
ISSF Munich World Cup: Manu Bhaker finishes sixth in women's 25m pistol final
Double Olympic medallist Manu Bhaker qualified with a high score of 588, but ended up sixth in the 25-metre sports pistol event in the shooting World Cup in Munich, Germany, on Wednesday.
Manu missed the chance to move further in the final as she lost by one point to the eventual bronze medallist Yang Jiin of Korea.
It was a hat-trick of gold medals for the 20-year-old Sun Yujie of China as she beat Oh Yejin of Korea 38-36. Sun had won the gold medals in the last two World Cups in Buenos Aires and Lima.
In the men's 50-metre rifle 3-position event, Olympian Chain Singh made the final with an impressive score of 592 but eventually placed seventh.
Jon-Hermann Hegg of Norway won gold, which put the team in second place on the medals table, behind China, which has won the other three gold medals so far.
In the men's air pistol on Tuesday, Varun Tomar had made the final but finished sixth. Thus, India has only the bronze medal so far, won by Elavenil Valarivan in women's air rifle.
RESULTS
10m air pistol: Men: 1. Hu Kai (Chn) 242.3 (588); 2. Valeriy Rakhimzhan (Kaz) 41.9 (583); 3. Christian Reitz (Ger) 220.8 (584); 6. Varun Tomar 160.3 (585); 12. Nishant Rawat 582; 30. Aditya Malra 578; RPO: Sarabjot Singh 583; Arjun Singh Cheema 579.
25m sports pistol: Women: 1. Sun Yuje (Chn) 38 (586); 2. Oh Yejin (Kor) 36 (588); 3. Yang Jin (Kor) 32 (586); 6. Manu Bhaker 20 (588); 11. Esha Singh 585; 32. Simranpreet Kaur Brar 577; RPO: TS Divya 580; Rahi Sarnobat 576.
50m rifle 3-position: Men: 1. Jon-Hermann Hegg (Nor) 464.1 (592); 2. Ilia Marsov (AIN) 462.0 (592); 3. Jiri Privratsky (Cze) 452.0 (593); 7. Chain Singh 407.0 (592); 38. Swapnil Kusale 587; 67. Kiran Jadhav 580; RPO: Niraj Kumar 591; Akhil Sheoran 589.

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


Hindustan Times
3 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Bolt beams as Alfred, Duplantis and Warholm light up Oslo Diamond League
Karsten Warholm, Julien Alfred and Armand 'Mondo' Duplantis lit up Thursday's star-studded Diamond League meet in Oslo where Jamaican sprint legend Usain Bolt was on hand to lend further glitter to a gripping evening of track and field. Bolt, the 100 and 200m world record holder, had been introduced to the baying, sell-out 15,000-strong crowd in the Bislett Stadium by World Athletics president Sebastian Coe, who had himself set three world records at the Norwegian venue. Bolt was on hand to present a bouquet of flowers to a delighted Alfred after she won the women's 100m in 10.89 seconds. "It's always been wonderful being at the Bislett Games. The energy and the love that I always get when I come here is just wonderful," said Bolt on his first return to Oslo since his retirement in 2017. Alfred said she had been honoured to meet the 38-year-old Bolt, an eight-time Olympic gold medallist and an 11-time world champion. "It was my first race of the season so I was a little rusty, but I got the win under my belt which is the main thing," said the 24-year-old whose gold in the Paris was the first ever for the tiny Caribbean island of Saint Lucia. "And I got to meet Usain Bolt yesterday for the first time ever and then two days running I got to meet him again!" Duplantis notched up his 36th victory in 40 Diamond League outings, clearing 6.15 metres before calling it a day as temperatures dipped. The US-born Swede was in a class of his own in another punishing display of vaulting of the highest order. "It did get cooler so that was why I stopped jumping," he said. "On Sunday at the Stockholm Diamond League it would be an absolute dream to break the world record." The meet was rounded off in spectacular style when Warholm clocked 32.67sec to win the 300m hurdles, an event that was granted official status earlier this year but is yet to have a ratified world record. The time bettered Warholm's own 33.05sec set earlier this season in Xiamen, China. "I have been doing a lot of 200m practices and as you can see from today I was very clean over the hurdles," said Warholm. "There were some top stars here which is great for Bislett and it was lovely to catch up with Usain and tomorrow we will have lunch and chat properly." Reigning Olympic champion Emmanuel Wanyonyi missed out on the stadium record of 1:42.04 for the 800m set by Kenyan legend David Rudisha in 2010. Wanyonyi was pushed all the way, but held on for victory in 1:42.78 ahead of Spain's Mohamed Attaoui, Algeria's Djamel Sedjati and France's Gabriel Tual. "Today, my body felt a little tired as I have come from Kenya so the travel has been long but I am happy with my performance against a strong field and pleased to run a season's best," said Wanyonyi. Olympic and Diamond League javelin champion Haruka Kitaguchi of Japan stole the lead in the fifth round with what proved to be a winning 64.63m effort. It broke Greek Elina Tzengko's streak of three back-to-back victories on the circuit. But Dominica's Thea LaFond could only finish fifth in the women's triple jump won by Cuba's Leyanis Perez Hernandez . And another Olympic champion, Winfred Yavi of Bahrain, had to settle for second behind Kenya's Faith Cherotich, who set a meet record of 9:02.60 in the women's 3,000m steeplechase. Oslo's Bislett Stadium is known as a venue where world records are regularly set. When a world-class field lined up for the 5,000m, they were chasing what could have been the 72nd world record set at the venue since Adriaan Paulen established the first one back in 1924. But the history books remained unshuffled as American Nico Young timed 12:45.27 in a shock victory over the likes of Ethiopia's Hagos Gebrhiwet, Yomif Kejelcha and Berihu Aregawi. It was a first Diamond League win and a personal best for the 23-year-old Team USA runner and also the fastest any American has ever run five kilometres outdoors. The evening ended in chaotic scenes with Bolt embracing Warholm on the track, hundreds of children swarming around the Jamaican, who then started screaming 'Mondo! Mondo!' at Duplantis while in full television interview. lp/jc


Hindustan Times
4 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Pulisic calls criticism 'way out of line,' offered to play in friendlies while skipping Gold Cup
American star Christian Pulisic says while he decided to skip the CONCACAF Gold Cup, U.S. coaches turned down his offer to play in friendlies against Turkey and Switzerland because they wanted one roster for all games. 'You can talk about my performances, whatever you want, but to question my commitment especially toward the national team, in my opinion that's way out of line,' Pulisic said during an interview with former U.S. players Tony Meola, Jimmy Conrad and Charlie Davis on a CBS Sports Golazo podcast released Thursday. Pulisic played about 120 games for AC Milan and the U.S. over the past two seasons. 'Toward the second half and toward the end of the season, hey, my body just started talking to me and my mind and then I started to think what is best and — what is going to be best for me leading into next year and going into the World Cup,' he said. "Was that to play eight more games and then get no rest at all, go straight into preseason and then grind another year and then go straight into the World Cup? That's not what I thought was best for my body.' Ahead of their Gold Cup opener against Trinidad and Tobago this Sunday, the U.S. lost to Turkey 2-1 last weekend and to Switzerland 4-0 on Tuesday, giving the Americans their first four-game losing streak since 2007. 'I did want to be a part of at least the two friendlies. I did speak with the coaches and I asked and I wanted to be part of the team in whatever capacity I could and they said no," Pulisic said. "They said they only wanted one roster and that's the coach's decision. I fully respect that. I didn't understand it, but it is what it is.' Landon Donovan, Clint Dempsey and Tim Howard have been critical of regulars not being on the current roster. 'It is tough because I looked up to those guys growing up, Pulisic said. "Some of these guys are my idols and I respect them so much as players.' 'Some of them, as well, even privately the way they can — the way they talk to me and clearly want to show support and be your friend and everything and then it goes and they say something slightly different publicly," he added. 'Does it hurt me? Am I surprised by it? I don't know, not really. People are always going to have their opinions but in the end I'm focused on how can I better myself.' Pulisic rejected some of the criticism aimed at the U.S. following losses to Panama and Canada in March at the CONCACAF Nations League final four. 'I didn't come out of that feeling like we were a weak team or performed really poorly,' he said. 'The only other thing that does frustrate me is this narrative that people want to create, that it's that we don't care, that's it's a commitment and stuff like that. That's something that in my opinion it can just be kind of a lazy take.' 'Just to say always, 'These guys don't care, bring guys that have pride,'' he added, 'that's just not — that's not really the answer, in my opinion. There's a lot more to a soccer game that you need to do to win than just to care, and I think a lot of us care.' Pulisic watched Tuesday's loss to Switzerland from afar, 'It's hard to watch. The results have been tough, for sure,' he said. 'There's still a lot of promising things that we can take from it. Going into the Gold Cup, I still think we can be excited and want to support this team. In these games, there's been some changes, some new faces, and it's not easy for those type of guys to step in and do an amazing job and expect great results right away.' Pulisic laughed when Davies pointed out Massimiliano Allegri will be his 13th team coach . 'Someone said I'm the problem," Pulisic said. soccer: /hub/soccer

The Hindu
6 hours ago
- The Hindu
FIFA U-17 World Cup schedule: Full list of Qatar 2025 matches, dates, venues, timings, groups
The FIFA U-17 World Cup 2025 in Qatar, the first to feature 48 teams, will take place between November 3 to 27. 'The tournament will be hosted in its entirety in the world-class Aspire Academy, with the final match to be held at Khalifa International Stadium, one of our historic Qatar 2022 venues,' said Rashid Al Khater, Executive Director of Operations of the Local Organizing Committee (LOC). DRAW RESULTS - GROUPS Host Qatar has been drawn into Group A alongside Italy, South Africa, and Bolivia. The young Maroons will look to improve on Qatar's best performance in the tournament when it claimed fourth place in 1991. 'Having the under-17 World Cup hosted in Qatar for five consecutive years provides young players with a wonderful opportunity to compete against the best teams in the world. This type of competition will have a great impact on the development of young players and will once again positively reflect Qatar's ability to host mega sporting events,' said Alvaro Perez, head coach of the Qatar under-17 team. Drawn alongside Qatar is South Africa. For head coach Vela Khumalo, the tournament has the potential to have global impact. The Amajimbos will be making their second appearance at the U-17 World Cup after their debut in 2015. 'The tournament is important for the entire world. That is why we were so keen to qualify and participate in the competition hosted by Qatar. The World Cup provides us with a platform to interact with teams and players from all around the world, which will undoubtedly have a tremendous impact on the skills and abilities of our players,' said Khumalo. A total of 48 teams will play 104 matches over a period of 24 days. They have been divided into 12 groups. Group A: Qatar, Italy, South Africa, Bolivia Group B: Japan, Morocco, New Caledonia, Portugal Group C: Senegal, Croatia, Costa Rica, United Arab Emirates Group D: Argentina, Belgium, Tunisia, Fiji Group E: England, Venezuela, Haiti, Egypt Group F: Mexico, Korea, Republic, Côte d'Ivoire, Switzerland Group G: Germany, Colombia, Korea DPR, El Salvador Group H: Brazil, Honduras, Indonesia, Zambia Group I: USA, Burkina Faso, Tajikistan, Czechia Group J: Paraguay, Uzbekistan, Panama, Republic of Ireland Group K: France, Chile, Canada, Uganda Group L: Mali, New Zealand, Austria, Saudi Arabia The first match will see host Qatar take on European giant Italy on November 3. Read and download the full schedule here: FIFA U-17 World Cup 2025 Related Topics FIFA U-17 World Cup