rotating globe
29 Jun 2026


World News

Cristiano Ronaldo

Ronaldo awaits FIFA decision on his World Cup ban

Cristiano Ronaldo must wait around three weeks for FIFA to rule on his red‑card incident during Portugal’s 2026 World Cup qualifier against…

Trump pushes DOJ to examine Epsteins ties to democrats

Trump pushes DOJ to probe Epstein-democrat links

The US Justice Department has agreed to investigate Jeffrey Epstein’s links with former President Bill Clinton and other high-profile figures, following a…

Trump drops tariffs on coffee fruit beef as consumers face high prices

Trump rolls back food import tariffs

President Donald Trump has ordered the removal of tariffs on several imported items, including beef, coffee, bananas, oranges, tomatoes, cocoa, tea, fruit…

China issues Japan travel warning amid Taiwan row

China issues Japan travel warning amid Taiwan row

China has urged its citizens to postpone or avoid travel to Japan, deepening a diplomatic rift that has widened rapidly over comments…

US Colleges See Fewer Foreign Applicants As India Fuels Decline

14% drop in Indian applications to US colleges

The US colleges have seen a roughly 9% decline in applications from foreign students this year compared to the previous year. India…

Russia Launches Massive Strike On Ukraines Kyiv Injuring 11

Ukraine’s Kyiv struck by Russian missile, 11 injured

Kyiv faced a major assault overnight as Russian forces launched missiles and drones across the city. Every district in Ukraine’s capital reported…

Donald Trump ends historic 43 day government shutdown as he signs funding bill

43-day US government shutdown ends as Trump signs

After 43 days of silence in government offices, grounded flights, and unpaid workers, the wheels of the US administration are finally turning…

U.S. sanctions 32 entities

US bars 32 firms, individuals over Iran missile links

The United States has imposed sanctions on 32 companies and individuals from India, China, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Turkey, Hong Kong,…

Jaishankar meets Rubio

India, US align on trade and security at G7 talks

India’s External Affairs Minister S. Jaishankar held talks with the US Secretary of State Marco Rubio during the G7 foreign ministers’ meeting…

PM Modi arrives in Bhutan for two day visit

India backs Bhutan’s Gelephu Mindfulness City, offers ₹4,000 cr

India has announced support for Bhutan’s Gelephu Mindfulness City (GMC) project, aimed at creating an environmentally friendly urban hub in southern Bhutan.…

About This Category

Sport as News, Not Just Scores

The Sports section at The Summary isn't a live score service. It's a reporting beat — and right now, that beat is producing some genuinely significant stories. The Indian T20 captaincy has changed hands with Suryakumar Yadav removed and Shreyas Iyer stepping in. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, still a teenager, has broken Chris Gayle's IPL sixes record and walked away with three awards from a single tournament. R Praggnanandhaa has beaten the world's best chess player twice in five days. These are stories with context, consequence, and people behind them. The section covers them that way.

Cricket: The Unavoidable Centre of Indian Sport

Indian cricket produces more news than any other sport on this beat, and not always because the cricket is exceptional. The captaincy politics around the T20 team are as much a story about BCCI decision-making and player management as they are about on-field performance. Hardik Pandya's uncertain future at Mumbai Indians, Shreyas Iyer's elevation, and Suryakumar's removal all reflect a selection culture that has become a running institutional story. The IPL, meanwhile, has given the section some of its most straightforward good news — Sooryavanshi's breakout season is the kind of story that happens once in several years, and it deserves to be reported fully rather than reduced to numbers.

India's Broader Sports Story

Cricket consumes attention, but the section deliberately makes room for what happens outside it. Gurindervir Singh running a new 100-metre national record is a significant athletics story in a country that has historically underinvested in track and field. Praggnanandhaa defeating Carlsen — not once but twice at Norway Chess — represents the continued rise of Indian chess at the highest level of global competition. These stories are covered because they represent genuine sporting achievement in disciplines that rarely get sustained coverage in Indian media.

Global Sport and the Business of It

Alexander Zverev's French Open win — his first Grand Slam — is covered because it is a landmark result in one of the sport's most watched tournaments. The Messi billionaire story sits in this section because it reflects something real about how elite football has evolved into a wealth-generation machine. Neither is covered as celebrity gossip. Both are reported for what they are: significant developments in the international sports landscape with audiences that extend well beyond dedicated fans.

Extremes and Outliers

The Russian Everest summit is a reminder that sport, broadly defined, includes feats that happen without a governing body's camera pointed at them. These stories make the cut when the achievement is documented and the context is clear.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. What sports does The Summary cover in this section?

Cricket is the most consistent beat, given its dominance in the Indian sports calendar. But the section also covers tennis, chess, athletics, football, and other sports when there is a result, decision, or development worth reporting. Coverage is not limited to India — international events are included when the story has genuine significance.

Q2. Does the section cover IPL and Indian cricket in depth?

Yes. The IPL generates team management decisions, captaincy changes, records, and commercial developments throughout its run. The Indian T20 team's selection and captaincy structure is covered as an ongoing story rather than a series of isolated announcements. Both the on-field performance and the institutional decisions behind it are part of the coverage.

Q3. How does The Summary cover Indian athletes outside cricket?

When they produce results worth reporting, they receive it. Gurindervir Singh's sprint record and Praggnanandhaa's victories over Carlsen are examples of the section covering Indian athletes in disciplines that tend to get overlooked elsewhere. The editorial standard is the same regardless of sport — significance of the result and quality of the sourcing.

Q4. Does The Summary cover the business side of sport?

Where it's a real story, yes. Messi joining Ronaldo in the billionaire bracket is a sports business story as much as a football one. Franchise captaincy decisions in the IPL involve commercial considerations alongside cricketing ones. The section doesn't separate sport from its economic context when the two are genuinely intertwined.

Q5. How quickly does The Summary publish sports results and news?

As quickly as results are confirmed and context can be added. A match result without any surrounding information is a data point, not a story. The aim is to publish once there is enough to say something meaningful — which, for major results, is usually within the same news cycle.

Q6. Does The Summary cover international sports events beyond cricket and tennis?

Yes, selectively. The Norway Chess tournament, the Everest summit, and Grand Prix athletics results all appeared here because they qualified as significant news on their own terms — not because they fit a predetermined international sports brief. The test is always whether a reader who follows sport seriously would want to know about it.