wimbledon in 1997 as his first match. 'We are deeply saddened to learn of the passing of our former chair and trailblazing referee, Uriah Rennie,' said a Sheffield & Hallamshire County Football Association statement. 'Uriah made history as the Premier League's first black referee, officiating over 300 top-flight matches between 1997 and 2008. He broke down barriers, shaped our football community and inspired generations to come.' What's on today? Italy host Moldova in what is expected to be Spalletti's final match as Azzurri coach. Belgium host Wales in Group J and Croatia welcome Czech Republic.


South Wales Guardian
3 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
Luciano Spalletti to leave Italy head coach role after Moldova match
The 66-year-old announced the news during his press conference ahead of Monday's World Cup qualifier against Moldova. Spalletti came under pressure after his country's campaign began with Friday evening's 3-0 defeat away to Norway. Italy vs. Moldova will be Luciano Spalletti's last game as Azzurri head coach.#Azzurri #VivoAzzurro — Italy ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (@Azzurri_En) June 8, 2025 His imminent departure – after he takes charge of the Group I meeting with Moldova in Reggio Emilia – was later confirmed by the Italian Football Federation. 'I spoke with (federation president Gabriele) Gravina last night and he informed me that I will be relieved of my duties as national team coach,' Spalletti told a press conference, according to The Athletic. 'I am disappointed: given the relationship we have, I had no intention of stepping down. Especially when things are not going well, I would have preferred to stay and do my job. 'However, it is a dismissal and I have to accept it. Defeat in Oslo. #Azzurri #VivoAzzurro — Italy ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (@Azzurri_En) June 6, 2025 'I have always seen this role as a service to my country and I want to facilitate the future of the national team. I think it is right to seek the best solution.' Former Roma and Inter Milan coach Spalletti succeeded Euro 2020 winner Roberto Mancini as Azzurri boss in 2023 after guiding Napoli to the Serie A title. He has won only 11 of his 23 matches in charge of the national team and oversaw a last-16 exit to Switzerland at Euro 2024.


South Wales Guardian
3 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
It feels like we're a group of mates – Skipper Harry Brook hails England unity
Brook has won five on the bounce against the West Indies since taking over from Jos Buttler, sweeping the tourists 3-0 in the ODI leg and going 2-0 up with one to play in the T20s. England did not have it easy in Sunday's four-wicket win at Bristol, with the asking rate climbing past 11 an over at one stage as they chased down a stiff target of 197. IT20 series win secured! 🔒 Victory in Bristol 🙌 Banton and Carse see us home 👏 Match Centre: — England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 8, 2025 But they stuck together to get over the line, with five of their top six making handy contributions before Jacob Bethell and Tom Banton took the bull by the horns. The middle-order duo hammered 56 off just 21 deliveries between them to puncture the West Indian resistance and keep the good times rolling for Brook. It was the kind of game England were losing in the difficult final days under Buttler, whose reign ended with eight straight defeats across both formats. But there is a new lighter feeling around the group – including the newly liberated former skipper, who has top-scored with 96 and 47 in the last two games. 'It feels like we're a group of mates. We're just going out and having fun,' said Brook. 'It's been nice for me. The results are awesome and we're really enjoying it. We're having a good time out there. 'At the end of games we go around the circle and Baz (head coach Brendon McCullum) asks if anybody has anything to say. In every game so far someone has stood up and said something. I think that's a great way of showing how the team is at the minute and we feel a proper togetherness.' The West Indies made England sweat at times, taking 82 off their last five overs including an unexpected tirade against Adil Rashid in the 19th. For so long the team's most bankable bowler, the leg-spinner shipped five sixes and 31 runs in what goes down as the second most expensive over by an English bowler in T20s. Stuart Broad holds the unwanted record of 36, taken for six off every ball by Yuvraj Singh at the 2007 World Cup. Brook, though, insists he and his team were never rattled. 'I'm always very chilled. We knew that there was going to be one, two, maybe three big overs,' he said. From a different angle 📐 All 25 of our boundaries! 💥#ENGvWI | #EnglandCricket — England Cricket (@englandcricket) June 8, 2025 'On a pitch that size, with 60-metre boundaries nearly all the way around, we accepted that before the game and we knew we could get big overs as well. 'The way Bants went about his business, getting 30 off 11 balls having never really batted in the middle order before was just awesome.' The West Indies have one more chance to avoid a winless tour in Southampton on Tuesday but head coach Daren Sammy paid tribute to Akeal Hosein, who took the field just six hours after arriving from the Caribbean following visa delays. 'He said to me, 'there's no way I'm not playing',' Sammy explained. 'Kudos to him, he turned up for us. An eight-hour flight straight into a game is not ideal but it shows his commitment.'