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Train smarter, not harder — Ramji Srinivasan decodes how IPL’s OG superstars can stave off injuries  They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told        Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another. Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                K. Murali Kumar
                            

                            Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                K. Murali Kumar
                                                    “The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.
    “You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji SrinivasanSrinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket. Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Emmanual Yogini
                            

                            Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Emmanual Yogini
                                                    “When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”Published on Apr 16, 2026  #Train #smarter #harder #Ramji #Srinivasan #decodes #IPLs #superstars #stave #injuries

Train smarter, not harder — Ramji Srinivasan decodes how IPL’s OG superstars can stave off injuries

They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.

Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.

The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.

According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told  Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another.

Train smarter, not harder — Ramji Srinivasan decodes how IPL’s OG superstars can stave off injuries  They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told        Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another. Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                K. Murali Kumar
                            

                            Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                K. Murali Kumar
                                                    “The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.
    “You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji SrinivasanSrinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket. Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Emmanual Yogini
                            

                            Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                Emmanual Yogini
                                                    “When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”Published on Apr 16, 2026  #Train #smarter #harder #Ramji #Srinivasan #decodes #IPLs #superstars #stave #injuries

Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar

lightbox-info

Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG. | Photo Credit: K. Murali Kumar

“The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.

The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.

According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.

“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.

“You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji Srinivasan

Srinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.

“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.

“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”

An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.

“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.

“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”

He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket.

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini

lightbox-info

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS. | Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini

“When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.

“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.

“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.

“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”

Published on Apr 16, 2026

#Train #smarter #harder #Ramji #Srinivasan #decodes #IPLs #superstars #stave #injuries

They say age comes for everyone eventually, and the 2026 edition of the Indian Premier League is proving that to be ruthlessly true. Rohit Sharma will miss Mumbai Indians’ clash against Punjab Kings at the Wankhede Stadium, marking a rare occasion that the 38-year-old will be absent from the five-time champion’s top-order.

Rohit is not the only one facing time on the sidelines. The seemingly untiring Virat Kohli was forced to play as an Impact Player in Royal Challengers Bengaluru’s match against Lucknow Super Giants, while M.S. Dhoni – the famed lynchpin of Chennai Super Kings’ middle-order – has missed the side’s first five matches of the season.

The stalwarts of a generation of the IPL are now being confronted with the realities of playing the tournament while not riding the conveyor belt of international cricket year-round.

According to Ramji Srinivasan, former India and Mumbai Indians strength and conditioning coach, the physical challenge of the IPL is primarily about rest and recovery. “The challenge is more on recovery than the fitness aspect,” he told  Sportstar. “The fitness aspect is more about tiring and traveling from one place to another.

Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
| Photo Credit:
K. Murali Kumar

lightbox-info

Virat Kohli played as an Impact Player due to a kneeinjury during RCB’s match against LSG.
| Photo Credit:
K. Murali Kumar

“The matches finish by 11:00-11:30PM, by the time they start from the ground, it will be around 12.30-1:00AM. The next morning, if they have to travel again, everything changes again. It’s about how you manage your body with proper recovery and nutrition,” Srinivasan said.

The challenge of dealing with a hectic schedule is one that becomes tougher with age. “After 30 and beyond, the body starts to slow down physiologically. It is natural. So, what they need to do is train smart rather than train hard,” Srinivasan said.

According to Srinivasan, age does have some benefit to doing so. “By this time you know your body better, when you need to push, when you need to pull yourself back, when you need to recover, what type of recovery you need to adhere to.

“What you are adhering to when you are in your 20s and early 30s may not be as pertinent now, you know. Your body is changing every year, and you need to adapt to a particular stimulus,” he explained.

“You need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.”Ramji Srinivasan

Srinivasan suggested a focus on cognitive and neuromuscular training, an approach he likens to that of a Formula One driver, which focuses on training the cognitive skills of the player.

“It’s all about the neural training pathway because cognition is what your eye perceives, and how your body reacts. For example, you see a ball trajectory coming in, how your body reacts to that particular impulse. It can be reactive or it can be proactive.

“You focus on how you train those muscle groups, the smaller and the finer muscle rather than the gross muscles. That is how you get precision, and they are the thing which loses the neural response in the long run if you don’t train them.”

An inevitable part of aging as a player is the arrival of injuries, as the likes of Rohit and Kohli are experiencing now. While niggles are unavoidable for top-level athletes, the focus, Srinivasan said, should be on being proactive about identifying the underlying causes and treating them quickly.

“The idea is that preventive medicine is better than curative, and if you cannot prevent it, your curative measure has to be quicker,” he said.

“Any sportsperson will have niggles, but you have to identify the contributing factors. When you are doing.your assessment and screening you will know there are probabilities, especially as you get older. So if it is a hamstring injury, why has it happened, is it because of dehydration, or because of lack of fitness, or because of overstretching?”

He also emphasised that there is no one-size-fits-all approach. The training methodology for players like Kohli or Rohit, who have recently stepped off the Test and T20I bandwagons but still play a single format, will have a different approach to a player like Dhoni, for whom IPL is the only remaining form of professional cricket.

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
| Photo Credit:
Emmanual Yogini

lightbox-info

Rohit Sharma suffered an injury to his left hamstring that ruled him out of the match against PBKS.
| Photo Credit:
Emmanual Yogini

“When you are young and robust, if you eat iron you will be able to digest it. In the thirties even if you eat food it won’t digest,” he explained with a laugh. “So you need to be very specialised according to the individual. What suits Virat will not suit Rohit or MS. So, it has to be highly bespoke, just because it is successful with one player need not be successful with any other players.

“There has to be progression in anything. Suddenly coming and sprinting it’s not going to help you however fit you are. When you are in a competition your body and mind responds differently to when you are training.

“The essence is that the professional needs to understand when you are in a competition there are a lot of things happening which are not happening during your training. So, the idea is to prepare yourself through the training, it’s a simulation.

“You cannot do that because there are so many variables. But being very close to the reality in your training module really helps. For example, when you are in your 20s, you may take two weeks to get into the groove. When you are in your 30s, it may take three weeks. When you are in your 40s, it may take a month and a half.”

Published on Apr 16, 2026

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Deadspin | Reports: Jorge Soler’s suspension reduced from 7 to 4 games <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28728209.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28728209.jpg" alt="MLB: Los Angeles Angels at New York Yankees" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Apr 14, 2026; Bronx, New York, USA; Los Angeles Angels designated hitter Jorge Soler (12) hits a solo home run in the first inning against the New York Yankees at Yankee Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Wendell Cruz-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Los Angeles Angels outfielder Jorge Soler’s suspension was reduced from seven to four games by Major League Baseball following his appeal, multiple media outlets reported on Wednesday.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>Soler, 34, reportedly will begin serving his ban on Wednesday as Los Angeles plays the third contest of its four-game series against the host New York Yankees. He will remain out until Sunday when the Angels conclude a three-game set versus the visiting San Diego Padres. </p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>Soler was suspended following a benches-clearing incident involving multiple players from the Atlanta Braves and Angels during their game on April 7. </p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>Soler belted a two-run homer off Reynaldo Lopez in his first at-bat before the latter hit him with a pitch on his left hand in his next trip to the plate. Soler then took exception to a high and inside fifth-inning fastball that glanced off the glove of catcher Jonah Heim and bounced to the backstop.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-5"> <p>Soler stared at Lopez for several seconds before jogging to the mound. Both players then squared up and began throwing punches, none of which appeared to land squarely, as players from both teams rushed in. Lopez fended Soler off with his glove and threw punches with his right hand, which still held the baseball.</p> </section> <section id="section-6"> <p>Braves manager Walt Weiss ended up tackling Soler on the first base line to help break up the fracas.</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>Soler was the 2021 World Series MVP for the Braves and is now on his third different team since that brief stint, plus a return to Atlanta in 2024.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>Lopez reached a settlement with MLB, reducing his suspension to five games.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section></div> #Deadspin #Reports #Jorge #Solers #suspension #reduced #games

CRICKET

Dhoni, Pandya, Bumrah and other stars invest in ‘eCricket’ gaming app

M.S. Dhoni, Jasprit Bumrah, Hardik Pandya, along with Shreyas Iyer, Ravindra Jadeja, Tilak Varma and Sai Sudharsan, have come on board as investors in ‘eCricket’, a AAA title from India with global ambitions, slated for release on mobile in 2026.

With cricket commanding a global audience estimated to be over 2.5 billion, LightFury—the publisher of eCricket—aims to address a significant gap in the sports gaming category by delivering a technically advanced, competitive, and live-service-driven cricket gaming franchise from India.

The 100-strong studio combines creative vision with technical innovation to create globally competitive games.

“I’ve seen a lot of cricket games over the years, and there’s always been something missing. When LightFury showed me what they were working on, I felt they were trying to close that gap. It’s a big undertaking, building something like this out of India for a global audience,” Dhoni was quoted in a release.

Founded in 2024 by Karan Shroff, Anurag Banerjee, and Tina Balachandran, LightFury Games is an India-based AAA-focused game-tech studio dedicated to building high-quality, cutting-edge gaming experiences. The leadership team has worked on more than 40 AAA titles.

Hardik Pandya said, “Cricket is pressure, skill, and entertainment all at once. Fans want to feel that energy. What excites me about eCricket is that it is not trying to make cricket smaller for gaming. It is trying to make gaming rise to the scale of cricket.”

Earlier this year, LightFury Games also announced securing a global player roster licence of over 600 professional cricketers, featuring stars like Chris Gayle, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Kane Williamson, Pat Cummins, Jos Buttler, Travis Head, and Andre Russell—marking one of the largest rosters in cricket gaming.

– PTI

GOLF

Shubhankar and Yuvraj have slow starts in China

Indian golfers Shubhankar Sharma and Yuvraj Sandhu endured slow starts at the Volvo China Open in Shanghai, finishing T-48 and 153rd respectively after the opening round.

Sharma, who won on his home tour in India a week earlier, carded 1-under 70 to be placed at T-48 while Sandhu carded 9-over 80 to be placed 153rd on the standings.

– PTI

SQUASH

Abhay Singh enters maiden PSA Gold-level quarters in Zurich

India’s Abhay Singh stunned Egyptian world No 13 Aly Abou Eleinen to enter his maiden PSA Gold-level event quarterfinals at the Grasshopper Cup squash in Zurich.

World No 24 Abhay trailed 5-8 in the opening game before recovering to beat the seventh seed 12-10, 11-9 in the second round.

Singh had beaten Eleinen earlier this month at the El Gouna Open in Egypt.

“I stuck to my game plan. Still a few things I can work on. We will go back to the drawing board tonight,” said Singh, who will meet Egyptian world No 4 Karim Gawad next.

In the opening round, Singh beat Swiss David Bernet 11-9, 9-11, 11-8, while compatriot Ramit Tandon lost to Egypt’s Fares Dessouky 6-11, 9-11.

– Team Sportstar

Published on Apr 24, 2026

#Indian #sports #wrap #April #Dhoni #Pandya #Bumrah #stars #invest #eCricket #gaming #app">Indian sports wrap, April 24: Dhoni, Pandya, Bumrah and other stars invest in ‘eCricket’ gaming app  CRICKETDhoni, Pandya, Bumrah and other stars invest in ‘eCricket’ gaming appM.S. Dhoni, Jasprit Bumrah, Hardik Pandya, along with Shreyas Iyer, Ravindra Jadeja, Tilak Varma and Sai Sudharsan, have come on board as investors in ‘eCricket’, a AAA title from India with global ambitions, slated for release on mobile in 2026.With cricket commanding a global audience estimated to be over 2.5 billion, LightFury—the publisher of eCricket—aims to address a significant gap in the sports gaming category by delivering a technically advanced, competitive, and live-service-driven cricket gaming franchise from India.The 100-strong studio combines creative vision with technical innovation to create globally competitive games.“I’ve seen a lot of cricket games over the years, and there’s always been something missing. When LightFury showed me what they were working on, I felt they were trying to close that gap. It’s a big undertaking, building something like this out of India for a global audience,” Dhoni was quoted in a release.Founded in 2024 by Karan Shroff, Anurag Banerjee, and Tina Balachandran, LightFury Games is an India-based AAA-focused game-tech studio dedicated to building high-quality, cutting-edge gaming experiences. The leadership team has worked on more than 40 AAA titles.Hardik Pandya said, “Cricket is pressure, skill, and entertainment all at once. Fans want to feel that energy. What excites me about eCricket is that it is not trying to make cricket smaller for gaming. It is trying to make gaming rise to the scale of cricket.”Earlier this year, LightFury Games also announced securing a global player roster licence of over 600 professional cricketers, featuring stars like Chris Gayle, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Kane Williamson, Pat Cummins, Jos Buttler, Travis Head, and Andre Russell—marking one of the largest rosters in cricket gaming.– PTIGOLFShubhankar and Yuvraj have slow starts in ChinaIndian golfers Shubhankar Sharma and Yuvraj Sandhu endured slow starts at the Volvo China Open in Shanghai, finishing T-48 and 153rd respectively after the opening round.Sharma, who won on his home tour in India a week earlier, carded 1-under 70 to be placed at T-48 while Sandhu carded 9-over 80 to be placed 153rd on the standings.– PTISQUASHAbhay Singh enters maiden PSA Gold-level quarters in ZurichIndia’s Abhay Singh stunned Egyptian world No 13 Aly Abou Eleinen to enter his maiden PSA Gold-level event quarterfinals at the Grasshopper Cup squash in Zurich.World No 24 Abhay trailed 5-8 in the opening game before recovering to beat the seventh seed 12-10, 11-9 in the second round.Singh had beaten Eleinen earlier this month at the El Gouna Open in Egypt.“I stuck to my game plan. Still a few things I can work on. We will go back to the drawing board tonight,” said Singh, who will meet Egyptian world No 4 Karim Gawad next.In the opening round, Singh beat Swiss David Bernet 11-9, 9-11, 11-8, while compatriot Ramit Tandon lost to Egypt’s Fares Dessouky 6-11, 9-11.– Team SportstarPublished on Apr 24, 2026  #Indian #sports #wrap #April #Dhoni #Pandya #Bumrah #stars #invest #eCricket #gaming #app

Deadspin | Bo Bichette slams key double as Mets take Twins series  Apr 23, 2026; New York City, New York, USA;  New York Mets outfielder Carson Benge (3) runs the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images   Bo Bichette had three hits Thursday night, including the three-run eighth-inning double that snapped a tie and lifted the host New York Mets to a 10-8 win over the Minnesota Twins in the rubber game of a three-game interleague series.  Brett Baty hit a three-run homer in the first for the Mets, who squandered a 7-2 lead before winning for the second straight night following a 12-game skid. New York scored three times in the second before Carson Benge homered in the fourth.  Ryan Jeffers tied the game with a grand slam in the top of the eighth for the Twins, who have lost six of seven. Tristan Gray homered in the sixth and had an RBI single in the ninth.  Baty opened the bottom of the eighth by singling off Andrew Morris (0-1) and went to second on Tyrone Taylor’s bunt. Marcus Semien singled Baty to third, after which Ronny Mauricio flew out. Anthony Banda entered and walked Tommy Pham, who was pinch-hitting for Benge, before Bichette’s bases-clearing hit.  Devin Williams (1-1), the Mets’ sixth pitcher, was awarded the win via official scorer’s discretion after giving up three hits, including Gray’s single, while recording the final two outs of the ninth.   Baty, Semien and Benge had two hits each.  Semien scored from third on a passed ball following a strikeout of Bichette in the second. Francisco Alvarez lofted a sacrifice fly two batters later, after which Luis Robert Jr. Robert laced a run-scoring double.  Austin Martin drew a bases-loaded walk in the first and finished 3-for-4. Brooks Lee was also 3-for-4 while Gray had two hits.  Mets starter Christian Scott didn’t allow a hit but walked five and struck out one over 1 1/3 innings in his season debut. The Twins’ Joe Ryan surrendered seven runs (four earned) on seven hits and two walks while striking out five over five innings.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Bichette #slams #key #double #Mets #Twins #seriesApr 23, 2026; New York City, New York, USA; New York Mets outfielder Carson Benge (3) runs the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images

Bo Bichette had three hits Thursday night, including the three-run eighth-inning double that snapped a tie and lifted the host New York Mets to a 10-8 win over the Minnesota Twins in the rubber game of a three-game interleague series.

Brett Baty hit a three-run homer in the first for the Mets, who squandered a 7-2 lead before winning for the second straight night following a 12-game skid. New York scored three times in the second before Carson Benge homered in the fourth.

Ryan Jeffers tied the game with a grand slam in the top of the eighth for the Twins, who have lost six of seven. Tristan Gray homered in the sixth and had an RBI single in the ninth.

Baty opened the bottom of the eighth by singling off Andrew Morris (0-1) and went to second on Tyrone Taylor’s bunt. Marcus Semien singled Baty to third, after which Ronny Mauricio flew out. Anthony Banda entered and walked Tommy Pham, who was pinch-hitting for Benge, before Bichette’s bases-clearing hit.


Devin Williams (1-1), the Mets’ sixth pitcher, was awarded the win via official scorer’s discretion after giving up three hits, including Gray’s single, while recording the final two outs of the ninth.

Baty, Semien and Benge had two hits each.

Semien scored from third on a passed ball following a strikeout of Bichette in the second. Francisco Alvarez lofted a sacrifice fly two batters later, after which Luis Robert Jr. Robert laced a run-scoring double.

Austin Martin drew a bases-loaded walk in the first and finished 3-for-4. Brooks Lee was also 3-for-4 while Gray had two hits.

Mets starter Christian Scott didn’t allow a hit but walked five and struck out one over 1 1/3 innings in his season debut. The Twins’ Joe Ryan surrendered seven runs (four earned) on seven hits and two walks while striking out five over five innings.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Bichette #slams #key #double #Mets #Twins #series">Deadspin | Bo Bichette slams key double as Mets take Twins series  Apr 23, 2026; New York City, New York, USA;  New York Mets outfielder Carson Benge (3) runs the bases after hitting a solo home run during the fourth inning against the Minnesota Twins at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images   Bo Bichette had three hits Thursday night, including the three-run eighth-inning double that snapped a tie and lifted the host New York Mets to a 10-8 win over the Minnesota Twins in the rubber game of a three-game interleague series.  Brett Baty hit a three-run homer in the first for the Mets, who squandered a 7-2 lead before winning for the second straight night following a 12-game skid. New York scored three times in the second before Carson Benge homered in the fourth.  Ryan Jeffers tied the game with a grand slam in the top of the eighth for the Twins, who have lost six of seven. Tristan Gray homered in the sixth and had an RBI single in the ninth.  Baty opened the bottom of the eighth by singling off Andrew Morris (0-1) and went to second on Tyrone Taylor’s bunt. Marcus Semien singled Baty to third, after which Ronny Mauricio flew out. Anthony Banda entered and walked Tommy Pham, who was pinch-hitting for Benge, before Bichette’s bases-clearing hit.  Devin Williams (1-1), the Mets’ sixth pitcher, was awarded the win via official scorer’s discretion after giving up three hits, including Gray’s single, while recording the final two outs of the ninth.   Baty, Semien and Benge had two hits each.  Semien scored from third on a passed ball following a strikeout of Bichette in the second. Francisco Alvarez lofted a sacrifice fly two batters later, after which Luis Robert Jr. Robert laced a run-scoring double.  Austin Martin drew a bases-loaded walk in the first and finished 3-for-4. Brooks Lee was also 3-for-4 while Gray had two hits.  Mets starter Christian Scott didn’t allow a hit but walked five and struck out one over 1 1/3 innings in his season debut. The Twins’ Joe Ryan surrendered seven runs (four earned) on seven hits and two walks while striking out five over five innings.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Bichette #slams #key #double #Mets #Twins #series

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