इंदौर में 4 मई के बाद गरज-चमक के साथ तेज हवाएं चलने के आसार
इंदौर में शहरवासियों को मई में तीव्र गर्मी से राहत मिलने की उम्मीद है। इस…
इंदौर में शहरवासियों को मई में तीव्र गर्मी से राहत मिलने की उम्मीद है। इस…
May 1, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors forward RJ Barrett (9) celebrates after scoring the winning basket against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the overtime period in game six of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images RJ Barrett made a dramatic 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds left in overtime Friday night as the Toronto Raptors defeated the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers 112-110 to force Game 7 of a first-round Eastern Conference playoff series.
Barrett’s Kawhi Leonard-esque bucket from straight away hit the back of the rim, bounced high into the air and fell in between the mesh. The shot was from the same end of the court as Leonard’s four-bounce miracle during Game 7 against the Philadelphia 76ers that sent Toronto to the Eastern Conference finals in 2019.
Asked by a reporter how many times he dreamed about making a big shot like Game 6’s winning basket, Barrett said, “I still dream about it.”
The hoop set up a deciding game Sunday at Cleveland. The home team has won every game in the series.
Scottie Barnes had 25 points and 14 assists for the Raptors. Barrett finished with 24 points, as did Ja’Kobe Walter. Collin Murray-Boyles contributed 17 points.
Evan Mobley had 26 points and 14 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Donovan Mitchell added 24 points, and James Harden had 16 points, nine assists, nine rebounds and four turnovers. Jarrett Allen scored 14 points, while Dean Wade contributed 10.
“I thought we did a lot of good things,” Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson said. “We rebounded like we asked them to rebound (Cleveland had a 52-38 advantage). We had some really good looks, you know sometimes it’s make or miss but I like a lot of things we did. That’s why you fight so hard to get home-court advantage. We knew this wasn’t going to be easy. This is the playoffs. This is what it’s about.”
Toronto took an 11-point lead into the fourth quarter. After two Cleveland defensive stops, Mitchell nailed a corner 3-pointer and then made a driving layup to reduce the margin to three with 6:54 to go. Mobley’s rebound and dunk cut the gap to one with 5:48 left.
A Barnes free throw had the Raptors up by two with 1:17 to go. Toronto’s shot-clock violation gave Cleveland possession with 15.6 seconds remaining. Mobley’s layup tied the game at 104 with a layup with 11.6 seconds to play in regulation. The Raptors’ Jamal Shead missed a 17-footer to set up overtime.
“We tightened up defensively,” Mitchell said of the Cavs’ fourth-quarter comeback. “I think both sides got a little fatigued naturally in a game like this. We put ourselves in position. We had a bunch of good looks, they didn’t fall and now we’ve got to go home and protect home court.”
After a Toronto turnover, Harden hit a 12-footer to give Cleveland a two-point lead in overtime. Barnes tied it at 108 with a floater with 1:25 to go.
Mitchell’s layup put Cleveland up by two with 33.7 seconds left, and then Shead made one of two free throws to cut the lead to one. Mobley’s turnover gave Toronto the ball with 10.9 left to set up Barrett’s shot.
“Call me crazy, call me psychic, but I saw this one coming tonight … It’s surreal,” Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic said, adding that he drew up the play for Barrett. “It was (in the air for) only half a second, but it felt like an eternity. … I was happy for him, for this team, for this city, that the shot went down.”
“To do it in the city where he grew up in, that’s truly amazing,” Barnes said of Barrett, who hails from Mississauga, Ont., about 20 miles southwest of Toronto. “The way that shot went in and when we needed it most, he showed up, that’s big time. It’s hard to wrap your head around.”
After Barrett put the Raptors on top, Mobley was off target on a 29-foot attempt at the OT buzzer.
The game was tied at 32 after one quarter.
The Raptors led by nine points after Barnes spun around Harden before dunking with 7:04 left in the second quarter. Cleveland cut the margin to two before Toronto took a 61-51 halftime lead following Shead’s 3-pointer with 51.3 seconds remaining.
A Cleveland turnover led to Barrett’s running layup and a 15-point lead with 5:02 to play in the third quarter. Toronto led 92-81 after three quarters.
Toronto was without Brandon Ingram (heel) and Immanuel Quickley (hamstring).
–Field Level Media
May 1, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors forward RJ Barrett (9) celebrates after scoring the winning basket against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the overtime period in game six of the first round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Scotiabank Arena. Mandatory Credit: Nick Turchiaro-Imagn Images RJ Barrett made a dramatic 3-pointer with 1.2 seconds left in overtime Friday night as the Toronto Raptors defeated the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers 112-110 to force Game 7 of a first-round Eastern Conference playoff series.
Barrett’s Kawhi Leonard-esque bucket from straight away hit the back of the rim, bounced high into the air and fell in between the mesh. The shot was from the same end of the court as Leonard’s four-bounce miracle during Game 7 against the Philadelphia 76ers that sent Toronto to the Eastern Conference finals in 2019.
Asked by a reporter how many times he dreamed about making a big shot like Game 6’s winning basket, Barrett said, “I still dream about it.”
The hoop set up a deciding game Sunday at Cleveland. The home team has won every game in the series.
Scottie Barnes had 25 points and 14 assists for the Raptors. Barrett finished with 24 points, as did Ja’Kobe Walter. Collin Murray-Boyles contributed 17 points.
Evan Mobley had 26 points and 14 rebounds for the Cavaliers. Donovan Mitchell added 24 points, and James Harden had 16 points, nine assists, nine rebounds and four turnovers. Jarrett Allen scored 14 points, while Dean Wade contributed 10.
“I thought we did a lot of good things,” Cavs coach Kenny Atkinson said. “We rebounded like we asked them to rebound (Cleveland had a 52-38 advantage). We had some really good looks, you know sometimes it’s make or miss but I like a lot of things we did. That’s why you fight so hard to get home-court advantage. We knew this wasn’t going to be easy. This is the playoffs. This is what it’s about.”
Toronto took an 11-point lead into the fourth quarter. After two Cleveland defensive stops, Mitchell nailed a corner 3-pointer and then made a driving layup to reduce the margin to three with 6:54 to go. Mobley’s rebound and dunk cut the gap to one with 5:48 left.
A Barnes free throw had the Raptors up by two with 1:17 to go. Toronto’s shot-clock violation gave Cleveland possession with 15.6 seconds remaining. Mobley’s layup tied the game at 104 with a layup with 11.6 seconds to play in regulation. The Raptors’ Jamal Shead missed a 17-footer to set up overtime.
“We tightened up defensively,” Mitchell said of the Cavs’ fourth-quarter comeback. “I think both sides got a little fatigued naturally in a game like this. We put ourselves in position. We had a bunch of good looks, they didn’t fall and now we’ve got to go home and protect home court.”
After a Toronto turnover, Harden hit a 12-footer to give Cleveland a two-point lead in overtime. Barnes tied it at 108 with a floater with 1:25 to go.
Mitchell’s layup put Cleveland up by two with 33.7 seconds left, and then Shead made one of two free throws to cut the lead to one. Mobley’s turnover gave Toronto the ball with 10.9 left to set up Barrett’s shot.
“Call me crazy, call me psychic, but I saw this one coming tonight … It’s surreal,” Raptors coach Darko Rajakovic said, adding that he drew up the play for Barrett. “It was (in the air for) only half a second, but it felt like an eternity. … I was happy for him, for this team, for this city, that the shot went down.”
“To do it in the city where he grew up in, that’s truly amazing,” Barnes said of Barrett, who hails from Mississauga, Ont., about 20 miles southwest of Toronto. “The way that shot went in and when we needed it most, he showed up, that’s big time. It’s hard to wrap your head around.”
After Barrett put the Raptors on top, Mobley was off target on a 29-foot attempt at the OT buzzer.
The game was tied at 32 after one quarter.
The Raptors led by nine points after Barnes spun around Harden before dunking with 7:04 left in the second quarter. Cleveland cut the margin to two before Toronto took a 61-51 halftime lead following Shead’s 3-pointer with 51.3 seconds remaining.
A Cleveland turnover led to Barrett’s running layup and a 15-point lead with 5:02 to play in the third quarter. Toronto led 92-81 after three quarters.
Toronto was without Brandon Ingram (heel) and Immanuel Quickley (hamstring).
–Field Level Media
May 1, 2026; Toronto, Ontario, CAN; Toronto Raptors forward RJ Barrett (9) celebrates after scoring…
Saturday will mark another landmark moment for Indian women’s football as the U-17 national team begins its AFC U-17 Women’s Asian Cup China 2026 campaign against Australia.
It will be India’s first appearance at the U-17 Women’s Asian Cup since 2005, ending a 21-year wait at this level. More significantly, it completes a rare sequence in 2026, with the U-17 side becoming India’s third women’s team to feature in an Asian Cup this year after the senior team and the U-20 side.
India’s journey to this stage has been built on a structured and continuous preparation period. Since January, the Young Tigresses have been in camp for more than three months, primarily in Bengaluru, focusing on physical, technical and tactical development.
They arrive in China after a series of competitive tours, winning the SAFF U-19 Women’s Championship in February, securing two victories against fellow Asian Cup qualifying side Myanmar in Yangon in March, and testing themselves in three friendly matches against Russia in Sochi in April.
The AFC U-17 Women’s Asian Cup match between India and Australia will kick off at 05:00 PM IST on Saturday at the Suzhou Taihu Football Sports Centre (Pitch 8) in China.
The AFC Women’s U-17 Asian Cup match between India and Australia will be broadcast live on the AFC Asian Cup YouTube Channel.
Published on May 02, 2026
Saturday will mark another landmark moment for Indian women’s football as the U-17 national team begins its AFC U-17 Women’s Asian Cup China 2026 campaign against Australia.
It will be India’s first appearance at the U-17 Women’s Asian Cup since 2005, ending a 21-year wait at this level. More significantly, it completes a rare sequence in 2026, with the U-17 side becoming India’s third women’s team to feature in an Asian Cup this year after the senior team and the U-20 side.
India’s journey to this stage has been built on a structured and continuous preparation period. Since January, the Young Tigresses have been in camp for more than three months, primarily in Bengaluru, focusing on physical, technical and tactical development.
They arrive in China after a series of competitive tours, winning the SAFF U-19 Women’s Championship in February, securing two victories against fellow Asian Cup qualifying side Myanmar in Yangon in March, and testing themselves in three friendly matches against Russia in Sochi in April.
The AFC U-17 Women’s Asian Cup match between India and Australia will kick off at 05:00 PM IST on Saturday at the Suzhou Taihu Football Sports Centre (Pitch 8) in China.
The AFC Women’s U-17 Asian Cup match between India and Australia will be broadcast live on the AFC Asian Cup YouTube Channel.
Published on May 02, 2026
Saturday will mark another landmark moment for Indian women’s football as the U-17 national team…
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Mar 22, 2026; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; Spire Motorsports Carson Hocevar (77) comes out for the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Mandatory Credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn Images FORT WORTH, Texas — The glass slipper still firmly on his foot from last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series win at Talladega, Carson Hocevar mashed the gas in overtime on Friday night and ran away to victory in the SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway.
Beating runner-up and Spire Motorsports teammate Kyle Busch to the finish line by 0.730 seconds in overtime, Hocevar notched his sixth career NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory at the 1.5-mile intermediate track that gave him his first in the series in 2023.
The triumph reversed a 1-2 finish from earlier this season at EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, where Busch beat Hocevar to the stripe by 0.114 seconds.
“It’s unbelievable — what a fun race,” Hocevar said after climbing from his No. 77 Chevrolet on the frontstretch. “We had to reverse the order, obviously the 1-2 with Kyle. I watched him win a lot of truck races, and it’s finally good to put an end to his Texas streak.”
Busch had won his last four Truck Series starts at Texas, but an early brush with the outside wall forced him to regain a lost lap as the beneficiary under caution for Cole Butcher’s crash in Turn 2 on Lap 51.
Busch fought through the field and challenged for the lead in the late going but failed to add to his record 68 Truck Series wins.
“We had an eventful night,” Busch said. “We didn’t start off very well. We were really, really loose and made a lot of adjustments to get it close. When we put the last set off tires on, we were really fast, felt really good.
“I was struggling with grip all night long, but (crew chief) Brian (Pattie) and the guys made a lot of good calls to get us dialed back in. It would have been nice to be in Victory Lane, but it’s good to have a teammate in there and have him get his shot. I got one, he got one, so now we’re even there.”
After the second stage break, Hocevar thought he might have a loose wheel, but that didn’t prevent him from going all-out during a succession of restarts late in the race.
Gio Ruggiero led the field to the overtime restart on Lap 171, but he lost impetus in the middle of a three-wide situation on the white-flag lap, as Hocevar charged into the lead and opened a gap of 10 car-lengths.
Kaden Honeycutt finished third, right behind Busch’s Silverado, with Brandon Jones and pole winner Ben Rhodes in fourth and fifth, respectively, as Ruggiero fell to 14th. Layne Riggs, Daniel Hemric, Christian Eckes, Ty Majeski and Chandler Smith completed the top 10.
Though Honeycutt left with the series lead — by 14 points over Smith — he remained frustrated with his inability to close out a victory.
“I’m proud to be able to drive a truck like this,” said Honeycutt, who is winless in 66 Truck Series starts. “It’s disappointing that I just keep failing. There’s no excuse for it. As soon as I got the lead (on Lap 149), I didn’t protect it right. I didn’t do the right things and ultimately that’s what led us to lose.
“Just got to figure out how to get restarts done. I’ve got to figure out how to win races. It’s eating me alive, I can promise you that.”
Ruggiero likewise missed an opportunity. He had passed Hocevar for the lead on Lap 165 of a scheduled 167, but a violent, five-truck accident on the frontstretch caused the eighth caution, necessitated a red flag for cleanup and forced the overtime.
Hocevar won the second stage and led a race-high 76 laps to 41 for Rhodes, who won the first stage wire-to-wire.
*****
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race – SpeedyCash.com 250
Texas Motor Speedway
Fort Worth, Texas
Friday, May 1, 2026
1. (11) Carson Hocevar(i), Chevrolet, 172.
2. (6) Kyle Busch(i), Chevrolet, 172.
3. (10) Kaden Honeycutt, Toyota, 172.
4. (18) Brandon Jones(i), Toyota, 172.
5. (1) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 172.
6. (34) Layne Riggs, Ford, 172.
7. (14) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 172.
8. (12) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 172.
9. (20) Ty Majeski, Ford, 172.
10. (8) Chandler Smith, Ford, 172.
11. (19) Parker Kligerman, RAM, 172.
12. (23) Ross Chastain(i), Chevrolet, 172.
13. (17) Brenden Queen #, RAM, 172.
14. (3) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 172.
15. (13) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, 172.
16. (22) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, 172.
17. (21) William Sawalich(i), Toyota, 171.
18. (27) Toni Breidinger, Chevrolet, 171.
19. (7) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, 171.
20. (30) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 170.
21. (28) Mini Tyrrell #, RAM, 170.
22. (31) Josh Reaume, Ford, 169.
23. (32) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 168.
24. (33) Caleb Costner, Chevrolet, 168.
25. (25) Corey LaJoie, RAM, 165.
26. (29) Clayton Green, Ford, 165.
27. (24) Justin Haley, RAM, Accident, 164.
28. (5) Tanner Gray, Toyota, Accident, 164.
29. (2) Jake Garcia, Ford, Accident, 163.
30. (15) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, Accident, 163.
31. (26) Kris Wright, Chevrolet, 163.
32. (9) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, Accident, 156.
33. (16) Conner Jones, Chevrolet, Accident, 155.
34. (35) Cory Roper, Toyota, Suspension, 123.
35. (4) Cole Butcher #, Ford, Accident, 51.
Average Speed of Race Winner: 112.924 mph.
Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 17 Mins, 5 Secs. Margin of Victory: 0.730 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 8 for 39 laps.
Lead Changes: 14 among 9 drivers.
Lap Leaders: B. Rhodes 1-41;C. Hocevar(i) 42;B. Jones(i) 43-58;C. Hocevar(i) 59-75;D. Sutton 76-77;M. Tyrrell # 78;C. Hocevar(i) 79-121;L. Riggs 122-127;T. Gray 128-129;D. Sutton 130-132;G. Ruggiero 133-148;K. Honeycutt 149-151;C. Hocevar(i) 152-164;G. Ruggiero 165-170;C. Hocevar(i) 171-172.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Carson Hocevar(i) 5 times for 76 laps; Ben Rhodes 1 time for 41 laps; Giovanni Ruggiero 2 times for 22 laps; Brandon Jones(i) 1 time for 16 laps; Layne Riggs 1 time for 6 laps; Dawson Sutton 2 times for 5 laps; Kaden Honeycutt 1 time for 3 laps; Tanner Gray 1 time for 2 laps; Mini Tyrrell # 1 time for 1 lap.
Stage #1 Top Ten: 99,77,17,11,38,52,9,34,88,45
Stage #2 Top Ten: 77,11,17,26,18,14,9,15,38,4
–By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
Mar 22, 2026; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; Spire Motorsports Carson Hocevar (77) comes out for the Goodyear 400 at Darlington Raceway. Mandatory Credit: Scott Kinser-Imagn Images FORT WORTH, Texas — The glass slipper still firmly on his foot from last Sunday’s NASCAR Cup Series win at Talladega, Carson Hocevar mashed the gas in overtime on Friday night and ran away to victory in the SpeedyCash.com 250 at Texas Motor Speedway.
Beating runner-up and Spire Motorsports teammate Kyle Busch to the finish line by 0.730 seconds in overtime, Hocevar notched his sixth career NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series victory at the 1.5-mile intermediate track that gave him his first in the series in 2023.
The triumph reversed a 1-2 finish from earlier this season at EchoPark Speedway near Atlanta, where Busch beat Hocevar to the stripe by 0.114 seconds.
“It’s unbelievable — what a fun race,” Hocevar said after climbing from his No. 77 Chevrolet on the frontstretch. “We had to reverse the order, obviously the 1-2 with Kyle. I watched him win a lot of truck races, and it’s finally good to put an end to his Texas streak.”
Busch had won his last four Truck Series starts at Texas, but an early brush with the outside wall forced him to regain a lost lap as the beneficiary under caution for Cole Butcher’s crash in Turn 2 on Lap 51.
Busch fought through the field and challenged for the lead in the late going but failed to add to his record 68 Truck Series wins.
“We had an eventful night,” Busch said. “We didn’t start off very well. We were really, really loose and made a lot of adjustments to get it close. When we put the last set off tires on, we were really fast, felt really good.
“I was struggling with grip all night long, but (crew chief) Brian (Pattie) and the guys made a lot of good calls to get us dialed back in. It would have been nice to be in Victory Lane, but it’s good to have a teammate in there and have him get his shot. I got one, he got one, so now we’re even there.”
After the second stage break, Hocevar thought he might have a loose wheel, but that didn’t prevent him from going all-out during a succession of restarts late in the race.
Gio Ruggiero led the field to the overtime restart on Lap 171, but he lost impetus in the middle of a three-wide situation on the white-flag lap, as Hocevar charged into the lead and opened a gap of 10 car-lengths.
Kaden Honeycutt finished third, right behind Busch’s Silverado, with Brandon Jones and pole winner Ben Rhodes in fourth and fifth, respectively, as Ruggiero fell to 14th. Layne Riggs, Daniel Hemric, Christian Eckes, Ty Majeski and Chandler Smith completed the top 10.
Though Honeycutt left with the series lead — by 14 points over Smith — he remained frustrated with his inability to close out a victory.
“I’m proud to be able to drive a truck like this,” said Honeycutt, who is winless in 66 Truck Series starts. “It’s disappointing that I just keep failing. There’s no excuse for it. As soon as I got the lead (on Lap 149), I didn’t protect it right. I didn’t do the right things and ultimately that’s what led us to lose.
“Just got to figure out how to get restarts done. I’ve got to figure out how to win races. It’s eating me alive, I can promise you that.”
Ruggiero likewise missed an opportunity. He had passed Hocevar for the lead on Lap 165 of a scheduled 167, but a violent, five-truck accident on the frontstretch caused the eighth caution, necessitated a red flag for cleanup and forced the overtime.
Hocevar won the second stage and led a race-high 76 laps to 41 for Rhodes, who won the first stage wire-to-wire.
*****
NASCAR CRAFTSMAN Truck Series Race – SpeedyCash.com 250
Texas Motor Speedway
Fort Worth, Texas
Friday, May 1, 2026
1. (11) Carson Hocevar(i), Chevrolet, 172.
2. (6) Kyle Busch(i), Chevrolet, 172.
3. (10) Kaden Honeycutt, Toyota, 172.
4. (18) Brandon Jones(i), Toyota, 172.
5. (1) Ben Rhodes, Ford, 172.
6. (34) Layne Riggs, Ford, 172.
7. (14) Daniel Hemric, Chevrolet, 172.
8. (12) Christian Eckes, Chevrolet, 172.
9. (20) Ty Majeski, Ford, 172.
10. (8) Chandler Smith, Ford, 172.
11. (19) Parker Kligerman, RAM, 172.
12. (23) Ross Chastain(i), Chevrolet, 172.
13. (17) Brenden Queen #, RAM, 172.
14. (3) Giovanni Ruggiero, Toyota, 172.
15. (13) Tyler Ankrum, Chevrolet, 172.
16. (22) Dawson Sutton, Chevrolet, 172.
17. (21) William Sawalich(i), Toyota, 171.
18. (27) Toni Breidinger, Chevrolet, 171.
19. (7) Stewart Friesen, Toyota, 171.
20. (30) Spencer Boyd, Chevrolet, 170.
21. (28) Mini Tyrrell #, RAM, 170.
22. (31) Josh Reaume, Ford, 169.
23. (32) Frankie Muniz, Ford, 168.
24. (33) Caleb Costner, Chevrolet, 168.
25. (25) Corey LaJoie, RAM, 165.
26. (29) Clayton Green, Ford, 165.
27. (24) Justin Haley, RAM, Accident, 164.
28. (5) Tanner Gray, Toyota, Accident, 164.
29. (2) Jake Garcia, Ford, Accident, 163.
30. (15) Andres Perez De Lara, Chevrolet, Accident, 163.
31. (26) Kris Wright, Chevrolet, 163.
32. (9) Grant Enfinger, Chevrolet, Accident, 156.
33. (16) Conner Jones, Chevrolet, Accident, 155.
34. (35) Cory Roper, Toyota, Suspension, 123.
35. (4) Cole Butcher #, Ford, Accident, 51.
Average Speed of Race Winner: 112.924 mph.
Time of Race: 2 Hrs, 17 Mins, 5 Secs. Margin of Victory: 0.730 Seconds.
Caution Flags: 8 for 39 laps.
Lead Changes: 14 among 9 drivers.
Lap Leaders: B. Rhodes 1-41;C. Hocevar(i) 42;B. Jones(i) 43-58;C. Hocevar(i) 59-75;D. Sutton 76-77;M. Tyrrell # 78;C. Hocevar(i) 79-121;L. Riggs 122-127;T. Gray 128-129;D. Sutton 130-132;G. Ruggiero 133-148;K. Honeycutt 149-151;C. Hocevar(i) 152-164;G. Ruggiero 165-170;C. Hocevar(i) 171-172.
Leaders Summary (Driver, Times Lead, Laps Led): Carson Hocevar(i) 5 times for 76 laps; Ben Rhodes 1 time for 41 laps; Giovanni Ruggiero 2 times for 22 laps; Brandon Jones(i) 1 time for 16 laps; Layne Riggs 1 time for 6 laps; Dawson Sutton 2 times for 5 laps; Kaden Honeycutt 1 time for 3 laps; Tanner Gray 1 time for 2 laps; Mini Tyrrell # 1 time for 1 lap.
Stage #1 Top Ten: 99,77,17,11,38,52,9,34,88,45
Stage #2 Top Ten: 77,11,17,26,18,14,9,15,38,4
–By Reid Spencer, NASCAR Wire Service. Special to Field Level Media
Mar 22, 2026; Darlington, South Carolina, USA; Spire Motorsports Carson Hocevar (77) comes out for…
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Film star-turned sports administrator Rahul Bose wears many hats, from being an award-winning actor to now, being the President of Rugby India.
Before the second edition of the Rugby Premier League (RPL), planned in Hyderabad next month, the 58-year-old discusses the present state of Rugby in India and the future of the sport, in an exclusive chat with Sportstar.
A: Yes, we were always wanting to have an RPL Women last year also. But because there was so much to look at, which was new to us, we decided to stay with RPL Men. But this year, the franchises have been very, very forthcoming.
We have dug into our pockets, and we have made sure that we have created the financial as well as operational space to run a women’s league at the same time as the men’s. So in effect, the same two weeks that we had last year, when the men’s league was running, the women’s league will run at the same time. Instead of two games a day, we’ll have four, sometimes five games a day.
It will build for a longer, more interesting evening for people who are coming to the stadium as well as those who are viewing it online. That’s one big difference. The second big difference is that our partners — Jio Hotstar and Star Sports have now partnered to have it on YouTube and TV.
ALSO READ: RPL 2026 — Second season of Rugby Premier League to be played in Hyderabad in June
We were always certain that the venue would move from city to city. From Mumbai, it has come to Hyderabad and will move to other venues in future.
A: It’s a city where the scale of the stadium is bigger than what we had in Mumbai. So we are very much looking forward to having experiences for fans and things in the stadium, along with the fact that it’s a longer evening. So we are very clear that we are setting our sights on creating not one but two world-class products.

The second season of Rugby Premier League will take place at the Gachibowli Stadium, which has also hosted football matches in the past. | Photo Credit: Nagara Gopal
The second season of Rugby Premier League will take place at the Gachibowli Stadium, which has also hosted football matches in the past. | Photo Credit: Nagara Gopal
A: I think almost everybody was ideologically very, very certain that they wanted to be part of it. But the economics had to work. And we are a league where we run a very tight ship. We are very, very collaborative and fair with our franchise owners.
At the same time, we cannot expect, should I say, generosity that’s unreasonable. So everybody was ideologically in line with us. So, what we did was we made a lot of attractive benefits for franchises, more attractive than they were last year, so that they would come to the women’s game this year. Thankfully, our franchises understood that.
We didn’t want to go for six or eight franchises because of the operational difficulties. So four is very solid, and we’ll have 48 players, 24 foreigners, 24 Indians. And yet, it will be operationally manageable.
A: India has 760 districts. Rugby is in 322 districts. 40 per cent of India plays rugby. So our grassroots are strong. For the last five years, we’ve had 320 districts. We had the option to either spread the districts or to deepen the involvement of the players in those districts. We’ve chosen the latter. We’ve chosen to deepen involvement in the 322 districts. We want those players to stay with the game.
A: We are not taking it to more unexplored regions. We are (already) in 322 districts, which is a lot. It’s a captive population of 650 million people. But in terms of initiatives, we’ve had the Asmita Women’s League.
Players in action during an ASMITA Rugby State League Jammu and Kashmir at the Multipurpose Indoor Sports Stadium. | Photo Credit: Imran Nissar
Players in action during an ASMITA Rugby State League Jammu and Kashmir at the Multipurpose Indoor Sports Stadium. | Photo Credit: Imran Nissar
The Government of India has given us solid support, and between 30 and 50 cities across India have had a women’s rugby league last year. We have over 30 national tournaments that happen.
I would say that this is probably the most played, least known game in India.
A: One is to make sure that something like the RPL happens, which brings rugby to the eyes of people through mass media. The second is for our (national) teams to do well. The moment our teams begin to win, it will automatically begin to become popular.
So for the teams to do well, you have to put a lot of money into high performance. Right now, our women are sixth in Asia out of 36 nations.
Rahul Bose feels the Indian women’s national team has a quicker chance to make it to the Olympics because of its higher ranking in Asia. | Photo Credit: Nissar Ahmad
Rahul Bose feels the Indian women’s national team has a quicker chance to make it to the Olympics because of its higher ranking in Asia. | Photo Credit: Nissar Ahmad
For perspective, if you get to the top two, you make the Olympics. We are hopeful of making the Olympics in 2032. And we will be the first team sport, after hockey, in 90 years to get to the Olympics.
Of course, cricket is in the Olympics, but it’s a very small pool. But, making it to the Olympics in rugby out of over 100, to be one of the 14-15 nations will be very prestigious. Our men’s team, 12th in Asia, has to wait for one more cycle to get there.
A: We’ve had the road map in place for five years, month by month. In fact, when we submitted the road map to the government or the Ministry of Sports, they said they had never seen anything like it in their lives.
We submitted this in 2020 on what was planned up to 2030. We’ll be following that. We are slightly ahead in some things, and we’re slightly behind in others. Anyone can track us month by month.
Students in a training session at Universal Engineering College at Vallivattom, in Thrissur, Kerala. | Photo Credit: K.K. Najeeb
Students in a training session at Universal Engineering College at Vallivattom, in Thrissur, Kerala. | Photo Credit: K.K. Najeeb
The Government has always asked for accountability, and we never shy away from being transparent and accountable. In fact, we were awarded the best Federation in the country by the FICCI last year because of our transparency, our ethics and our processes.
A: It’s not in the big cities but in the districts, a cluster of schools, PETs (Physical Education Teachers) through our State Associations that are doing very good work. So we don’t go to one school.
ALSO READ: Rugby Premier League Season 2 squads finalised; women’s league set for historic debut
You cannot think of this as a metro sport but as a hinterland sport instead. Most of our players come from the bottom of the social pyramid. We don’t do a caste census. But socio-economically, they are the poorest of the poor.
A: We are one of the few federations that give a yearly purse to every state to spend on development, for national tournaments, on jerseys, on transport and on food. That is what they spend in their districts, and all the State Associations have to submit detailed reports on follow-up actions.
A: Normally, all our tournaments are funded by us. We have sponsors like Capgemini and DHL, who fund Indian Rugby. We’ve had some government states supporting us in the past.

Chennai Bull’s Vaafauese Apelu Maliko in action in the first season of Indian Rugby Premier League (RPL) final against Delhi Redz. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
Chennai Bull’s Vaafauese Apelu Maliko in action in the first season of Indian Rugby Premier League (RPL) final against Delhi Redz. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
We get money from the Central Government, World Rugby, and small amounts from the Capri Group and Jamuna Auto. So, we raise the money and spend it on national tournaments.
A: This is the Federation’s responsibility. It has to raise more money, work harder and build a 365-day-a-year ecosystem around our players. Right now, we can only afford to do it maybe 100 days a year.
We would like to build an ecosystem around our 30-40 best players from each team – Under-18 boys, under-18 girls, under-20 boys, under-20 girls, men and women.
A: I think a real mark of success will be when the six franchises begin to do more work in developing an interest and creating infrastructure in the cities. We don’t have a (major) presence in the cities as a sport. So in these big six cities, we will start to have what we have never had before.
Published on May 02, 2026
Film star-turned sports administrator Rahul Bose wears many hats, from being an award-winning actor to now, being the President of Rugby India.
Before the second edition of the Rugby Premier League (RPL), planned in Hyderabad next month, the 58-year-old discusses the present state of Rugby in India and the future of the sport, in an exclusive chat with Sportstar.
A: Yes, we were always wanting to have an RPL Women last year also. But because there was so much to look at, which was new to us, we decided to stay with RPL Men. But this year, the franchises have been very, very forthcoming.
We have dug into our pockets, and we have made sure that we have created the financial as well as operational space to run a women’s league at the same time as the men’s. So in effect, the same two weeks that we had last year, when the men’s league was running, the women’s league will run at the same time. Instead of two games a day, we’ll have four, sometimes five games a day.
It will build for a longer, more interesting evening for people who are coming to the stadium as well as those who are viewing it online. That’s one big difference. The second big difference is that our partners — Jio Hotstar and Star Sports have now partnered to have it on YouTube and TV.
ALSO READ: RPL 2026 — Second season of Rugby Premier League to be played in Hyderabad in June
We were always certain that the venue would move from city to city. From Mumbai, it has come to Hyderabad and will move to other venues in future.
A: It’s a city where the scale of the stadium is bigger than what we had in Mumbai. So we are very much looking forward to having experiences for fans and things in the stadium, along with the fact that it’s a longer evening. So we are very clear that we are setting our sights on creating not one but two world-class products.

The second season of Rugby Premier League will take place at the Gachibowli Stadium, which has also hosted football matches in the past. | Photo Credit: Nagara Gopal
The second season of Rugby Premier League will take place at the Gachibowli Stadium, which has also hosted football matches in the past. | Photo Credit: Nagara Gopal
A: I think almost everybody was ideologically very, very certain that they wanted to be part of it. But the economics had to work. And we are a league where we run a very tight ship. We are very, very collaborative and fair with our franchise owners.
At the same time, we cannot expect, should I say, generosity that’s unreasonable. So everybody was ideologically in line with us. So, what we did was we made a lot of attractive benefits for franchises, more attractive than they were last year, so that they would come to the women’s game this year. Thankfully, our franchises understood that.
We didn’t want to go for six or eight franchises because of the operational difficulties. So four is very solid, and we’ll have 48 players, 24 foreigners, 24 Indians. And yet, it will be operationally manageable.
A: India has 760 districts. Rugby is in 322 districts. 40 per cent of India plays rugby. So our grassroots are strong. For the last five years, we’ve had 320 districts. We had the option to either spread the districts or to deepen the involvement of the players in those districts. We’ve chosen the latter. We’ve chosen to deepen involvement in the 322 districts. We want those players to stay with the game.
A: We are not taking it to more unexplored regions. We are (already) in 322 districts, which is a lot. It’s a captive population of 650 million people. But in terms of initiatives, we’ve had the Asmita Women’s League.
Players in action during an ASMITA Rugby State League Jammu and Kashmir at the Multipurpose Indoor Sports Stadium. | Photo Credit: Imran Nissar
Players in action during an ASMITA Rugby State League Jammu and Kashmir at the Multipurpose Indoor Sports Stadium. | Photo Credit: Imran Nissar
The Government of India has given us solid support, and between 30 and 50 cities across India have had a women’s rugby league last year. We have over 30 national tournaments that happen.
I would say that this is probably the most played, least known game in India.
A: One is to make sure that something like the RPL happens, which brings rugby to the eyes of people through mass media. The second is for our (national) teams to do well. The moment our teams begin to win, it will automatically begin to become popular.
So for the teams to do well, you have to put a lot of money into high performance. Right now, our women are sixth in Asia out of 36 nations.
Rahul Bose feels the Indian women’s national team has a quicker chance to make it to the Olympics because of its higher ranking in Asia. | Photo Credit: Nissar Ahmad
Rahul Bose feels the Indian women’s national team has a quicker chance to make it to the Olympics because of its higher ranking in Asia. | Photo Credit: Nissar Ahmad
For perspective, if you get to the top two, you make the Olympics. We are hopeful of making the Olympics in 2032. And we will be the first team sport, after hockey, in 90 years to get to the Olympics.
Of course, cricket is in the Olympics, but it’s a very small pool. But, making it to the Olympics in rugby out of over 100, to be one of the 14-15 nations will be very prestigious. Our men’s team, 12th in Asia, has to wait for one more cycle to get there.
A: We’ve had the road map in place for five years, month by month. In fact, when we submitted the road map to the government or the Ministry of Sports, they said they had never seen anything like it in their lives.
We submitted this in 2020 on what was planned up to 2030. We’ll be following that. We are slightly ahead in some things, and we’re slightly behind in others. Anyone can track us month by month.
Students in a training session at Universal Engineering College at Vallivattom, in Thrissur, Kerala. | Photo Credit: K.K. Najeeb
Students in a training session at Universal Engineering College at Vallivattom, in Thrissur, Kerala. | Photo Credit: K.K. Najeeb
The Government has always asked for accountability, and we never shy away from being transparent and accountable. In fact, we were awarded the best Federation in the country by the FICCI last year because of our transparency, our ethics and our processes.
A: It’s not in the big cities but in the districts, a cluster of schools, PETs (Physical Education Teachers) through our State Associations that are doing very good work. So we don’t go to one school.
ALSO READ: Rugby Premier League Season 2 squads finalised; women’s league set for historic debut
You cannot think of this as a metro sport but as a hinterland sport instead. Most of our players come from the bottom of the social pyramid. We don’t do a caste census. But socio-economically, they are the poorest of the poor.
A: We are one of the few federations that give a yearly purse to every state to spend on development, for national tournaments, on jerseys, on transport and on food. That is what they spend in their districts, and all the State Associations have to submit detailed reports on follow-up actions.
A: Normally, all our tournaments are funded by us. We have sponsors like Capgemini and DHL, who fund Indian Rugby. We’ve had some government states supporting us in the past.

Chennai Bull’s Vaafauese Apelu Maliko in action in the first season of Indian Rugby Premier League (RPL) final against Delhi Redz. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
Chennai Bull’s Vaafauese Apelu Maliko in action in the first season of Indian Rugby Premier League (RPL) final against Delhi Redz. | Photo Credit: Getty Images
We get money from the Central Government, World Rugby, and small amounts from the Capri Group and Jamuna Auto. So, we raise the money and spend it on national tournaments.
A: This is the Federation’s responsibility. It has to raise more money, work harder and build a 365-day-a-year ecosystem around our players. Right now, we can only afford to do it maybe 100 days a year.
We would like to build an ecosystem around our 30-40 best players from each team – Under-18 boys, under-18 girls, under-20 boys, under-20 girls, men and women.
A: I think a real mark of success will be when the six franchises begin to do more work in developing an interest and creating infrastructure in the cities. We don’t have a (major) presence in the cities as a sport. So in these big six cities, we will start to have what we have never had before.
Published on May 02, 2026
Film star-turned sports administrator Rahul Bose wears many hats, from being an award-winning actor to…
May 1, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong (4) high fives the fans after scoring against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fourth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images Michael Busch had two hits, including a two-run single, and the Chicago Cubs used two three-run innings to hold off the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks 6-5 on Friday in the first game of a weekend series.
Busch triggered a three-run first with a bases-loaded single, then the Cubs added three more in the fourth off Diamondbacks starter off Zac Gallen (1-2) for their third win in four games and ninth straight home win.
Cubs starter Colin Rea (4-1) gave up two runs on eight hits over 5 1/3 innings. He fanned six with no walks. Jacob Webb pitched the final two innings for his first save, the sixth Cub reliever to record a save this season.
Diamondbacks second baseman Ildemaro Vargas had a career-high four hits to raise his batting average to a major league-leading .404. Geraldo Perdomo cracked a three-run homer to cap a four-run sixth and pull the D-backs within 6-5, but they managed just one baserunner over the final three innings.
Vargas singled in the first to extend his season-opening hitting streak to 24 games. His 27-game streak dating to last September ranks as the longest in the majors since Trea Turner’s 27-game run in 2022.
Per Elias, Vargas’ season-opening streak stands as the longest in the majors since the Detroit Tigers’ Ron LeFlore hit in 30 straight in 1976. His 27-game streak ranks second in Arizona history behind Luis Gonzalez (30, 1999).
Carson Kelly had two hits for the Cubs and Alex Bergman and Dansby Swanson had RBI hits in the three-run fourth that pushed their lead to 6-1.
Jorge Barrosa had two doubles — one a bunt that kicked off the third base bag into left field — and scored twice for Arizona. Perdomo also had two hits for the D-backs, who have lost seven of 10.
Gallen gave up six runs on seven hits in 3 2/3 innings, with three strikeouts and three walks.
Nico Hoerner doubled to open the three-run first and Gallen walked to load the bases. Busch hit a two-run single, then the third run scored when Kelly’s catchable pop to center fell safely.
Vargas singled in a run in the third before the Cubs knocked out Gallen in the fourth. The D-backs got within 6-5 with a four-run sixth, all scoring after Rea was replaced by Ryan Rolison with one out and one on.
Pinch-hitter Tim Tawa walked and Barrosa pushed a hard bunt down the third base line. When Bregman let it roll, the ball hit the bag and kicked into short left. Perdomo followed with a three-run homer.
Hoerner was replaced by pinch-hitter Matt Shaw in the second inning. Hoerner was removed with a neck strain, the Cubs said.
–Field Level Media
May 1, 2026; Chicago, Illinois, USA; Chicago Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong (4) high fives the fans after scoring against the Arizona Diamondbacks during the fourth inning at Wrigley Field. Mandatory Credit: David Banks-Imagn Images Michael Busch had two hits, including a two-run single, and the Chicago Cubs used two three-run innings to hold off the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks 6-5 on Friday in the first game of a weekend series.
Busch triggered a three-run first with a bases-loaded single, then the Cubs added three more in the fourth off Diamondbacks starter off Zac Gallen (1-2) for their third win in four games and ninth straight home win.
Cubs starter Colin Rea (4-1) gave up two runs on eight hits over 5 1/3 innings. He fanned six with no walks. Jacob Webb pitched the final two innings for his first save, the sixth Cub reliever to record a save this season.
Diamondbacks second baseman Ildemaro Vargas had a career-high four hits to raise his batting average to a major league-leading .404. Geraldo Perdomo cracked a three-run homer to cap a four-run sixth and pull the D-backs within 6-5, but they managed just one baserunner over the final three innings.
Vargas singled in the first to extend his season-opening hitting streak to 24 games. His 27-game streak dating to last September ranks as the longest in the majors since Trea Turner’s 27-game run in 2022.
Per Elias, Vargas’ season-opening streak stands as the longest in the majors since the Detroit Tigers’ Ron LeFlore hit in 30 straight in 1976. His 27-game streak ranks second in Arizona history behind Luis Gonzalez (30, 1999).
Carson Kelly had two hits for the Cubs and Alex Bergman and Dansby Swanson had RBI hits in the three-run fourth that pushed their lead to 6-1.
Jorge Barrosa had two doubles — one a bunt that kicked off the third base bag into left field — and scored twice for Arizona. Perdomo also had two hits for the D-backs, who have lost seven of 10.
Gallen gave up six runs on seven hits in 3 2/3 innings, with three strikeouts and three walks.
Nico Hoerner doubled to open the three-run first and Gallen walked to load the bases. Busch hit a two-run single, then the third run scored when Kelly’s catchable pop to center fell safely.
Vargas singled in a run in the third before the Cubs knocked out Gallen in the fourth. The D-backs got within 6-5 with a four-run sixth, all scoring after Rea was replaced by Ryan Rolison with one out and one on.
Pinch-hitter Tim Tawa walked and Barrosa pushed a hard bunt down the third base line. When Bregman let it roll, the ball hit the bag and kicked into short left. Perdomo followed with a three-run homer.
Hoerner was replaced by pinch-hitter Matt Shaw in the second inning. Hoerner was removed with a neck strain, the Cubs said.
–Field Level Media
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