
Shreyas Iyer Becomes 2nd Captain In The World After MS Dhoni To...
Shreyas Iyer-led Punjab Kings suffered a heartbreaking defeat by six runs against Royal Challengers Bengaluru in the IPL 2025 final played at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Tuesday (June 3). The Mohali-based franchise failed to chase down the target of 191 runs set by Rajat Patidar & Co. in front of more than 90,000 fans present at the world's biggest cricket stadium.
PBKS fans had high hopes from Iyer, who hammered unbeaten 97 and 87 runs in the two IPL 2025 matches played at Narendra Modi Stadium, but on the night of the final, the 30-year-old right-handed batter from Mumbai got out for 1 run from two balls.
Hashtags

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


Hindustan Times
12 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
K'taka HC relief for state cricket body officials in stampede case
Bengaluru The Karnataka high court on Friday restrained the Bengaluru police from arresting the top brass of the Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA) in connection with the June 4 stampede at Bengaluru's M Chinnaswamy Stadium, which left 11 dead and over 50 injured. Granting interim protection from arrest till June 16, Justice SR Krishna Kumar directed that no 'precipitative action' be taken against KSCA President Raghuram Bhat, Secretary A Shankar, and Treasurer ES Jairam, who are among the accused in one of three FIRs registered suo motu by the Bengaluru police over the tragedy. The court however, directed the petitioners to cooperate with the ongoing investigation, and barred them from leaving its jurisdiction. The FIR, registered at the Cubbon Park Police Station in Bengaluru, names the KSCA management for alleged negligence during the crowd-control disaster that unfolded as thousands gathered to greet the Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) team following its first-ever IPL title win. It also charges them under Section 105 of the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita for the offence of culpable homicide not amounting to murder. In their petition, the KSCA officials claimed that the FIR was a 'knee-jerk, politically motivated' action spurred by public outrage and state government pressure. 'There is absolutely no wrong that can be attributed to the petitioner committee or its office bearers,' stated the plea, adding that despite offering independent compensation to victims, the KSCA was being 'subjected to undeserved misery.' The petition also took strong exception to public remarks made by chief minister Siddaramaiah, alleging that he had directed the police to arrest KSCA officials. 'The media carries commanding statements by the Hon'ble Chief Minister directing the police to arrest the accused. The police have got on their toes pursuant to the same, in utter violation of the law,' the petition read. Senior advocate Ashok Haranahalli, appearing for KSCA, argued that no criminal offence had been made out and the FIR was vitiated as it was registered by police officers who had since been suspended. He pointed out that the state government had already instituted three inquiries -- a magisterial probe, a judicial commission headed by retired Justice Michael Cunha, and a CID investigation. However, advocate general Shashi Kiran Shetty opposed the quashing plea, arguing that the investigation must be allowed to proceed. While assuring the court that the police had no immediate plans to arrest the petitioners, Shetty cautioned that arrests might become necessary depending on the outcome of the parallel inquiries. 'Whatever the allegations, the police must be allowed to proceed. We have no intention of arresting the petitioners right now, but we must file objections and the investigation should not be stalled,' he said. Shetty further questioned the timing of the petition, noting the haste with which the KSCA approached the court 'even before the ink had dried' on the FIR. Shetty informed the court that along with KSCA officials, the FIR named three employees of the event management firm DNA Entertainment and that RCB marketing head Nikhil Sosale had already been arrested. On its part, the court clarified that it had no intention of interfering with or staying any of the three ongoing investigations but deemed it appropriate to grant the petitioners brief protection. 'If they are arrested, it will affect their constitutional rights,' Justice Krishna Kumar observed. 'Without prejudice, respondents (police) are directed to not take any precipitative action against P2, 3, 4 (petitioners) subject to condition that petitioner cooperates with investigation/inquiry,' the court ordered. It also took up a separate plea by RCB marketing head Sosale challenging his arrest. He was apprehended at 4:30 am on Friday from the domestic terminal of Kempegowda International Airport as he was allegedly attempting to flee to Dubai, according to the AG. Sosale's lawyer, senior advocate Sandesh Chowta, argued that the arrest was illegal and politically motivated. The court posted the matter for further hearing on Monday, June 9. The June 4 stampede occurred when crowds surged toward the stadium gates following unverified rumours that entry to the celebration event would be free. The felicitation programme had been organised by Royal Challengers Sports Pvt Ltd, with logistical support from the KSCA. The high court is also hearing a suo motu petition seeking broader systemic accountability in the wake of the tragedy. That matter is scheduled to be heard again on June 10.


Hindustan Times
36 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Supporters celebrating RCB's IPL win booked for bursting firecrackers, disrupting traffic
Around 40 persons were booked for bursting firecrackers and creating ruckus while celebrating Royal Challengers Bengaluru's (RCB's) Indian Premier League (IPL) win, a police official said on Thursday. The incident took place at Namdar Gopal Krishna Gokhale Chowk (Goodluck Chowk) after the match on Tuesday night, the Deccan police station official said. 'Around 40 persons have been charged under provisions of Maharashtra Police Act for disrupting public transport, creating public nuisance and disturbing peace with firecrackers. The celebrations caused inconvenience to motorists. We are reviewing CCTV footage of the area to identify more persons,' the official added. RCB won their maiden title with a six-run victory over Punjab Kings in the final at Ahmedabad on Tuesday, ending an 18-year wait.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
Has Virat Kohli emerged as a convenient scapegoat in the aftermath of the Chinnaswamy Stadium tragedy?
How quickly we turn on our heroes. How zealously we enjoy the process of putting them on a pedestal with painstaking determination, only to pull them down at the first hint of perceived apathy. To say that Virat Kohli has the most frenzied, loyal fanbase across the cricketing world will be no exaggeration. India's former captain is an unquestioned crowd-puller whose cricketing persona resonates with millions. He has carried the hopes and prayers and good wishes of large sections and seldom disappointed, producing one epic after another with staggering regularity. A maiden IPL title, on his 18th attempt with Royal Challengers Bengaluru, ought to have been the icing on the cake. Apart from the World Test Championship trophy which will now never be his, the only glaring absence from his brimful cupboard of silverware was the symbol of supremacy in the IPL. That anomaly was corrected four nights back in Ahmedabad; Kohli himself, as one would expect, was the engine room that drove the RCB charge, finishing the tournament as the third highest run-getter while making those runs with flair and panache and a healthy strike-rate that hadn't always been his staunchest ally. RCB's six-run defeat of Punjab Kings on Tuesday night sent RCBians worldwide into the throes of ecstasy. Impromptu street parties broke out in Bengaluru and ran well into the early hours of Wednesday. Kohli was the toast, understandably; single-handedly for 17 years, he had ensured that the fan base grew in inverse proportion to RCB's on-field accomplishments. There was a sense of vindication, for him, and his and RCB's passionate supporters, when the tape was breasted at long last. Now, Kohli is the object of much scorn and vile abuse on social media, primarily. The social media space is increasingly becoming caustic and nasty, its relative anonymity encouraging keyboard warriors to spew venom without the fear of reprisals and recrimination. In the aftermath of the horrific tragedy outside the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Wednesday evening that swiftly devolved from celebratory to mournful, Kohli has been slammed in certain quarters for not being sensitive enough to the developments outside the venue and for continuing with the celebrations on the outfield of RCB's home base. Different people react differently to catastrophes, there is no template and no one has the right to expect anyone else to behave in the manner in which we want them to. Having oneself been caught bang in the middle of much of the jostling and shoving outside the venue as early as 3 pm, one can say with some confidence that no one who didn't experience that – and we truly are grateful that so many did not – cannot really fathom the rising panic, the thumping heart, the surge of adrenaline and the mode of self-preservation that the subconscious slips into. Kohli might have had something to do with the ungainly haste with which the celebratory events on Wednesday evening were put together in Bengaluru, a little over 15 hours after the title was secured in Ahmedabad, but he certainly wasn't responsible for it. Because of the imminence of the talisman's departure to London, those that saw an opportunity to cash in on being at the forefront of putting the show together showed scant regard for protocol and police advice, choosing to place personal interests ahead of safety and security measures that most certainly would have been in place had the police machinery had greater time to plan and organise an event certain to attract tens of thousands of RCB fans delighted that their long wait had finally come to an end. There has been criticism of Kohli being in the vanguard of the celebrations inside the stadium even after the stampede outside cruelly snuffed out 11 lives (as subsequent revelations confirmed). But anyone who watched the proceedings would have immediately noticed that he was merely going through the motions, that there was neither exuberance nor palpable shows of delight or orchestrating the crowd, such an inimitable Kohli feature. Suggestions that the stadium show ought to have been cancelled in its entirety didn't take into account the fact that the 35,000 people inside were largely unaware of the disaster that had unfolded outside. To have called off the show would most likely have triggered greater unrest and potentially unchecked anger. Because telephone networks were jammed, either by design or otherwise, word of the unspeakable tragedy was not yet common knowledge among those who populated the stands. Without going overboard, Kohli did what he had to under difficult circumstances. To fire salvos at him for alleged indifference doesn't do anyone credit. There were many glaring lapses that catalysed the avoidable cataclysm, but to lay the blame at Kohli's doorstep? Not done.