• West Midlands warms up for super September of sport

    The West Midlands is gearing up for a month of high-quality sporting action to keep visitors entertained following the excitement of the 2024 Paris Olympic Games.

  • What BHM means for some Premier League players

    As Black History Month (BHM) in the UK celebrates the excellence of the Black community who have invented, created and inspired – past, present and future – to help shape the wider multicultural community, some of the Premier League’s leading players are upfront and personal with their views of what the celebratory month means to them. Kalvin Phillips, Kyle Walker and Paul Pogba, share their views on what the ‘Month means to them.

  • What drama… as England and India provide the very best in Test Cricket!

    Twenty-five days of gripping Test cricket came down to a one-armed man painfully scampering 22 yards of south London turf.

  • What drives sports streaming in the UK?

    The FIFA World Cup 2022 is here, with 32 teams vying for the most prestigious title in football. This time around, the event takes place in Qatar until December 18.

    In anticipation of one of the world’s most watched sporting events, VPN (virtual private network) service, ExpressVPN, looked at how online spectatorship has changed over the last few years and the possible factors - from the pandemic to TV shows - that could have influenced these trends. 

  • What is learned from hearing into racism at Yorkshire

    For just under two hours Azeem Rafiq addressed a group of MPs about his experiences of racism as a player at Yorkshire.

    The former captain spoke emotionally about the racist comments and actions that left him, in his own words, close to taking his own life.

  • What it takes to host the biggest indoor women’s tennis event in the UK

    The biggest indoor women’s tennis event in the UK will kick off in Shropshire of all places next week - but do you know how many tennis balls players will get through or how many rackets will be restrung during the course of the week?

    The ITF World Tennis Tour, which sees leading British and international stars compete in the W100 Women’s Tour, is now taking place (to November 6) at The Shrewsbury Club. But events of this magnitude don’t just happen, as Dave Courteen, Managing Director of The Shrewsbury Club, explains.

  • What next for British Tour de France winner Geraint Thomas following retirement?

    Tour de France winner and two-time Olympic gold medal cyclist, Geraint Thomas, has announced his retirement at the end of the current season.

  • What next for Ronaldo following damming revelations?

    In the aftermath of Manchester United's thrilling 2-1 injury-time victory at Fulham, Erik ten Hag allowed himself to reflect on the developments at Old Trafford since he became manager in the summer.

    "We are now united," he said. "We have togetherness, in the dressing room, with the staff, the directors, the whole club, and the fans.

  • What the Premier League is doing to tackle racism

    Addressing racism has become a pressing priority not only in society but also within football.

  • What to expect at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games

    Tokyo 2020 was postponed by a year because of the Covid pandemic but now, three years later with the crowds back to fill the stands, what can we expect from Paris 2024?

  • Who can qualify for Olympics and how do play-offs work?

    Two spots at this summer's Olympics are up for grabs as the Women's Nations League enters the finals.

  • Who will be Kings of Africa… Côte d'Ivoire or Nigeria?

    After a record number of goals, unrelenting shocks and an apparent capacity for unceasing drama, the Africa Cup of Nations finishes today when either hosts Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) or fellow former champions Nigeria will be crowned kings of Africa.

  • Who will be UK sportswoman of the 21st Century?

    As part of the BBC's celebration of women's sport this summer, BBC 5 Live Breakfast is asking listeners to vote for their UK sportswoman of the 21st Century.

  • Who will win the Webb Ellis Cup?

    With the competition up and ready, and the opening game between New Zealand and France the perfect starter, the question is ‘Who is going to win the 2023 Rugby World Cup?

  • Who won the LeBron vs Zlatan politics bout?

    Basketball superstar LeBron James has come out fighting after Swedish football legend Zlatan Ibrahimovic told him to stay out of politics.

    Ibrahimovic said in a TV interview sports figures like James should not get involved as "it doesn't look good". James fired back: "I will never shut up about things that are wrong." Pointing out Ibrahimovic's own past complaints about racism in Sweden, James said: "I'm kinda the wrong guy to actually go at... I do my homework."

    The two are megastars in their respective sports.

    Ibrahimovic, in an interview with UEFA and Discovery+ in Sweden, criticised the political activism of sports stars. "Do what you're good at. Do the category that you do. I play football because I'm the best at playing football, I'm no politician. If I'd been a politician, I would be doing politics.

    "This is the first mistake famous people do when they become famous and come into a certain status. For me it is better to avoid certain topics and do what you're best at doing, because otherwise it doesn't look good." James's response after his LA Lakers beat the Portland Trail Blazers was unequivocal. "I would never shut up about things that are wrong," he said.

    "I preach about my people and I preach about equality, social injustice, racism, systematic voter suppression, things that go on in our community. There's no way I would ever just stick to sports, because I understand how powerful this platform and my voice is."

    James also appeared confused at Ibrahimovic's statements, as the football star has regularly spoken out against racism. He said: "He's the guy who said in Sweden, he was talking about the same things, because his last name wasn't a [raditional Swedish last name, he felt like there was some racism going on when he was out on the pitch."

    Ibrahimovic did indeed in 2018 tell French broadcaster Canal+ he did not receive the same treatment as other Swedish athletes, saying: "This is about racism. I don't say there is racism, but I say there is undercover racism." But he has also had to defend himself, particularly after certain comments to Romelu Lukaku in a heated exchange in January's derby with Inter Milan.

    For his part James has faced criticism for his political activism before. He clashed with then President Donald Trump over the act of kneeling to protest against systemic racism. Fox News journalist Laura Ingraham told him to "shut up and dribble".

    Zlatan Ibrahimovic, 39, is an ex-Sweden international who has played in the top division of seven countries in a career that started more than two decades ago. He has won more than 30 trophies, scored more than 500 career goals and is still going strong in the top leagues at 39 - now back with AC Milan. Before that he was with the Galaxy in Los Angeles – James's current home town.

    LeBron, 36, is widely considered one of the greatest players in NBA history.

    He has won the NBA title with three different franchises - the Cleveland Cavaliers, Miami Heat and Los Angeles Lakers - and has been the finals MVP for all of them.

  • Why a legendary cricketer's biopic is causing outrage

    Former Sri Lankan cricketing great Muttiah Muralitharan says a planned film about his life will be released, despite a massive backlash in south India which caused the lead actor to quit.

     

    A member of Sri Lanka's minority Tamils, Muralitharan defied the odds to make it on to the national team during a long civil war between Tamil separatists and the Sinhalese-majority security forces.

     

    Then, he battled controversy over his bowling action - he was famously no-balled for "chucking" in Australia - to become one of the most formidable bowlers the cricketing world has ever seen. However the biopic of his life - entitled 800, a reference to his record-breaking 800 Test match wickets - may be his biggest obstacle yet.

     

    Shooting has yet to start, but when a film poster featuring popular south Indian actor Vijay Sethupathi in the lead role was released there was a massive outpouring of anger.

     

    The hashtag #ShameOnVijaySethupathi started trending across the state of Tamil Nadu, with many demanding that he turn down the role.

     

    The film's producers have called it a "sports biography", intended to inspire young people, but critics fear a hagiography, an attempt to glorify someone who has become a controversial political issue. Much of the outrage stems from Muralitharan's comments at a presidential election event last year, at which he celebrated the end of the war in 2009 and supported the candidacy of Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Mr Rajapaksa was the defence secretary when government forces crushed Tamil Tiger separatists in a brutal campaign that also left tens of thousands of civilians dead.

     

    He said the "happiest day of my life" was in 2009 as the country could now "go on without fear". An estimated 40,000 Sri Lankan Tamil civilians are believed to have died in the last stages of the war, and it has been an emotive issue in Tamil Nadu, where the same language and ethnic identity are shared.

     

    "Even though Muralitharan is a Tamil, he does not behave as a Tamil, and we don't want him to enter Tamil Nadu in any form - whether in person or on film," said V Prabha, a youth activist based in Chennai (formerly Madras). "Muralitharan did many wrongs during the Sri Lankan civil war, we don't want him to be a hero in the Tamil community." But Muralitharan says his words have been repeatedly "twisted" and taken out of context.

     

    "I meant that after 2009, we had peace in this country. For me when the war finished, it was the happiest day of my life because peace came - not because Tamil civilians were killed," he said. "I did not take any sides over the war - Rajapaksa side or the other side. I was in the middle. People in India don't know what's happening in Sri Lanka."

     

    Muralitharan has close links with India, especially Tamil Nadu. His wife is from the state and he represented Chennai when he played for Chennai Super Kings from 2008 to 2010, becoming one of the team's most popular players. So why is the film so contentious?

     

    "In 2010, people in Tamil Nadu knew what had happened to Tamils in the Sri Lankan civil war, but they didn't connect Muralitharan to it," said Mr Prabha.

    "We then started a campaign showing how he supported the Sri Lankan state, and by 2013, we were able to ban him and other Sri Lankan players here."

     

    In 2013, the Tamil Nadu government banned IPL games with Sri Lankan players from being played in the state, due to alleged human rights violations of Tamils in Sri Lanka.

     

    Kavitha Muralidharan, a freelance journalist in Chennai, says the furore over Muralitharan's biopic has been so intense because of its lead actor, 42-year-old Vijay Sethupathi.

     

    "Sethupathi is seen as a progressive actor, he speaks out on a lot of social issues, so for many people it was troubling to see him choosing to play the role of Muttiah Muralitharan," she said. "People in Tamil Nadu take cinema very seriously. A movie is not just a movie there - Tamil cinema and politics are inter-related."

     

    Tamil nationalism is often infused into Kollywood, as the Tamil cinema industry is known. A number of the state's chief ministers were actors before they took to politics.

     

    The pressure on Sethupathi to quit came from both film stars and politicians. But it was Muralitharan's surprise intervention - he asked the actor to withdraw - that decided the issue.

     

    "Why does Sethupathi have to have unnecessary problems with this movie? Why do I want to put these problems on him?" the cricketer asks. "This is my battle, not his battle, so I will take on the battle."

     

    The response in Sri Lanka - where he is widely regarded as a sporting hero - has been mixed.

     

    "I would have loved to see a film about him, not glorifying him, but something which brings all aspects of his complex identity to the screen," said Andrew Fidel Fernando, a cricket writer in Colombo, who has written extensively about Muralitharan's cricketing reign. "The immediate backlash to the film seems ludicrous - we don't know what the film would have been like."

     

    Families of Tamils who went missing during the Sri Lankan civil war are more critical, with some calling for the film to be scrapped completely.

     

    The film's producers, Dar Motion Pictures (which made the Bollywood films The Lunchbox and Ugly) and Movie Train Motion Pictures had hoped to begin shooting 800 in early 2021. Without a lead actor, that now seems unlikely. But Muralitharan is confident that his story will be told on screen.

     

    "It will be made. The film's not just for Tamil Nadu. The producers are from Mumbai, they want it in all languages, in Tamil, Sinhala, Hindi, Bengali, Telugu, Malayalam and with English subtitles," he says.

     

    "It's a sports movie, how can it be controversial?"

    Yet the furore around 800 suggests it will be difficult to sep

     

  • Why Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce is the ‘G.O.A.T.’

    Jamaican sprinter, Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, is officially the fastest woman in the world after her recent victory in the 100-meter final at the World Athletics Championships in Doha, Qatar.

    At the age of 32, she also made history as the oldest woman to ever win the title after sprinting pass her contenders - finishing the race in 10.71 seconds, just 0.01 seconds of the personal best she set in 2012. She also became the first mom ever to win the 100-meter world championship title.

    Receiving her fourth World Championships title in the 100-meter division, it brought her total to eighth world title overall. Her victory was extra special as she became the first mother in 24 years to win the World 100m title after giving birth.

    She was joined on the track by her 2-year old son Zyon after her victory.

    An elated Fraser-Price said: “My secret is just staying humble. It’s about knowing who you are as a person and athlete and just continue to work hard”.

    She now hopes to inspire more women in achieving their dreams.

    “I am even more grateful for those girls who will come after me or the women who are still holding their own and working on their greatness in their own way and never trying to be anyone but themselves!” she wrote. “I am humbled to be filling my shoes with my potential, fill yours and never stop for anyone and do it with all your heart and all your courage.”

    The 2-time Olympic and a 4-time World Championships 100 meters winner officially goes down as the ‘Greatest Of All Time!’.

     

  • Why the Bob and Rita Marley Foundations end financial support for national women’s football programme?

    The Bob and Rita Marley Foundations announced the end of their financial support for the Jamaica Football Federation’s (JFF) national women’s program after what the general counsel for the Foundations, Lecia-Gaye Taylor, described as a “long and meaningful partnership.”

  • Whyte set to face Joyce this April

    Britons Dillian Whyte and Joe Joyce will headline a heavyweight-stacked card at Manchester's Co-op Live Arena on April 5.

  • Will the Kabaddi World Cup 2025 boost the sport’s popularity?

    Kabaddi is a sport loved by millions and for the first time ever, the Kabaddi World Cup will be hosted outside Asia.