Sports
‘Yes, he tried’: AB de Villiers reveals Virat Kohli wanted him to delay RCB retirement | Cricket News
Former Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) batter AB de Villiers has revealed that Virat Kohli tried to convince him not to retire from franchise cricket before he stepped away from the game in 2021.Speaking on TOI Sports’ Bombay Sports Exchange Podcast, de Villiers said Kohli made an effort to change his mind, but he had already decided it was the right time to move on. “Yes. He tried,” de Villiers said when asked if Kohli tried to stop him.The South African great retired from international cricket in 2018 after helping his team beat India and Australia at home. He continued playing franchise cricket, including for RCB in the Indian Premier League (IPL), before retiring from all forms of the game in 2021.“I walked away from international cricket exactly when I wanted to (2018). We had beaten India and Australia at home, and I left on a high.”“Then I decided I’d continue playing a few T20 tournaments, travel the world with my family, take them to the IPL, to England for the Blast, to Australia for the Big Bash and a few other tournaments. When I finally felt ready, I called it a day (from franchise cricket as well, in 2021).”De Villiers said retiring from the IPL was not a sudden decision and that he had been thinking about it throughout his final season.“It took time. That thought stayed in my mind throughout the final season or so. Eventually, I simply went up to Virat and said, ‘I’m done’,” de Villiers said.De Villiers also spoke about the pressure of playing in front of packed crowds at Bengaluru’s M Chinnaswamy Stadium, where fans chanted his name.“That can be draining as well. Those moments also bring sleepless nights. It’s not all sunshine and roses. There are difficult moments too. The expectations and pressure you put on yourself can sometimes become suffocating. I’ve spoken about that before. I’m incredibly proud of what I achieved. But before big matches, I’d often struggle to sleep. I’d be so focused on making an impact for the team that I found it difficult to simply be myself. So it wasn’t always easy,” De Villiers said on TOI Sports’ Bombay Sports Exchange Podcast.Reflecting on life after retirement, he said the joy of success does not last long, even for the biggest players.“Of course, I miss those moments. When everything clicked and the crowd helped me enter that zone, it was an incredible feeling. But success disappears very quickly. Every champion will tell you the same thing. You win the biggest trophy, and an hour later you’re already asking yourself, “Now what?” Then your attention shifts immediately to the next trophy. You’re never fully satisfied with those achievements. Having said that, I can now look back at those memories with enormous gratitude.“
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Former India captain Sourav Ganguly set to be inducted in ICC Hall of Fame
Mumbai: Former India captain Sourav Ganguly is set to be inducted in International Cricket Council’s Hall of Fame on July 11, TOI has learnt.
Ganguly thus will join an elite list of Indian cricketers to be inducted in the ICC’s Hall of Fame. Other ICC Hall of Famers from India include MS Dhoni, Virender Sehwag, Vinoo Mankad, Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Anil Kumble, Kapil Dev, Sunil Gavaskar, Bishen Singh Bedi and former India women’s captain Diana Edulji.
Incidentally, on Wednesday (July 8), which happened to be Ganguly’s 54th birthday, the makers of Ganguly’s biopic ‘Dada’ unveiled the film’s first look, featuring Rajkummar Rao in the titular role. The scene shows Rao swirling his jersey in jubilant celebration after India’s win in the 2002 NatWest Series final against England at Lord’s. A shirtless Ganguly waving his India jersey before running onto the field remains one of Indian cricket’s most iconic moments.
Minutes after the poster was unveiled, Ganguly shared it on his social media handle and reacted to RajKummar Rao’s look. Calling it the “best gift ever,” he wrote, “The Best Gift Ever! Can’t wait to see you play my cover drive! @rajkummar_rao.”
A celebrated former India skipper and cricketer, Ganguly, who went on to become the BCCI president and currently is the president of Cricket Association of Bengal, scored 7212 runs in 113 Tests, including 16 centuries and 11363 runs in 311 ODIs, with 22 centuries, while also claiming 132 wickets with his useful medium-pace. Ganguly remains one of the top run-getters in ODI cricket. A force in one-day cricket, he formed a highly successful opening pair with the legendary Sachin Tendulkar.
Known as the “God of off-side” due to his ability to pierce the off-side field with his breathtaking cover drives, Ganguly was widely known as one of India’s greatest, graceful batters and captains, who even made the great former Australian captain Steve Waugh for toss during the iconic 2001 Test series!
When he took over as India’s captain in 2000, the Indian team was emerging from dark, bleak phase of match-fixing, perhaps the worst in its history. However, hailed for his aggressive tactics, Ganguly, putting together a bunch of world-class cricketers like Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, VVS Laxman, Anil Kumble and Harbhajan Singh, inspired India to overseas Test victories. Under Ganguly’s leadership, India were the joint winners of the ICC Champions Trophy in 2002, reached the 2003 ODI World Cup final in South Africa, squared a Test series in England, won a historic Test series in Pakistan in 2004 and ended Australia’s 16-match winning streak in Kolkata in one of the greatest comebacks in Test history.
Sports
Giants vs. Blue Jays odds, prediction, line: 2026 MLB picks for Wednesday, July 8
The Toronto Blue Jays and San Francisco Giants wrap up a three-game interleague set with a Wednesday afternoon contest. San Fran (38-53) took Monday’s contest, 10-1, before Toronto (43-49) evened the series by taking Tuesday’s matchup, 9-3. Dylan Cease (5-4, 2.79 ERA) will start for the Jays, countered by the Giants’ Logan Webb (5-6, 3.66 ERA), as a pair of 2026 MLB All-Stars will be on the mound. The Jays are 8-2 over the teams’ last 10 meetings.
First pitch is at 3:45 p.m. ET from Oracle Park in San Francisco. The latest Blue Jays vs. Giants odds list Toronto as the -122 favorite (risk $122 to win $100). The over/under for total runs is 7. Before making any Giants vs. Blue Jays picks or MLB predictions, be sure to see the MLB predictions for Blue Jays vs. Giants.
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The SportsLine Projection Model simulates every MLB game 10,000 times and entered Week 16 of the MLB season on a sizzling 29-16 run on all top-rated MLB picks. It also excelled at making home run prop picks in 2025, returning nearly 30 units of profit. Anyone following its MLB betting picks at sportsbooks and on betting sites could have seen strong returns.
Now, the model has set its sights on Blue Jays vs. Giants and just locked in its picks and MLB predictions. You can head to SportsLine now to see the model’s picks. Here are several MLB odds and betting lines for Giants vs. Blue Jays:
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Blue Jays vs. Giants money line |
Blue Jays -122, Giants +103 |
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Blue Jays vs. Giants over/under |
7 runs |
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Blue Jays vs. Giants run line |
Blue Jays -1.5 (+147) |
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Blue Jays vs. Giants picks |
See picks at SportsLine |
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Blue Jays vs. Giants streaming |
Fubo (try for free) |
Top Giants vs. Blue Jays predictions
After 10,000 simulations of Blue Jays vs. Giants, the model is going Over 7 total runs. Both of the first two games of this series surpassed the total in a big way as each contest had at least 11 combined runs. The Giants have also engaged in high-scoring affairs in interleague battles recently as the Over sports an 8-2 record over San Fran’s last 10 games versus American League opponents.
Webb is coming off maybe the worst start of his career, allowing 7 ER and 11 H over just 3 IP last Friday. As for Cease, he was lit up the last time he faced the Giants in a 2025 start. The pitcher gave up 4 ER over his last 4 IP to the Giants, so given the unfavorable history of the pitchers, plus the O/U trends, the model is firmly behind the Over. It projects 8.2 total runs, making the Over the side to back in over/under sports betting. Get the Giants vs. Blue Jays money-line pick at SportsLine.
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How to make Blue Jays vs. Giants picks
After simulating every pitch of Giants vs. Blue Jays 10,000 times, the model also says one side of the money line has all the value. You can get that pick at SportsLine.
So who wins Blue Jays vs. Giants, and which side of the money line has all the value? Visit SportsLine now to see which side you need to jump on, all from the model that has crushed its MLB picks, and find out.
Sports
Fitness Issues Still Remains A Concern For Pakistan, Says Sarfaraz Ahmed
File photo of Sarfaraz Ahmed© X (Twitter)
Pakistan’s Test team head coach Sarfaraz Ahmed has admitted that fitness issues still remains a concern in the national side ahead of its upcoming tours of the Caribbean and England. Sarfaraz told the media here on Wednesday that fitness issues had cropped up during the month-long red-ball training camp in Lahore. “Some of the fitness issues were resolved during the camp but some still remain and we will have another short conditioning camp in Islamabad from tomorrow (Thursday) and try to sort them out as well,” he said without elaborating further. Sarfaraz said he had spoken to new Test captain Babar Azam and he was confident that he skipper would deliver on the coming tours.
The former Pakistan captain said that Babar carried a lot of experience behind his back and having remained captain before he knew about the challenges up ahead.
Babar this week told a Pakistan Cricket Board podcast that he would emphasise on fitness and discipline as captain as both these were important to get performances on the field.
Pakistan will be playing two Tests in the Caribbean and three in England in July, August and early September.
Babar also admitted that Pakistan needed to step up its game in the ICC World Test Championship’s remaining matches as despite the influx of white ball cricket a player was defined by his performances in red-ball cricket.
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Sports
Egypt’s wrath after World Cup exit: ‘The match was rigged’
“Perhaps they wanted to keep the world champions in the competition. Perhaps they wanted Messi to stay in the race,” fumed Egypt‘s national team coach, Hossam Hassan, on BeIN Sports after his team’s 3–2 round-of-16 defeat to Argentina on Tuesday.
“This match was rigged, and the whole world saw it,” he said.
Late in the second half, the Egyptians had led 2–0 thanks to goals from Yasser Ibrahim (15th minute) and Mostafa Ziko (67). Then, the defending champions launched a comeback, turning the match on its head. Cristian Romero (79), Lionel Messi (83), and Enzo Fernandez (90+2) scored to secure the win, and a spot in the quarterfinals.
‘The efforts of an entire nation destroyed’
The defeat left a very bitter taste in the mouth for the seven-time Africa Cup of Nations winners. They blamed French referee Francois Letexier for denying them a historic victory.
“The referee was unfair and destroyed the efforts of an entire nation. The trophy is being handed to Argentina,” said Mostafa Ziko, who had a 58th-minute goal disallowed by the video assistant referee (VAR), in coach Hassan’s words “for whatever reason.”
In the referee’s defense, during the sequence in which Egypt won possession prior to the goal, an Egyptian player clearly stepped on the foot of the Argentine player in possession, bringing him down. In the eyes of some, it was therefore justifiable to disallow the goal. Others feel the infraction was minor and a long way from goal and not the sort of error in which VAR is supposed to intervene at this tournament.
Potential penalty goes unchecked
This was not the only contentious issue. The Egyptians were particularly upset about another incident: “A penalty for us wasn’t even checked by VAR,” Hassan complained.
He and his team said a foul had been committed against Hamdy Fathy inside the Argentine penalty area just minutes before Fernandez scored the winning goal — a view shared by some neutral observers.
Alexis Mac Allister had grabbed Fathy’s jersey away from the ball and pulled the Egyptian player, thereby depriving him of the chance to reach, and potentially convert, a rebound.
Following the match, the Egyptian FA lodged an official complaint with football’s world governing body, FIFA. EFA President Hany Abo Rida accused referee Letexier of “serious errors” and demanded not only an investigation into the incidents but also the exclusion of the entire officiating team from the World Cup.
He said the referee had applied a “double standard, resulting in the Egyptian team losing the match and being eliminated.” Abo Rida further criticized “blatant errors and the refusal to review specific video sequences.”
German former referees weigh in
“You can see the jersey being pulled,” former Bundesliga referee Patrick Ittrich told viewers on Germany’s MagentaTV. “For me, that’s a penalty.”
Ittrich also noted a general imbalance in how the referee officiated the game.
“All the contentious decisions went against Egypt. The negative emotions are understandable,” he said.
At the same time, he said, “the procedures followed regarding the video assistant were correct.”
Ittrich surmised that the VAR didn’t consider the shirt-pulling incident significant or clear enough to intervene.
Lutz Wagner, a former Bundesliga referee and head of referee training at the German Football Association (DFB), assessed the situation similarly.
“Very unwise behavior by the Argentine,” he told viewers on German public broadcaster ARD. “Argentina could not have complained had the whistle been blown.”
National team coach Hassan blamed the Argentines, claiming they had “put pressure on the referee.”
“We deserved the win, but we were shown no respect and no fair play,” Hassan said. “Life is unfair, the world is unfair, but why is there no fairness in football, in sport? We were treated unfairly.”
Scorn for FIFA
Ever since FIFA, following a phone call from President Donald Trump, suspended the red-card ban against US striker Folarin Balogun, the door has been wide open for speculation regarding match-fixing and favoritism.
The English FA announced that it was considering — possibly partly in jest — appealing the red card and resulting suspension of defender Jarrell Quansah for their quarterfinal against Norway, even though there is no standard appeals process for red cards. The topic has since taken on a life of its own on social media, with numerous memes circulating.
Also not to be taken entirely seriously in this context is a remark by former German national team goalkeeper Oliver Kahn, who suggested revisiting the yellow card issued to German captain Michael Ballack during the 2002 World Cup semifinal.
“If we’re rewriting football history anyway, I have a small suggestion: FIFA should annul the yellow card Michael Ballack received in the 2002 World Cup semifinal, the card that ruled him out of the final,” Kahn wrote on X. He also called for a replay of the 2002 final against Brazil, which Germany lost 2-0.
Credibility deficit
FIFA are bound to continue to face credibility issues well beyond this World Cup. Yet, the organization seems largely unconcerned about providing its critics with open goals. Regarding Trump’s phone call, it would have been easy to simply point to the existing rules and uphold Balogun’s suspension.
FIFA have also unnecessarily exposed themselves to criticism regarding more perceived favoritism toward Argentina. For the quarterfinal match between France and Morocco, it has appointed an all-Argentine officiating team. This caused at least some bewilderment in the French media, given that France, alongside Argentina, are considered one of the favorites for the World Cup title.
The French team themselves appear unperturbed.
“I don’t focus on who the referee is. We’ve never done that. We are focusing on Morocco and want to win the match,” Bayern Munich defender Dayot Upamecano said.
Whether concerns over the appointment of the all-Argentine officiating team are warranted promises to be revealed during the 90 to 120 minutes on the pitch.
This article was originally written in German.
Sports
2026 Amundi Evian Championship: TV, streaming, tee times
Sports
Hawks hire ex-NBA writer, podcaster in front-office role
Nov 7, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; A general view of State Farm Arena before a game between the Atlanta Hawks and Toronto Raptors. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images
Former NBA journalist Tim Bontemps is joining the front office of the Atlanta Hawks.
The 41-year-old was named strategic adviser to Hawks president of basketball operations Onsi Saleh. Saleh was promoted in May from his position of general manager.
Bontemps, co-host of “The Hoop Collective” podcast, has worked for ESPN, The Washington Post and New York Post covering the NBA since 2012.
He’s the second hoops journalist to cross over to an NBA front office. Another former ESPN writer, 36-year-old Mike Schmitz, was named general manager of the Dallas Mavericks under new team president Masai Ujiri. Schmitz, who played basketball at Arizona, describes himself as a self-taught scout who previously worked for Draft Express, Yahoo and as assistant general manager of the Portland Trail Blazers.
–Field Level Media
Sports
History at Wimbledon: Arnav Paparkar becomes first Indian in 36 years to reach boys’ singles quarter-finals since Leander Paes | Tennis News
Arnav Paparkar took the quieter route. He climbed the ladder one step at a time, starting with lower-level international tournaments in India before moving through the Asian circuit and eventually into the higher levels. The 18-year-old began playing Grand Slam junior events this year, in his final season in the category, and improved with each tournament. On Wednesday, that steady rise reached a landmark moment as Paparkar became the first Indian in 36 years to reach the Wimbledon boys’ singles quarter-finals, since Leander Paes lifted the title in 1990.The 6ft 1 inch Indian, ranked No. 19 in the junior rankings, dispatched Japan’s Ryo Tabata 6-2, 6-1 in 52 minutes to book his place in the quarter-finals, where he will face American qualifier Jordan Lee. Paparkar will be looking to turn the tide against Lee, having lost both of their previous meetings, including their most recent clash at the J300 Roehampton in June.Yuki Bhambri, who won the junior Australian Open in 2009, reached the US Open quarterfinals that same year and remains the last Indian before Paparkar to reach a junior Grand Slam quarter-final. Tabata, who had beaten Paparkar twice before, including once after the Indian had led 5-2 in the deciding set and held five match points, was not at his best physically. As the match wore on, he struggled with his serve and eventually stopped extending himself in his court coverage.“That match was in my head. I was like, I cannot lose like that again. I’m much better now mentally, a lot calmer… I tell myself, it’s ok, it’s just a tennis match,” a beaming Paparkar said.Paparkar was aware of the Japanese player’s physical struggles.“I realised that he was struggling with his serve, but also sometimes players feel better in the course of a match, so I just was focussed on what I could do in the match,” he added.Paparkar produced another impressive serving display, firing eight aces and winning 23 of 25 points on his first serve. His fastest delivery of the day came at 208 km/h in the second set, while the average speed of his first serves was 196 km/h.The Indian has two training bases, at home in Pune, where he works with Hemant Bendre, and at the Soto Academy in Spain, where he trains under Nigel Beavers. Paparkar credits Bendre with helping improve his serve by tweaking his action.“If you see now my swing is slower and fuller, my coach told me in April that it was better to work on that now as it would prevent injuries,” he said. “It has given me a better rhythm and that has led to more consistency.”
Sports
Norway World Cup chaos continues as squad switch Miami hotels before England clash
Norway’s preparation for their World Cup 2026 quarter-final against England has been disrupted again after the squad switched hotels in Miami just one night after checking into their previous accommodation.
The players reportedly complained to the team’s management about noise and disruption from the road outside their original hotel as well as a nearby construction site.
An official complaint was made to World Cup organisers Fifa and the Norway squad were moved out of the Dalmar Hotel in Fort Lauderdale within two-and-a-half hours.
The hotel fiasco follows an illness that has run through the squad since Sunday with Norway manager Stale Solbakken revealing that the affected players were recovering.
Norway are having an exceptional World Cup. They qualified for the tournament for the first time in 28 years and swept through the group stages losing only to France in their final group match having rested a bunch of their first choice starters.
They then defeated Ivory Coast 2-1 in the round of 32 before an Erling Haaland brace saw them nip past five-time world champions Brazil by the same scoreline.
That victory has sent them into the quarter-finals for the very first time in their history and they are readying to take on England for a place in the final four on Saturday night.
The switch in hotels now means the Norway squad have re-located to a venue near to the Hard Rock Stadium where the quarter-final will take place.
Truls Daehli, the Norway team’s logistics manager, said: “It is brutal having to move but we are satisfied with the new place and everyone is happy now. Some people might fear that this will affect the players, but it was the players who wanted this more than anyone else.
“We have strong people in our support team and managed to move in two-and-a-half hours. The process of changing hotel is not ideal but we wanted to take action as soon as possible. Having a good atmosphere is most important.
“We are going to stay for a week in Miami and we have now been for six weeks in the United States and we are going to play in the biggest match in Norwegian history.
“We have avoided cabin fever so far and don’t want any risk of it now. Fifa have accepted that we must move to another hotel.”
Fifa agreed to pay for 50 rooms plus security at Norway’s new hotel, with the Norwegian FA obliged to pay extra charges to cover the upgrade demanded by players.
Sports
McLaughlin: Pac-12 Secrecy, No Media Days a Concern?
The Pac-12 enters its first season as a revamped league and needs to tell its own story to help shape its future.
Why didn’t they hold media days this year, and is that a mistake?
On today’s episode of Locked On College Football, Spencer McLaughlin and ‘Locked On Mississippi State’ host Jaron Spoor discuss a big matchup for HC Jeff Lebby.
A Week 2 showdown with Minnesota is not a game Lebby can afford to lose.
Barry Odom had a rough first season with Purdue and does not have high expectations going into this Fall.
Will the Boilermakers be anything but a bottom dweller?
00:00 PAC 12 media rights controversy
05:05 Discussion on Power 4 media days
07:31 Conference media days discussion
11:46 Mississippi State’s tough schedule
13:18 Coming up short again in 2025
18:55 Discussion on Purdue’s football prospects
19:55 Barry Odom’s roster improvements
24:40 Discussing Big Ten coaching changes
27:31 Purdue’s athletic director transition
Sports
IOC eases Russia’s path to full member return for LA 2028 Olympics | Olympic Games 2024
Russia has moved closer toward having a full team with its national flag and anthem at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.
The International Olympic Committee on Tuesday provisionally lifted a suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee and advised Olympic sports bodies to end a three-year program where Russian athletes had to be vetted for permission to compete as neutrals.
The IOC said the timing was because qualifying events are starting for the L.A. Games, and “the need to offer equal access to these competitions to all athletes.”
The move, which also signals a return for Russia in team sports, had been expected since the IOC advised two months ago that athletes from Belarus, which was Russia’s ally when its military invasion of Ukraine started in 2022, should be allowed again to compete with their full national identity.
“We don’t want to hold athletes accountable for the actions of their governments,” IOC president Kirsty Coventry said at an online news conference after she chaired an executive board meeting.
A two-time Olympic gold medalist swimming for Zimbabwe, Coventry said it was a fair decision and noted: “I wouldn’t be sitting here if I had to pay the price when my country was going through things and being sanctioned.”
Ukraine’s sports minister Matvii Bidnyi questioned why the IOC altered its rules when in the war “nothing changed. The situation became even worse.”
Russia unleashed waves of missiles and drones at Ukraine early Monday, killing at least 22 people.
“So we don’t understand it,” Bidnyi told The Associated Press in an interview Tuesday. “In this day, when all of Ukraine (is) in a day of mourning, when our flags was a little bit lower because of so many people, our peaceful citizens was killed yesterday at night.”
The IOC also reiterated its “solidarity with the Olympic community of Ukraine” and ongoing financial support.
Barriers remain
The IOC’s guidance to reintegrate Russians in international events is not binding for the governing bodies of individual sports.
“Our country’s return to the Olympic family is a green light for international federations to restore the rights of our athletes,” Russian Sports Minister Mikhail Degtyaryov said Tuesday.
Track and field is not following suit.
Asked about the IOC’s decision, World Athletics referred the AP to its decision last week maintaining a ban on Russian and Belarusian athletes in its international events.
In soccer, FIFA and European body UEFA have continued to exclude Russia in competitions such as the World Cup and Champions League, avoiding likely chaos because teams from other countries would refused to play those games.
Russian athletes and teams likely will face issues getting entry visas from some countries hosting sports events.
Russia’s return
Among top-tier Olympic sports, swimming’s governing body World Aquatics lifted its restrictions on Russian athletes in April.
The ROC was suspended in 2023 when the Russian Olympic body incorporated regional sports councils from occupied regions of eastern Ukraine. But the IOC said “the ROC confirmed that it does not, and will not, conduct any activities in these territories.”
Ukrainian minister Bidnyi described this promise as “just fake and empty words.”
Just 32 athletes from Russia and Belarus competed at the 2024 Paris Olympics as approved neutrals.
The Russian team in Los Angeles could now be closer to the more than 300 athletes sent to the Tokyo Olympics held in 2021. That squad returned with 71 medals including 20 titles.
Athletes still monitored
To be approved for neutral status, Russian athletes had to show no links to state military and security agencies. They also should not have publicly supported the war in Ukraine.
The IOC will continue to monitor social media posts by Russian athletes, Coventry confirmed, citing the “role models” requirement in the Olympic Charter.
“That is strong enough leverage that we would need at any time in order to decide who would be willing and deserving to come to any Olympic Games,” she said.
IOC official James Macleod said the Olympic body gets referrals from Ukraine about problematic social media posts by Russian athletes: “Those are always taken into consideration.”
In a statement Wednesday, the Australian Olympic Committee said it wants the IOC to ensure “a level playing field in competition” given Russia’s doping history.
“Russia has had extremely serious anti-doping breaches in the past,” the AOC statement said. “We therefore support the most stringent possible anti-doping controls being in place to ensure all Russian athletes who are returning, some having been out of the system for many years, are fully compliant.”
Flag, anthem to return in October?
The IOC did not yet approve letting Russian athletes and teams compete with their flag and anthem. That decision will come “at an appropriate time,” it said.
The next Olympic competition is the 2026 Youth Summer Games in Dakar, Senegal, opening Oct. 31.
The IOC said to “address the lack of confidence in the global sporting community relating to the return of Russian athletes to international competition,” those athletes must give multiple doping controls and be part of a recognized testing program.
The IOC said it will continue to “not organize IOC events in Russia or invite Russian government or state officials to its events.
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