’Revolutionary’ Dupont turns focus to Olympics after record Top 14 success

Toulouse’s french center Antoine Dupont dives and scores the opening try during the French Top 14 rugby union final match between the Stade Toulousain (Toulouse) and Union Bordeaux-Begles (UBB) at the Velodrome Stadium in Marseille, southeastern france, on June 28, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 29 June 2024
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’Revolutionary’ Dupont turns focus to Olympics after record Top 14 success

PARIS: Superstar scrum-half Antoine Dupont was omnipresent once again as his club Toulouse claimed a third Top 14 and Champions Cup double on Friday but his mind now switches to this summer’s home Olympic Games.
French rugby’s poster boy Dupont was unplayable at times as the aristocrats of French rugby cruised past Bordeaux-Begles 59-3 in Marseille to add to May’s Champions Cup success.
The 27-year-old scored two tries and set up another less than a month from the 2024 Games’ men’s sevens final at the Stade de France.
A victory in Paris would be historic for Les Bleus, beating the women’s silver medal in Tokyo three years ago.
“I have one week of holidays before I join up with the Olympics squad,” Dupont told France Televisions after the victory.
“I will enjoy this, rest up to get there with a fresh mind and to be motivated to start again to win something else,” the 2021 World Rugby player of the year added.
Dupont’s ability seemed to have peaked in early 2022.
He had claimed Toulouse’s second ever double and lifted France’s first Six Nations in more than a decade.
They came a few months after he was named World Rugby player of the year.
This season, Dupont’s 15-a-side campaign started with a heartbreaking Rugby World Cup quarter-final defeat to eventual winners South Africa.
He has managed to put that to one side and in February he turned his hand to the shorter form of the game and was like a duck to water on his sevens debut in Canada.

A week later he helped Les Bleus to their first leg success since 2005 as they won in Los Angeles.
The former Castres half-back ended the campaign with another win, in Madrid.
The rookie of the year award followed having featured in just three of the season’s eight legs.
His two tries in the Top 14 final took him to 11 club touchdowns for the season, equalling his 2021 personal best.
“I think I’ve achieved much more than I could have dreamt of as a child,” Dupont told Canal+ after the Bordeaux-Begles’ rout.
“I have to realize it but not too much as to be able to keep dreaming,” he added.
Dupont has become a symbol of the increasingly healthy state of French rugby, with the national team and its clubs blossoming.
Since the sport became professional in 1995, it has been plagued with in-fighting between the French Rugby Federation (FFR) and influential clubs, such as Dupont’s Toulouse.
But his Olympic wish originating back in spring of 2022, was the fruit of the work done by FFR chiefs and Toulouse.
Dupont sat out this year’s Six Nations and was rested by his club for parts of the season, prioritising his seven-a-side obligations.
“What was amazing with what Antoine has done is that we called upon him in a sporadic way throughout the season and every time he’s been with us he was the player he’s capable of being in the big moments,” Toulouse head coach Ugo Mola told reporters after the final.
“I remain convinced that very few players can change their sport, I think in the few years to come he can revolutionize the sport.
“He might be able to have a go at rugby league too?” Mola jokingly added.


Saudi taekwondo champion Dunya Abu-Talib wins IOC Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion Award for Asia

Updated 07 March 2025
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Saudi taekwondo champion Dunya Abu-Talib wins IOC Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion Award for Asia

  • Abu-Talib recognized for her inspiring contribution to empowering female athletes, IOC says
  • Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal, Saudi Olympic and Paralympic Committee’s president, voices pride in the achievement

RIYADH: Taekwondo national team athlete Dunya Abu Talib has become the first Saudi sportsperson to win the International Olympic Committee’s Equality, Diversity, and Inclusion Award for Asia.
Abu Talib, the first Saudi woman to qualify for the Olympic Games and win an Asian gold medal, was given the 2024 award in recognition of her inspiring contribution to empowering female athletes both locally and internationally, the IOC said in a statement on Friday.
Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal, the Saudi Olympic and Paralympic Committee president, expressed his pride in the achievement, saying: “I congratulate Abu Talib on this well-deserved award, which reflects the significant progress in women’s sports in the Kingdom, thanks to the unlimited support of our wise leadership.”
The recognition shows that Saudi women are now playing a key role in global sports and serves as a motivation for the next generation of female athletes to achieve even greater success, he said.
Abu Talib ranked first globally in the International Taekwondo Federation’s general classification for the under-53 kg weight category for March 2025.
SOPC continues its commitment to supporting male and female athletes in the Kingdom by providing a comprehensive sports environment that enables them to achieve global success and raise the Saudi flag at the world’s leading sporting events.


‘No advantage’ in playing Champions Trophy matches in Dubai, says Indian batting coach

Updated 07 March 2025
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‘No advantage’ in playing Champions Trophy matches in Dubai, says Indian batting coach

  • The tournament’s tangled schedule, forcing teams to travel to Dubai to play India, has become controversial
  • New Zealand head coach says his team has played a game in Dubai and will learn quickly from that experience

DUBAI: India playing all their Champions Trophy matches in Dubai was a pre-tournament decision and the talk of unfair advantage is baseless, the team’s batting coach said on Friday.
Rohit Sharma’s team face New Zealand in the title clash on Sunday at the Dubai International Stadium, where India have been unbeaten in four matches.
India refused to tour hosts Pakistan in the eight-nation tournament due to political tensions and were given Dubai as their venue in the United Arab Emirates.
“The draw that happened, it happened before,” batting coach Sitanshu Kotak told reporters. “After India winning four matches, if people feel that there is an advantage, then I don’t know what to say about it.”
The tournament’s tangled schedule, with teams flying in and out of the UAE from Pakistan while India have stayed put, has been hugely controversial.
South Africa batsman David Miller said “it was not an ideal situation” for his team to fly in to Dubai to wait on India’s semifinal opponent and then fly back to Lahore in less than 24 hours.
Even nominal hosts Pakistan had to jump on a jet and fly to Dubai to play India, rather than face them on home soil.
The pitches have been vastly different in the two countries.
Pakistan tracks produced big totals, in contrast to the slow and turning decks of the Dubai stadium.
“End of the day, I think in a game, you have to play good cricket every day when you turn up,” the 52-year-old Kotak said. “So the only thing they (critics) may say is that we play here. But that is how the draw is.”
“So nothing else can happen in that. It is not that after coming here, they changed something and we got an advantage,” he added.
India have been the team to beat after they topped Group A, which had New Zealand, Pakistan and Bangladesh.
They then beat Australia in the first semifinal.
New Zealand, led by Mitchell Santner, lost the last group game to India by 44 runs before they beat South Africa in the second semifinal in Lahore.
Kotak said the previous result between the two teams will have no bearing on their mindset going into the final.
“That depends how the New Zealand team thinks, but I think we should not think that,” said Kotak.
“We should just try and turn up and play a good game of cricket because there is no use thinking about the last match.”
New Zealand head coach Gary Stead said they are not too worried about India’s advantage.
“I mean, look, the decision around that’s out of our hands,” said Stead.
“So, it’s not something we worry about too much. India have got to play all their games here in Dubai. But as you said, we have had a game here and we’ll learn very quickly from that experience there as well.”
“And if we’re good enough to beat India on Sunday, then I’m sure we’ll be very, very happy,” he added.


Brighton boss Hurzeler targets ‘new peaks’ in Premier League

Updated 07 March 2025
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Brighton boss Hurzeler targets ‘new peaks’ in Premier League

  • Brighton’s extra-time FA Cup victory at Newcastle last weekend was a fifth straight win in all competitions
  • Hurzeler has enjoyed an impressive first campaign at the club, who host Fulham on Saturday

LONDON: Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler has urged his side to “climb new peaks” as they seek to move into the Premier League’s top six.
The soaring Seagulls have been on an impressive run since being hammered 7-0 at Nottingham Forest on Feb. 1.
Brighton’s extra-time FA Cup victory at Newcastle last weekend was a fifth straight win in all competitions for the south coast side.
Hurzeler — at 32 the youngest permanent manager in Premier League history — has enjoyed an impressive first campaign at the club, who host Fulham on Saturday.
Marco Silva’s Fulham are ninth in the table, one place below Brighton as the race for European places hots up.
Hurzeler, two years younger than Brighton forward Danny Welbeck, has challenged his team to aim high.
The club’s best-ever Premier League finish was sixth, in the 2022/23 season, earning qualification for the Europa League.
“It is very important we focus on our journey and that we really believe in it,” Hurzeler said on Friday.
“Yesterday, I received a picture from a mountain. In a mountain you always have new peaks, new peaks you have to climb. That is the goal for us, we have to climb new peaks.”
He added: “Fulham will be a big, big challenge. They have played an unbelievable season, they play very compact as a team and have individual quality.”
Hurzeler said Japan winger Kaoru Mitoma would be available, having been forced off with cramp at Newcastle.


India football great Chhetri comes out of retirement aged 40

Updated 07 March 2025
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India football great Chhetri comes out of retirement aged 40

  • The former captain, the fourth-highest men’s international goalscorer of all time, played his last match for India in June 2024 in a World Cup qualifier
  • Chhetri said last year that “instinct” told him the match against Kuwait should be his last and he bowed out in front of nearly 59,000 fans in Kolkata

MUMBAI: Indian football legend Sunil Chhetri will return to the national team aged 40 in an unexpected reversal of his decision to hang up his boots last year.
The former captain, the fourth-highest men’s international goalscorer of all time, played his last match for India in June 2024 in a World Cup qualifier.
Chhetri said last year that “instinct” told him the match against Kuwait should be his last and he bowed out in front of nearly 59,000 fans in Kolkata.
But on Thursday, India head coach Manolo Marquez announced the return of India’s most-capped player for the March international window.
India are out of qualifying for the 2026 World Cup and are now targeting the Asian Cup in 2027.
“The qualification for the Asian Cup is very crucial for us. Given the importance of the tournament and the matches ahead, I discussed with Sunil Chhetri about making a comeback to strengthen the national team,” Marquez said in a statement from the All India Football Federation.
“He agreed, and so we have included him in the squad.”
India play a friendly against Maldives on March 19, in preparation for an Asian Cup qualifier against Bangladesh on March 25.
Football has struggled to find its feet among the 1.4 billion people of India, where the sport is dwarfed by the nation’s longstanding cricket obsession.
Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter once called India a “sleeping giant” of football.
Chhetri is a sporting icon in cricket-mad India.
The diminutive striker, who is 1.7 meters (5ft 7in) tall, made his debut against fierce rivals Pakistan in 2005 and scored India’s only goal.
Chhetri had two brief but unsuccessful spells in Portugal and the United States, but has spent most of his career in India.
In 2009 he was offered a contract by London club Queens Park Rangers, in England’s second tier, but he could not get a work permit.


Young Spanish star embraces transition from Barcelona to Al-Ittihad

Updated 07 March 2025
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Young Spanish star embraces transition from Barcelona to Al-Ittihad

  • Unai Hernandez talks Saudi Pro League debut, fan support and Al-Ittihad’s title focus

JEDDAH: Although a statement addition to the Roshn Saudi League in January, Unai Hernandez had to wait a little before making his debut.

Maybe that was to be expected. The Spanish starlet, a feature of FC Barcelona’s reserve side this season, only made the transition from teenager to 20-year-old man a month before he left his homeland for Saudi Arabia.

Born in Barcelona, his transfer from the Spanish giants to Jeddah’s Al-Ittihad represented the midfielder’s first taste of the professional game outside his own country.

However, a few weeks after he left La Liga for the RSL, Hernandez finally got the opportunity to show what he could do in Al-Ittihad’s home clash against Al-Okhdood last Sunday.

The young star was introduced at Alinma Stadium as a 76th-minute substitute, replacing Saudi winger Abdulrahman Al-Obud.

For Hernandez, it was worth the wait.

“I am very happy to make my debut in this great team,” he said after the 1-1 draw. “Since I arrived, I was really eager to play, and well, it has been a tough match where we lost these points and the victory at the end.

“But we can’t relax. And we have to try to win every possible match."

Despite his tender years, Hernandez already sounds like a seasoned pro. It maybe helps that he is surrounded in the Al-Ittihad squad by some of football’s most decorated stars.

Among them are Karim Benzema, the club captain and winner of the 2022 Ballon d’Or. Then there is N’Golo Kante, a FIFA World Cup winner. And Fabinho, who, like Benzema, is a European champion who has won the UEFA Champions League.

As they have already followed the same path from Europe to Saudi Arabia, they will be crucial to helping Hernandez settle swiftly.

“I feel very comfortable with my new teammates,” Hernandez said. “The fans also support me a lot, and that makes me happy and gives me a lot of confidence when I go out for those minutes.”

Although he missed Thursday night’s 1-1 draw with Al-Qadsiah, he has said before that he hopes to play a role, no matter how big or small, in Al-Ittihad’s intended march to the title. With such a talented group of teammates, no doubt he is biding his time as he waits for his next chance to shine.