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Saina Nehwal-Parupalli Kashyap Divorce: Olympic Star Shares Emotional Instagram Update

Saina Nehwal-Parupalli Kashyap Divorce: Olympic Star Shares Emotional Instagram Update

India.com3 days ago
photoDetails english 2931426
Olympic bronze medalist Saina Nehwal has announced her separation from husband Parupalli Kashyap, ending their six-year marriage. The couple, who trained together at the Pullela Gopichand Academy, tied the knot in 2018. Saina shared the news via Instagram, citing a mutual decision focused on "peace, growth, and healing." While Kashyap remains silent, fans are reacting to the emotional update. This comes amid speculation about Saina Nehwal's retirement, as she battles arthritis and hasn't competed since June 2023. The breakup of India's beloved badminton duo has gone viral, dominating sports news and trending across Google search and social media platforms. https://zeenews.india.com/photos/sports/saina-nehwal-parupalli-kashyap-divorce-olympic-star-shares-emotional-instagram-update-2931440 Updated:Jul 14, 2025, 08:40 AM IST 1. Saina Nehwal Announces Separation Via Instagram
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In a heartfelt Instagram Story, Saina Nehwal revealed her split from Parupalli Kashyap, emphasizing 'peace, growth, and healing' as the reasons behind their mutual decision. 2. "We're Choosing Peace" – Viral Social Media Quote
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The emotional quote 'We're choosing peace, growth, and healing' instantly went viral, resonating across social media and trending under #SainaNehwal and #ParupalliKashyap on X (formerly Twitter). 3. End of a 6-Year Marriage
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The couple tied the knot in December 2018. Their marriage, rooted in years of camaraderie and shared badminton journeys, now ends after nearly six years. 4. Saina and Kashyap Trained at Gopichand Academy
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Both athletes rose to prominence training under Pullela Gopichand in Hyderabad. Their love story began as doubles partners and evolved off the court. 5. Parupalli Kashyap Remains Silent
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While Saina made the public announcement, Parupalli Kashyap has not released any personal statement about the separation, keeping fans curious about his side. 6. Saina Nehwal Battling Arthritis, Considering Retirement
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In a revealing podcast last year, Saina admitted to battling severe arthritis, raising questions about her future in badminton. Retirement talks have intensified following the separation news. 7. Last Competitive Match Was in June 2023
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Saina has not played since her early exit at the Singapore Open 2023, further fueling retirement speculation and concerns about her fitness. 8. Kashyap Now Focuses on Coaching Career
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Having retired from professional play in early 2024, Kashyap has transitioned into coaching, a move that marked a new chapter in his life and career. 9. Nehwal's Legacy in Indian Sports
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From winning bronze at London 2012 to becoming India's first World No.1 in women's singles, Saina's career inspired a generation of Indian shuttlers, including PV Sindhu and Lakshya Sen. 10. Fans Express Support and Respect for Privacy
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Social media is flooded with supportive messages for Saina and Kashyap. Fans are respecting their request for privacy while praising Saina's courage to share her personal journey.
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On World Coaches Day 18th July: Honouring & Celebrating Our Coaches & Mentors
On World Coaches Day 18th July: Honouring & Celebrating Our Coaches & Mentors

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time33 minutes ago

  • Hans India

On World Coaches Day 18th July: Honouring & Celebrating Our Coaches & Mentors

Every year on 18th July, World Coaches Day is celebrated to recognize and honour the invaluable contributions of coaches and mentors across every walk of life. From boardrooms to classrooms, stadiums to studios, and from therapy rooms to spiritual ashrams, coaches have helped millions rise beyond their limits and live to their fullest potential. On this special day, we collectively pause to reflect on the importance of these guiding forces and pay tribute to the silent yet powerful role they play in shaping lives, careers, and character. The Power Behind the Spotlight While achievers are often celebrated for their brilliance, few notice the hands that helped mould that brilliance. Coaches are rarely in the limelight, yet their impact echoes through the actions, decisions, and achievements of the people they guide. Whether it is Bill Campbell (Executive Coaching), who mentored top Silicon Valley CEOs, or Sir Alex Ferguson (Football), who built one of the most legendary football dynasties, the footprints of great coaches can be found in every field of excellence. A Coach Builds More Than Skill At the surface, a coach might seem like someone who teaches technique or strategy. But at a deeper level, a coach is someone who transforms mindset, expands belief systems, and fosters accountability. They bring clarity where there is confusion, calm where there is chaos, and vision where there is fear. It is through the eyes of a great coach that individuals often first glimpse their own potential. The impact of a coach is visible in a swimmer like Michael Phelps, whose record-breaking Olympic journey was shaped by Bob Bowman (Swimming Coach). Similarly, Butch Harmon (Golf Coach) shaped the careers of golf legends with discipline and precision. 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Coco-colonialism
Coco-colonialism

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  • Time of India

Coco-colonialism

Bachi Karkaria's Erratica and its cheeky sign-off character, Alec Smart, have had a growing league of followers since 1994 when the column began in the Metropolis on Saturday. It now appears on the Edit Page of the Times of India, every Thursday. It takes a sly dig at whatever has inflated political/celebrity egos, and got public knickers in a twist that week. It makes you chuckle, think and marvel at the elasticity of the English language. It is a shooting-from-the-lip advice column to the lovelorn and otherwise torn, telling them to stop cribbing and start living -- all in her her branded pithy, witty style. LESS ... MORE London is going nuts over 'nariyal' Oxford Street isn't yet redolent with aromas of simmering aviyal, albeit close enough. Goodbye, Coca-colonialism's. Hello, coco-colonialism. London is being blitzed by coconut milk, water, oil, fresh/desiccated/compacted kernel. From tabloid, tube and bus, I'm bombarded with ads ordering 'Convert to Coconut'. It isn't baptism by fiery kari, but by cool tetrapack. Downing packaged nariyal paani is not a patch on slurping from the real thing, even if easier to wield. It's already caught on among India's sipping classes. Here, the little blue and white cartons are drink du jour not only coz Britain – indeed all exited-from Europe – is in the throes of a throat (and grass)-parching Indian summer. It's a wider conquest. The unrelenting ad's baseline says, 'It's not a cult'. The udder distaste for milk from nature-intended sources led to such substitutes as soya, oat, almond, apple…Coconut conversion, however, goes beyond Veganism & Co. Its messaging cashes in on the greatest, latest massage: 'gut health'. This is the silver bullet; sure-fire seduction; certain path to nirvana, physical, mental, psychological, yea, even social. As always, We knew it first. Remember the ancient eastern wisdom of a healthy morning evacuation? Here, 'potty' is ensured via pot of 'Coconut Yog'. That's yoghurt, not Guruji Iyengar. The ad promises 'ALL YOUR PROBLEMS WILL BE SOLVED. If your problems are exclusively breakfast-based. Or dessert-based. Or curry-dollop-based. Or wanting-a-whole-coconut-in-each-pot-based.' Chicken tikka masala and king-sized samosa, ok, but no self-respecting desi visitor will cure home-food yearning with ersatz Ernakulam. Better to favour real curry, Mercifully this is no longer the pineapple-riddled atrocity once dished up in icky-sticky Bangladeshi dives. As a mark of my own upgrading, the only Bangladeshi I encountered was expertly shaking signature cocktails in a Portobello tapas bar – and called himself 'Jose'. Still, good to know that 'coconut' is now something more desirable than a WOG (Westernised Oriental Gentlemen) who was 'brown outside, white inside'. Even more satisfying is palms metaphorically swaying amidst oaks, more evidence of East and West mixing, and nixing colonial Mr Kipling. *** Alec Smart said: 'Tesla test-drives India.' Facebook Twitter Linkedin Email Disclaimer Views expressed above are the author's own.

‘This was the plan...': Mohammad Kaif accuses Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer of wanting to injure Jasprit Bumrah
‘This was the plan...': Mohammad Kaif accuses Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer of wanting to injure Jasprit Bumrah

First Post

timean hour ago

  • First Post

‘This was the plan...': Mohammad Kaif accuses Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer of wanting to injure Jasprit Bumrah

Mohammad Kaif has accused Ben Stokes and Jofra Archer of deliberately targeting Jasprit Bumrah with bouncers to injure him during the Lord's Test. Kaif also criticised India's unnecessary aggression in England's second innings as the team lost by 22 runs. read more Former India all-rounder Mohammad Kaif has made a sensational claim that England skipper Ben Stokes and pacer Jofra Archer deliberately tried to injure India's strike bowler Jasprit Bumrah during the third Test at Lord's. Speaking on his YouTube channel, Kaif alleged that England's plan was to bowl bouncers at Bumrah to either get him out or hurt him. Bumrah was part of a 132-ball partnership with Ravindra Jadeja in the final innings of the third Test, when India were trying to avoid a defeat after suffering a mini collapse in their chase of 193 runs. Archer and Stokes targetted Bumrah with several short-pitched deliveries during his long stay at the crease that lasted for an entire session. Kaif has now claimed that Stokes and Archer had planned to injure Bumrah. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD 'Stokes and Archer planned to bowl bouncers against Bumrah. If he doesn't get out, hit him on the finger or shoulder to injure him. This stays in the mind of bowlers to injure the main bowler, whom our batters find tough to bat against. This was the plan, which worked later (to get him out),' Mohammad Kaif said. Kaif slams Indian players for misplaced aggression Kaif also criticised India's on-field aggression during England's second innings, saying it came at the wrong time. Referring to the heated exchanges involving Shubman Gill and Zak Crawley from Day 3, Kaif said Indian players' emotional reaction backfired. 'If Crawley hadn't got out on Day 3, he could've got dismissed on the next day. Was he in good form? He is no Joe Root. It was a loss for us. Gill lost his cool, Siraj joined him and then Reddy celebrated after getting him out. You can show aggression but you need to do that at the right time. They didn't choose the right time,' he added. India lost the third Test at Lord's by 22 runs, handing England a 2-1 lead in the five-match series despite being ahead for the majority of period. The fourth Test will be played at Old Trafford in Manchester from 23 to 27 July. India will be eager to bounce back and level the series again.

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