
Noah returns to action at South African Safari
Harith Noah
will return to competitive
racing
after four months when he participates at the inaugural South African Safari Rally, which is Round 3 of the
FIA
FIM World Rally-Raid Championship, beginning Sunday.
Noah was forced to exit Dakar 2025, in which a crash left him with a fractured wrist.
"After Dakar, I needed time to recover from the injury, but everything went well and I'm back to full fitness now. This is my first race since the crash, so there are definitely some nerves, which is normal," said Noah.
'But the South African Safari Rally is a new challenge for everyone, the route is unfamiliar territory across the board. The key is to stay calm, get used to the bike again, and take it one kilometre at a time,' added Noah.
by Taboola
by Taboola
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South African Safari Rally brings the W2RC to South Africa for the first time and with extreme terrains and rapidly changing climates, it is tipped to be a standout fixture on the W2RC calendar.
The 2025 W2RC season features five rounds across three continents, pushing riders through a wide spectrum of terrains and conditions.
The year kicked off with the legendary
Dakar Rally
in Saudi Arabia, followed by the Abu Dhabi Desert Challenge. Now, the championship heads into uncharted territory with the debut of the South African Safari Rally.
The final two rounds will take riders to Portugal for the BP Ultimate Rally Raid in September, before culminating with the iconic Rallye du Maroc in October.
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India Today
14 minutes ago
- India Today
Brothers of Destruction: How the relay team is driving India's athletics revolution
The Brothers of Destruction are leading India's athletics revolution (Courtesy: Reliance Foundation) India is seeing an athletics revolution The 4 fastest sprinters are constantly pushing each other James Hillier gives a behind-the-scenes insight to India Today On a humid Sunday evening in Odisha, a dejected Lalu Bhoi walked up to the press after finishing fourth in the men's 100m sprint. The local boy, who hoped to be in the medal standings, missed the podium by 0.04 seconds, having clocked 10.54 in the 1st Indian Continental Tour. The result wasn't the end of the world. Lalu said that he had a tremendous bunch of people around him, who always lent a hand when things got difficult. 'Amlan, Gurindervir, Manikanta, they treat me like their brother. I am doing well (PB 10.34), they tell me that if we do not push each other, then who will? And they tell me that I will also get to the top level, and they will help me get there.' The words from Lalu give a reflection of an incredible value system that has been built by coaches James Hillier and Martin Owens at the Reliance Foundation. The top four sprinters â€' Animesh Kujur, Gurindervir Singh, Manikanta Hoblidhar and Amlan Borgohain â€' have broken each other's records in the race to become India's fastest man. Young Animesh is at the top of the pile right now, having beaten Gurindervir's record at the Dromia meet in Greece. And now he has a target on his back. He cannot sit back and bask in his glory. The Making of Brothers of Destruction Sprinting is an intense competition. It is an ancient sport that brings out the primal instincts of a man. In 10 seconds or less, you put every single muscle of your body in unison, under intense pressure. When you hear the clap, you get out of the box as fast as you can, and then you run, run and run. It is each man to their own, and it is rare that you find friends on the track in such a hostile environment. When they are on their own, they are Animesh, Guri, Mani, and Amlan, but together, they become the Brothers of Destruction. The Brothers of Destruction constantly push themselves to get better on the track (Image Credit: Reliance Foundation) Their camaraderie is more than a nickname. That bond extends off the track as well, one that has been carefully nurtured inside the high-performance environment of the Reliance Foundation. In Indian sprinting, where most breakthroughs have been individual, this quartet has found something different: identity, rhythm, and trust, together. At the 2025 National Relay Carnival in Chandigarh, they broke the long-standing national record from the 2010 Commonwealth Games (38.89s), clocking a blistering 38.69 seconds. 'You know, they are four great young people. They really are. They're real role models now, and becoming more and more important in the country,' James Hillier, the Athletics Director of the foundation told India Today in an exclusive interview. Hillier directly oversees the 4x100m squad. In competitions, once they run their individual events, they have to quickly make a shift in mentality to race the 4x100. That shift in mentality cannot happen without chemistry, says Hillier. 'The camaraderie is very important. And the chemistry as well. You need to know where exactly the baton is going to be. The first leg runner needs to tell the second leg runner where exactly the hand needs to be. So we start creating leaders in the team. So you know, I might be the head coach, but I need them to be coached by each other,' Hillier says. There are examples of national disasters in the relay event. The teams from the USA and Great Britain have consistently been affected by the lack of chemistry, despite having four of their best sprinters on track. Hillier says that members of the US and GB teams used to dislike each other in the mid-2000s and 2010s, which significantly impacted their performances on the track. 'When Britain won the 4x100m relay in the 2017 World Championships, they did it without Reece Prescod, their fastest runner. He was not buying into the culture, so they kicked him out of the relay.' When there is no chemistry, there are no results. The glaring example of that is the USA team who had a string of failures through 2004–2021, nearly two decades. USA Men's Team in Olympics 2004 Athens: A clumsy exchange left the US men in silver behind Team GB. 2008 Beijing: US dropped the baton, failed to advance beyond the heats. 2012 London: US finished second but were later disqualified for a doping offense. 2016 Rio: US botched the baton exchange and were disqualified. 2021 Tokyo: Once again a clumsy exchange led to them getting knocked out in the heats. It got so bad in the US, that legendary Carl Lewis snapped and asked the system to be blown up. Driving the Athletics Revolution of India For an emerging country like India, they cannot afford for this to happen. The quartet have been able to bring the athletics revolution in the country, and one bad event can push that progress back by years. 'With relay, it is not about the 4 fastest athletes, it is about the four guys who are together the fastest. You could pick the four fastest in a team, and then the four who have better chemistry. The ones with better chemistry will win.' The camaraderie has also helped the four athletes push each other to the limit. And it's not just unity and baton chemistry that's evolved â€' raw speed has too. In Pics: How Odisha aced the 1st Indian Continental Tour When James came to India and joined the Reliance Foundation in 2019, the top athletes in India were running 10.5. Earlier, the benchmark of a good sprint runner was seen as 10.5, and if you were running 10.3 and 10.4, you were seen as a hero. If you ran 10.2, then invariably, you had the national record. Hillier remembers a time when '10.5 was a big deal,' but now, 'guys no one's even heard of' are running 10.2. 'You know Pranav won the Fed Cup. Everyone was thinking that the three Reliance boys will come in the top 3, but the question was in which order, but then Pranav came out of nowhere and won it.' 'Now people are running 10.2, and soon you will see them running 10.1,' Hillier stressed. The Briton is no less than a visionary. He had predicted way back that a javelin revolution would come to India with Neeraj Chopra. And it did. India now has several stars who throw 80+ meters. The latest entrant in that club is 20-year-old Shivam Lohakare from Maharashtra, who clinched the second spot in the recently concluded Indian Continental Tour in Bhubaneswar. James Hilliers considers all four men to be his favourites (Image Credit: Reliance Foundation) James states that India's athletics revolution is here, and it is these four athletes â€' Animesh, Guri, Amlan and Manikanta â€' who are driving it. 'They are all my favourites you know, and they all piss me off,' jokes Hillier. 'They are good guys you know. There is good banter. Amlan now winds up Animesh because he won the bronze in World University Games. He has the bragging rights now. But then Animesh winds him up back, saying that I broke your record,' Hillier concluded. If things go according to plan, the Brothers of Destruction are likely to be one of the medal favourites in the 2026 Asian Games. Their best 38.69s would have secured them the bronze in the previous edition of the competition. But James is slightly conservative about that. Hope is cruel. It kills. But medal or no medal, one thing cannot be taken away. It is the fact that Indian athletics is already seeing the ripple effects of the brilliance of this quartet, who are striving to reach a common goal, leaving their egos and inhibitions behind. They all want to be the 'top dog' as Hillier says, but they also share the common goal of taking India to the peak on the world stage. We don't know if these four will be the ones to do it â€' to stand on the Olympic podium â€' but someday, someone will. And when they do, they'll owe it to the men who turned hope into a system. Not just runners, but builders. Not just a team, but brothers. On a humid Sunday evening in Odisha, a dejected Lalu Bhoi walked up to the press after finishing fourth in the men's 100m sprint. The local boy, who hoped to be in the medal standings, missed the podium by 0.04 seconds, having clocked 10.54 in the 1st Indian Continental Tour. The result wasn't the end of the world. Lalu said that he had a tremendous bunch of people around him, who always lent a hand when things got difficult. 'Amlan, Gurindervir, Manikanta, they treat me like their brother. I am doing well (PB 10.34), they tell me that if we do not push each other, then who will? And they tell me that I will also get to the top level, and they will help me get there.' The words from Lalu give a reflection of an incredible value system that has been built by coaches James Hillier and Martin Owens at the Reliance Foundation. The top four sprinters â€' Animesh Kujur, Gurindervir Singh, Manikanta Hoblidhar and Amlan Borgohain â€' have broken each other's records in the race to become India's fastest man. Young Animesh is at the top of the pile right now, having beaten Gurindervir's record at the Dromia meet in Greece. And now he has a target on his back. He cannot sit back and bask in his glory. The Making of Brothers of Destruction Sprinting is an intense competition. It is an ancient sport that brings out the primal instincts of a man. In 10 seconds or less, you put every single muscle of your body in unison, under intense pressure. When you hear the clap, you get out of the box as fast as you can, and then you run, run and run. It is each man to their own, and it is rare that you find friends on the track in such a hostile environment. When they are on their own, they are Animesh, Guri, Mani, and Amlan, but together, they become the Brothers of Destruction. The Brothers of Destruction constantly push themselves to get better on the track (Image Credit: Reliance Foundation) Their camaraderie is more than a nickname. That bond extends off the track as well, one that has been carefully nurtured inside the high-performance environment of the Reliance Foundation. In Indian sprinting, where most breakthroughs have been individual, this quartet has found something different: identity, rhythm, and trust, together. At the 2025 National Relay Carnival in Chandigarh, they broke the long-standing national record from the 2010 Commonwealth Games (38.89s), clocking a blistering 38.69 seconds. 'You know, they are four great young people. They really are. They're real role models now, and becoming more and more important in the country,' James Hillier, the Athletics Director of the foundation told India Today in an exclusive interview. Hillier directly oversees the 4x100m squad. In competitions, once they run their individual events, they have to quickly make a shift in mentality to race the 4x100. That shift in mentality cannot happen without chemistry, says Hillier. 'The camaraderie is very important. And the chemistry as well. You need to know where exactly the baton is going to be. The first leg runner needs to tell the second leg runner where exactly the hand needs to be. So we start creating leaders in the team. So you know, I might be the head coach, but I need them to be coached by each other,' Hillier says. There are examples of national disasters in the relay event. The teams from the USA and Great Britain have consistently been affected by the lack of chemistry, despite having four of their best sprinters on track. Hillier says that members of the US and GB teams used to dislike each other in the mid-2000s and 2010s, which significantly impacted their performances on the track. 'When Britain won the 4x100m relay in the 2017 World Championships, they did it without Reece Prescod, their fastest runner. He was not buying into the culture, so they kicked him out of the relay.' When there is no chemistry, there are no results. The glaring example of that is the USA team who had a string of failures through 2004–2021, nearly two decades. USA Men's Team in Olympics 2004 Athens: A clumsy exchange left the US men in silver behind Team GB. 2008 Beijing: US dropped the baton, failed to advance beyond the heats. 2012 London: US finished second but were later disqualified for a doping offense. 2016 Rio: US botched the baton exchange and were disqualified. 2021 Tokyo: Once again a clumsy exchange led to them getting knocked out in the heats. It got so bad in the US, that legendary Carl Lewis snapped and asked the system to be blown up. Driving the Athletics Revolution of India For an emerging country like India, they cannot afford for this to happen. The quartet have been able to bring the athletics revolution in the country, and one bad event can push that progress back by years. 'With relay, it is not about the 4 fastest athletes, it is about the four guys who are together the fastest. You could pick the four fastest in a team, and then the four who have better chemistry. The ones with better chemistry will win.' The camaraderie has also helped the four athletes push each other to the limit. And it's not just unity and baton chemistry that's evolved â€' raw speed has too. In Pics: How Odisha aced the 1st Indian Continental Tour When James came to India and joined the Reliance Foundation in 2019, the top athletes in India were running 10.5. Earlier, the benchmark of a good sprint runner was seen as 10.5, and if you were running 10.3 and 10.4, you were seen as a hero. If you ran 10.2, then invariably, you had the national record. Hillier remembers a time when '10.5 was a big deal,' but now, 'guys no one's even heard of' are running 10.2. 'You know Pranav won the Fed Cup. Everyone was thinking that the three Reliance boys will come in the top 3, but the question was in which order, but then Pranav came out of nowhere and won it.' 'Now people are running 10.2, and soon you will see them running 10.1,' Hillier stressed. The Briton is no less than a visionary. He had predicted way back that a javelin revolution would come to India with Neeraj Chopra. And it did. India now has several stars who throw 80+ meters. The latest entrant in that club is 20-year-old Shivam Lohakare from Maharashtra, who clinched the second spot in the recently concluded Indian Continental Tour in Bhubaneswar. James Hilliers considers all four men to be his favourites (Image Credit: Reliance Foundation) James states that India's athletics revolution is here, and it is these four athletes â€' Animesh, Guri, Amlan and Manikanta â€' who are driving it. 'They are all my favourites you know, and they all piss me off,' jokes Hillier. 'They are good guys you know. There is good banter. Amlan now winds up Animesh because he won the bronze in World University Games. He has the bragging rights now. But then Animesh winds him up back, saying that I broke your record,' Hillier concluded. If things go according to plan, the Brothers of Destruction are likely to be one of the medal favourites in the 2026 Asian Games. Their best 38.69s would have secured them the bronze in the previous edition of the competition. But James is slightly conservative about that. Hope is cruel. It kills. But medal or no medal, one thing cannot be taken away. It is the fact that Indian athletics is already seeing the ripple effects of the brilliance of this quartet, who are striving to reach a common goal, leaving their egos and inhibitions behind. They all want to be the 'top dog' as Hillier says, but they also share the common goal of taking India to the peak on the world stage. We don't know if these four will be the ones to do it â€' to stand on the Olympic podium â€' but someday, someone will. And when they do, they'll owe it to the men who turned hope into a system. Not just runners, but builders. Not just a team, but brothers. Join our WhatsApp Channel


Hindustan Times
14 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli asked, 'How will you keep yourself motivated?': 'Should have said we won't play ODIs, T20Is'
Is the end near for Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma? What looked like a done deal a few days back is now nowhere certain. The two Indian stalwarts looked set to remain in the ODI scheme of things till the 2027 ODI World Cup. However, according to a Dainik Jagran report, there is a sword hanging over the duo, and both batters might potentially call it quits in their international career after the three-match ODI series against Australia. The report states that Rohit and Virat might be asked to play the Vijay Hazare Trophy if they harbour the dreams of playing the 2027 World Cup in South Africa, Zimbabwe and Namibia. Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma will return to action in the series against Australia(AFP Images) Former India opening batter Aakash Chopra believes RoKo said goodbye to the wrong format (Tests), as it would have been ideal if they had called it quits in the white-ball formats. Rohit and Kohli announced their T20I retirements on the same day as India's T20 World Cup win in June 2024. The two senior India batters then witnessed dwindling returns in Tests in the series against New Zealand and Australia. Eventually, Rohit and Kohli announced their Test retirement before the squad announcement for the England series. Having witnessed a heartbreak in the 2023 ODI World Cup final, it is clear that the two players want to go out on the ultimate high after winning the next 50-over tournament. However, Chopra asked some tough questions, such as how Virat and Rohit will get enough game time and keep themselves motivated, as there are only limited ODIs scheduled until the next IPL. Also Read: Seriously? Throwing Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma out of India's ODI setup? Just because they aren't playing doesn't mean... 'The duo said goodbye to the wrong format. Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli suddenly decided to bid adieu to Test cricket. They said they will only play ODIs now. This is my problem. I'll tell you why. Test cricket is the toughest format. White-ball cricket is monotonous, but the same is not the case for Tests. Tests are the toughest, while ODIs are the easiest when it comes to batters. There is relatively no pressure,' Chopra said on his YouTube channel. 'If you are playing just six ODIs in a year, then there are just six days of game time for you. How will you stay motivated? How will you prepare? How will you stay fit and stay in the best shape? This is what I'm thinking. You should have said that I'll not play ODIs and T20Is, but I'll play Tests. Consider that you had played the series against England, you would have played for 25 days. Then you would get the series against West Indies and South Africa,' he added. Virat, Rohit won't play the Vijay Hazare Trophy Aakash Chopra further said that Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli won't play the Ranji Trophy due to their Test retirements. Hence, it would be really difficult for them to stay in the groove because of the limited game time. 'If you were playing Tests, and somehow there was a gap, you can always play Ranji Trophy. You can play county cricket. If you play the longest format, you stay in the game. When you leave Tests, obviously, you wouldn't go to play Ranji Trophy. What's the point of playing Ranji and county when one has retired from Tests?,' said Chopra. However, the former India opener was also quick to dismiss the reports of the duo being asked to play Vijay Hazare Trophy, saying he is confident that the two batters won't do so. 'The chatter about playing the Vijay Hazare Trophy, the tournament will happen in December. What's the point? There are nine ODIs for India till the next IPL. That's about it. Just nine days of cricket action for you. You're not playing at all. You're not practising,' said Chopra. 'Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli don't have to play Vijay Hazare Trophy, they wouldn't be selected based on their performance in the tournament, let's be honest about this. It's bogus talk. If they had played Tests and left ODIs, staying in the groove would have been easier,' he added.


Time of India
26 minutes ago
- Time of India
Ivanka Trump partners with Dana White and Donald Trump for unforgettable UFC fight night at the White House
Ivanka Trump partners with Dana White and Donald Trump for unforgettable UFC fight night at the White House (Image via Getty) Ivanka Trump is making a surprise return to her father's team. The daughter of President Donald Trump has been away from politics for years. But now she is stepping in to help UFC president Dana White with something never done before a live UFC fight at the White House. The event is planned for next July to mark 250 years since America's independence. Dana White says it is 'definitely happening' and could even air on CBS for millions to watch. Ivanka Trump teams up with UFC president Dana White for historic White House fight Ivanka Trump worked as a full-time adviser during her father's first term from 2017 to 2021. Since then, she has kept her distance, even saying earlier this year, 'I hate politics.' But this new UFC project has brought her back. Dana White told Front Office Sports that Ivanka Trump is directly involved in organizing the fight night. — mailsport (@mailsport) White said they will travel to Washington at the end of August 2025 for meetings about the event. The UFC team will make a presentation inside the White House to show how they want to set up the stage, seating, and cameras. The fight is expected to take place on the South Lawn, with the White House as one backdrop and the Washington Monument on the other side. President Donald Trump, a long-time fan of UFC, is already on board. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like No annual fees for life UnionBank Credit Card Apply Now Undo He has often been seen sitting in the crowd at UFC events in Las Vegas and New York. Also Read: 'More than any American Culture': Martina Navratilova once shared how Chris Evert's Catholic upbringing shaped her tennis image Dana White reveals plans for July 2026 UFC event on the South Lawn with Ivanka Trump's help Dana White says the July 2026 event will be one of the biggest shows UFC has ever done. He called it 'the baddest card of all time' and hinted it could feature huge names like Jon Jones and Tom Aspinall. While nothing is confirmed, fans are already buzzing about possible matchups. White explained that tickets might not be sold to the general public. Instead, guests could be invited, with each person passing strict background checks due to the location. The idea is to make it a high-profile, safe, and unforgettable celebration. Ivanka Trump is still listed on the White House website as an advisor concentrating on women's education, employment, and household financial development. Arabella, Joseph, and Theodore are her three kids; she resides in Washington with her husband Jared Kushner. In a manner the United States has never witnessed before, Ivanka Trump and Dana White combine history, politics, and sports. Should everything go according to plan, the South Lawn might become the best known battling arena in the world next year. Catch Rani Rampal's inspiring story on Game On, Episode 4. Watch Here!