• India makes history with first women's Test win over Australia

    India secured their first Test win over Australia with an eight-wicket victory in a one-off match in Mumbai.

  • India mourning cricket legend Bishan Singh Bedi

    India is mourning the death of cricket legend Bishan Singh Bedi, who died after battling age-related illnesses and undergoing a few surgeries in recent years.

  • India not playing in Champions Trophy in Pakistan

    India has informed the International Cricket Council that its players will not travel to the Champions Trophy, according to hosts Pakistan.

  • India on top of the white-ball world after edging out New Zealand in Champions Trophy final

    India survived a New Zealand fightback to win the Champions Trophy with a four-wicket victory in Dubai.

  • India overwhelm South Africa to win T20 title

    India ended their 13-year wait for a world title by fighting back to beat South Africa in a thrilling T20 World Cup final.

  • India set to play Champions Trophy games at neutral venue

    India will play their matches at next year's Champions Trophy at a neutral venue, the International Cricket Council has announced.

  • India tennis star, Mirza, announces retirement

    Former Wimbledon doubles champion Sania Mirza has announced that she will be retiring from tennis after 2022. She made her decision after her first-round loss in the women's doubles in the Australian Open.

    One of India's most celebrated sports stars, she told reporters: "I've decided that this will be my last season. I'm taking it week by week. Not sure if I can last the season, but I want to."

  • India Test supremacy scuppered following Australia mauling

    Indian cricket fans are still reeling from the team's crushing 1-3 defeat in the five-match Test series against Australia.

  • India thrash Pakistan as Australia ease past Barbados in Games’ T20 matches

    India cruised to an eight-wicket win over fierce rivals Pakistan in their Commonwealth Games cricket match, after a record number of people bought tickets to watch the women’s T20 cricket competition at Edgbaston.

  • India to bid for 2036 Olympics as IOC censures ‘politicisation of sport’

    The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has warned countries that exclude athletes from competing for political reasons they could risk harming their plans to host Olympic Games.

  • India v England Test series schedule announced

    England will start their five-Test tour of India next year on 25 January in Hyderabad. India's cricket board (BCCI) has published the schedule for the series and the other Tests will take place in Vizag, Rajkot, Ranchi, and Dharamsala.

    The fifth Test will start on 11 March and England captain Ben Stokes' side will be hoping to win in India for the first time since 2012. When India last hosted England in 2021, they won the series 3-1.

  • India wins 5-day third Test…in less than two

    England succumbed to a 10-wicket defeat against India inside two days of an astonishing third Test in Ahmedabad.

    On a scarcely believable day when both sides collapsed and 17 wickets fell in two sessions, India completed the quickest Test win since 1935 not long into the final session.

    England began the day with a thrilling fightback, turning India's overnight 99-3 into 145 all out. But, faced with a first-innings deficit of 33, England were bowled out for 81 as India's spinners ran riot once again.

    In a frenzied start to their second innings, England lost Zak Crawley and Jonny Bairstow within three balls - both bowled by Axar Patel. Ben Stokes and Joe Root briefly calmed the raucous atmosphere but their dismissals in consecutive overs sparked a sorry procession to England's lowest Test total in India.

    Spinners were responsible for every wicket to fall on the day - and 28 of the 30 in the match - Joe Root taking 5-8 in the first session, Axar 5-32 and Ravichandran Ashwin 4-48, including his 400th Test scalp. India cruised to their target of 49 inside eight overs, an incredible game wrapped up before the floodlit conditions of a day-night Test could have an impact.

    A victorious India captain Virat Kohli said: "The result went our way but the quality of batting wasn't at all up to standard by both teams. We were 100-3 and hoping to get more than we needed. There was a lack of application from both sides." England captain Joe Root said: "We won the toss and batted first, but we didn't capitalise on that. We could have got 250, which would have been a good total. We don't define ourselves on a performance like that."

    Victory give India, who lost the first Test, an unassailable 2-1 lead in the series with one match to play and ended England's hopes of qualifying for the World Test Championship final this summer.

     

  • India women pull out of England tour due to Covid-19 pandemic

    India will not travel to England for the proposed women's tri-series because of coronavirus restrictions.

    They were originally due to tour in June and July but those matches were postponed. And with South Africa due to arrive later in the summer, it had been hoped the three sides would play a tri-series, but the rising number of cases in India mean they will not be able to travel. It is understood England will try to extend the series against the Proteas and will no longer be hosting India later this summer, after the visitors pulled out of a proposed tri-series due to coronavirus.

    The T20 World Cup runners-up had initially been scheduled to tour in June, but lockdown restrictions saw the matches postponed. The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) had hoped that it could instead arrange for India to take part in a tri-series along with South Africa later this summer, but the country's Covid-19 crisis has meant they will be unable to commit. India has reported 1.1 million cases of the infection, and scheduled flights to the UK are currently suspended.

    England's squad returned to training, following three months out of action after their World Cup semi-final exit and it is understands that the ECB is pushing to potentially extend England's run of fixtures against South Africa, originally scheduled as two T20s and four one-day internationals, in order to get as much play as possible. Dates for the series have not been confirmed but are expected to be announced for late August at the earliest.

    Coronavirus has ravaged what was expected to be an exciting summer for women's cricket this year. The Hundred competition, which would have seen women's domestic cricket aired on terrestrial television and players receive salaries, was a major casualty to the crisis after it was cancelled since March. The ECB, however, reiterated its commitment to the women's domestic game and 25 players were awarded retainers, in a step towards offering professional status to those outside the England squad.

    Full-time contracts, which will be a step up from the retainers, are expected to be allocated later this year. Also, details about the new elite domestic competition for later this summer - comprising the new regional teams made up from county groupings - are likely to soon be announced.

     

  • India's ends unbeaten run to Australia in Women's U-19 T20 World Cup

    India's unbeaten run at the Women's U-19 T20 World Cup came to an end with a seven-wicket thrashing by Australia in the Super Six stage at Potchefstroom. Invited to bat, the India batters, who have looked formidable so far in the tournament, were blown away as Australia skittled them for a paltry 87 in 18.5 overs.

  • India's grandmother-granddaughter karate champs

    An unusual duo is winning laurels for India in karate.

    Geeta Godara, 60, and her 13-year-old granddaughter Aashka recently won medals in different categories at an international karate competition in Dubai.

  • India's men and women cricket teams set to be paid equal match fees for international matches

    Players in India's men's and women's international cricket sides will receive equal match fees, the country's Board of Control for Cricket has said.

    Jay Shah, Honorary Secretary for the BCCI, said: “Contracted cricketers would now be receiving the same pay in a new era of gender equality in cricket”.

  • India's South Africa to go ahead - with revised schedule

    India's cricket tour of South Africa will go ahead this month with a revised schedule of three Test matches and three one-day internationals.

    The series had been thrown into some doubt following the emergence of the Omicron variant of coronavirus in South Africa. India, who completed a 1-0 series win over New Zealand on Monday, will now arrive in the country a week later than originally scheduled and four planned T20 internationals have been dropped and will be rearranged.

  • India-Pakistan ‘Handshake-Gate’ still raging

    Cricket’s fiercest rivalry is back under the spotlight as India and Pakistan prepare to face each other in the Asia Cup Super Four at Dubai International Stadium on September 21, 2025.

  • Indian 'Flying Sikh' Milkha Singh dies from Covid

    One of India's greatest athletes, Milkha Singh, has died from Covid-related complications.

    Popularly known as "the Flying Sikh", Singh won four Asian gold medals and finished fourth in the 400m final at the 1960 Rome Olympics.

    In 2013, his story was turned into the Bollywood film Bhaag Milkha Bhaag - Run Milkha Run.

    Singh's wife, Nirmal Kaur, a former volleyball captain, also died with Covid earlier this week, aged 85.

    Singh had contracted Covid-19 last month and died of complications from the disease in a hospital in the northern city of Chandigarh. Prime Minister Narendra Modi led the tributes to the athlete, who has been described as independent India's first sporting superstar.

    Singh's exploits on the track and field are legendary in India.

    He won five golds in international athletic championships and was awarded the Helms World Trophy in 1959 for winning 77 of his 80 international races. He also won India's first

    Commonwealth gold in 1958.

    Singh grew up in a small village in what, during his childhood, was still British India. As a young boy who lived in a remote village in Multan province, he saw his parents and seven siblings murdered during the Partition of India and the creation of Pakistan in 1947.

    As his father fell, his last words were "Bhaag Milkha Bhaag", exhorting his son to run for his life. The boy ran - first to save his life, and then to win medals.

    Arriving in India as an orphan in 1947, he took to petty crime and did odd jobs for survival until he found a place in the army. It was there that he discovered his athletic abilities.

    Singh won Gold at the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff and went on to finish fourth in the 400 metres at the Rome Olympics, missing out on a bronze medal by a whisker. In 1960, he was invited to take part in the 200m event at an International Athletic competition in Lahore, Pakistan. He hadn't been back to Pakistan since fleeing in 1947 and initially refused to go.

    Singh eventually did go to Pakistan. Despite the huge support for his main rival, Pakistan's Abdul Khaliq, in the stadium, Singh went on to win that race, while Khaliq took the bronze medal. As Gen Ayub Khan, Pakistan's second president, awarded the competitors their medals, Singh received the nickname that would stick with him for the rest of his life.

    He said: "Gen Ayub said to me, 'Milkha, you came to Pakistan and did not run. You actually flew in Pakistan. Pakistan bestows upon you the title of the Flying Sikh.' If Milkha Singh is known as the Flying Sikh in the whole world today, the credit goes to General Ayub and to Pakistan.”

    Even though he never won an Olympic medal, his only wish was that someone else should win that medal for India. When the biographic film was released in 2013, Singh told the BBC that it would inspire the next generation.

    "We had nothing in our times,” he said. “The athletes and sportsmen in those days didn't earn much money. We worked for the applause, people's appreciation inspired and motivated us, we ran for the country." He was 91.

  • Indian captain, Sharma, wins hearts despite losing cricket World Cup final

    Millions of Indians cried along with cricket captain Rohit Sharma on Sunday as he walked off the field, trying to hold back his tears.