Resurgent Pogacar set for Tour de France duel with road-rusty Vingegaard

Resurgent Pogacar set for Tour de France duel with road-rusty Vingegaard
Team UAE's Slovenian rider Tadej Pogacar gestures a victory sign during the 21st and last stage of the 107th Giro d'Italia cycling race, 125km from Rome to Rome, on May 26, 2024. (File/AFP)
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Updated 27 June 2024
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Resurgent Pogacar set for Tour de France duel with road-rusty Vingegaard

Resurgent Pogacar set for Tour de France duel with road-rusty Vingegaard
  • Visma’s Vingegaard, the two-time defending champion from Denmark, hasn’t raced since suffering multiple fractures in a fall in March
  • With another wink at history Pogacar is aiming to become the first rider in 26 years to win the Giro and Tour de France in the same season

PARIS: The Tour de France sets off from the Italian city of Florence on Saturday with Tadej Pogacar well prepped for a battle royale with defending champion Jonas Vingegaard on a route designed to take the world’s greatest bike race down to the wire.

Team UAE’s rider Pogacar goes into the 21-day race in red-hot form after winning the Giro d’Italia in May.

Visma’s Vingegaard, the two-time defending champion from Denmark, hasn’t raced since suffering multiple fractures in a fall in March.

Vingegaard’s fall offers Slovenia’s Pogacar a chance at revenge for the brutal manner in which the Dane crushed him on two Alpine stages late in the 2023 edition.

“I’ve tested my legs a little and to be honest, I’ve never felt so good on a bike,” said Pogacar, a back-to-back winner in 2020 and 2021.

“Everyone thinks that I’m going to win the Tour every year, but I didn’t win the last two times.”

While Pogacar dislikes heat and high altitude, Vingegaard is the man on the back foot this year due to the punctured lung and broken ribs he sustained in that March accident.

“Jonas was really badly injured, but I think he’ll be okay. If he is feeling mentally strong and has made a good recovery he will be at his top level,” Pogacar said.

Behind these chalk-and-cheese rivals is a bevvy of pretenders awaiting the slightest slip on a treacherous route in a year where bike accidents have hogged the headlines.

Veteran Primoz Roglic has won the Vuelta a Espana and the Giro in his career and will be riding the Tour in the colors of new sponsor Red Bull, a new contract worth €6 million a year in his back pocket.

Also in the mix is the impossible-to-ignore talent of Belgian Remco Evenepoel (Quick Step), who will target the two time-trials and the gravel roads on what should be an enthralling Tour debut for the 24-year-old targeting the best young rider jersey.

“We saw that Remco and Primoz were in good shape in the Dauphine and I reckon they’ll be at their best. But you never know. Last year I thought I was 100 percent,” Pogacar said.

The route crosses the Alps twice with seven mountain slogs, features a first-ever race on white gravel and ends with an eye-catching individual time trial from Monaco to Nice along the French Riviera.

Broadcast live in more than 100 countries, the first four days are drenched with Italian color, starting with the Renaissance beauty of Florence before the race crosses the Rubicon river, takes in the seaside sights at Rimini, passes along the Via Romagna road into Bologna and eventually moves out of Fiat capital Turin toward France for the remaining 17 stages.

Instead of the traditional parade round Paris on the final day for the 21st stage, a timetable clash with the 2024 Olympic Games in the French capital sent the organizers looking elsewhere.

And what a solution they found. In place of the sprint up and down the Champs-Elysees, the stage is now an individual 34.5km time-trial along the coastline corniches between Monaco and Nice.

The last stage could well provide a last twist in fate for the riders, evoking memories of the 1989 Tour, when American Greg LeMond started a rare final-day time trial 50 seconds behind French leader Laurent Fignon and ended up winning the race by eight seconds.

With another wink at history Pogacar is aiming to become the first rider in 26 years to win the Giro and Tour de France in the same season.

He romped almost unopposed to the Giro title in May and should he pull off the ambitious feat he will join a list of legends in Fausto Coppi, Jacques Anquetil, Eddy Merckx, Bernard Hinault, Stephen Roche, Miguel Indurain and Marco Pantani, the last man to achieve the double in 1998.

The seven mountain stages, which include four high-altitude finales, with the highest at 2,802m on stage 19, will be to the liking of Vingegaard.


Schniederjans holds off DeChambeau for emotional comeback win at International Series India

Schniederjans holds off DeChambeau for emotional comeback win at International Series India
Updated 13 sec ago
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Schniederjans holds off DeChambeau for emotional comeback win at International Series India

Schniederjans holds off DeChambeau for emotional comeback win at International Series India
  • The American posted a three-under-par 69 for a four-round aggregate of 10-under

GURUGRAM, INDIA: Ollie Schniederjans completed a remarkable comeback victory at International Series India presented by DLF, in front of a packed audience at the DLF Golf and Country Club in Gurugram, just outside Delhi.

The American, lifted by an outrageous chip in for birdie on 13, fired a three-under-par 69 for a four-round aggregate of 10-under.

It gave him a surprise four-shot victory over reigning US Open Champion Bryson DeChambeau, his nearest challenger — in the opening event of the year on the International Series that brought crowds flocking to Gurugram.

The two-time major winner pulled out all the stops with a seven-under par round of 65, but it was not enough to cancel out an eight-shot gap that Schniederjans had built up over him going into the final round, and he finished on six under for the week.

Abraham Ancer of Fireballs GC finished joint third on two under after a level-par final round, alongside reigning International Series Rankings Champion Joaquin Niemann, with only four players finishing under par on the testing Gary Player-designed course.

“It means a lot to me,” said the 31-year-old Schniederjans, ably supported by his brother Ben as caddie this week. “This golf course is very challenging, and back in the day I would have had a hard time out here, so to come out and shoot those scores now, with everything I have been through, my game is a lot better than it ever was. This was proof this week.”

The third round had to be completed this morning, and Schniederjans got off to a great start as he carved out a three-shot lead on seven under.

The field had nine holes to finish after a first shotgun start on Saturday afternoon, and the American birdied his first three holes — 10, 11 and 12 — en route to a 69. He had a five-shot lead at the turn from Kazuki Higa and DeChambeau. That lead became six when he sensationally chipped in for a three on the par-four 13th from a difficult lie to the right of green, where it looked like a bogey would be more likely.

Japan’s Higa (72) had started the final round in second place on four under, but ultimately fell away to T5 on level par after a four-over final round of 76.

The backlog was the result of long delays every day caused by thick fog each morning. In order to complete 72 holes, the organisers switched to shotgun starts for rounds three and four, with players staying in the same pairings.

They started round four immediately after completion of round three and Schniederjans did not let up in pursuit of a morale-boosting victory, with Australian Greg Norman walking the course and watching intently.

And despite a bogey on 17, the American safely made par on 18 to see things out, narrowly missing out on a birdie chip in from the fringe of the green.

Schniederjans’ win is a remarkable one. He had replacement surgery on both hips in 2022 and was out of the game for well over a year.

It was his final attempt to fix a whole host of injury issues which had derailed the career of a player who was ranked the world’s top amateur in 2014 for 41 consecutive weeks. He also won on the Korn Ferry Tour in 2016, the year after turning professional.

Schniederjans was playing this week by virtue of finishing fourth at last year’s LIV Golf Promotions event, with the top-10 players earning playing rights for The International Series.

He just missed out on winning the event in Saudi, which brings a passage onto the LIV Golf League, but having triumphed today he has made the ideal start to The International Series Rankings race, with the champion also earning a berth on the roster.

Speaking out about his long journey back to victory, he said: “It was a long process, it took a lot of patience. I did a lot to change my body and swing, and had to learn a lot through that process.

“There were setbacks that took me years to get to this point. This year has been good, I have been able to be on the course all year for a year now. I’ve been able to put everything together, and I knew something like this was coming.”

Sebastian Munoz of Colombia, Spain’s Eugenio Chacarra and Higa finished T5 on level par, ahead of Australian Kevin Yuan and Chase Koepka in eighth place on one over.

The next event on the Asian Tour is the New Zealand Open from Feb. 27 — March 2, which will be followed by the International Series Macau (March 20-23), the second elevated event of 10 that offers a pathway onto the LIV Golf League.


18-year-old UAE resident Ibrahiem Alrefai claims victory at inaugural L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France

18-year-old UAE resident Ibrahiem Alrefai claims victory at inaugural L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France
Updated 39 min 33 sec ago
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18-year-old UAE resident Ibrahiem Alrefai claims victory at inaugural L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France

18-year-old UAE resident Ibrahiem Alrefai claims victory at inaugural L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France
  • Over 1,000 cyclists participated in 1st edition of L’Etape Dubai, the highest number of participants for an amateur cycling event’s inaugural race in UAE history

DUBAI: L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France made its grand debut in the UAE this weekend, bringing together over 1,000 cycling enthusiasts, from hobby riders and amateurs to elite athletes, and recording the highest number of participants for the first edition of any amateur cycling event in the history of the UAE.

The main race, held on Sunday, Feb. 2, saw hundreds of competitors set off from Dubai Design District (D3) on a thrilling 101-km route, navigating Dubai-Al Ain Road (E66) before a decisive push by Syrian national and UAE resident Ibrahiem Alrefai, along Zayed Bin Hamdan Al Nahyan Street (D54), delivered a first-place finish at Expo Village Park.

In total, the event featured the highest number of international competitors to have participated in the first edition of an amateur cycling race in Dubai, including over 250 Emiratis.

Alrefai secured the first-ever L’Etape Dubai title in a time of 02:17:24, followed closely by Ivan Kormshchikov, with Danil Konotop rounding out the podium.

Alrefai said: “Winning the inaugural L’Etape Dubai is an incredible honor. The course was both challenging and rewarding, and the atmosphere was fantastic with all the new cyclists, whether they were professionals or trying cycling for the first time. It was a true test of endurance, and I couldn’t be prouder to stand on the podium as the first winner of L’Etape Dubai by Tour de France.”

The female winner in the overall race was Olha Shekel with a time of 02:20:20, with Ebtissam Zayed in second position and Olivuja Balesisyte finishing third. One of the youngest female finishers was 15-year-old UAE resident Darcey Minton who took first place in the 50-km ride and was supported by race sponsor Skoda.

The event was backed by the Dubai Sports Council. The organization’s Secretary-General Saeed Hareb said: “We are pleased with the wide participation of cyclists, especially those who have come from outside the country to participate in this famous race that combines the luxury, splendor and beauty of the city of Dubai with the history, traditions and name of the most famous Tour de France race.

Hareb thanked the UAE’s leaders, attributing the success of cycling in Dubai to their continuous support.

“Dubai has become one of the most important cities in the world that supports sports in general and cycling in particular,” he said, adding that Dubai hosts international and local cycling championships throughout the year.

“February happens to be the most exciting month for cyclists as Dubai organizes a total of six cycling competitions, which (draw) the participation of thousands of cyclists of all nationalities, ages and abilities. All are keen to come to Dubai and participate in these events and benefit from the sports facilities designed according to the highest standards. These facilities include the more than 544 km (of) cycling tracks that connect most of the areas and neighborhoods of Dubai,” Hareb added.


Rybakina adds Sanguinetti to coaching staff amid Vukov investigation

Rybakina adds Sanguinetti to coaching staff amid Vukov investigation
Updated 02 February 2025
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Rybakina adds Sanguinetti to coaching staff amid Vukov investigation

Rybakina adds Sanguinetti to coaching staff amid Vukov investigation
  • Italian is with Rybakina this week in Abu Dhabi, where world number five is top seed and defending champion

ABU DHABI: Elena Rybakina has added Italian former player Davide Sanguinetti to her coaching staff and has reiterated her displeasure at the WTA’s decision to provisionally suspend her coach Stefano Vukov for allegedly breaching the tour’s Code of Conduct.

Rybakina ended her trial period with Novak Djokovic’s former coach Goran Ivanisevic following her fourth-round exit from the Australian Open last month and has brought in Sanguinetti to accompany her at tournaments and work with Vukov, who is banned from all sanctioned events pending the WTA’s investigation into his conduct.

Sanguinetti is with Rybakina this week in Abu Dhabi, where the world number five is the top seed and defending champion.

The 2022 Wimbledon winner says she has not been notified by the WTA about a date for the conclusion of the investigation and insists the situation “was not handled well”.

“I don’t know much. It’s a situation I’m not happy with. But it is what it is but for now I don’t know much,” Rybakina told AFP at the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open on Sunday.

“I think safeguarding is important but the case with what happened with us I don’t think it was handled well.”

Vukov told The Athletic that he “never abused anyone” and Rybakina feels she is not being heard.

“In the end of the day, I think you need to listen to the player, that’s the most important. Because as I said before there are a lot of comments from people which are also in our environment but they’re making comments not knowing me, not knowing him, and it’s just making a bad look for everyone.”

Rybakina says the coaching partnership with Ivanisevic was on a trial basis and the decision for them to part ways after just a couple of months of working together was mutual.

“We just sat down, we talked, and we decided to go our separate ways. But I think I learned a lot and it’s not easy to find a good collaboration,” explained the 25-year-old Kazakh.

“It of course takes time and everything but that was our decision. We’ll see how this year goes for me. I’m also not such an easy player maybe like some people think, ‘Oh it’s easy with her’, or something, but it’s not really like this.

“I think every person is different and there is no one who is perfect. I can be sometimes stubborn on the court, stubborn on some things, that’s at least my honest opinion.”

While Vukov is banned from joining Rybakina at tournaments, she says they are “communicating of course” and that he and Sanguinetti are always in contact, and spent some time together with her at a recent training block in Dubai post-Australian Open.

“He’s an important person in my career. We started when I was like 200 [in the world]. So it’s a lot of things, on the court, outside of the court, he’s helping out with,” she said of Vukov, who began coaching her when she was a teenager.

“I feel like of course it’s not ideal that he cannot be on the practice courts but at the same time we are finding a way also with help of Davide, his opinion. I hope it’s going to work out. We have a good team in the end of the day.”

Rybakina headlines a competitive field at the WTA 500 tournament in Abu Dhabi that also includes recent Australian Open semi-finalist Paula Badosa, world number 11 Daria Kasatkina, Tunisian star Ons Jabeur, and British wildcard Emma Raducanu.

Main draw action kicks off on Monday with the final taking place on Saturday February 8.


Afghans push back against international calls for ban on cricket team

Afghans push back against international calls for ban on cricket team
Updated 02 February 2025
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Afghans push back against international calls for ban on cricket team

Afghans push back against international calls for ban on cricket team
  • Cricket is considered the most popular sport in Afghanistan, representing hope for many Afghans
  • British lawmakers urged their national cricket body to boycott Feb. 26 match against Afghanistan

KABUL: Afghans are pushing back against calls to ban their national cricket team from participating in international competitions, saying that such a move would not reverse the Taliban’s increasing restrictions on women in the country. 
Regarded as the most popular sport in Afghanistan, cricket has represented a rare bright spot for many Afghans as they struggle amid a devastating economic and humanitarian crisis sparked by sanctions slapped on the Taliban administration following their takeover in 2021. 
Since last month, foreign campaigns calling for Afghanistan’s men’s team to be barred from international matches have been gaining traction, as a protest of the Taliban restricting women’s access to education, the workplace, public spaces, as well as sports. 
This includes British lawmakers urging the England Cricket Board to boycott the country’s upcoming match against Afghanistan in the ICC Champions Trophy, which is scheduled to take place on Feb. 26. 
“There are problems in the country – we can’t deny that – but cricket is certainly not one of them,” Ahmad Nadim, a 23-year-old cricket fan in Kabul, told Arab News. 
“The national players were among the first ones to criticize the restrictions on girls’ education and they have continuously voiced their support for Afghan women’s rights. Cricket has been a great source of happiness for Afghans and still continues to be one.” 
Despite record-setting performances – including high-profile victories against England, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Australia – over the last few years, Afghanistan’s place on the world cricket stage has become increasingly controversial. 
After the Taliban disbanded the country’s women’s team following their takeover, most of the squad members fled to Australia, where they reunited for a match just last week. 
Though the International Cricket Council requires member nations to have both a men’s and a women’s team, as Afghanistan kept its status as a full member in the ICC it triggered boycotts from countries like Australia and England, which have refused to play them in bilateral matches. 
Human Rights Watch have also called on the ICC to suspend Afghanistan’s membership “until women and girls can once again participate in education and sport” in the country. 
In their home country, Afghans are openly opposing the boycotts and called for sports to be separated from politics. 
“Afghanistan’s cricket team is all supportive of women’s right to education because education is the foundation of a strong society and development in the country,” Hasti Gul Abid, Afghan cricketer who has played for the national team, told Arab News. 
“Afghanistan’s cricket reached the current stage with a lot of difficulties,” he said. “The people of Afghanistan have been supporting their national team since day one. Our people contributed to the advancement of cricket as much as the players did.”
As the men’s team’s popularity and victories have brought joy across the country on many occasions, some argue that the squad should not be seen as representatives of the Taliban government. 
“The cricket team belongs to the whole country and all Afghans. It represents us all, not a specific political or ethnic group,” said 21-year-old Khanzada Shaheen, who plays in a local cricket team in Kabul. 
Banning Afghanistan’s cricket team will not change the Taliban’s policies against women, said Lal Pacha, a fruit vendor in Kabul. 
“We all want Afghan girls to return to schools and universities but why punish our cricket team for that?” he told Arab News. 
“Let’s say the cricket team is banned from playing internationally, will this change the Islamic Emirate’s policy? There’s no logic in the demand for banning the cricket team.”


Sofia Kenin and Cristina Bucsa win Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open qualifiers

Sofia Kenin and Cristina Bucsa win Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open qualifiers
Updated 02 February 2025
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Sofia Kenin and Cristina Bucsa win Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open qualifiers

Sofia Kenin and Cristina Bucsa win Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open qualifiers
  • Mixed day for the Brits as Sonay Kartal progresses but Heather Watson is beaten
  • Main draw pits Ons Jabeur against Jelena Ostapenko while Emma Raducanu meets Marketa Vondrousova

ABU DHABI: The Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open returned to the UAE capital on Saturday with qualifying wins for the likes of Sofia Kenin, Cristina Bucsa and 17-year-old Wakana Sonobe.

Meanwhile, the main draw produced clashes between crowd favorite Ons Jabeur and Jelena Ostapenko, and Grand Slam champions Emma Raducanu and Marketa Vondrousova.

The third edition of the Women’s Tennis Association 500 event takes place at the International Tennis Centre, Zayed Sports City, over the next week, with the final on Saturday, Feb. 8.

American Kenin, the 2020 Australian Open champion, overcame Japan’s Aoi Ito in an entertaining match early on, edging a tight first set via tie-break before running out the winner, 7-6, 6-2.

In her match, Cristina Bucsa fought back from a set down to beat Kamilla Rakhimova 5-7, 7-6, 6-3.

Brit Heather Watson, the Wimbledon mixed doubles champion, suffered an early exit at the hands of Katie Volynets, losing 6-4, 6-3, but her compatriot Sonay Kartal produced a superb comeback against Chloe Paquet, overturning a one-set deficit to win 4-6, 6-2, 6-3.

Elsewhere, Sonobe, who won the girls’ singles title at the Australian Open one week ago, defeated Hailey Baptiste 6-3, 6-1, while there were also straight-set victories for Veronika Kudermetova and McCartney Kessler.

Meanwhile, Teodora Kostovic and Renata Zarazua progressed via walkovers following the withdrawals through injury of Diane Parry and Ysaline Bonaventure.

Away from the on-court action, the main draw took place in the new-look Mubadala Tennis Village which, at 15,000 sq. meters, is double the size of previous years.

Three-time Grand Slam finalist Jabeur takes on Ostapenko, who won the French Open in 2017 and the US Open doubles title in 2024, while 2021 US Open winner Raducanu, goes head-to-head with 2023 Wimbledon champion Vondrousova.

Elsewhere, Belinda Bencic, winner of the inaugural Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open in 2023, goes up against Rebecca Sramkova, Polina Kudermetova faces Liudmila Samsonova, and 2022 WTA Finals champion Caroline Garcia plays Lulu Sun.

Tournament director Nigel Gupta said: “The opening day of this year’s tournament has been a huge success, with some wonderful matches and fantastic off-court entertainment. Attendance figures have been great, and it was brilliant to see so many fans of all ages coming through the gates and enjoying the Mubadala Tennis Village.

“The draw has produced some really exciting matches, and everything is on course for the 2025 edition of the Mubadala Abu Dhabi Open to be the best yet. We look forward to welcoming many more spectators to Zayed Sports City over the course of the next week.”