Al-Qurashi, Mustafa win at Saudi Toyota Championship

Al-Qurashi, Mustafa win at Saudi Toyota Championship
The firts round of the 2024 Saudi Toyota Karting Championship took place at the Dirab Karting Circuit in Riyadh. (Supplied)
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Al-Qurashi, Mustafa win at Saudi Toyota Championship

Al-Qurashi, Mustafa win at Saudi Toyota Championship

RIYADH: The first contest of the 2024 Saudi Toyota Karting Championship concluded at the Dirab Karting Circuit in Riyadh on Saturday with Abdulrazzaq Suleiman Al-Qurashi and Malik Firas Mustafa winning the junior and senior categories respectively.

The one-day event, with eight drivers participating, was organized by the Saudi Automobile and Motorcycle Federation.

It was sponsored by Jameel Motorsports and Saudi Investment Bank, in collaboration with the Ministry of Sports.

In the junior category at the FunXtreme track, Al-Qurashi finished first in 1 hour, 1 minute, 7 seconds, while Tameem Firas Mustafa came second in 1:02.22.

Mustafa won the senior category in 59.79, Khalid Abdullah Al-Zaid came second in 59.778, and Lyth Maher Momenah third in 59.896.


Sharjah Self-Defense crowned winners at Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu Championship

Sharjah Self-Defense crowned winners at Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu Championship
Updated 12 sec ago
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Sharjah Self-Defense crowned winners at Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu Championship

Sharjah Self-Defense crowned winners at Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu Championship
  • MOD UAE finished second, Al-Ain Jiu-Jitsu Club third in the 3-day competition which concluded on Sunday night

SHARJAH: Sharjah Self-Defense Sports Club came out on top on the final day of the Khaled bin Mohamed bin Zayed Jiu-Jitsu Championship – Round 3 No-Gi, held at Al-Bait Metwahid in Sharjah.

Sunday’s showdowns featured under-16 and youth matchups, with MOD UAE in second and Al-Ain Jiu-Jitsu Club in third.

Issa Hilal Al-Hazami, chairman of the Sharjah Sports Council, said they were proud to host the event. “The strong participation in a championship that holds such a special name is a great sign of the sport’s continuous growth.”

“The support from families plays a big role in the success of these athletes,” he added.

“We are proud to see them making steady progress towards their dreams, which aligns with the country’s vision of empowering young people and giving them the best opportunities to excel.”

Mohamed Hussain Al-Marzooqi, director of marketing and corporate communications at the UAE Jiu-Jitsu Federation, said the results highlighted the strength of the sport in the country.

“This championship plays a crucial role in empowering young athletes and developing their skills,” he said.

“The under-16 and youth categories are the future of jiu-jitsu, and their impressive performances show their dedication to building a strong professional career and representing their country in future competitions.”


Motor Racing-Hamilton reveals long battle with depression in Times interview

Motor Racing-Hamilton reveals long battle with depression in Times interview
Updated 30 September 2024
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Motor Racing-Hamilton reveals long battle with depression in Times interview

Motor Racing-Hamilton reveals long battle with depression in Times interview
  • Hamilton said he has battled with depression as an adult, and has found it difficult to open up about his journey

Seven-time Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton battled with depression for years from an early age as he dealt with the pressure of pursuing a career in motor racing and faced bullying at school, the 39-year-old told The Times in an interview.
Hamilton, who has been racing competitively since he was six, said he has also battled with depression as an adult, and has found it difficult to open up about his journey.
“I think it was the pressure of the racing and struggling at school. The bullying. I had no one to talk to,” Hamilton said in the interview published on Saturday.
“I’ve struggled with mental health through my life, depression from a very early age when I was, like, 13... when I was in my twenties I had some really difficult phases.”
Hamilton made his Formula One debut in 2007 when he was 21, becoming the first Black driver in the series. He won the championship next year and matched Michael Schumacher’s record of seven championships in 2020.
The Briton said he felt more mature today than he was earlier in his career.
“You’re learning about things that have been passed down to you from your parents, noticing those patterns, how you react to things, how you can change those,” he said.
“So what might have angered me in the past doesn’t anger me today. I am so much more refined.”
Hamilton said he has tried silent retreats to improve his mental health, and while talking to a therapist years ago did not help, he would like to find one in the future.
The Mercedes driver, who is set to join Ferrari next year, is sixth in the championship, with the next race set for Austin next month. (Reporting by Chiranjit Ojha in Bengaluru; editing by Miral Fahmy)


England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series

England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series
Updated 30 September 2024
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England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series

England cricket team to arrive in Pakistan on Oct. 2 for three-match Test series
  • All three Test matches are part of the World Test Championship cycle 
  • Pakistan have not won a Test match at home since February 2021

ISLAMABAD: England’s cricket team will arrive in Pakistan during the wee hours of Oct. 2 to play a three-match Test series in the country, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) said on Sunday, as the South Asian country desperately searches for a win at home. 

The first Test match between the two sides will be played in Multan from Oct. 7-11 while the second match will also be played at the same venue from Oct. 15-19. The third match of the series will take place in Rawalpindi from Oct. 24-28. 

The three-match series is part of the World Test Championship cycle. After getting whitewashed by Bangladesh at home this month, Pakistan are placed at number eight on the points table just ahead of West Indies. 

 “The England men’s cricket team will arrive in the wee hours of 2 October,” the PCB said in a statement on Sunday. 

The PCB said Pakistan’s cricket team will assemble in Multan on Oct. 1 where they will hold training sessions from Oct. 2. Pakistan captain Shan Masood will hold his pre-series media conference at the National Bank Stadium on Sept. 30. 

After a string of disappointing losses at home, most recently to minnows Bangladesh, the South Asian country is searching for a win. Pakistan last won a Test match at home in February 2021 when they beat South Africa by 95 runs at Rawalpindi. 

Pakistan have a busy cricket schedule in the months to come, with the green shirts scheduled to play an away white-ball series against Australia in November before playing another white-ball series against Zimbabwe in November/December. 

The green shirts will then tour South Africa for a T20, ODI and Test series in December and January before they host the West Indies for a Test series the same month.

Pakistan’s recent lackluster performances in all three formats of the game have invited scathing criticism from cricket experts and fans alike. Both have blamed a lack of quality pitches and infrastructure in the country for Pakistan’s hapless performances while many also point to frequent changes in the PCB’s management and a lack of unity in the team for Pakistan’s losses. 

Pakistan squad: Shan Masood (captain), Saud Shakeel (vice-captain), Aamir Jamal, Abdullah Shafique, Abrar Ahmed, Babar Azam, Mir Hamza, Mohammad Huraira, Mohammad Rizwan (wicket-keeper), Naseem Shah, Noman Ali, Saim Ayub, Salman Ali Agha, Sarfaraz Ahmed (wicket-keeper), and Shaheen Shah Afridi, Zahid Mehmood.

England squad: Ben Stokes (captain), Rehan Ahmed, Gus Atkinson, Shoaib Bashir, Harry Brook, Brydon Carse, Jordan Cox, Zak Crawley, Ben Duckett, Jack Leach, Ollie Pope, Matthew Potts, Joe Root, Jamie Smith, Olly Stone, Chris Woakes.
 


Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series

Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series
Updated 16 min 22 sec ago
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Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series

Three things we learned from the England-Australia ODI series
  • Inexperienced England gave Australia a scare by leveling three-match series 2-2 before losing
  • England stand-in skipper Harry Brook emerges leading run-scorer for either side during series 

LONDON: Australia completed a 3-2 one-day international series victory over England with a 49-run win in a rain-shortened clash at Bristol on Sunday.

But an inexperienced England 50-over team gave the world champions a scare by levelling the series at 2-2 after a pair of thumping defeats.

Below AFP Sport looks at some of the taking points to have emerged from an intriguing campaign between the arch-rivals.

Travis Head, having the time of his cricketing life after hundreds in both Australia’s World Test Championship and World Cup final wins over India last year, was a thorn in England’s side with both bat and ball.

Blessed with an admirable temperament, as well as skill, his match-winning 154 not out in the 1st ODI at Trent Bridge set him up for a series return of 248 runs at an average of nearly 83 in four innings.

Quite where opponents should bowl to left-handed opener Head in this kind of form is something of a mystery, with the 30-year-old demonstrating his value as a back-up spinner with an ODI-best 4-28 at Bristol.

England stand-in captain Harry Brook was the leading run-scorer on either side this series with 312 runs in five innings at an average of 78, including a maiden and match-winning ODI century at Chester-le-Street on Tuesday, an 87 that paved the way for a colossal 186-run success at Lord’s on Friday and 72 at Bristol.

By his own admission this series saw Brook discover the “tempo” for ODI batting, with Australia coach Andrew McDonald saying after the 25-year-old Yorkshireman’s 110 in Durham: “He’s going to give us some headaches over the journey.”

Although Brook was deputising as captain this series in place of the injured Jos Buttler, he demonstrated a feel for the job that suggested England might gain from appointing him as ODI skipper on a full-time basis.

He also learned a valuable lesson when, following England’s seven-wicket loss in the series opener, he tried to explain some loose dismissals by saying: “If you get caught somewhere on the boundary or in the field then who cares?

Brook, however, clearly cares about whether England win or lose.

Playing cricket in England this late in September was always going to be a risk, with three matches this series cut short by bad weather.

But while sports fans are used to braving the cold and wet for 90 minutes at a football match, it’s asking a lot for them to be exposed to similar conditions for hours on end, as happened repeatedly in a series featuring day/night games as well as Sunday’s chilly climax.

Brook, asked about a quick turnaround before he travels with England on Tuesday for a Test series in Pakistan, replied: “I’m alright with it. I’m off to a hot country. It’s bloody freezing here, it’s horrible.”

The England and Wales Cricket Board might do well to remember that many fans don’t have the option of flying away to a warmer climate.


Americans defeat Internationals to capture Presidents Cup

Americans defeat Internationals to capture Presidents Cup
Updated 30 September 2024
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Americans defeat Internationals to capture Presidents Cup

Americans defeat Internationals to capture Presidents Cup
  • The US team featured 12 of the world’s 25 top-ranked players and won fights late in matches to continue their rivalry domination

MONTREAL: With 2025 US Ryder Cup captain Keegan Bradley delivering the deciding point, the United States won a 10th consecutive Presidents Cup on Sunday, defeating the Internationals 18.5-11.5 at Royal Montreal.
Bradley defeated South Korea’s Kim Si-woo 1-up to clinch the trophy, which gave the Americans a 13-1-1 lead in the series against the non-European side whose only win came in 1998.
“Wow, that was incredible,” Bradley said. “Just to play in this tournament and then to win the point, my goodness.”
The US team featured 12 of the world’s 25 top-ranked players and won fights late in matches to continue their rivalry domination.
“These players were amazing,” US captain Jim Furyk said. “These guys played their hearts out this week and they played really well on the back nine. We owned the back nine this week. That was the difference.”
The Internationals took seven lost or tied matches to the 18th hole this week before the Cup was decided.
“When you don’t get a win it’s disappointing but a lot of great things to take away,” Internationals captain Mike Weir of Canada said. “We’re close. A lot of these matches were so close.”
After winning Saturday’s foursomes and four-ball sessions each by 3-1, the Americans needed only 4.5 points in 12 singles matches for the trophy.
Wins by second-ranked Xander Schauffele, Russell Henley and Patrick Cantlay and a half-point tie from Sam Burns set the stage for Bradley, who last played on a US team at the 2014 Ryder Cup.
“Last time I played (in 2014), I was the point to lose the Ryder Cup,” Bradley said. “So if this is my last round as a player, I’m happy with that.”
Bradley, 38, birdied the 14th hole from just inside 12 feet for a 3-up lead over Kim.
But Bradley missed a four-foot par putt to lose 16 and an eight-foot birdie putt to clinch the match and Cup at the par-3 17th, then watched Kim sink a five-footer for birdie to push the match to the 18th hole.
Kim dropped his approach to just outside eight feet while Bradley landed 26 feet away. Bradley rolled his putt to the edge of the hole for a concession par, but when Kim missed his birdie putt, the Cup was sealed for the USA.
“I learned I can still do this,” said Bradley. “It’s always hard. That was really uncomfortable there at the end but I’m really proud of how everyone played.”
Schauffele, this year’s British Open and PGA Championship winner, made seven birdies and took the last five front-nine holes in winning 4&3 to finish 4-1 this week.
“My goal was just to set the tone, get red up on that board as early as possible, and I was able to do that,” Schauffele said.
Burns and Tom Kim tied in a match the American never trailed. Kim tied Burns with a 15-foot birdie putt to win 15 but missed another 15-footer to win 18, settling for a half-point.
“I struggled with my irons. Didn’t hit it great,” said Burns, the week’s only unbeaten player with three wins and a draw.
Henley’s four-foot par putt at 16 brought a 3&2 win over South Korean Im Sung-jae, who won only one hole and never led.
Japan’s seventh-ranked Hideki Matsuyama took an emotional 1-up victory over top-ranked Scottie Scheffler in a match that was never more than 1-up either way. Matsuyama birdied three of the last five holes for the triumph.
“Really happy with how I played,” Matsuyama said.
Canada’s Corey Conners beat Tony Finau 5&3 as the tension built.
Patrick Cantlay never trailed in putting the Americans on the brink with a 3&1 win over Canada’s Taylor Pendrith.
Cantlay sank a five-foot birdie putt to win 14 for a 1-up lead, dropped his approach inches from the cup to win 15 and closed out victory with a nine-foot birdie putt to win 17.
“It’s great to have the best players in the world on my team,” Cantlay said. “Everybody fought hard this week.”