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Tag: legends

  • Inside soccer legends’ quest to grow American fandom with US-focused show

    Inside soccer legends’ quest to grow American fandom with US-focused show

    It can be so basic, Gary Neville believes.

    It should be, Rebecca Lowe agrees. 

    That’s where the true magic emerges. 

    Anyone with even a faint interest in the Premier League or soccer as a whole has very likely seen and heard both on television as central parts of the sport’s coverage on the biggest outlets.

    Gary Neville (L.), Rebecca Lowe (C.) and Jamie Carragher on the “It’s Called Soccer” set. Courtesy of It’s Called Soccer

    But now they want to be heard in a different way.

    Viewed through a different lens.

    Connected with fans through a different medium. 

    And, most notably, to bring the beautiful game to a newer, growing audience. 

    So Neville and Lowe, along with Jamie Carragher, have teamed up for “It’s Called Soccer,” a new digital show about the sport designed for American fans.

    “What we do here, I just think it’s a case of: press record, let us speak and press stop. It’s really simple,” Neville told The Post in a wide-ranging sit-down interview along with Lowe at the Spotify studios in downtown Manhattan. “And I love the simplicity of what we do. Sometimes, when you’re on television, you’re waiting around for three hours for the game to start. You’re in very restricted timeframes — you have three minutes to speak or you have two minutes to speak. You’re kind of quite compartmentalized. I love the freedom of being able to press record, everything is recorded, and press stop. And then it goes out. 

    “I like the idea that we can just have a conversation about the sport that we love. It takes it back to, in England, the old adage was that you went down to the pub with your mates, you talk about football, you have a conversation, you have a debate, you have an argument — ‘who should we play, should we sack him?’ And that’s what it is. That’s what football is. I just love that idea.” 

    Gary Neville (L.), Rebecca Lowe (C.) and Jamie Carragher on the “It’s Called Soccer” set. Courtesy of It’s Called Soccer

    That the trio want to expand into America is significant. 

    Neville is a Manchester United and England legend.

    He spent his entire 20-year career with Manchester United, winning eight Premier League titles and two Champions league titles with the club.

    He served as captain for five years.

    Neville was also the starting right back for England for over 10 years, playing at two World Cups and three European Championships. 

    Carragher is a Liverpool legend who spent his entire 17-year career with the team, winning a Champions league title.

    He represented England at two World Cups and a European Championship. 

    Both Neville and Carragher have since become two of the sport’s top on-air analysts and personalities since retiring. 

    And Lowe is central to NBC’s Premier League coverage in the United States as the network’s studio host. 

    All three help frame how millions of fans around the world consume soccer.

    And they see America as the sport’s next frontier. 

    Gary Neville (R.) and David Beckham pose with the Premier League trophy
    on May 11, 2003. Manchester United via Getty Imag
    Jamie Carragher spent his entire 17-year career with Liverpool. AFP via Getty Images

    The show (co-produced and distributed by Buzz16 and Wave Sports And Entertainment) is part of Neville’s media channel The Overlap’s venture into the United States.  

    “I think it was time,” Lowe said. “The World Cup is coming. Also, the Premier League now has gotten to a point which I didn’t think I would see 10 years ago. It was like ‘hang on a second, there’s a market there. It’s not being served enough.’ There’s space for more. 

    “With the world of social media, everything is more reachable. Mo Salah is more reachable through social media. He doesn’t look like this figure in a far-off country that you can’t have any affiliation with. And the product does the work for us. It’s just the most incredible league. If it was a rubbish league, it wouldn’t be catching on. The content and the product itself does the job, which attracts the people.”

    Rebecca Lowe is the studio host for NBC’s Premier League coverage. Visionhaus/Getty Images

    They believe this platform allows them to be their true, authentic selves. 

    Neville wishes that television cameras would pick up what the crew says off-air, because “it’s the most interesting stuff.”

    This show, he hopes, is as close to that dynamic as possible. 

    And viewers, they stress, are better off for it. 

    Gary Neville (L.) and Jamie Carragher (R.) have become two of soccer’s top media personalities since retiring as players. Getty Images

    “It feels like less of a performance,” Neville said. “Whereas when you go on television you have to think about what you wear, you have to have your makeup on, you have to have your hair done, you got this big production around you. You have to come in at a certain time to speak, then you get told to stop. All that formality is gone. I think I’ve become less formal as I’ve sort of moved through my career. I feel like I’m liking the informal approach.”

    “I think we as humans try to create the next best thing, try to overcomplicate things,” Lowe added. “But when I sit and listen to podcasts, sometimes I catch myself thinking ‘I’m listening to two women just having a chat like they’d have on the phone. Why am I loving this so much?’ And I think it’s because of simplicity, it’s connection – you want normal. Especially in an age of social media when a lot of people don’t appear normal, they appear to have an amazing life, you just want to hear normality. I think we try to press record, talk about football, press stop. As long as you’re normal within those boundaries and you touch on interesting things, it works.”

    Just 12 episodes in, the American focus is noticeable. 

    Already, they’ve had former USMNT manager Jurgen Klinsmann, current USMNT star Antonee Robinson, former USWNT legend Brandi Chastain, longtime NFL star Josh Norman and current USWNT manager Emma Hayes on the show. 

    Still in its infancy, if they have one goal for the show, what would it be?

    “To still be going in five years,” Neville said. “If something lasts, that’s the ultimate test. Longevity is underestimated.” 

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  • Stories of our local football legends – The Australian Jewish News

    Stories of our local football legends – The Australian Jewish News

    When David Weiner’s seven-year-old son started reading football books, the author was delighted to share his lifelong passion for the game with the next generation. Until he realised that the only books on offer were about international stars. Great, he thought, but where are the books about our incredibly talented Australian players?

    After a bit of digging around, Weiner realised there wasn’t much for kids and teenagers to learn about the development of Australian football. So, after finishing up a 17-year stint in various jobs in the football industry, he pulled out an exercise book and started jotting things down.

    “I had a lot of useless facts in my head, and I thought I better do something with them,” he laughed, when chatting to The AJN. But, he said, there’s also a romantic reason that he sought to write The Goals That Changed Australia, and that’s his son.

    “The reason it’s a kid’s book is absolutely inspired by my seven-year-old who has learnt to read, essentially through kids’ football books. But they were all overseas – Ronaldo, Messi, Neymar. And it got to the point where I was like, where are our stars and our connection to the game?”

    Weiner explained that while you can dream of the heights of Messi, kids in Australia are going to follow an Australian path, and they need to see this reflected in their literature.

    For Weiner, his career was bookended by two incredible goals that truly did change the landscape of Australian football – the 2005 John Aloisi penalty against Uruguay which saw the Socceroos qualify for the 2006 FIFA World Cup for the first time since 1974 and Cortnee Vine’s perfect penalty to take the Matildas into the quarter-finals for the 2023 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Two iconic moments in Australian football history.

    As Weiner writes in the book, “mark down the date: August 12, 2023. It’s down in the calendar like November 16, 2005.”

    Throughout The Goals That Changed Australia, Weiner weaves the backstories of the players with the ultimate aim that kids see themselves in these sporting heroes. Sure, Aloisi scored that unbelievable goal, but did you also know that he simply practised that kick in his backyard as a kid?

    “The story is written deliberately aspirational. The moral of the story is that kids can do it too, these are stories they can relate to. You’ve got girls from the bush who have made it, boys who were part of junior teams and ended up playing in the Premier League, kids that had injuries,” Weiner explained.

    This concept is sprinkled throughout the book, culminating in the last chapter which is aimed at the children reading it.

    Weiner writes, “These heroes are not from PlayStation games or YouTube. You can follow and be them, because they were once where you are now. Many even play professionally here in our own backyard; so close, you can almost touch them.”

    Just like kids will remember where they were when Vine scored, adults remember exactly where they were in 2005 for Aloisi’s goal.

    Plus, he said, he has combined the two national teams. As he explained at the book’s launch, you don’t support the Socceroos or the Matildas, you support Australia. And that means getting behind both the male team and the female team. “You support the game,” he said, pointing out that it was the success of the Matildas in 2023 that served as the inspiration to write the book.

    At each age, the reader will take something different from the stories.

    “There are some kids who are going to consume the results, others are going to want the facts and some people will love the trivia that they can share with their friends,” Weiner pointed out.

    Weiner acknowledged though that trying to make a goal that was scored more than 20 years ago interesting for kids was a tricky process.

    “It dawned on me that the equivalent was me being told about something that happened in the ’70s,” he laughed. “Why would I read that? While it’s a non-fiction book, I’ve written it as a narrative. The colour makes it a bit more accessible for kids.”

    Indeed, even adults will love to reminisce. Just like kids will remember where they were when Vine scored, adults remember exactly where they were in 2005 for Aloisi’s goal.

    Throughout the book, there are also lessons that readers can take on board.

    “They were all overseas – Ronaldo, Messi, Neymar. And it got to the point where I was like, where are our stars and our connection to the game?”

    “There are a lot of breakout vignettes on all the key characters throughout the years who had to overcome adversity or do whatever they needed to do to get where they are,” Weiner told The AJN. “Part of the book is that everything has a bit of a life lesson. What do you do when you lose? What do you do when you’re subbed off? There’s something meaningful here to take away beyond the goals.”

    And, as Weiner points out, these are lessons that extend beyond the sporting arena.

    “I firmly believe that you can learn a lot about life through sport,” he said. “There are moral lessons, practical lessons, geography – where the teams travel – the evolution of how females have been treated in a professional environment. There’s all sorts of different things in the book, and everyone can take it a different way.”

    David Weiner in conversation with Niav Owens at the launch for The Goals that Changed Australia

    Weiner said it was a lot of fun going back through his memories, stories and videos to reflect. He did a lot of research, dug up his old articles. Although, he pointed out that a lot of the information was still very fresh in his mind – whether that’s a good or bad thing, he’s not sure.

    Ultimately, he hopes the book shows readers that while football has a long way to go in Australia, it has come so far. Weiner said it was especially important to explore the history of women’s football in Australia. Particularly when looking at the fact that while the Socceroos were qualifying for the 2006 World Cup, being flown in a chartered plane and having all their expenses paid for, the Matildas were wearing old Socceroos kits and doing publicity stunts to raise money for their tours.

    “I think it better appreciates the heroes we have today, and hopefully gives justice to the heroes of yesteryear, who didn’t always have the platform that the players have today.”

    The Goals That Changed Australia is published by Fairplay Publishing, $24.99 rrp.



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  • Can you guess who these sports legends are from their high school yearbook photos?

    Can you guess who these sports legends are from their high school yearbook photos?

    Before the trophies, before they were famous, and before photos of these iconic athletes were taken over and over again came their high school yearbooks, where they posed for pictures alongside their classmates. 

    These pictures came before the paparazzi followed them around and before photographers were assigned to snap their every movement on the court and elsewhere.  

    The well-known faces for their athletic careers include a Super Bowl winner, one of the premier tennis players in history, and a basketball legend.  

    The quintet below have been involved in some of the grandest moments in sports history, representing both their teams and their country. 

    Even some of the most famous faces of went to high school before their incredible success, each from the class of 1979. 

    Can you name who these athletes are by their high school yearbook photos?

    This legend did not keep the big hair for long after this yearbook photo from 1979 was taken

    This legend did not keep the big hair for long after this yearbook photo from 1979 was taken

    Alongside playing football as his main sports, this athlete was involved in baseball in high school

    Alongside playing football as his main sports, this athlete was involved in baseball in high school

    Dan Marino is widely regarded as the best quarterback of all-time to never win a Super Bowl

    Dan Marino is widely regarded as the best quarterback of all-time to never win a Super Bowl

    Dan Marino

    The Miami Dolphins legend did not keep the big poufy hair for long after this yearbook photo from 1979 was taken. 

    Marino was an All-American at Central Catholic High School in Pittsburgh and stayed in town to play college football for Pitt. 

    After staying for his senior season with the Panthers, Marino barely stayed a first-round draft pick of the Dolphins in 1983. 

    Marino is widely regarded as the best quarterback of all-time to never win a Super Bowl, having only appeared in the NFL’s biggest game once, during his second professional season. 

    Marino officially retired from football in 1999 and was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2005. 

    Since 2014, he has been a special advisor to the Dolphins.

    One of the greatest track and field stars of all-time also smiled big for his yearbook picture

    One of the greatest track and field stars of all-time also smiled big for his yearbook picture

    He was a star at Willingboro High School, located in a Philadelphia suburb in New Jersey

    He was a star at Willingboro High School, located in a Philadelphia suburb in New Jersey

    Lewis ended up winning the long jump at four straight Summer Olympics, his last in 1996

    Lewis ended up winning the long jump at four straight Summer Olympics, his last in 1996

    Carl Lewis

    One of the greatest track and field stars of all-time had to get his reps in somewhere before dominating on the world stage for over a decade. 

    Lewis was a star at Willingboro High School, located in a Philadelphia suburb in south New Jersey. 

    His first Olympic success came five years after graduation, winning four gold medals at the Los Angeles Olympics. 

    Lewis would have competed as a 19-year-old in the 1980 Olympics if the United States and dozens of other countries did not boycott the games. 

    Lewis ended up winning the long jump at four straight Summer Olympics, one of six athletes in history to pull off that feat. 

    The former sprinter is now 63 years old and is currently the head track and field coach at Houston.  

    This was taken three years before 'The Play', where he was Stanford's quarterback in 1982

    This was taken three years before ‘The Play’, where he was Stanford’s quarterback in 1982

    More than four decades ago at Granada Hills High School in California, he was the starter

    More than four decades ago at Granada Hills High School in California, he was the starter

    Elway's post-football career had him involved with the Broncos as a member of their front office

    Elway’s post-football career had him involved with the Broncos as a member of their front office

    John Elway

    The Denver Broncos’ best quarterback of all-time nearly looks the same in this photo from 45 years ago at Granada Hills High School in California. 

    It was taken three years before ‘The Play’, where Elway was Stanford’s quarterback in 1982. 

    Elway was the top overall draft pick in the 1983 NFL Draft, 26 picks ahead of Marino, to the Broncos, where he had to wait over a dozen years to win a Super Bowl. 

    Yet, Elway is best remembered for his late career triumphs in 1998 and 1999, winning back-to-back Super Bowls after a long period without one for the AFC. 

    Elway’s post-football career also had him involved with the Broncos as a member of their front office from 2011 through 2021. 

    Recently, Elway appeared as the ‘Leaf Sheep’ on ‘The Masked Singer’ and as eliminated in the season premiere in September.

    One of the best basketball players of all-time was one of the top basketball prospects of 1979

    One of the best basketball players of all-time was one of the top basketball prospects of 1979

    Before he was a bad-boy Piston, Thomas was a younger bad boy at St. Joseph High School

    Before he was a bad-boy Piston, Thomas was a younger bad boy at St. Joseph High School

    Thomas spent his entire NBA career in Detroit, making a dozen straight NBA All-Star games

    Thomas spent his entire NBA career in Detroit, making a dozen straight NBA All-Star games

    Isiah Thomas 

    Before he was a bad-boy Detroit Piston, Thomas was a younger bad boy at St. Joseph High School in Westchester, Illinois. 

    Thomas played for Bob Knight at Indiana and was one of the legendary coach’s biggest stars in Bloomington. 

    After being drafted No 2 overall in the 1981, Thomas spent his entire NBA career in Detroit, making a dozen straight All-Star games from 1982 through 1993.

    Thomas tried his hand at coaching after retiring from the NBA, first with the Indiana Pacers. 

    The lifetime Piston then coached for the rival Knicks before his only stint as a college coach at FIU. 

    Thomas’ career as a coach was rather uneventful, never leading any of his teams to much success.  

    Arguably one of the most underrated athletes of the 20th century is this doubles tennis' specialist

    Arguably one of the most underrated athletes of the 20th century is this doubles tennis’ specialist

    She may be known as the doubles partner of Martina Navratilova, winning 21 Grand Slam titles

    She may be known as the doubles partner of Martina Navratilova, winning 21 Grand Slam titles

    Shriver has had a long-standing broadcasting career after her retirement from tennis in 1997

    Shriver has had a long-standing broadcasting career after her retirement from tennis in 1997

    Pam Shriver

    Arguably one of the most underrated athletes of the 20th century, who had the most success of her professional career as Martina Navratilova’s doubles partner, is Shriver. 

    She attended the McDonogh School in the Baltimore suburbs and had already appeared in a major-tournament final by the time she got her diploma. 

    That was the 1978 US Open against Chris Evert. Shriver lost the next eight Grand Slam semifinals she played in, four coming to Navratilova herself. 

    Her final appearance in a Grand Slam tournament was the 1996 US Open, where she lost in the first round.  

    Shriver did win 21 Grand Slam women’s doubles titles and one mixed doubles title. 

    Shriver may now be best known for her broadcasting career, with many appearances for ESPN. 

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  • Five rugby legends discuss how to fix the sport

    Five rugby legends discuss how to fix the sport

    When England stand and face the haka (uncontroversially) on Saturday afternoon, in front of 82,000 people paying a minimum of £99 to be there with millions more watching round the world, it will be hard to believe that rugby union is in crisis.

    But it is undeniable that the sport is at a crossroads. It faces a number of existential problems, from dwindling domestic attendances, to the demise of rugby in schools, to concussion and player welfare in the professional game, to the global calendar. Any one of those problems, all of which are interlinked of course, might be significant enough to take the sport from struggling to extinct.

    “I just hope the right people are doing the right things behind the scenes,” Danny Care tells i. The former England scrum-half is in the last year of his playing career but says he is unlikely to take up a formal role in helping to save rugby. (His burgeoning media career may inadvertently play a part in that though.) However, as one of the oldest players in the Premiership, he is acutely aware of the pain the sport is going through.

    “We lost three amazing clubs in the last year or so. That’s quite close to home, because I’ve been there playing against these clubs since I was 18.”

    Care has seen a number of close friends lose their livelihoods since 2022 as Wasps, Worcester and London Irish have all gone bust. These are not failed upstarts either. These are clubs with a combined 296 years of history and significant pedigree in the game, but now no longer exist. The top professional tier in England now has just 10 teams playing in it, and profit margins – where profits can be found – are razor thin.

    “I don’t know enough about economics of the game, but if the economics don’t work, it’s not a sustainable business,” says John Barclay, the former Scotland captain.

    “The people who are far smarter than me can configure that one out.”

    Unlike Matt Dawson, who recently revealed he would be encouraging his two sons not to play rugby over safety concerns, Barclay has three children, two of whom are already playing the game.

    “I think the issues around concussion in the professional game, the way the game’s played professionally is obviously getting faster and faster and faster, ball in play time is very high – but the kids’ game has never been safer,” Barclay adds.

    “Kids are the same size as they were 20 years ago, and that awareness around concussion… I coach the kids and if there is, any doubt, they’re out.”

    The two issues – finance and safety – are intertwined. An ongoing class action legal battle between hundreds of players and the governing bodies of rugby could bankrupt some of them and set precedent for more cases on a domestic level if it falls down on the side of the players: the NFL recently settled a suit that cost them $765m (around £590m) over concussion and links to chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE. Rugby faces claims that failure to protect players from concussion has left many with elevated risk of early-onset dementia and other neurological damage.

    For several years, World Rugby has been trying mitigate head injuries in the game by changing the tackle height and introducing more severe penalties for high contact. A flurry of red cards led to fans to accuse authorities of killing the game. But Ireland legend Brian O’Driscoll thinks the opposite.

    “We’re still seeing red cards, but I think we’re seeing the tackle height piece come into effect through how high the score lines are in rugby at the moment,” O’Driscoll tells i.

    “Are attacks that much better than defense? No, I think it’s because defenses can’t wildly go into collisions anymore and so maybe it’s taken longer than we thought, but I think it’s getting there. The sport is trying to manage that.”

    But a perennial optimist, O’Driscoll is also keen to make sure rugby does not “beat itself up” too much

    “You can never lose sight of all of the upside and the positive message around what rugby offers,” he adds.

    “I think every time I hear the negativity, I’m always there to promote the positivity around life values, around friendship, camaraderie, respect and hard work. They are all things that serve you well, no matter what you do. You see so many rugby players coming out of sport and not knowing they have these skills to put into the corporate world.

    “There’s so much stuff to enjoy with us that project and elevate it – as much as we do have to talk about concerns and new fans and capturing the imagination of Gen Z, or whatever the next generation.

    “But we make sure that we tell everyone that we do offer a huge amount of value to those that love the game, and I’m certainly a huge ally of the sport and will always be.”

    O’Driscoll wants to make sure rugby keeps telling those positive stories to new audiences and new fans, phrases that unite all sides of the debate within the game.

    As former All Blacks captain Sean Fitzpatrick puts it: “I don’t think we have enough fans watching the game.”

    It’s easy for northern hemisphere fans to assume that New Zealand exists outside of the fraught ecosystem. After all “the international game is in an unbelievable place” insists Care, and the All Blacks are the embodiment of it, even if recent results have undermined that status a little. But the financial stability of the brand seems assured, even if it does not run much deeper than the 1st XV.

    “The only part of the equation that makes money is the All Blacks,” Fitzpatrick reveals.

    “All the other grassroots, provincial rugby, Super Rugby, it’s an issue. Silver Lake [the US private equity firm which bought a stake in the All Blacks two years ago] when they came on board, said we had close to a billion fans globally, but we only had 700,000 registered fans. If you could fix that…

    “We need to make the game more accessible. The way we consume in the game is different than what we used to 10 years ago, five years ago, yeah, and I don’t think we do that very well.

    “Both my daughters are F1 fans now. They were up to 11 o’clock last night watching F1. They’ve never been to an F1 race, they just love all the content.

    “It’s easy to consume, you can watch it on your phone, easy to understand, great stuff to watch in terms of the on-board riding. All these things we’re just behind. So we’ve got a real job on our hands to make it entertaining, fun to watch, easy to consume, and financially stable.”

    Netflix documentary series Full Contact received mixed reviews for its coverage (Photo: Getty)

    Solving those problems and winning the race in the way Formula One has – rugby has tried the Netflix documentary approach and it didn’t make much of a dent – is the million dollar question faced by every sport that is not football. Even the Olympics is facing growing existential dread.

    But Jamie Roberts, the former Wales and Lions centre, has an idea.

    “It’s a supporter demographic that traditionally has been middle-aged, and the challenge is being able to engage the younger audience, and making sure as a sport that it stays relevant and remains a sport that is attractive to watch. Because above all else, this is an entertainment business,” Roberts tells i.

    “I’m a big believer as well that rugby needs to find an alternative version of the sport that we’ve seen in other sports. We’ve seen the NFL do it with flags [a non-contact version that will feature at the 2028 Olympics], we’ve seen cricket do it with T20 and with the Hundred.

    “Rugby sevens for me is a different sport. It’s actually quite far removed from the 15s game, it requires a different sort of athlete. My question would be whether that’s so far removed now that rugby needs to innovate and develop a version of the sport that the kids play. It’s the entry into the sport. Whether you’re making a faster, safer version of sport that’s a bit shorter, a bit more engaging with kids that maybe could eventually become a professional sport in itself.

    “Rugby has a great opportunity and as we’ve seen with cricket, the purists gravitate even more towards Test cricket. It kind of makes people go ‘actually, there’s room in the ecosystem for everyone, and all these different formats’. And rugby, to grow the game, can it do that?”

    It’s the question everyone is asking. Over the next four weeks, the biggest teams in the world will play each other in front of sellout crowds in London, Dublin, Cardiff and beyond. Rugby’s future, whatever that may be, comes next.

    Every match of 2024 Autumn Nations Series is exclusively live on TNT Sports and discovery+. Watch The Autumn Nations Rugby Show, free-to-air on Quest every Thursday at 10pm

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  • Konark Suryas Odisha Eyes Legends League Victory and Broader Sports Expansion

    Konark Suryas Odisha Eyes Legends League Victory and Broader Sports Expansion

    SRINAGAR:  Konark Suryas Odisha, the cricket team owned by San Priya Group, is making waves in the Legends League at Bakshi Stadium, Srinagar. The team is eager to make a strong mark in the upcoming matches, with an ambitious goal of lifting the cup. Rajat Bokalia, Chief Marketing Officer of San Priya Group, expressed confidence in the team’s potential to clinch the championship, highlighting their impressive performance thus far.

    “We are here to win, and we believe in our team’s capability to take home the cup,” Bokalia said. “The support from our fans and the synergy among our players have been remarkable, and we’re excited for the challenges ahead.”

    San Priya Group, a diversified conglomerate with interests in real estate, interior solutions, and education, is taking significant steps in the sports sector. Their involvement with Konark Suryas Odisha is just the beginning of a larger sports development strategy, with plans to expand beyond cricket. Bokalia shared the group’s future initiatives, including the creation of a women’s hockey team and a rugby team for India, underscoring San Priya Group’s commitment to fostering a rich sports culture in Odisha and beyond.

    The group is also developing a 12-acre, state-of-the-art sports facility in Odisha, which will focus on scouting and nurturing hidden talent across various sports, including cricket, hockey, badminton, rugby, and football. “Our vision is not just about one team – it’s about creating a national platform for athletes to shine across disciplines. We are aiming for a gold medal at the 2036 Olympics,” Bokalia added.

    Konark Suryas Odisha boasts a star-studded lineup featuring cricket legends such as Irfan Pathan, Yusuf Pathan, Ross Taylor, Amrathi Raidu, and Kevin O’Brien. These players are enjoying the warm hospitality and pleasant weather of Kashmir while feeling energized by the robust fan support from across the nation.

    Bokalia also expressed optimism regarding the region’s sports infrastructure, anticipating improvements in cricket and hockey facilities in Jammu and Srinagar due to ongoing government support. “This is just the beginning,” he said. “With the government’s backing, we are confident that sports in this region will continue to flourish, and we are excited to be part of that journey.”

    Konark Suryas Odisha’s vision extends beyond this tournament. “Our goal is to become a symbol of national sporting excellence – not just with one team, but through a consortium of teams and our sports academy,” Bokalia emphasized.

    As Konark Suryas Odisha prepares for the next matches, they are committed to carrying the hopes of Odisha and inspiring the nation with their performances on and off the field. Fans across the country are rallying behind the team, optimistic that this campaign marks the beginning of a golden era for Odisha in sports.

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  • Video game actors’ union calls for strike against ‘League of Legends’

    Video game actors’ union calls for strike against ‘League of Legends’

    LOS ANGELES — Hollywood’s actors union called a strike against the popular multiplayer online game “League of Legends” on Tuesday, arguing the company that produces the game attempted to get around the ongoing video game strike by hiring non-union actors to work on a union title.

    The Screen Actors Guild-American Federation of Television and Radio Artists said the company, Formosa Interactive LLC, tried to “cancel” an unnamed video game affected by the strike shortly after the start of the work stoppage. The union said that when Formosa learned it could not cancel the game, the company “secretly transferred the game to a shell company and sent out casting notices for ‘non-union’ talent only.” In response, the union’s interactive negotiating committee voted unanimously to file an unfair labor practice charge against the company with the National Labor Relations Board and to call a strike against “League of Legends” as part of that charge.

    “League of Legends” is one of Formosa’s most well-known projects. The company provides voiceover services for the game, according to SAG-AFTRA.

    SAG-AFTRA has accused Formosa of interfering with protections that allow performers to form or join a union and prevent those performers from being discriminated against — a move the union called “egregious violations of core tenets of labor law.”

    Formosa did not immediately respond to a request for comment. “League of Legends” developer Riot Games said that the company “has nothing to do” with the union’s complaint.

    “We want to be clear: Since becoming a union project five years ago, ‘League of Legends’ has only asked Formosa to engage with union performers in the U.S. and has never once suggested doing otherwise,” Riot said in an emailed statement. “In addition, we’ve never asked Formosa to cancel a game that we’ve registered.”

    SAG-AFTRA’s allegations are related to a non-Riot game, the game publisher said.

    “It’s bad enough that Formosa and other companies are refusing to agree to the fair AI terms that have been agreed to by the film, television, streaming, and music industries, as well as more than 90 other game developers,” said the union’s national executive director, Duncan Crabtree-Ireland. “To commit illegal unfair labor practices is beyond the pale and won’t be tolerated by SAG-AFTRA members.”

    SAG-AFTRA members must immediately stop providing covered services to “League of Legends,” the union said. Until Tuesday, the game was one of several titles that remained unstruck. Formosa is a union signatory.

    “League of Legends is a game of champions. Instead of championing the union performers who bring their immense talent and experience to beloved characters, decision-makers at Formosa have chosen to try to evade and abandon them,” said Interactive Media Agreement Negotiating Committee Chair Sarah Elmaleh. “Such double-dealing is very disappointing from a longtime committed union signatory.”

    SAG-AFTRA called a strike against major game companies in July after more than a year of negotiations around the union’s interactive media agreement broke down over concerns around the use of unregulated artificial intelligence. Formosa is a member of the bargaining group in those talks.

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  • Veteran broadcaster Dougie Donnelly reflects on 50 years of rubbing shoulders with the legends of sport in his new autobiography

    Veteran broadcaster Dougie Donnelly reflects on 50 years of rubbing shoulders with the legends of sport in his new autobiography

    There is a pleasing thump as the names drop. Dougie Donnelly can tell a story, which is perhaps just as well as he has just written an autobiography, but his screenplay has the most enthralling cast.

    He can talk about caddying for Colin Montgomerie at Augusta, receiving advice from the holy fitba trinity of Ferguson, Smith and Stein, having to conduct an interview with legendary drummer Ginger Baker, when a Trappist monk would be more chatty, and nattering near the 18th green with Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus and Arnie Palmer.

    There is also the remembrance of Elton John gently taking over DJ duties in an encounter in a Radio Clyde studio. 

    He also recounts tentative job offers from Rangers and the Scottish Football Association.

    There is no bombast in any of this, no vainglory. There is, instead, a sense of gratitude and more than a little surprise.

    Dougie Donnelly has released an autobiography reflecting on his 50-year career in sport

    Dougie Donnelly has released an autobiography reflecting on his 50-year career in sport

    ‘I had a bit of talent, I worked hard, certainly, I spoke to a lot of people. People kept using me. Maybe I was cheap,’ says Donnelly. 

    It is a scouting report from the spectacularly erroneous MGM school where Fred Astaire was assessed thus: ‘Can’t act. Can’t sing, Slightly bald, Can dance a little.’

    Donnelly has certainly seemed to waltz through his broadcasting career since the day more than 50 years ago when he stepped in for a sick DJ when he was a law student at Strathclyde University. 

    He has since covered seven Olympic Games, three Commonwealth Games three World Cups, 33 consecutive Scottish Cup finals and more golf tournaments than one could shake a stick, or even a club, at. Oh, he has also interviewed three of the Beatles.

    His personal story is thus intriguing. But he stands, too, as an experienced and acute observer of how the TV industry was and how it now is. At 71, he can remember when he was chastised for saying ‘Woosie’ rather than Ian to Mr Woosnam after a post-round interview on the BBC. 

    He now observes the modern pundit escaping censure for more egregious language.

    As he observes of current pundits: ‘One former Scottish international player committed four grammatical mistakes in eight words. He said: “Yous know, I seen him, he done great”.’

    This is said with a guffaw but Donnelly is no mean-spirited viewer of the modern TV world. He knows change, he accepts change, he has also been a victim of change. 

    Now commentating on the Asian Tour, Donnelly came to that gig after being considered surplus to requirements in a similar job on the European Tour.

    The veteran broadcaster has been a permanent fixture on our TV screens over the years

    The veteran broadcaster has been a permanent fixture on our TV screens over the years

    He was once a mainstay of BBC network and BBC Scotland. But his last Scottish Cup final presentation was 14 years ago. The BBC is a distant if fond memory.

    One senses there have been turbulent waters but Donnelly maintains a steady course. Indeed, he looks back at it all with a quiet sense of wonder.

    ‘Would a young Dougie Donnelly now get the chances I got? No, for a variety of reasons. TV sport looks and sounds very different to when I started. 

    ‘That is inevitable. It evolves. I remember being angry when Scotland played and drew with the Faroe Isles under Berti Vogts in 2002. I used words like appalling, embarrassing, disgraceful during the broadcast. That was very unusual then. It is not now. Indeed, it is encouraged.’

    He worked with greats such as Bill McLaren and Peter Alliss. ‘Peter was a great Chic Murray fan and we bonded over that,’ he says as an aside. But he uses both characters to illustrate the modern trend of overly dramatic commentary and partisan punditry.

    ‘I will listen all day to the likes of Graeme Souness, Ally McCoist and Roy Keane but as for many of the rest, keep it for the pub. But I accept that this is a generational thing. It is now all about hits, likes and controversy. And that’s fine, if that is what the audience wants.’

    Former Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson once advised Donnelly to shave his beard

    Former Manchester United boss Sir Alex Ferguson once advised Donnelly to shave his beard

    Donnelly counts Scottish golfing great Sam Torrance as one of his closest friends

    Donnelly counts Scottish golfing great Sam Torrance as one of his closest friends 

    He has no resentment towards the BBC. ‘I did work for them for 33 years. I owe them an enormous amount,’ he says. But he is not blind to the issues facing the corporation.

    ‘They still do good stuff but I can see them doing less and less. Major sports are largely going elsewhere. 

    ‘Individual sports are going with individual broadcasters. The water cooler moments where we all saw the great moments on the same channel have gone.’

    The protected television status of sport has also largely evaporated. Donnelly was on an advisory committee set up to decide what sporting events must be shown on terrestrial television under the auspices of the Broadcasting Act of 1996. Group A covers events that must have full live coverage. It includes the Olympics, World Cup, Scottish Cup final, the Derby and Wimbledon.

    ‘I was surprised to be asked to provide Scottish input,’ he says. ‘But the reality was that BBC sports coverage was slipping in terms of events, STV largely were not interested, and Sky was getting stronger. The pertinent question is what did the British people expect to see and what should they see for no subscription?

    ‘You would think everyone would want to get the biggest audience possible. Now, governing bodies will play lip service to that but actually they want the money that comes with exclusive deals. I got so many phone calls from important people saying they did not want their events restricted to the A list.

    ‘I told them: “I hear what you are saying but there is a wider issue here”. It was fascinating.’

    Donnelly has built up a rapport with sporting icons such as 15-time major winner Tiger Woods

    Donnelly has built up a rapport with sporting icons such as 15-time major winner Tiger Woods

    Beyond broadcasting, Donnelly was also chairman of the Scottish Institute of Sport for three years from 2005. He stood down as the institute merged with SportScotland but has had other opportunities to work in the wider world.

    He was asked to be head of media at Rangers and was also sounded out as a possible chief executive of the SFA.

    ‘I never thought about either job too hard. The Rangers approach came in a telephone call in about 2000. It was a sort of, “would you be interested?” question. I was told by someone in the know that Dick Advocaat, the manager then, would have made it a difficult job. But I had no compelling interest. I have spent most of my career protesting that I am a Clyde fan with people asking if I am a Rangers Clyde fan or a Celtic Clyde fan. I wasn’t really tempted.’

    And the SFA?

    ‘It was just a sounding out,’ he says. ‘By why would I put myself in the line of fire to take either of the two hardest jobs in Scottish football?

    ‘I would have had to have given up everything else and frankly I did not have the skill set for either job. I would like to think I could have identified some problems and addressed them.’

    He was made wary by his experience at the Institute of Sport. ‘I was perhaps wide-eyed and somewhat naive in going into that. I thought: “I am going to work with people who love sport and want success”. But life is not like that. I suspect these jobs at Rangers and the SFA would have been the same — a culture of don’t rock the boat, you can’t do this or that. Politics isn’t my thing.’

    Broadcasting certainly was and is. ‘It was never my intention. I was going to be a lawyer. It was a good four or five years into my career when I though: “You know, maybe I could stick with this”.’

    He did return to Strathclyde University 20 years after dropping out to take the conveyancing exam and thus earn his law degree. But his life has been sport and talking to the people in it.

    ‘I feel a great sense of privilege. I have never lost that down the years. I was there when both Arnie and Jack holed out for last time at the Open in St Andrews 10 years apart (1995, 2005). I thought: “You lucky boy”. To be there at these moments and speaking to them, I have never lost that sense of wonder.’

    He also formed a rapport with Tiger Woods. ‘I asked him on air once if he wanted to go for a pint but he felt the headlines this would create during a tournament would be a bit too much.’ He also caddied for Colin Montgomerie in the Par 3 contest at Augusta and formed a lasting friendship with Sam Torrance.

    Donnelly previously caddied for Colin Montgomery at the famous Par 3 contest at Augusta

    Donnelly previously caddied for Colin Montgomery at the famous Par 3 contest at Augusta 

    Professional relationships have led to personal advice. ‘I was doing a bit of public speaking and Mr Stein — he was always Mr Stein to me — was sitting beside me at the top table. I had used some industrial language during the speech and when I sat down Mr Stein said quietly that I should not do that. 

    ‘He told me to stay classy and not be something I wasn’t. I remembered that. Sir Alex has been a friend, too. He once told me to shave off a beard. He said I looked terrible. So I took his advice.’

    The most substantial advice, however, came from Walter Smith, the former Rangers and Scotland manager who became a close friend. 

    ‘He was at my daughter’s wedding in 2017 and I mentioned casually to him that I was thinking about retiring. He took me by the shoulders and very firmly told me not to do that. He said that I should continue as long as I could and as long as I enjoyed it.’

    Both conditions have been met and Donnelly patrols exotic courses with mic in hand covering the Asia Tour. 

    He later remarks that he might just be heading to the 18th green in terms of his career. 

    Perhaps so, but my money is on him asking for a ruling and then forcing a series of play-off holes.

    Dougie Donnelly: My Life in Sport is published by McNidder and Grace.

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