
Finally, truce in IOA as CEO appointment ratified by EC
Getting the house in order seemed to be their priority after the International Olympic Committee (IOC) had warned India that their 2036 Olympic bid without a strong National Olympic Committee might not be favouring them. In quite a few replies to this newspaper, the IOC kept reiterating their position of a united house.
Interestingly, the CEO appointment had been accepted by the IOC last year itself. Even before the ratification, the CEO had been part of almost all important meetings involving the IOA including the Paris Olympics, IOC headquarters in Lausanne and Commonwealth Sports. Joint secretary Kalyan Chaubey, who during the days of revolt had proclaimed himself as acting CEO quite a few times and had been rude to the IOA president also seemed at peace when he said they are now looking forward in the interest of the nation.

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Indian Express
an hour ago
- Indian Express
Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty return to Top 10 in BWF Rankings
After finishing in the last 4 of the recently concluded China Open, India's duo Satwiksairaj Rankireddy and Chirag Shetty climbed 3 spots to return to top 10 in the BWF mens' doubles World Rankings released on Tuesday. The former world No. 1 duo are now 10th in the list after their semifinals loss to the Malaysian pair of Aaron Chia and Soh Wooi Yik 13-21, 17-21. With the latest defeat, Satwik-Chirag lost thrice in a row against the world No 2 duo from Malaysia. It appeared once more that the pair that tormented them for so long, are back to being their nemeses, especially considering the heartbreak that Chia and Soh gave at the Paris Olympics last year. 'We had our chances, especially in the second game,' Chirag had told BWF later, but he too was aware they didn't do enough. 'But (overall we) were not playing the right game. We were playing strokes which we shouldn't have, hitting more on Aaron and I think that's what took the game away from us. When we started playing smarter at 12-16, we came back at 16-16. A good tournament for us, but sad that we had to go out this way.' This was the India duo's third semifinal appearance on the BWF Tour this season, having earlier reached the last four at the Singapore Open and India Open. The Indian pair had reclaimed the world No. 1 ranking after the title win at the Thailand Open last year. In men's singles, top-ranked Indian Lakshya Sen moved up two places to No. 17 with 54,442 points, just ahead of China's Zhenxiang Wang, who jumped five spots to 18. HS Prannoy also climbed two places to reach world No. 33 with 40,336 points. In women's singles, 17-year-old Unnati Hooda rose four spots to a career-best No. 31 after her landmark pre-quarterfinal win over double Olympic medallist PV Sindhu last week. The Haryana shuttler stunned Sindhu 21-16, 19-21, 21-13 in a gruelling hour-and-13-minute battle to reach the quarterfinals, where she lost to third seed Akane Yamaguchi of Japan. Sindhu, meanwhile, remained static at No. 15 and continues to be the highest-ranked Indian in women's singles. In women's doubles, India's top pair of Treesa Jolly and Gayatri Gopichand held steady at No. 11, while Tanisha Crasto and Ashwini Ponnappa moved up two spots to 45. (With agency inputs)


NDTV
an hour ago
- NDTV
Katie Ledecky Claims 22nd World Title With 1,500m Freestyle Gold In Singapore
Katie Ledecky cruised to a dominant 1,500m freestyle gold in Singapore on Tuesday to claim the 22nd world title of her storied career. The American great touched the wall in 15min 26.44sec, ahead of Simona Quadarella of Italy in 15:31.79 and Australia's Lani Pallister in 15:41.18. The masterful win moved all-time great Ledecky four short of Michael Phelps's career tally of 26 world gold medals. It also gave her the sixth world 1,500m freestyle title of her career and she paraded around the arena afterwards with the American flag. "I love this race. This race was the race that I broke my first world record in in 2013," said Ledecky, 28, who has won nine Olympic golds. "Lots of great races and memories over the years at worlds. I'm happy I could do it in Singapore." Ledecky was the red-hot favourite going into the race, having qualified for the final over 10 seconds faster than nearest challenger Pallister. She also went into the race owning the top 24 1,500m freestyle times ever, and set the second-fastest time in history in April behind her own record. Ledecky and Pallister broke clear of the rest of the field early on, with the Australian determined to keep close to the American. Both were on world record pace at the 500m mark before Ledecky began to leave Pallister behind. Ledecky was in a class of her own from there on, with the world record still within sight. That prospect drained away in the closing stages but by that time the gold was in the bag. "Lani took it out there. I knew she would be out fast and I just wanted to get out fast, but comfortable enough that I could go from there," said Ledecky. "I'm happy with the time and happy with the swim." The victory gave Ledecky her first gold medal of the championships, after picking up a bronze behind Summer McIntosh in the 400m freestyle on Sunday's opening night. Ledecky is set to go head-to-head with Canadian phenomenon McIntosh again in Singapore in the 800m freestyle. Ledecky's win came against the backdrop of a gastroenteritis outbreak in the American team, which managing director Greg Meehan said had affected the "overwhelming majority" of the squad.


Hindustan Times
an hour ago
- Hindustan Times
Swimming-American Ledecky extends 1,500 freestyle dominance with world title in Singapore
July 29 - Katie Ledecky delivered another masterclass in distance swimming to collect her sixth world title in the 1,500 metres freestyle on Tuesday and while she was never threatened in the final she felt her rivals were helping her push the sport forward. Swimming-American Ledecky extends 1,500 freestyle dominance with world title in Singapore The American great has now won 22 world titles and her gold on Tuesday took her overall medal tally to 28, second only to compatriot Michael Phelps's 33. Ledecky, who has won nine Olympic gold medals, was well under her own world record pace for much of the race at the Singapore Sports Hub but eased off in the last 200 metres to touch the wall in 15 minutes and 26.44 seconds. That was more than 5 seconds clear of silver medallist Italian Simona Quadarella, whose time of 15:31.79 made her the second quickest swimmer in the event though it is still slower than 11 of Ledecky's times. "I just wanted to try to get out fast, but comfortable enough that I can build from there. Happy with the time, happy with the swim," Ledecky said. "That was an awesome swim from Simona. Second fastest performer ever. The distance races are really quick right now. Just good to see how much we can push the sport forward. It's great to push the sport forward all together ... "All the events in the distance freestyles are moving forward, both on the women's and men's side." Australian Lani Pallister hung on Ledecky's hip for a good portion of the race but could not sustain the pace and finished as the bronze medallist. "I kind of had a sense that I was probably out pretty fast, because Lani tends to take it out fast, and just having her right by my side for such a long portion really kept me on my toes and kept me moving forward," the 28-year-old added. "I was hopeful that as I kind of extended, I was able to hold that pace. I wasn't quite sure where I was at." Ledecky, who finished third behind Summer McIntosh in the 400 on Sunday, is set to come up against the Canadian sensation again in the 800 later this week. This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.