Mumbai, June 22 (IANS) It’s been exactly a week since the Rugby Premier League (RPL) kicked off its inaugural season. One of the Olympians, Aaron Cummings, who plays for Mumbai Dreamers, believes that the league has the potential to change the landscape of Rugby 7s.Further elaborating on how the format of the league sets it apart, the 27-year-old said, “This is something new, something exciting and I think the RPL might change the landscape of Sevens, with the way they are approaching it.””It’s just different. It’s more high-intensity. You see more high-impact collisions on the field. Usually, after four minutes or so, everyone gets tired, and the game gets a little bit slower. But with it just being four minutes a quarter here, you can keep that high intensity and high impact scoring. So, I think this is special,” he added.Cummings also shared that the proactive format of the RPL would capture the imagination of the fans back in his home country. “The RPL, with the model that it has, I think this would be attractive to the American public just because it is kind of similar to (American) football with the quarters. I feel the crowd in the USA would get behind that,” he reckoned.Speaking about how his experience at the RPL has been so far, Cummings said, “My experience has been great. The league has taken great care of us. The Dreamers franchise and Dream 11 has been over the top. It’s been great.”Talking about how he’s relishing the experience of playing in India, he added, “I’m trying to inspire and teach, but I’m also trying to learn the things maybe I don’t know. I’ve been saying how the RPL has sparked a fire back under me, as far as the excitement and reminding me of the reason why I play the game. It’s been huge since I’ve been here.”RPL is the first-ever franchise tournament in rugby sevens, offering a unique opportunity for the sport to grow in India. Opening up about how this league will have an impact, especially in India, Cummings is convinced that the game will grow exponentially.”I think it’s huge, especially for India. I’m sure you can find 13-14 players who can be elite at the sport, if not more. I think this league will grow the game exponentially because of the format it is played in, with the four quarters.”Cummings also elaborated on how having the division of Marquee, Bridge and Indian players is benefiting the game. He said, “Having the number of Marquee players the league has, teaching the Indians and the Bridge players from the lower-ranked nations is great learning. To be honest, I think this league will only grow. Rahul Bose and GMR have done a fantastic job with how they’ve structured this entire format.”–IANSbc/ab

New Delhi, June 22 (IANS) Canada have sealed their qualification for the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka.
The hosts of the Americas Qualifiers confirmed their place at the tournament after securing a win against the Bahamas, their fifth consecutive victory in the ongoing campaign from as many outings.Kaleem Sana and Shivam Sharma picked up three wickets apiece as Canada bundled out Bahamas for just 57. The chase was wrapped up in just 5.3 overs, with Dilpreet Bajwa smashing an unbeaten 36 off 14 balls to seal a dominant win and qualification.Having featured at last year’s Men’s T20 World Cup in the USA and the Caribbean, Canada arrived into the qualifiers as one of the favourites to progress through.The Nicholas Kirton-led side kickstarted their campaign with a comprehensive win against Bermuda by 110 runs. The result was followed by a 59-run win against Cayman Islands and a 10-wicket trumping of Bahamas in the first round of games between the teams.In their second outing against Cayman Islands – a contest cut short to five-overs-a-side – Canada registered another comfortable win after putting together 82 runs on the board, and eventually seizing the game by 42 runs.Canada joined the list of 10 teams already qualified for the 20-team event, alongside co-hosts India and Sri Lanka. The other qualified sides include Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, England, South Africa, United States, West Indies, Ireland, New Zealand and Pakistan.Seven more teams – two from Europe Qualifier (to be played from July 5–11), two from Africa Qualifier (to be played from September 18 to October 4) and three from Asia–EAP Qualifier (to be played from October 1-17) – will join the Men’s T20 World Cup through the Regional Qualifiers.–IANSab/bc

Leeds, June 22 (IANS) Former India cricketer Sanjay Manjrekar heaped praise on Jasprit Bumrah for his ability to manufacture a wicket every time he come into the attack and compared the Indian pace ace to New Zealand great Richard Hadlee, the first player to reach 400 Test wickets.When India bowled out for 471 in 113 overs after Shubman Gill’s career-best 147 and Rishabh Pant’s astonishing 134 – his seventh ton in the format, England had to deal with a menacing Bumrah, who picked 3-45. But Ollie Pope and Ben Duckett added 122 runs for the second wicket to bring some normalcy into England’s innings as the hosts ended the day 209/3, trailing India by 262 runs.”We’ve seen four hundreds in the match so far — three from India and one from England — but which bowler has been truly special? For me, it’s just Bumrah. Yet, just the ability to manufacture a wicket every time he came into the attack is what stands out. The one bowler that comes to mind, someone with that kind of impact single-handedly, is Sir Richard Hadlee.”He played for a New Zealand team with a relatively weaker attack, but every time he came on, you felt a wicket was around the corner. The common thread between the two is mastery — when I watched Hadlee from close quarters, he felt like a true master of his trade. I get that same impression with Bumrah,” Manjrekar said on JioHotstar.While Duckett fell for 62, Pope overcame his usual nervous start to score his ninth Test hundred, laced with 13 fours. Pope got a life on 60 when he tried to steer off Bumrah in the final session, but the Indian ace found success when Duckett chopped onto his stumps and fell for 62 off 94 balls.”With Ollie Pope’s hundred for me, it was also Bumrah in the final over. Just look at this guy — the kind of wicket he picked on a pitch like this. We saw during the 2023 Cricket World Cup how he put himself in a different league from the rest of the fast bowlers, and here he is doing it again. The dismissal came with such nonchalance, and that’s something only Bumrah can manufacture. Ben Stokes does it for England to some degree, but this guy does it consistently,” said Manjrekar.Just before stumps, Bumrah had Harry Brook give a top edge on a pull to mid-wicket, but didn’t get the scalp as replays showed he overstepped for the third time in the over. He ended the day with an absolute ripper to surprise Brook with his length and angle.”In that final over, with Harry Brook trying to survive, what happened was pure drama. We witnessed the genius of Bumrah when he got him to pull a short ball he hadn’t used at all throughout the innings. The setup was brilliant — delivery after delivery outside the off stump — and then came that surprise bouncer. Nowhere in the corner of his mind would Harry Brook have expected it. It came, and he instinctively played the shot,” he added.–IANSbc/ab

Pasadena, June 22 (IANS) CA River Plate squandered the opportunity to reach the FIFA Club World Cup 2025 knockout stages after they were held to a goalless draw by Monterrey at the Rose Bowl.
The Argentinian giants needed a victory to reach the Round of 16 but both sides struggled to make any chances in a game littered with fouls and breaks in play.In an ill-tempered start to the game, three yellow cards were handed out in the first half-hour. Lacking any real fluidity, the best chance of the opening half came on the stroke of half-time when River Plate full-back Lucas Martinez Quarta found space after a corner only to side-foot a volley wide of the post with the goalmouth gaping.After the break, River Plate wunderkind Franco Mastantuono brought the crowd to their feet with a curling effort in the 67th minute that was comfortably saved by Monterrey goalkeeper Esteban Andrada. The remainder of the game petered out to a draw, with River Plate midfielder Kevin Castano sent off in injury time after picking up a second yellow card, FIFA reports.The draw sets up an exciting final matchday in Group E next Wednesday. River Plate face FC Internazionale Milano in a crunch top-of-the-table clash at Lumen Field, while Monterrey meet the already-eliminated Urawa Red Diamonds back at the Rose Bowl.Elsewhere, Fluminense FC scored three second-half goals to beat Ulsan HD and earn all three points at MetLife Stadium in New York New Jersey. The loss eliminates Ulsan from the FIFA Club World Cup after they were also beaten in their opening encounter with Mamelodi Sundowns FC.The match began with Fluminense dominating possession as Ulsan were content to sit back and defend. The Brazilian side finally broke through in the 27th minute, when Jhon Arias curled a free-kick from 24 yards into the top right corner to beat goalkeeper Jo Hyeonwoo for a 1-0 lead.It was the third free-kick goal of the tournament, with Arias joining CF Pachuca’s Bryan Gonzalez and Inter Miami CF’s Lionel Messi.Ulsan equalised with the most surprising counter-attack. They capitalised on a Fluminense giveaway with surgical precision, with Um Wonsang making a long run and sending a hard cross to the far post to Lee Jinhyun, who beat goalkeeper Fabio from the sharpest of angles to make it 1-1. It was Ulsan’s first shot of the game.Suddenly, the Korea Republic side were on the front foot. They applied pressure on the Fluminense backline and struck again just before the break. After Fluminense failed to completely clear the ball out of their area, Lee swung a cross to Um, whose diving header in the box beat Fabio for a 2-1 lead.Fluminense levelled in the 66th minute. Milosz Trojak tried to clear Keno’s cross, but the ball stayed in the box and fell to Nonato, who calmly tucked his right-footed strike inside the right post to make it 2-2.Fluminense regained the lead in the 83rd minute. With a scrambling Ulsan defence unable to clear the ball, substitute German Cano drove a cross to Juan Freytes, whose first-time finish beat Jo for a 3-2 advantage.Both teams will play their final group match on Wednesday, 25 June. Fluminense will meet Mamelodi Sundowns at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, while Ulsan will take on Borussia Dortmund at TQL Stadium in Cincinnati.–IANSbc/

Leeds, June 22 (IANS) Top-order batter Ollie Pope smashed an unbeaten century, his ninth in Tests, as England trail India by 262 runs after reaching 209/3 in 49 overs at stumps on Day Two of the first Test of the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy series at Headingley here on Saturday.It was a day when India were primed to get a big total, after reaching 430/3 – thanks to Shubman Gill making a career-best 147 and Rishabh Pant somersaulting his way to an astonishing 134 – his seventh ton in the format. But after Gill departed, India lost their last seven wickets for just 41 runs to be bowled out for 471 in 113 overs. A sudden burst of rain meant England’s innings had a delayed start, and they then had to deal with a menacing Jasprit Bumrah, who picked 3-45. But Pope and Ben Duckett added 122 runs for the second wicket to bring some normalcy into England’s innings.While Duckett fell for 62, Pope overcame his usual nervous start to score his ninth Test hundred, laced with 13 fours, before walking off undefeated after putting England in a comfortable position. It also helped the duo that India’s bowling attack, minus Bumrah, wasn’t that penetrative.In the opening over of England’s innings, with dark clouds looming around, Bumrah was on the money from the word go and was rewarded with Zak Crawley’s scalp. He got the ball to be straight, before getting it to move away at the last moment to induce an edge from Crawley and have him caught brilliantly by first slip.But after that, England began to build their innings as Pope and Duckett took two fours each off Mohammed Siraj, who released the pressure built by Bumrah. India’s pace spearhead, despite an electrifying first spell, could have got Duckett out for 15 if Ravindra Jadeja didn’t drop his catch at backward point. With Prasidh Krishna being ineffective with his loose deliveries, it meant that there was no stopping Duckett and Pope.After 17 overs, left-arm spinner Ravindra Jadeja was brought into the attack and got a good turn and bounce on offer in his second over. Duckett, though, swept Jadeja for four to bring up his 14th Test fifty and the century of his stand with Pope, just before the tea break.Pope got the final session underway with a late cut through the gap between third slip and gully, taking him to a half-century in 64 balls. But Bumrah found success when Duckett chopped onto his stumps and fell for 62 off 94 balls. Pope got a life on 60 when he tried to steer off Bumrah, but Yashasvi Jaiswal made a mess of the catch at third slip.Siraj bowled with much better lengths, and that resulted in him trapping Joe Root lbw for seven, only for the batter to overturn it on review. Pope continued to grow in confidence by taking boundaries off Jadeja, Prasidh, and Shardul Thakur before getting his second straight off 125 balls through an inside edge off Bumrah.But on the very next ball, Root poked at an outside off-stump delivery from Bumrah, and a thick outside edge was snapped up by Nair at first slip, making it the tenth time the pacer dismissed the premier England batter in Tests. Just before lunch, Bumrah had Harry Brook give a top edge on a pull to mid-wicket, but didn’t get the scalp as replays showed he overstepped for the third time in the over.That gave England a huge sigh of relief as local lad Brook and Pope walked off after having an enthralling day where England gained some momentum they squandered on day one’s play. For India, they would need to fire back on day three after having a bowling performance that was more of Bumrah or nothing.Previously, Josh Tongue led a strong fightback from England’s bowlers to end up with 4-86 as the hosts bowled out India for 471. For India, it was slightly underwhelming to end at a score below 500 after three of the top five batters made centuries.Resuming from 395/3, India had a first session of two halves – 53/0 before the drinks break was taken. But after the drinks break, India lost four wickets, including both centurions Gill and Pant.Gill got Day Two underway with a gorgeous extra cover drive off Chris Woakes for four before Pant pulled and steered Brydon Carse for boundaries, despite missing a hack down the ground off the pacer. The duo continued to trade in boundaries, as Pant went into the 90s with a falling scoop off Shoaib Bashir for four, before walloping him for six.Pant then stepped out to heave Bashir for a one-handed six over midwicket to bring up his enthralling century off 146 deliveries and celebrated with his signature somersault, a skill he picked up from undergoing gymnastics practice in his growing-up years. Pant’s seventh Test century meant he went past MS Dhoni (six) for the most Test centuries hit by an Indian wicketkeeper.The flamboyant Pant’s third Test hundred in England, laced with magnificence and madness in stroke play in equal measure, is a feat no other visiting keeper has achieved before in longer format games in the country. Pant then brought up 200 runs of his stand with Gill when he managed to clear long-off for six off Bashir.But after that, the 209-run partnership was snapped by Bashir when Gill holed out to deep square leg. Pant’s fun continued when he creamed Stokes for four, and slog-swept Bashir for six, before pulling off the England captain for another boundary.But from the other end, Karun Nair’s comeback to the Test team after eight years lasted just four balls as he reached out to a wide ball off Stokes, and Ollie Pope at cover took a brilliant leaping catch to dismiss him for a duck.With some reverse swing on offer, Pant was troubled by inswingers from Tongue, before shouldering arms to a sharp nip-backer from around the wicket and was trapped lbw right in front of the stumps. Soon after, Thakur slashed Stokes behind to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith at the stroke of lunch, as England walked off with a smile on their face.Shortly after lunch, Tongue lured Bumrah into the drive, and a second slip caught the outside edge. Tongue came back to cramp Jadeja for room and succeeded, as the left-handed batter chopped onto his stumps, before he castled Krishna to ensure India’s innings was wrapped up in 23 minutes of the second session in a day, going England’s way.Brief scores:India 471 in 113 overs (Shubman Gill 147, Rishabh Pant 134; Ben Stokes 4-66, Josh Tongue 4-86) lead England 209/3 in 49 overs (Ollie Pope 100 not out, Ben Duckett 62; Jasprit Bumrah 3-48) by 262 runs–IANSnr/bsk/