×
Deadspin | FIFA watching Iran developments as World Cup nears

Deadspin | FIFA watching Iran developments as World Cup nears

Nov 29, 2022; Doha, Qatar; United States of America midfielder Yunus Musah (6) battles for the ball against Iran midfielder Mehdi Torabi (16) during the second half of a group stage match during the 2022 World Cup at Al Thumama Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Danielle Parhizkaran-Imagn Images

FIFA said Saturday it is keeping an eye on events in Iran after the United States launched a military strike on the nation.

The action comes just months before the start of World Cup play in June, with matches to be played in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Iran qualified for the tournament through its participation in the Asian Football Conference.

Iran is scheduled to play Belgium, New Zealand and Egypt in Group G. Two of the games are set for Los Angeles, one in Seattle.

FIFA secretary general Mattias Grafstrom said the organization is monitoring what happens.

“I read the news (about Iran) this morning the same way you did,” Grafstrom said at the International Football Association Board’s annual general meeting in Cardiff, Wales, per ESPN.

“We had a meeting today and it is premature to comment in detail, but we will monitor developments around all issues around the world.”

The World Cup draw took place in Washington, D.C., in December, with Iran represented.

“We will continue to communicate as we always do with three (host) governments as we always do in any case. Everybody will be safe,” Grafstrom said.

–Field Level Media

Source link
#Deadspin #FIFA #watching #Iran #developments #World #Cup #nears

Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.

But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.

“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells Sportstar.

These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.

“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.

READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K Bengaluru

This is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.

“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.

Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.

At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.

Second thoughts about surgery

Initially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.

ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policy

Sable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.

Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics.

Avinash Sable: ‘Don’t want to go to CWG just to participate’  Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells        Sportstar.These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K BengaluruThis is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.Second thoughts about surgeryInitially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policySable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics. Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                            

                            Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                                                    “What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.Finding his bestHe’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  Published on Apr 24, 2026  #Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

lightbox-info

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

“What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.

Finding his best

He’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.

Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.

For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.

But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  

Published on Apr 24, 2026

#Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate">Avinash Sable: ‘Don’t want to go to CWG just to participate’  Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells        Sportstar.These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K BengaluruThis is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.Second thoughts about surgeryInitially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policySable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics. Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                            

                            Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                                                    “What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.Finding his bestHe’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  Published on Apr 24, 2026  #Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate

Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K Bengaluru

This is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.

“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.

Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.

At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.

Second thoughts about surgery

Initially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.

ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policy

Sable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.

Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics.

Avinash Sable: ‘Don’t want to go to CWG just to participate’  Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells        Sportstar.These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K BengaluruThis is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.Second thoughts about surgeryInitially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policySable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics. Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                            

                            Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                                                    “What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.Finding his bestHe’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  Published on Apr 24, 2026  #Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

lightbox-info

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

“What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.

Finding his best

He’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.

Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.

For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.

But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  

Published on Apr 24, 2026

#Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate">Avinash Sable: ‘Don’t want to go to CWG just to participate’

Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.

Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.

But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.

“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells Sportstar.

These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.

“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.

READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K Bengaluru

This is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.

“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.

Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.

At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.

Second thoughts about surgery

Initially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.

ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policy

Sable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.

Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics.

Avinash Sable: ‘Don’t want to go to CWG just to participate’  Four years ago, Avinash Sable produced one of the defining moments of India’s campaign at the 2022 Commonwealth Games.Although his powerful finishing kick fell just short, he smashed his own national record and nearly ran down future Olympic bronze medallist Abraham Kibiwot to win a silver medal in the 3000m steeplechase, ending in the process a 28-year Kenyan monopoly on the podium.But Sable, now 30, says he can’t guarantee that he’ll be in Glasgow for the 2026 Games. As he prepares to make his return from a knee injury that ruled him out for much of last year’s athletics season, Sable is still not sure if he’ll be able to match his form at the Birmingham Games.“If everything goes well, then I feel I can be in the shape I was in (four years ago). But if everything doesn’t go well, if I’m not fully fit, then even if I qualify for the Indian team, I’d rather skip the Commonwealth Games. I don’t want to go to the Commonwealth Games just to participate,” he tells        Sportstar.These days Sable is to be found in the Inspire Institute of India campus in Vijayanagar, as he looks to get himself in shape for next month’s Federation Cup in Ranchi, where he’ll be making his return. He admits his comeback is still a work in progress.“I returned to training in January this year. Earlier this month I went to Ooty for some high-altitude training, but I felt a lot of tightness in my body after. I felt I was lacking strength, so I came to IIS to improve. Right now I’m still not at 100 per cent. I think I’m at about 70-80 percent of where I was,” he says.READ: Harbert Kibet leads impressive men’s field at TCS World 10K BengaluruThis is an unusual position for Sable to be in. Before he limped off the track with a torn ACL (anterior cruciate ligament) at last year’s Diamond League in Monaco, Sable had felt he was one of the rarest things in elite sport—an athlete who’d never been injured.“I had suffered one small injury at the start of my career, but I thought I’d never get seriously injured. I hadn’t even suffered any pain after training. I was in probably the best shape of my life before the Monaco Diamond League,” he says.Suddenly, though, he was looking at undergoing a major surgery with the knowledge that not only was his season over, but he also would have to spend a long time away from the running track.At 30, Sable wondered whether he was running out of time. The timing of his injury—last July—meant he was going to miss out on the World Championships and that it would take a lot of effort to recover for the 2026 Commonwealth and Asian Games.Second thoughts about surgeryInitially Sable says he had even hoped to put off his surgery. “I thought that maybe I could run at the World Championships even with that torn ACL. The doctors I consulted told me that if I were running any other event like the 5000m or 10,000m, they might have even considered it, but the steeplechase is a very high-impact event because it has the steeple jump and the water hazard. The doctors told me that if I got injured again, then it would become really hard to recover for the Commonwealth and Asian Games. If I missed those events this year, I genuinely wasn’t sure whether I would be in a position to compete in the next edition of these Games. I didn’t even know if I was going to be an athlete then. Four years is a very long time in sport,” he says.ALSO READ: ‘Women’s sports should be protected,’ two-time high jump world champion Blanka Vlasic on IOC’s gender policySable eventually did get the surgery done, but he reckons the road to recovery was among the toughest things he’d had to face in his career. “My heart was saying I needed to run, but my body wasn’t supporting me. I first learned to walk with a brace. Even that was hard. It was all very new for me. I would try to test myself. But it would hurt every time I’d try to do something. This journey has been really hard,” he says.Doubts often crept into his mind. When his steps hurt, he admitted being fearful about whether he would ever be able to move without pain. He also wondered whether he would ever be as good as he once was and whether he would ever rediscover the kind of form in the steeplechase that saw him compete at two separate Olympic finals and win Asian Games gold alongside his Birmingham heroics. Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                            

                            Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                AFP
                                                    “What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.Finding his bestHe’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  Published on Apr 24, 2026  #Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

lightbox-info

Avinash Sable celebrates after winning the 3,000m steeplechase final at the 2022 Asian Games in Hangzhou. | Photo Credit: AFP

“What finally helped me to overcome those fears was simply taking each day at a time and going through every individual stage of my recovery. First I thought I wouldn’t be able to walk. But then I was able to. I didn’t think I would be able to jog, but I did. If I got through all of that, then one day I can return to my best as well,” he says.

Finding his best

He’ll need to be. The Athletics Federation of India has set the qualification standard for the Commonwealth Games in the 3000m steeplechase at 8.30.26. Amongst active Indian athletes, only Sable, who currently holds the national mark of 8.09.91, has ever run faster than that.

Sable, though, isn’t just looking to meet that qualification standard. “It’s not a big thing to qualify for the Commonwealth Games. I only want to take part in the Commonwealth Games if I’m fully fit. Otherwise I don’t see the point,” he says.

For now Sable’s mind is focussed on getting back to form in the 3000m steeplechase and defending his CWG and Asiad medals. But he’s more open-minded about the future. “I think next year I want to try some other event. I have a lot of attachment to the steeplechase because it’s the event that gave me my recognition. I wonder if there’s another event that I might be good in that I haven’t tried because I’ve been so focussed on the steeplechase. At the world level, there’s no athlete who does both the steeplechase and something else. So maybe it’s time for me to give my priority to something else and see if it’s something I could do,” he says.

But that’s for the future. For now Sable doesn’t want to do something new. He just wants to discover his old form. “I just want to run close to what I’ve done earlier. On the inside, I’m very motivated. But until I come on the track and actually run a time that is at least close to what I’ve done before, I don’t think I’ll have that confidence,” he says.  

Published on Apr 24, 2026

#Avinash #Sable #Dont #CWG #participate
Deadspin | Blue Jackets part ways with three assistants after missing playoffs  Mar 12, 2024; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; View of a Columbus Blue Jackets logo on a jersey worn by a member of the team during warm-up before the game against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images   The Columbus Blue Jackets announced Friday that assistant coaches Mike Haviland and Scott Ford will not return for the 2026-27 season.  In addition, the team is set to part ways with video coach Aron Augustitus.  All three were under contract through 2025-26. Haviland and Ford joined the Blue Jackets prior to the 2024-25 campaign and Augustitus joined the organization in 2018.  The decisions were made by president of hockey operations and general manager Don Waddell and head coach Rick Bowness after Columbus (40-30-12, 92 points) finished fifth in the Metropolitan Division and missed the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season.   “Following our end of season meetings, Rick and I determined that changes to our coaching staff would be in the best interest of our club moving forward,” Waddell said. “We are very appreciative of the time and hard work that Mike, Scott and Aron have done during their time with the Blue Jackets and wish them well in their future endeavors. We will begin the process of reviewing candidates to join our staff in the very near future.”  Columbus finished 21-11-5 under Bowness, who took over when head coach Dean Evason and assistant coach Steve McCarthy were fired on Jan. 12.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Blue #Jackets #part #ways #assistants #missing #playoffsMar 12, 2024; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; View of a Columbus Blue Jackets logo on a jersey worn by a member of the team during warm-up before the game against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images

The Columbus Blue Jackets announced Friday that assistant coaches Mike Haviland and Scott Ford will not return for the 2026-27 season.

In addition, the team is set to part ways with video coach Aron Augustitus.

All three were under contract through 2025-26. Haviland and Ford joined the Blue Jackets prior to the 2024-25 campaign and Augustitus joined the organization in 2018.


The decisions were made by president of hockey operations and general manager Don Waddell and head coach Rick Bowness after Columbus (40-30-12, 92 points) finished fifth in the Metropolitan Division and missed the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season.

“Following our end of season meetings, Rick and I determined that changes to our coaching staff would be in the best interest of our club moving forward,” Waddell said. “We are very appreciative of the time and hard work that Mike, Scott and Aron have done during their time with the Blue Jackets and wish them well in their future endeavors. We will begin the process of reviewing candidates to join our staff in the very near future.”

Columbus finished 21-11-5 under Bowness, who took over when head coach Dean Evason and assistant coach Steve McCarthy were fired on Jan. 12.

–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Blue #Jackets #part #ways #assistants #missing #playoffs">Deadspin | Blue Jackets part ways with three assistants after missing playoffs  Mar 12, 2024; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; View of a Columbus Blue Jackets logo on a jersey worn by a member of the team during warm-up before the game against the Montreal Canadiens at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images   The Columbus Blue Jackets announced Friday that assistant coaches Mike Haviland and Scott Ford will not return for the 2026-27 season.  In addition, the team is set to part ways with video coach Aron Augustitus.  All three were under contract through 2025-26. Haviland and Ford joined the Blue Jackets prior to the 2024-25 campaign and Augustitus joined the organization in 2018.  The decisions were made by president of hockey operations and general manager Don Waddell and head coach Rick Bowness after Columbus (40-30-12, 92 points) finished fifth in the Metropolitan Division and missed the playoffs for the sixth consecutive season.   “Following our end of season meetings, Rick and I determined that changes to our coaching staff would be in the best interest of our club moving forward,” Waddell said. “We are very appreciative of the time and hard work that Mike, Scott and Aron have done during their time with the Blue Jackets and wish them well in their future endeavors. We will begin the process of reviewing candidates to join our staff in the very near future.”  Columbus finished 21-11-5 under Bowness, who took over when head coach Dean Evason and assistant coach Steve McCarthy were fired on Jan. 12.  –Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Blue #Jackets #part #ways #assistants #missing #playoffs

Post Comment