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Algerian girls take up boxing after Khelif’s Olympic gold

Algerian girls take up boxing after Khelif’s Olympic gold
Algerian junior boxing champion for 2025 Cerine Kessal, right, practices with trainer Manal Berkach, a former boxer herself, at a club in Azazga town in Algeria’s Tizi Ouzou province on Feb. 25, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 13 March 2025

Algerian girls take up boxing after Khelif’s Olympic gold

Algerian girls take up boxing after Khelif’s Olympic gold
  • Khelif’s victory generated newfound interest among Algerian girls and women in the male-dominated sport
  • In Bejaia, further east of Algiers, clubs such as Dream Team and Sidi Ayad Boxing Club have also welcomed more women and girls

AZAZGA, Algeria: In a gym in northern Algeria’s Kabylia, 15-year-old Cerine Kessal was driving her fists into a punching bag. The two-time national champion was dreaming of greater feats after Algerian Imane Khelif won Olympic gold last year.

Khelif’s victory generated newfound interest among Algerian girls and women in the male-dominated sport, with gyms across the North African country witnessing a surge in memberships.

She had emerged from the Paris Olympics as a trailblazer for aspiring women athletes in Algeria, despite a gender controversy over her eligibility.

“I want to compete in African and world championships,” Kessal said, speaking in a blend of Arabic, French and Tamazight, the language of the Amazigh people, also known as Berbers.

Her coach, Djaafar Ourhoun, said Khelif had become “a role model for the other boxers at the gym,” after winning her local club, Jeunesse Sportive Azazga, its only medal at a recent national championship.

The small gym, refashioned from a former municipal slaughterhouse with the help of local families, now trains 20 women boxers, said Ourhoun.

The young girls’ “hunger for results” has often sparked “competitiveness, even jealousy, among their male counterparts,” he said.

“I want to be like Imane Khelif and win an Olympic gold medal,” said Kessal.

In 2023, the International Boxing Association barred Khelif from its world championships after it said she had failed gender eligibility tests for carrying XY chromosomes.

The 25-year-old champion denounced the IBA’s “false and offensive” allegations and vowed last month to keep fighting “in the ring” and “in the courts.”

“I have seen adversity before,” she said in a statement, “but I have never stayed down.”

In Bejaia, further east of Algiers, clubs such as Dream Team and Sidi Ayad Boxing Club have also welcomed more women and girls.

Lina Debbou, a former boxer and now sports adviser, said this momentum started right after the Olympics.

“Imane Khelif brought so much to women’s boxing,” she said. “More girls are joining the sport thanks to her.”

Even in relatively more conservative parts of the country, like Djelfa in the Saharan Atlas range some 300 kilometers south of Algiers, more women are said to have taken up the sport.

“We first tried introducing women’s boxing in 2006, but it was not successful due to the region being conservative,” Mohamed Benyacoub, the director of local club Ennasr, said.

Now, “the women’s sports movement began to revive,” he said, adding that Khelif had “shattered the taboo that women can’t box.”

Nacim Touami, a boxing referee whose wife is also a professional boxer, said parents are playing a pivotal role in this “real obsession with boxing now.”

“Parents used to prefer volleyball or swimming for their daughters,” he said. “But after Khelif’s gold medal, we’ve seen a real shift.”

Manel Berkache, a former national champion who also coaches at JSA, said it was mothers, in particular, who were driving the change.

“Mothers are now the ones who register their daughters and attend training and matches, and this is a beautiful thing,” she said.

Hocine Oucherif, vice president of the Algerian Boxing Federation, called this “the Imane Khelif phenomenon.”

“She is the locomotive of women’s boxing in Algeria,” he said. “She gave us a strong momentum.”

He said over 100 junior girl boxers had turned up at this year’s national championship — more than double the number from last year.

It was at this competition that Kessal won gold, sparring against athletes from clubs including the Tiaret Civil Protection Club where Khelif debuted.

Like Kessal, 14-year-old Hayat Berouali, who picked up boxing less than a month ago, dreams of becoming a champion, too.

“I liked boxing after watching fights at the Olympic Games, especially those of Imane Khelif, and my parents encouraged me,” she said, smiling.


West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller
Updated 59 sec ago

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller

West Indies hold their nerves to beat Pakistan in T20 thriller
  • Jason Holder takes four wickets, smashes boundary off final ball to hand West Indies win
  • It is the first T20 victory for West Indies in seven matches after they lost 5-0 to Australia 

LAUDERHILL, Florida: Jason Holder took four wickets and then smashed a boundary off the final ball of the game to lift West Indies to a thrilling two-wicket victory over Pakistan on Saturday and level the three-match Twenty20 cricket international series.

The veteran allrounder bowled an inspired spell to take 4-19 off four overs, as Pakistan struggled to 133 for nine after it won the toss and batted in Florida.

The West Indies reply also stumbled as Pakistan’s spinners kept scoring difficult but late cameos by Gudakesh Motie and Romario Shepherd kept West Indies just about in the contest before Holder’s heroics off Pakistan talisman Shahid Shah Afridi’s final delivery clinched it.

It is the first T20 victory for West Indies in seven matches, a span that includes a heavy 5-0 series defeat to Australia, on top of a test series sweep last month.

“Been a tough couple of weeks for us,” captain Shai Hope said. “We always try to get better, the guys have put in a lot of hard work.

“Hopefully today is the turnaround we are looking for.”

Earlier, Hasan Nawaz’s 40 from 23 balls and captain Salman Agha’s 38 from 33 deliveries led Pakistan from a precarious 53-4 in the 10th over, but 133 looked a vulnerable target at the innings break.

Fresh from taking three wickets in Pakistan’s 14-run win in the opening game at the same venue on Thursday, Mohammad Nawaz took another three Saturday, returning 3-14 from his four overs.

Like Thursday’s game, West Indies found scoring more than five-an-over difficult on the spin-friendly pitch and lost regular wickets.

When Roston Chase was teased into a big shot by Saim Ayub (2-20), West Indies had sunk to 70-5 in the 14th over and looking at a steep mountain to climb.

West Indies rally

Motie got the innings moving with his quickfire 28 from 20 balls before Shepherd chipped in with 15 from 11 balls, including taking 10 runs off Hasan Ali in the second-to-last over to give West Indies a glimpse.

Needing eight runs from the final over, Afridi (1-31) removed Shepherd off the second ball, with Holder and new batter Shamar Joseph only able to score singles off the next three balls.

Afridi then bowled a wide to leave West Indies needing three runs from the final ball. Holder (16 from 10 balls) then found the gap at backward square to score the boundary they needed and end their six T20 match losing streak.

“We’ve had a fair bit of criticism which is warranted,” player-of-the-match Holder said. “We haven’t done justice to our potential.

“We can be a lot better, consistency has definitely plagued us.”

The third T20 will be held in Lauderhill on Sunday before an ODI series in the Caribbean.


Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches
Updated 03 August 2025

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches

Dubai, Abu Dhabi to host T20 Asia Cup matches
  • Arch-rivals India and Pakistan to meet in Dubai on September 14 for Asia Cup clash 
  • Group A includes Asia Cup defending champions India, Pakistan, UAE and Oman

Dubai and Abu Dhabi will be the host cities for the men’s Twenty20 Asia Cup, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) said, with arch-rivals India and Pakistan to meet in Dubai on September 14.

The tournament in the United Arab Emirates, scheduled to run from September 9 to 28, will feature eight teams — two more than the last edition — with 11 matches in Dubai and eight in Abu Dhabi.

Abu Dhabi will host the opener between Afghanistan and Hong Kong, while the final will be held in Dubai.

“Hosting it in the UAE allows us to bring the excitement to one of the most vibrant cricketing hubs in the world,” ACC President Mohsin Naqvi said in a media release on Saturday.

“Dubai and Abu Dhabi are well equipped to deliver a seamless and world class experience for players, fans, and broadcasters alike.”

Group A includes defending champions India, Pakistan, UAE and Oman, while Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Hong Kong are in Group B. 
 


Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’
Updated 03 August 2025

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’

Lionel Messi’s Leagues Cup injury confirmed as ‘hamstring discomfort’
  • The 38-year-old Messi’s exit brings a halt to an exceptional run of clean health
  • Messi, an eight-time Ballon d’Or winner, has not scored in the Leagues Cup

Lionel Messi exited Saturday night’s Leagues Cup match against visiting Necaxa in the 11th minute due to a right leg injury. After Inter Miami completed its 2-2 draw, manager Javier Mascherano declared Messi felt “hamstring discomfort.”

The 38-year-old Messi’s exit brings a halt to an exceptional run of clean health, the longest since he joined Miami in July 2023.

He had played in every minute of 16 consecutive matches for Miami between MLS regular season and FIFA Club World Cup play before his failure to appear in the 2025 MLS All-Star Game resulted in a one-match suspension against FC Cincinnati a week ago.

He returned Wednesday night for Miami’s Leagues Cup opener against Atlas and provided two assists – one leading to the game-winner late – in a 2-1 victory.

Neither team scored prior to Messi’s exit Saturday, though Miami’s Telasco Segovia scored shortly thereafter to put Miami in front. Necaxa took a 2-1 lead with the Herons reduced to 10 men when Marcelo Weigandt was sent off for denying an obvious goal-scoring opportunity, but Inter Miami rallied for the equalizer in extra time. The Herons then won 5-4 on penalty kicks.

Messi, an eight-time Ballon d’Or winner, has not scored in the Leagues Cup. But in MLS play, he is tied for the league lead with 18 goals.

Messi’s run of consecutive appearances was in stark contrast to his first two MLS seasons, during which he missed significant portions of regular-season play.

After playing all seven matches of Miami’s run to the 2023 Leagues Cup title, minor ailments limited Messi to just six appearances among Miami’s last 12 regular-season games that year.

He also dealt with multiple issues in 2024, the most pronounced being an extended recovery from a torn leg muscle sustained while playing for Argentina during the 2024 Copa America final that July.

He played in only 19 games in his first full MLS season, but he still scored 20 goals and had 16 assists to earn the league’s 2024 MVP award.


McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out
Updated 03 August 2025

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

McIntosh eases into 400 medley final, Marchand almost misses out

Summer McIntosh is on track to finish the world championships with a fourth gold medal after being fastest in the 400 meters individual medley heats while Leon Marchand nearly missed the men’s final on the eighth and final day in Singapore on Sunday.
McIntosh cruised to victory in her heat in four minutes and 35.56 seconds for the final later on Sunday, nearly 12 seconds shy of her world record (4:23.65) from Canadian trials in June.
The biggest cheers might have been for 12-year-old Yu Zidi, though, as the Chinese schoolgirl won her heat to qualify third for the final in 4:36.49, less than a second off the personal best (4:35.53) that clinched the national title in May.
Marchand, who took the 200m IM gold after setting a world record in the semifinals, led halfway through his 400 heat but slowed up almost too much in the breaststroke and freestyle legs as he qualified seventh for the final in the evening session.
While nearly three seconds behind Japanese top seed Tomoyuki Matsushita, Olympic champion and world record holder Marchand will be strongly backed to win his third 400 world title.
With American Carson Foster, the Olympic bronze medallist, pulling out of the heats with an ankle injury, the United States did not qualify a swimmer in the final for the first time in over 50 years of world championships.
New Zealand’s defending champion Lewis Clareburt also bombed out of the heats.
The US qualified fastest for the men’s 4x100 medley relay final with Jack Alexy swimming the anchor leg for the Paris Olympic silver medallists.
But Olympic champions China crashed out as the ninth quickest nation along with 11th-ranked Australia.
The US women also qualified fastest in the medley relay in 3:54.49, a second clear of second-ranked Australia, with Germany third fastest.
Eight gold medals will be contested in a packed program in the evening session, with German iron man Florian Wellbrock gunning for the men’s 1,500 freestyle title to boost his bumper haul after sweeping the open water events.
Lithuanian world record holder Ruta Meilutyte will bid for a fourth successive women’s 50 breaststroke world title since returning to the pool from a two-year ban for anti-doping rule violations in 2021.


Miyu Yamashita takes slim lead into final round at Women’s Open

Miyu Yamashita takes slim lead into final round at Women’s Open
Updated 03 August 2025

Miyu Yamashita takes slim lead into final round at Women’s Open

Miyu Yamashita takes slim lead into final round at Women’s Open
  • Yamashita was at 9-under par through three rounds as her advantage was narrowed to a single shot heading into Sunday’s final round
  • A Lim Kim moved into second place at 8 under after a 5-under par 67 in the third round after a nine-hole stretch when she compiled four birdies

PORTHCAWL, Wales: Miyu Yamashita of Japan maintained her lead through three rounds of the AIG Women’s Open despite stumbling to a 2-over par 74 on Saturday at Porthcawl, Wales.

After holding a three-shot lead through the midway point of the tournament, Yamashita was at 9-under par through three rounds as her advantage was narrowed to a single shot heading into Sunday’s final round.

“I think one of the main things is not missing in the wrong spots,” said Yamashita, whose best finish in a major was a tie for second at the 2024 Women’s PGA Championship. “Because I’m able to do that, that means I don’t put myself in awkward positions and helps me not make those bogeys which can cost you so much at these championships.”

A Lim Kim moved into second place at 8 under after a 5-under par 67 in the third round after a nine-hole stretch when she compiled four birdies. Andrea Lee of the United States also shot a 5-under 67 on Saturday and was alone in third place at 7 under.

“So honestly I’m not focused on the leader,” Kim said. “I focus on my process and my shot and then my position. That’s all.”

A group of four tied for fourth place at 6 under included Japan’s Minami Katsu and Rio Takeda, England’s Charley Hull and American Megan Khang.

Yamashita breezed to a 7-under par 65 in the second round to move into the lead but struggled to find that form Saturday. She was 1 over on the front nine with a bogey and eight pars. She was 1 over again on an eventful back nine that included three bogeys and two birdies.

Yamashita was even par for the round through 13 holes until she recorded a pair of bogey 5s at No. 14 and 16.

“I’ll be just looking at what went wrong and what went right and analyzing the day and make the improvements that hopefully will lead to a better round (Sunday),” Yamashita said.

Yamashita and Takeda, who was alone in second place through two rounds, were the only members of the top 10 on the leaderboard to shoot over par Saturday. Takeda, who was Yamashita’s playing partner, also was 2 over.

Katsu had the low round of the day at 7-under 65 to put herself into contention by moving up 31 spots on the leaderboard. She got off to a slow start with a pair of bogeys on the first two holes before going on a red-hot run.

Starting with a birdie 3 at No. 4, Katsu was 9 under over her final 15 holes in a stretch that included an eagle 3 at No. 6.

“Made two bogeys on the first three holes, but after that I was really focused on my swing,” Katsu said. “I just had a really good image of my swing, and I kept that going, and here I am.”

World No. 1 Nelly Korda stumbled to a 2-under 74 on Saturday to leave her at even par for the tournament in a tie for 36th place.

England’s Lottie Woad, who turned pro last week then won the Women’s Scottish Open, shot a 1-under 71 and is at 3 under for the weekend to sit in a seven- way tie for 11th place.

Defending champion Lydia Ko of New Zealand shot a 2-under 70 and was tied for 36th at even par.