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Eng V Ind: Young India Tear Down English Experts, Vaughan Trolled

Eng V Ind: Young India Tear Down English Experts, Vaughan Trolled

First Posta day ago
Eng V Ind: Young India Tear Down English Experts, Vaughan Trolled | First Sports With Rupha Ramani
India's young Test team proved how victory tastes sweeter when the odds are stacked against you. The young side tore down the predictions of English experts, including Michael Vaughan, who called the series a warm-up before the Ashes. Against all expectations, on a daunting Day 5, the Indian side staged a remarkable comeback to salvage a historic 2-2 draw. Led by Mohammed Siraj's inspired bowling and backed by fearless performances from Rishabh Pant, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Washington Sundar, and captain Shubman Gill, this series was a story of redemption, grit, and unshakable belief. Fans trolled Michael Vaughan after the new India showed the world that no record, no venue, and no opponent can break their fighting spirit. Rupha Ramani unpacks the key moments, emotions, and fiery battles that made this Test series a classic for the ages.
Also on the show, Magnus Carlsen was crowned the winner of the inaugural chess Esports World Cup, but not without controversy. The world number 1 lost his cool during the semifinal against Hikaru Nakamura. The Norwegian silenced the crowd who were supporting Nakamura. Not for the first time have Carlsen's actions sparked controversy. Is the former world champion a true role model or just a record holder? And Cristiano Ronaldo's absence from Diogo Jota's funeral sparked fury. After a month of speculation, the truth has been revealed. Is there a deeper issue from Ronaldo's past that forced him to stay away from the funeral?
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Graphics: How Bodhana Sivanandan became the youngest female to defeat a Grandmaster
Graphics: How Bodhana Sivanandan became the youngest female to defeat a Grandmaster

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Graphics: How Bodhana Sivanandan became the youngest female to defeat a Grandmaster

Let's take a look at the journey of Bodhana Sivanandan, a 10-year-old British chess prodigy of Indian origin, who became the youngest female to defeat a Grandmaster. She also earned her Woman International Master title and first Woman Grandmaster norm in the same event. Bodhana Sivanandan, a 10-year-old British girl of Indian origin, has just etched her name in history books. She stunned the chess world by becoming the youngest female player ever to defeat a Grandmaster. The chess prodigy beat 60-year-old English GM Peter Wells in the final round of the 2025 British Chess Championship in Liverpool on Sunday, August 10. Bodhana also became the youngest Woman International Master (WIM) and secured her first Woman Grandmaster (WGM) norm in the same event. Her family is originally from Trichy, Tamil Nadu but Bodhana was born and brought up in Harrow, London. Her remarkable achievements at such a young age have made her one of the biggest rising players in world chess. Let's explore her journey so far through some creative graphics attached below. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD

IND vs ENG: ‘Control' over ‘intent' — How change in approach reaped dividends after NZ debacle at home and disappointment in Australia
IND vs ENG: ‘Control' over ‘intent' — How change in approach reaped dividends after NZ debacle at home and disappointment in Australia

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  • Indian Express

IND vs ENG: ‘Control' over ‘intent' — How change in approach reaped dividends after NZ debacle at home and disappointment in Australia

Accepting keyword 'accumulation' over 'aggression' may have come in the way of a series win for Shubman Gill's India on their recent England sojourn. But if one takes into account the backdrop of a 0-3 home whitewash against New Zealand and the batting shambles witnessed in the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series in Australia, the 2-2 stalemate may pass off as a win. A win on the 'execution' front for India's batting main cast manning the red-ball transition. A morale-booster for head coach Gautam Gambhir and a riposte to Bazball cultists. The result at Lord's will sting, but the Indian team management and the new batting order will take pride in ticking off fresh boxes, recalibrated post the 1-3 debacle in Australia. The visitors weren't always equipped to take 20 wickets on the UK tour, but the radical batting overhaul is a worthy uptick that Gill & Co will hope to build on before their next SENA trip in October 2026. The cornerstone for change was firmly placed on a base distinct from that of the Englishmen, not necessarily keen on emulating their rapid scoring bursts. England recorded 3,378 runs in nine innings in the series, their 4.17 run rate the third-highest ever in a five-match Test series. Trading run rate for sheer volume, India piled on 3,809 – the most runs ever in a five-match series – at a higher average (42.32). Striking the right balance between the several gears of five-day batting, India's 3.62 run rate in the series ranks as their best-ever in a series featuring at least five Tests. A cursory review of the series reflects the flip in the script. India's three 500-plus run-scorers – Shubman Gill, KL Rahul and Ravindra Jadeja – exuded effortless 'control' for the majority of the series, admittedly on pitches prepared to wear down seam-bowling packs. The comparison of India's batting in Australia and England reveals telling enhancements. India batted 2,371 deliveries more in England than Down Under in equal innings (10), propelling the 4.1 percent gain in control percentages (80% to 84.1%) as a monumental marker of consistent quality batting in the UK. Channelling the old-school instincts naturally benefited batters of the ilk of Rahul and Jadeja, run-accumulators in whites. The effects also rubbed off on Gill and Rishabh Pant; their sharpened 'timing' produced stronger results when juxtaposed against their returns on previous tours. Firming up control, formally measured as the number of balls middled, ensured that Gill, Pant, Rahul and Jadeja played key roles in the batting revival. The skipper marked the prominent surge, translating time in the middle into better results when pressing on the attack. According to Cricket-21 data, Gill was dismissed three times in only 32 deliveries (44 runs) against seamers while attacking in Australia, with false shots creeping up to 28 percent. Attacking 215 balls off pacers of the 1,150 deliveries he faced in England, Gill reduced his false shots to only 10.2 percent. The staggering gain in control meant only two dismissals to pace while recording 338 runs from deliveries he chose to attack. Pant left a similar imprint in England. Of the 89 attacking shots played, Pant made contact with the sweet spot of his bat on 76 occasions. Collectively, the Indian batting average on attacking shots against pace doubled from 30.3 to 60.5 between the two series, scoring 633 more runs with six fewer wickets lost in England. The new batting template eased the burden on Rahul and Jadeja, with both batters securing 500-plus run tallies for the first time in their long careers. The 2-2 scoreline may be a result of lack of assertiveness on the bowling front. But the approach of putting a price on their wicket on English soil may bind this Indian line-up together before spicier challenges ahead.

Parliament passes National Sports Bill after extensive discussion
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Parliament passes National Sports Bill after extensive discussion

The National Sports Governance Bill was on Tuesday passed by the Parliament with Rajya Sabha giving its nod a mere 24 hours after Lok Sabha, marking a historic first for India's sports administration that is now set to be regulated by a national board and have its own dispute resolution mechanism. The National Anti-Doping (Amendment) Bill, which reinforces NADA's autonomy as required by the World Anti-Doping Agency, was also passed by the Parliament. The two bills now await presidential assent to be notified as acts. Soon after Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports Mansukh Mandaviya moved the bills for consideration and passage in the Upper House at 3pm, there were vociferous opposition protests over revision of electoral rolls in Bihar. The opposition eventually staged a walkout led by Leader of Opposition and Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, who demanded a discussion on the revision of electoral rolls in Bihar. 'In 20 countries, there is sports law. 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