Jack Grange for Grazia UK with Emmanuelle Lacou
[original_title 301 32 22 0 29 In a recent editorial for Grazia UK, photographer Jack…
[original_title 301 32 22 0 29 In a recent editorial for Grazia UK, photographer Jack…
Apr 6, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley (4) handles the ball as Memphis Grizzlies forward GG Jackson (45) defends during the first quarter at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images The Cleveland Cavaliers overcame a 17-point first-half deficit to defeat the host Memphis Grizzlies 142-126 Monday night and secure the 14th 50-win season in franchise history.
Evan Mobley led the Cavs (50-29) with 24 points, while Dennis Schroder added 22 points and 11 assists and Sam Merrell scored 21. Keon Ellis contributed 19 points and eight assists and Jarrett Allen had 13 points and nine boards for Cleveland, which won for the ninth time in 11 games.
Plagued by injuries throughout the season, Memphis (25-54) lost its fifth straight and fell for the 18th time in 20 games, but the Grizzlies tied the NBA record for most 3-pointers made in a game. Adama Bal’s 3-pointer with 1:41 remaining gave the Grizzlies their 29th trey, tying Boston (2024) and Milwaukee (2020) for the record. Memphis finished 29 of 59 (49.2%) from long range.
Olivier-Maxence Prosper paced the Grizzlies with 24 points on 10-of-12 shooting, while Dariq Whitehead and Bal came off the bench to score 20 apiece. Lucas Williamson added 17 points, five rebounds and four assists. Walter Clayton Jr. added 10 points and 11 assists.
Cleveland played without Donovan Mitchell (right ankle), James Harden (personal reasons) and Max Strus (left foot) but won its seventh straight game in the series.
Cleveland trailed 44-27 in the second quarter but bounced back to lead 68-64 at the half. Behind 10 second-period points from Ellis, the Cavaliers outscored the Grizzlies 44-28 in the quarter while shooting 63%.
The Cavaliers extended their lead to 17 points late in the third quarter on a 3-pointer by Merrill and maintained a double-digit advantage for most of the fourth quarter. Memphis trimmed the margin to 10 points late in the fourth on Bal’s record-tying 3-pointer, but the hosts got no closer.
With an abundance of key players out because of injuries, including season-ending injuries to star guard Ja Morant and big man Zach Edey, Memphis is limping its way to the regular-season finish line. The Grizzlies placed a lineup on the floor that included four players on 10-day contracts.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley (4) handles the ball as Memphis Grizzlies forward GG Jackson (45) defends during the first quarter at FedExForum. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images The Cleveland Cavaliers overcame a 17-point first-half deficit to defeat the host Memphis Grizzlies 142-126 Monday night and secure the 14th 50-win season in franchise history.
Evan Mobley led the Cavs (50-29) with 24 points, while Dennis Schroder added 22 points and 11 assists and Sam Merrell scored 21. Keon Ellis contributed 19 points and eight assists and Jarrett Allen had 13 points and nine boards for Cleveland, which won for the ninth time in 11 games.
Plagued by injuries throughout the season, Memphis (25-54) lost its fifth straight and fell for the 18th time in 20 games, but the Grizzlies tied the NBA record for most 3-pointers made in a game. Adama Bal’s 3-pointer with 1:41 remaining gave the Grizzlies their 29th trey, tying Boston (2024) and Milwaukee (2020) for the record. Memphis finished 29 of 59 (49.2%) from long range.
Olivier-Maxence Prosper paced the Grizzlies with 24 points on 10-of-12 shooting, while Dariq Whitehead and Bal came off the bench to score 20 apiece. Lucas Williamson added 17 points, five rebounds and four assists. Walter Clayton Jr. added 10 points and 11 assists.
Cleveland played without Donovan Mitchell (right ankle), James Harden (personal reasons) and Max Strus (left foot) but won its seventh straight game in the series.
Cleveland trailed 44-27 in the second quarter but bounced back to lead 68-64 at the half. Behind 10 second-period points from Ellis, the Cavaliers outscored the Grizzlies 44-28 in the quarter while shooting 63%.
The Cavaliers extended their lead to 17 points late in the third quarter on a 3-pointer by Merrill and maintained a double-digit advantage for most of the fourth quarter. Memphis trimmed the margin to 10 points late in the fourth on Bal’s record-tying 3-pointer, but the hosts got no closer.
With an abundance of key players out because of injuries, including season-ending injuries to star guard Ja Morant and big man Zach Edey, Memphis is limping its way to the regular-season finish line. The Grizzlies placed a lineup on the floor that included four players on 10-day contracts.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Memphis, Tennessee, USA; Cleveland Cavaliers center Evan Mobley (4) handles the ball…
Sports can be rather ruthless when it comes to poorly timed injuries. Luka Doncic, the Los Angeles Lakers’ only hope and a legitimate MVP candidate, strained his hamstring and is out indefinitely — very possibly missing the first round of the NBA Playoffs or more. Austin Reaves, their second primary offensive creator, went down to an oblique strain and could miss even more time. He’s trying to rush back, but that’s a scary idea in itself, too. If this was not pro basketball, everyone could just rest up and hit the ground running when healed. The Lakers do not have time for that, and they must soldier on with whatever forces they can muster.
If LeBron James can somehow drag his shorthanded team out of the first round, it will be an iconic, hitherto unheard-of effort that the poets will sing about for decades. But the far more pressing fallout of these injuries is this: the Lakers’ peril creates a power vacuum in the Western Conference that other teams are ready to pounce on.
What was a fairly even field in the West just got tilted hard in favor of whoever can figure out how to play the Lakers in the first round. Currently, the Lakers, Denver Nuggets and Houston Rockets are separated by less than two games with only four games left. It’s anyone’s guess who will be 3, 4 and 5. The Nuggets and Rockets have both been on absolute tears, winning nine and six straight games, respectively. The Minnesota Timberwolves, the six seed, thought they had won the lottery and that the Lakers had locked up the three seed to be their first-round opponent — not so. This is all terribly confusing, so I’m going to break it down like an NBA seeding-logistic DJ making a really boring mixtape:
The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed opponents each round. I repeat: The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed opponents. That means the winner of the 2-7 match always plays the winner of the 3-6 match AND the winner of the 1-8 match always plays the winner of the 4-5 match. I forget this every year, but we have to remember it this time because it’s important. Write it on your hand. Tattoo it on your back like John Wick. Schedule send an email to yourself every two hours with the subject line “The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed.” Whatever you have to do.
That is critical this year, because, with the Lakers absolutely gutted but right in the thick of a Western Conference seeding battle, tiny shifts in standing can have explosive results on the bracket. I’m not sure any of this is really controllable, but here’s my read on how it could shake down.
If Denver bops the Lakers down to four, the Rockets may luck out, and Oklahoma City may seriously luck out by having to play … whoever the eight seed is and then the winner of Los Angeles/Houston; a very easy duo to beat if the Lakers do not have Luka. Meanwhile, Denver is now faced with a super winnable 6-3 against the Timberwolves and a second round against the scary-but-inexperienced San Antonio Spurs.
The Rockets could mess all of that up if they somehow stumble their way to the three seed, in which case the Spurs are your big winners, staring down only the winner of Houston/Minnesota while the Thunder are like “bro what do you mean I have to play the Nuggets in the second round?”
Denver, meanwhile, might have four free wins left on their schedule, playing two tanking teams and then the Spurs and Thunder in their last two; seems hard, until you realize both those teams are basically locked into their seeds and will probably rest their starters. Houston has a bunch of teams that might actually be trying, and the Lakers are going to have to dig deep, no matter who they play.
This is a fascinating ordeal. With everyone trying so hard to avoid that guy but seek out that other guy and making sure that this dude isn’t waiting around the corner has created so much confusion that we should probably just all agree to just… win basketball games and circle back later. But if we had to distill all of this into some deliverables, here’s what I got:
1. The Timberwolves could be trouble for everyone if this breaks right — if the Wolves get the Lakers in the first round and the Spurs in the second round, they could plausibly make the Western Conference Finals. They are 2-1 against the Spurs this year and their loss was by three points. They have size and match up pretty well. Meanwhile, the Thunder may have to deal with Stephen Curry in round one and Nikola Jokic in round two. That’s less fun.
2. If LeBron James can drag his team out of the first round without Luka and Reaves, he might be the GOAT — I’m not going to sit here and tell you that LeBron, Marcus Smart and Deandre Ayton have a great shot at beating anyone, but if they do… I mean, come on now. That would be legendary stuff.
3. Every single team in the West’s Top 6 can win the West — this has been a hilarious, weird, unpredictable NBA season. You can talk yourself into every single team in the field to make the Finals; if the Lakers are forfeit, even the Rockets can make this happen. If the Lakers somehow make it to Luka’s return, they could pull a rabbit out of a hat.
Basically, had the Lakers, Nuggets, Timberwolves and Rockets all stayed in their assigned seats, this would be reasonably simple and predictable. Now, we’re in a full-blown crisis trying to figure this out. Nothing about this will be logical, nothing about this will be boring. And as a fan of a team in the Eastern Conference, I cannot wait.
Sports can be rather ruthless when it comes to poorly timed injuries. Luka Doncic, the Los Angeles Lakers’ only hope and a legitimate MVP candidate, strained his hamstring and is out indefinitely — very possibly missing the first round of the NBA Playoffs or more. Austin Reaves, their second primary offensive creator, went down to an oblique strain and could miss even more time. He’s trying to rush back, but that’s a scary idea in itself, too. If this was not pro basketball, everyone could just rest up and hit the ground running when healed. The Lakers do not have time for that, and they must soldier on with whatever forces they can muster.
If LeBron James can somehow drag his shorthanded team out of the first round, it will be an iconic, hitherto unheard-of effort that the poets will sing about for decades. But the far more pressing fallout of these injuries is this: the Lakers’ peril creates a power vacuum in the Western Conference that other teams are ready to pounce on.
What was a fairly even field in the West just got tilted hard in favor of whoever can figure out how to play the Lakers in the first round. Currently, the Lakers, Denver Nuggets and Houston Rockets are separated by less than two games with only four games left. It’s anyone’s guess who will be 3, 4 and 5. The Nuggets and Rockets have both been on absolute tears, winning nine and six straight games, respectively. The Minnesota Timberwolves, the six seed, thought they had won the lottery and that the Lakers had locked up the three seed to be their first-round opponent — not so. This is all terribly confusing, so I’m going to break it down like an NBA seeding-logistic DJ making a really boring mixtape:
The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed opponents each round. I repeat: The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed opponents. That means the winner of the 2-7 match always plays the winner of the 3-6 match AND the winner of the 1-8 match always plays the winner of the 4-5 match. I forget this every year, but we have to remember it this time because it’s important. Write it on your hand. Tattoo it on your back like John Wick. Schedule send an email to yourself every two hours with the subject line “The NBA Playoffs do not re-seed.” Whatever you have to do.
That is critical this year, because, with the Lakers absolutely gutted but right in the thick of a Western Conference seeding battle, tiny shifts in standing can have explosive results on the bracket. I’m not sure any of this is really controllable, but here’s my read on how it could shake down.
If Denver bops the Lakers down to four, the Rockets may luck out, and Oklahoma City may seriously luck out by having to play … whoever the eight seed is and then the winner of Los Angeles/Houston; a very easy duo to beat if the Lakers do not have Luka. Meanwhile, Denver is now faced with a super winnable 6-3 against the Timberwolves and a second round against the scary-but-inexperienced San Antonio Spurs.
The Rockets could mess all of that up if they somehow stumble their way to the three seed, in which case the Spurs are your big winners, staring down only the winner of Houston/Minnesota while the Thunder are like “bro what do you mean I have to play the Nuggets in the second round?”
Denver, meanwhile, might have four free wins left on their schedule, playing two tanking teams and then the Spurs and Thunder in their last two; seems hard, until you realize both those teams are basically locked into their seeds and will probably rest their starters. Houston has a bunch of teams that might actually be trying, and the Lakers are going to have to dig deep, no matter who they play.
This is a fascinating ordeal. With everyone trying so hard to avoid that guy but seek out that other guy and making sure that this dude isn’t waiting around the corner has created so much confusion that we should probably just all agree to just… win basketball games and circle back later. But if we had to distill all of this into some deliverables, here’s what I got:
1. The Timberwolves could be trouble for everyone if this breaks right — if the Wolves get the Lakers in the first round and the Spurs in the second round, they could plausibly make the Western Conference Finals. They are 2-1 against the Spurs this year and their loss was by three points. They have size and match up pretty well. Meanwhile, the Thunder may have to deal with Stephen Curry in round one and Nikola Jokic in round two. That’s less fun.
2. If LeBron James can drag his team out of the first round without Luka and Reaves, he might be the GOAT — I’m not going to sit here and tell you that LeBron, Marcus Smart and Deandre Ayton have a great shot at beating anyone, but if they do… I mean, come on now. That would be legendary stuff.
3. Every single team in the West’s Top 6 can win the West — this has been a hilarious, weird, unpredictable NBA season. You can talk yourself into every single team in the field to make the Finals; if the Lakers are forfeit, even the Rockets can make this happen. If the Lakers somehow make it to Luka’s return, they could pull a rabbit out of a hat.
Basically, had the Lakers, Nuggets, Timberwolves and Rockets all stayed in their assigned seats, this would be reasonably simple and predictable. Now, we’re in a full-blown crisis trying to figure this out. Nothing about this will be logical, nothing about this will be boring. And as a fan of a team in the Eastern Conference, I cannot wait.
Sports can be rather ruthless when it comes to poorly timed injuries. Luka Doncic, the…
Paris St Germain manager Luis Enrique has played down suggestions his side is favourite ahead of Wednesday’s Champions League quarterfinal first leg at home to out-of-form Liverpool.
The English champion, fifth in the Premier League, has suffered 15 defeats across all competitions this season – its most in a single campaign since losing 18 matches in 2014-15.
PSG, meanwhile, leads Ligue 1 and is well placed to defend its Champions League crown. “It’s difficult to talk about Liverpool,” Enrique told reporters on Tuesday. “Liverpool manager Arne Slot speaks very well about them.
READ | PSG vs Lens postponed to May 13 as LFP prioritises Champions League and UEFA coefficient push
“My view is that it’s both the same team and a different team. Everyone is trying to work out who the favourites are, but in this sort of match that means nothing. It will be tough for both teams.
“Showing that we’re still in the running every year and playing against Liverpool is always a positive thing. We want to reach the semi-finals; we know how difficult it will be, but we’re very motivated.”
The tie is a repeat of last season’s round-of-16 meeting, when PSG knocked Liverpool out on penalties.
“Last year, everyone said it was Liverpool, and PSG went through,” the Spaniard said.
This time, it will also see Liverpool striker Hugo Ekitike come up against his former club.
The 23-year-old France international has enjoyed an impressive first season in England, scoring 17 goals and providing six assists in 43 appearances.
Ekitike spent a brief spell at PSG between 2023 and 2024 but found minutes hard to come by in a squad featuring Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe.
“After leaving here, he did very well in Germany and at Liverpool,” Luis Enrique added. “He’s now an international player and has made great progress. He was very young when he was here; he’s improved a lot.”
Spanish midfielder Fabian Ruiz did not train with the squad on Monday due to injury, but French winger Bradley Barcola did following an ankle problem.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Paris St Germain manager Luis Enrique has played down suggestions his side is favourite ahead of Wednesday’s Champions League quarterfinal first leg at home to out-of-form Liverpool.
The English champion, fifth in the Premier League, has suffered 15 defeats across all competitions this season – its most in a single campaign since losing 18 matches in 2014-15.
PSG, meanwhile, leads Ligue 1 and is well placed to defend its Champions League crown. “It’s difficult to talk about Liverpool,” Enrique told reporters on Tuesday. “Liverpool manager Arne Slot speaks very well about them.
READ | PSG vs Lens postponed to May 13 as LFP prioritises Champions League and UEFA coefficient push
“My view is that it’s both the same team and a different team. Everyone is trying to work out who the favourites are, but in this sort of match that means nothing. It will be tough for both teams.
“Showing that we’re still in the running every year and playing against Liverpool is always a positive thing. We want to reach the semi-finals; we know how difficult it will be, but we’re very motivated.”
The tie is a repeat of last season’s round-of-16 meeting, when PSG knocked Liverpool out on penalties.
“Last year, everyone said it was Liverpool, and PSG went through,” the Spaniard said.
This time, it will also see Liverpool striker Hugo Ekitike come up against his former club.
The 23-year-old France international has enjoyed an impressive first season in England, scoring 17 goals and providing six assists in 43 appearances.
Ekitike spent a brief spell at PSG between 2023 and 2024 but found minutes hard to come by in a squad featuring Lionel Messi, Neymar and Kylian Mbappe.
“After leaving here, he did very well in Germany and at Liverpool,” Luis Enrique added. “He’s now an international player and has made great progress. He was very young when he was here; he’s improved a lot.”
Spanish midfielder Fabian Ruiz did not train with the squad on Monday due to injury, but French winger Bradley Barcola did following an ankle problem.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Paris St Germain manager Luis Enrique has played down suggestions his side is favourite ahead…
Apr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) warms up prior to a game against the Philadelphia 76ers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images Stephon Castle produced his fifth career triple-double with 19 points, 13 assists and 11 rebounds to lead a balanced San Antonio attack as the host Spurs defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 115-102 on Monday.
The Spurs played the second half without star center Victor Wembanyama, who sat out with a left rib contusion suffered in a second-quarter collision with the 76ers’ Paul George.
San Antonio (60-19) has now won 12 of its past 13 outings after having an 11-game winning streak snapped in Denver on Sunday. The Spurs are still alive for the top seed in the West and in the league but would have to win their remaining three games (all at home) and have top-ranked Oklahoma City lose three of its final four contests to attain that goal.
Wembanyama and Dylan Harper added 17 points each for San Antonio, with De’Aaron Fox and Keldon Johnson hitting for 13 apiece and Luke Kornet scoring 10.
The 76ers (43-36) dropped their second straight game and slipped to seventh place in the East.
Joel Embiid’s 34 points and 12 rebounds paced the 76ers, who also got 16 points from George, 15 from Tyrese Maxey and 14 by VJ Edgecombe.
The Spurs led by seven points at halftime after a physical first half that saw plenty of fur flying. One that was the worse for the wear was Wembanyama, who went to the locker room twice in the second quarter but finished the half on the floor.
Even without Wembanyama, San Antonio built its lead to as many as 11 points in third quarter before a late 76ers rally, capped by a reverse layup by Maxey with 50 seconds left, culled the deficit to 87-85.
San Antonio scored the final five points of the third period and then 10 of the first 14 in the fourth to extend its advantage to 13 points. The 76ers got no closer than nine points the rest of the way.
The Spurs led 29-28 after a physical first quarter. San Antonio eventually expanded its lead to as many as eight points before a George free throw with 16.2 seconds to play forced the Spurs to settle for a 62-55 advantage at the break.
Embiid led all scorers in the first half with 20 points, while George added 13 for Philadelphia. Wembanyama’s 17 points paced the Spurs before halftime as Castle amassed 10 points, six rebounds and six assists.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) warms up prior to a game against the Philadelphia 76ers at Frost Bank Center. Mandatory Credit: Scott Wachter-Imagn Images Stephon Castle produced his fifth career triple-double with 19 points, 13 assists and 11 rebounds to lead a balanced San Antonio attack as the host Spurs defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 115-102 on Monday.
The Spurs played the second half without star center Victor Wembanyama, who sat out with a left rib contusion suffered in a second-quarter collision with the 76ers’ Paul George.
San Antonio (60-19) has now won 12 of its past 13 outings after having an 11-game winning streak snapped in Denver on Sunday. The Spurs are still alive for the top seed in the West and in the league but would have to win their remaining three games (all at home) and have top-ranked Oklahoma City lose three of its final four contests to attain that goal.
Wembanyama and Dylan Harper added 17 points each for San Antonio, with De’Aaron Fox and Keldon Johnson hitting for 13 apiece and Luke Kornet scoring 10.
The 76ers (43-36) dropped their second straight game and slipped to seventh place in the East.
Joel Embiid’s 34 points and 12 rebounds paced the 76ers, who also got 16 points from George, 15 from Tyrese Maxey and 14 by VJ Edgecombe.
The Spurs led by seven points at halftime after a physical first half that saw plenty of fur flying. One that was the worse for the wear was Wembanyama, who went to the locker room twice in the second quarter but finished the half on the floor.
Even without Wembanyama, San Antonio built its lead to as many as 11 points in third quarter before a late 76ers rally, capped by a reverse layup by Maxey with 50 seconds left, culled the deficit to 87-85.
San Antonio scored the final five points of the third period and then 10 of the first 14 in the fourth to extend its advantage to 13 points. The 76ers got no closer than nine points the rest of the way.
The Spurs led 29-28 after a physical first quarter. San Antonio eventually expanded its lead to as many as eight points before a George free throw with 16.2 seconds to play forced the Spurs to settle for a 62-55 advantage at the break.
Embiid led all scorers in the first half with 20 points, while George added 13 for Philadelphia. Wembanyama’s 17 points paced the Spurs before halftime as Castle amassed 10 points, six rebounds and six assists.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; San Antonio, Texas, USA; San Antonio Spurs guard Stephon Castle (5) warms…
Junior Commonwealth Championships gold medal-winning weightlifter Sairaj Pardeshi has been provisionally suspended by the National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) for a failed dope test, months after alleging a conspiracy to sabotage his career by a coach.
He has tested positive for “Metanolone”, a banned anabolic steroid that aids muscle building.
The 18-year-old from Maharashtra, who won a gold in the men’s 88kg junior category at the Commonwealth Championships last year, has alleged conspiracy behind the outcome.
He had written to the Indian Weightlifting Federation (IWLF) and the Sports Authority of India in October, claiming that a coach present at the national camp held a personal vendetta against him.
In an email dated October 24, 2025, Sairaj alleged that the coach, whose identity has been withheld by the weightlifter, instigated others to tamper with his food and water.
“The coach instigated my friends and some competitors to mix some drugs in my food or water bottle,” Sairaj wrote in the e-mail.
He further claimed that the coach had earlier threatened to “ruin” his career as well.
“After my Commonwealth Championships performance, I started gaining recognition. The coach wanted credit for my success despite not training me.
ALSO READ | Khelo India Youth Games: Maharashtra’s Sairaj breaks weightlifting record
“Then some people heard the coach say ‘Sairaj is getting ahead, we need to bring him down somehow, mix something in his food’. This was in October,” he alleged.
Sairaj, who is part of NADA’s Registered Testing Pool, said he reported the matter immediately. A dope test conducted on October 26, two days after his complaint, returned negative.
However, in an out-of-competition test in December, Sairaj was found positive for “Metanolone” leading to a provisional ban. As a result, he wasn’t able to take part in the National Championships in February.
“I have undergone several dope tests and never failed before this. I was in Patiala from October to December and did not travel anywhere,” Sairaj said.
The IWLF has also conducted an inquiry, the findings of which are yet to be revealed.
“We have appealed that the athlete be allowed to compete at events which he is not allowed in provisional suspension,” Sairaj’s lawyer Munish Nagar said.
Hailing from Manmad in Maharashtra, Sairaj has been a consistent performer on the junior circuit.
At the Commonwealth Championship in Ahmedabad, he lifted a total of 348kg to clinch gold — a performance that would also have secured him the top spot in the senior category.
He had also won a bronze medal at the 2024 Asian Youth and Junior Weightlifting Championships in Doha.
Sairaj was training in Patiala for two years after spending five years at the National Centre of Excellence in Chhtarpati Sambhajinagar.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Junior Commonwealth Championships gold medal-winning weightlifter Sairaj Pardeshi has been provisionally suspended by the National Anti-Doping Agency (NADA) for a failed dope test, months after alleging a conspiracy to sabotage his career by a coach.
He has tested positive for “Metanolone”, a banned anabolic steroid that aids muscle building.
The 18-year-old from Maharashtra, who won a gold in the men’s 88kg junior category at the Commonwealth Championships last year, has alleged conspiracy behind the outcome.
He had written to the Indian Weightlifting Federation (IWLF) and the Sports Authority of India in October, claiming that a coach present at the national camp held a personal vendetta against him.
In an email dated October 24, 2025, Sairaj alleged that the coach, whose identity has been withheld by the weightlifter, instigated others to tamper with his food and water.
“The coach instigated my friends and some competitors to mix some drugs in my food or water bottle,” Sairaj wrote in the e-mail.
He further claimed that the coach had earlier threatened to “ruin” his career as well.
“After my Commonwealth Championships performance, I started gaining recognition. The coach wanted credit for my success despite not training me.
ALSO READ | Khelo India Youth Games: Maharashtra’s Sairaj breaks weightlifting record
“Then some people heard the coach say ‘Sairaj is getting ahead, we need to bring him down somehow, mix something in his food’. This was in October,” he alleged.
Sairaj, who is part of NADA’s Registered Testing Pool, said he reported the matter immediately. A dope test conducted on October 26, two days after his complaint, returned negative.
However, in an out-of-competition test in December, Sairaj was found positive for “Metanolone” leading to a provisional ban. As a result, he wasn’t able to take part in the National Championships in February.
“I have undergone several dope tests and never failed before this. I was in Patiala from October to December and did not travel anywhere,” Sairaj said.
The IWLF has also conducted an inquiry, the findings of which are yet to be revealed.
“We have appealed that the athlete be allowed to compete at events which he is not allowed in provisional suspension,” Sairaj’s lawyer Munish Nagar said.
Hailing from Manmad in Maharashtra, Sairaj has been a consistent performer on the junior circuit.
At the Commonwealth Championship in Ahmedabad, he lifted a total of 348kg to clinch gold — a performance that would also have secured him the top spot in the senior category.
He had also won a bronze medal at the 2024 Asian Youth and Junior Weightlifting Championships in Doha.
Sairaj was training in Patiala for two years after spending five years at the National Centre of Excellence in Chhtarpati Sambhajinagar.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Junior Commonwealth Championships gold medal-winning weightlifter Sairaj Pardeshi has been provisionally suspended by the National…
Apr 6, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Twins right fielder Matt Wallner (38) hits an RBI single against the Detroit Tigers in the third inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images Luke Keaschall clubbed a tiebreaking two-run home run and the Minnesota Twins pulled away for a 7-3 win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday night in Minneapolis.
Victor Caratini went 2-for-4 with three RBIs for Minnesota, which won the opener of a four-game series. Matt Wallner finished 2-for-5 with a double and an RBI.
Zach McKinstry went 1-for-3 with two RBIs to lead Detroit at the plate. Rookie Kevin McGonigle batted leadoff and went 1-for-5 with a double.
Twins right-hander Joe Ryan (1-1) allowed three runs (two earned) on three hits in five innings. He walked three and struck out seven.
Tigers right-hander Casey Mize (0-1) surrendered five runs on seven hits in 4 1/3 innings. He walked three and fanned four.
Cody Laweryson pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief to earn his first career save for the Twins. Minnesota’s bullpen combined to pitch four scoreless frames.
The Twins jumped to a 3-0 lead in the third inning.
Byron Buxton hit a leadoff double, advanced to third on a single by Trevor Larnach and scored on a sacrifice fly by Caratini. Wallner and Royce Lewis followed with back-to-back RBI singles.
The Tigers responded quickly to even the score at 3-all in the fourth.
Colt Keith ripped an RBI double to right for Detroit’s first run. McKinstry stepped to the plate with the bases loaded one out later and delivered a two-run single that scored Keith and Gleyber Torres.
In the bottom of the fourth, the Twins pulled ahead 5-3. Larnach hit a two-out single, and Keaschall followed with a two-run, 367-foot homer to left to give Minnesota the lead.
Minnesota added a pair of insurance runs against Detroit’s bullpen in the eighth.
Caratini capitalized on a two-out, bases-loaded opportunity when he knocked a two-run single to center. The hit scored Buxton and Austin Martin, each of whom had reached base by drawing a walk.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Twins right fielder Matt Wallner (38) hits an RBI single against the Detroit Tigers in the third inning at Target Field. Mandatory Credit: Jesse Johnson-Imagn Images Luke Keaschall clubbed a tiebreaking two-run home run and the Minnesota Twins pulled away for a 7-3 win over the Detroit Tigers on Monday night in Minneapolis.
Victor Caratini went 2-for-4 with three RBIs for Minnesota, which won the opener of a four-game series. Matt Wallner finished 2-for-5 with a double and an RBI.
Zach McKinstry went 1-for-3 with two RBIs to lead Detroit at the plate. Rookie Kevin McGonigle batted leadoff and went 1-for-5 with a double.
Twins right-hander Joe Ryan (1-1) allowed three runs (two earned) on three hits in five innings. He walked three and struck out seven.
Tigers right-hander Casey Mize (0-1) surrendered five runs on seven hits in 4 1/3 innings. He walked three and fanned four.
Cody Laweryson pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings of relief to earn his first career save for the Twins. Minnesota’s bullpen combined to pitch four scoreless frames.
The Twins jumped to a 3-0 lead in the third inning.
Byron Buxton hit a leadoff double, advanced to third on a single by Trevor Larnach and scored on a sacrifice fly by Caratini. Wallner and Royce Lewis followed with back-to-back RBI singles.
The Tigers responded quickly to even the score at 3-all in the fourth.
Colt Keith ripped an RBI double to right for Detroit’s first run. McKinstry stepped to the plate with the bases loaded one out later and delivered a two-run single that scored Keith and Gleyber Torres.
In the bottom of the fourth, the Twins pulled ahead 5-3. Larnach hit a two-out single, and Keaschall followed with a two-run, 367-foot homer to left to give Minnesota the lead.
Minnesota added a pair of insurance runs against Detroit’s bullpen in the eighth.
Caratini capitalized on a two-out, bases-loaded opportunity when he knocked a two-run single to center. The hit scored Buxton and Austin Martin, each of whom had reached base by drawing a walk.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; Minnesota Twins right fielder Matt Wallner (38) hits an…
Less than a week after playing a key role in the late goal that sent Sweden to the World Cup, Gustav Lundgren’s dreams of playing at the finals are in tatters after he tore his Achilles tendon while warming up for his first league game of the season on Monday.
Lundgren, whose raid down the right and into the penalty area set up Viktor Gyokeres to fire Sweden’s 88th-minute winner in a thrilling 3-2 playoff victory over Poland, faces an operation and rehab, rather than World Cup group games against Tunisia, the Netherlands and Japan.
READ | Gyokeres scores late winner as Sweden edges Poland to reach FIFA World Cup
“I’m a bit in shock. I haven’t really understood what happened or what it means,” he told reporters as he left the arena on crutches. “Everything indicates that the Achilles tendon has ruptured. That will be a fairly long absence, this season is more or less over.”
A late bloomer, the 30-year-old GAIS winger was playing in the third tier of Swedish football as recently as 2022, and few would have tipped that he would be called up to Graham Potter’s Sweden squad three years later.
His disappointment at missing the tournament was palpable as he spoke to reporters in Gothenburg following a 1-0 defeat for his club side in its league opener against Djurgarden.
“(Being in the World Cup squad) was not something I took for granted … but it is sad not to give yourself the chance to get the opportunity to be there and have that possibility. It will probably take a few days to understand what happened,” he said.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Less than a week after playing a key role in the late goal that sent Sweden to the World Cup, Gustav Lundgren’s dreams of playing at the finals are in tatters after he tore his Achilles tendon while warming up for his first league game of the season on Monday.
Lundgren, whose raid down the right and into the penalty area set up Viktor Gyokeres to fire Sweden’s 88th-minute winner in a thrilling 3-2 playoff victory over Poland, faces an operation and rehab, rather than World Cup group games against Tunisia, the Netherlands and Japan.
READ | Gyokeres scores late winner as Sweden edges Poland to reach FIFA World Cup
“I’m a bit in shock. I haven’t really understood what happened or what it means,” he told reporters as he left the arena on crutches. “Everything indicates that the Achilles tendon has ruptured. That will be a fairly long absence, this season is more or less over.”
A late bloomer, the 30-year-old GAIS winger was playing in the third tier of Swedish football as recently as 2022, and few would have tipped that he would be called up to Graham Potter’s Sweden squad three years later.
His disappointment at missing the tournament was palpable as he spoke to reporters in Gothenburg following a 1-0 defeat for his club side in its league opener against Djurgarden.
“(Being in the World Cup squad) was not something I took for granted … but it is sad not to give yourself the chance to get the opportunity to be there and have that possibility. It will probably take a few days to understand what happened,” he said.
Published on Apr 07, 2026
Less than a week after playing a key role in the late goal that sent…
Apr 6, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers shortstop Corey Seager (5) hits a single and drives in a run during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Corey Seager had two hits and an RBI and Jake Burger drove in the tiebreaking run with a sixth-inning double, leading the Texas Rangers to a 2-1 win over the slumping Seattle Mariners on Monday in Arlington, Texas.
The Rangers, who earned their first home win of the season, ended a four-game losing streak, while the Mariners lost for the fifth time in the past six games.
With the score 1-1 in the home sixth, Seager hit a two-out single off Mariners starter Logan Gilbert and moved to second base on a wild pitch. Burger then drove a 3-2 pitch into the gap in left-center field to drive in Seager.
Gilbert (0-2), with a 2.90 ERA in 16 previous appearances against the Rangers, pitched well against them once again on Monday but took the loss. He allowed two runs on six hits in six innings, with five strikeouts and no walks.
Seattle had just two hits for the night, one a solo home run by slugger Cal Raleigh in the first inning, his first of the season. It was the only hit yielded by Texas starter Jacob DeGrom, who went five innings, walked one and struck out six.
Jalen Beeks (1-0) threw an inning of scoreless relief for the win.
The Mariners put a runner on first base with one out in the top of the ninth when Rangers reliever Jakob Junis hit Julio Rodriguez with a pitch, but Josh Naylor grounded into a game-ending double play. Junis picked up his third save of the season.
The Rangers’ bullpen also got scoreless relief from Tyler Alexander, Cole Winn and Robert Garcia.
After Raleigh’s homer opened the scoring, Texas responded in the bottom of the first when Wyatt Langford doubled with one out and came home on Seager’s single to right.
Texas was coming off being swept in a three-game series by the visiting Cincinnati Reds, while Seattle dropped two of three at home against the Los Angeles Angels.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers shortstop Corey Seager (5) hits a single and drives in a run during the first inning against the Seattle Mariners at Globe Life Field. Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-Imagn Images Corey Seager had two hits and an RBI and Jake Burger drove in the tiebreaking run with a sixth-inning double, leading the Texas Rangers to a 2-1 win over the slumping Seattle Mariners on Monday in Arlington, Texas.
The Rangers, who earned their first home win of the season, ended a four-game losing streak, while the Mariners lost for the fifth time in the past six games.
With the score 1-1 in the home sixth, Seager hit a two-out single off Mariners starter Logan Gilbert and moved to second base on a wild pitch. Burger then drove a 3-2 pitch into the gap in left-center field to drive in Seager.
Gilbert (0-2), with a 2.90 ERA in 16 previous appearances against the Rangers, pitched well against them once again on Monday but took the loss. He allowed two runs on six hits in six innings, with five strikeouts and no walks.
Seattle had just two hits for the night, one a solo home run by slugger Cal Raleigh in the first inning, his first of the season. It was the only hit yielded by Texas starter Jacob DeGrom, who went five innings, walked one and struck out six.
Jalen Beeks (1-0) threw an inning of scoreless relief for the win.
The Mariners put a runner on first base with one out in the top of the ninth when Rangers reliever Jakob Junis hit Julio Rodriguez with a pitch, but Josh Naylor grounded into a game-ending double play. Junis picked up his third save of the season.
The Rangers’ bullpen also got scoreless relief from Tyler Alexander, Cole Winn and Robert Garcia.
After Raleigh’s homer opened the scoring, Texas responded in the bottom of the first when Wyatt Langford doubled with one out and came home on Seager’s single to right.
Texas was coming off being swept in a three-game series by the visiting Cincinnati Reds, while Seattle dropped two of three at home against the Los Angeles Angels.
–Field Level Media
Apr 6, 2026; Arlington, Texas, USA; Texas Rangers shortstop Corey Seager (5) hits a single…
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