• How Hyrox became the latest sporting craze

    Hyrox is in a strange place right now.

  • How Krejcikova held off Paolini to win Wimbledon title

    Barbora Krejcikova held off a charge from Jasmine Paolini in a gripping final at Wimbledon to claim her second Grand Slam singles title.

  • How LeBron the Great broke the NBA all-time scoring record

    LeBron James became the NBA's all-time leading scorer after his 38 points, for Los Angeles Lakers, in their 133-130 defeat by the Oklahoma City Thunder, passed fellow-Laker legend, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's long-standing record of 38,387, set in 1989.

    Needing 36 points to break the record, James 38, broke the record with a fadeaway jumper at the end of the third quarter and he finished the match with a career total of 38,390. In front of a cheering crowd that included tennis legend John McEnroe, music stars Jay-Z, LL Cool J and Bad Bunny, boxer Floyd Mayweather Jr and actor Denzel Washington, Abdul-Jabbar ceremoniously handed over the ball to James to recognise his new record.

  • How many athletes will travel to Paris?

    This year’s Olympic Games promise to be truly spectacular.

  • How Sachin Tendulkar made this Indian girl an online cricket star

    Until a few days ago, 10-year-old Sushila Meena lived an ordinary life, far from the public eye, in a small village in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan.

  • How Sinner beats Alcaraz for debut Wimbledon title win

    World number one Jannik Sinner won his first Wimbledon title by wearing down Carlos Alcaraz in another high-quality Grand Slam final between the dominant forces of the men's game.

  • How sports celebrated Eid whilst enjoying competition

    As the Blessed Holy Month of Ramadan came to an end, under current coronavirus restrictions, large celebrations were not allowed, so although restrictions are soon due to ease, people were being reminded to follow the rules to limit the spread of the virus.

    While Eid al-Fitr marked the end - where people would traditionally be getting together to celebrate the end of dawn-to-dusk fasting with large scale events, festival food and prayer - in sport, the effect of continuing to fast while competing is fast making people more accepting and compassionate for religious beliefs and followers. In Premier League football, a Muslim presence is fairly prominent as follows:

    Champions-elect Manchester City have Benjamin Mendy, İlkay Gündoğan and Riyad Mahrez  Sadio Mane, Naby Keita, Xherdan Shaqiri and Mohamed Salah of Liverpool, Shkodran Mustafi, Sead Kolasinc,, Mohamed Elneny and Granit Zhaka of Arsenal, Aston Villa’s Ahmed El Mohamady, Anwar El Ghazi and Mahmoud Hassan Trezeguet, Alireza Jahanbaksh and Beram Kayal at Brighton, Chelsea’s Antonio Rudiger, Kurt Zouma, N’Golo Kanté, Crystal Palace’s Mamadou Sakho, Cheikou Kouyate and Jordan Ayew, Djibril, Cenk Tosun and Oumar Niasse at Everton, Leicester City’s Eldin Jakupovic, Caglar Soyuncu and Rachid Ghezzal, Manchester United’s Paul Pogba, Sheffield United’s Muhamed Besic, Southampton’s Mohamed Elyounoussi, Moussa Djenepo and Sofiane Boufal, Tottenham Hotspur’s Serge Aurier and Moussa Sissoko and West Ham United’s Issa Diop. Each one endeavouring to excess for their respective clubs, whilst keeping their faith and values in tact for the world to see.

    Lowe down the football ‘food-chain’, those (faith and sporting) values were equally highlighted in Birmingham, in the UK. During Ramadan Saltley Stallions Football Club offered matches every week to Muslims to get together to play football late at night after the daily fasting. The league was launched in 2018 and this year the games were played outside for the first time.

    The Club’s founder, Obayed Hussain, who also the founded the Midnight Ramadan League, said: "Ramadan was a time to concentrate on wellbeing and fitness, so we wanted to provide a regular outlet and space for our players to socialise safely. It was a pleasure to lead and watch everyone dedicate themselves to fasting and training during this special month.

    "Our sessions were framed around positive mental health and to encourage those from all backgrounds and ability to come and enjoy the game after fasting. We worked with EA Sports for this year’s Midnight League, taking inspiration from its Volta initiative to encourage players to think about the game away from big stadiums, bringing it back to the grassroots foundations of the club.

    “Being able to showcase the skills our communities have at their feet against the best influencers and legends of the game was a great endorsement for us."

    Eid al-Fitr began in the evening of Wednesday, May 12 and ends yesterday evening (Thursday May 13). Ramadan began on the evening of Monday April 12 in the UK, and end on the evening of Monday May 12. 

  • How students balanced Ramadan and sport

    As a cross-country runner at the highest level of college athletics, Abdi Ibrahim had to balance training and schoolwork, as well as his religious observances as a Muslim.

  • How successful has The Hundred proven to be?

    With the first season of The Hundred over, the focus switches away from newly formed teams in gold, vivid red or bright blue, and back to the men's Tests, England's women and the county game.

    Cricket’s ‘The Hundred’ finale at Lord’s, saw Oval Invincibles crowned the first women's champions with Southern Brave winning the first men's title, in front of a crowd of nearly 25,000. With children and families sitting side-by-side among groups of ‘hard-core,’ cricket stalwarts, some 20% of the spectators across the tournament were children, a big jump on the Twenty20 Blast in recent years, with a total of 21% of tickets sold being bought by women.

  • How Taylor beat Serrano to complete trilogy clean sweep

    Ireland's Katie Taylor beat Amanda Serrano for the third time in their epic trilogy, winning their bout at New York's Madison Square Garden on a majority decision after a chess match of a fight.

  • How the Birmingham 2022 Queen’s Baton Relay celebrated International Women’s Day

    The Birmingham 2022 Queen’s Baton Relay has been touring the 72 Commonwealth nations and territories for five months. During this time, many incredible women have taken on the role of Batonbearer, whilst women from Birmingham 2022’s host country, England, have been taking on their own challenges as we build up to Birmingham 2022, the first ever multi-sport event in history to award more medals to women than men.

  • How the power of sport changed the world

    Back in 2000, former South Africa President Nelson Mandela declared that “sport has the power to change the world.” Two decades years later, 2020 proved how right he was.

    This was a year where athletes of all different talents - footballers; basketballers; track and field stars; tennis players; F1 drivers - from across the world mobilised. They protested against racism. And they demanded change. Sierra Leone's US-based footballer, Kei Kamara - who joined in the protests following the death of George Floyd - said his children and their futures inspired him to make a stance.

    "I lay down on the ground for nine minutes and my son actually then just lay down next to me, without me even asking him - and Kendrick is only three," Kamara said. "He just decided to lay next to me. And I turned around and I saw him and it just hit me so hard, like 'wow'.

    "I'm so, so grateful to every other race that's standing with us now because it's given us a voice".

    2020 was also the year that footballers in the English Premier League began taking a knee before kick-off in show of unity against racism. For the American triple-jump record holder Tori Franklin, sport has the capacity to provoke a shift in people’s mentality and play its part in the fight against racism. I feel like sport can really make a huge impact” Franklin said. “Sport is a big part of American culture. It’s gets a lot of TV time, a lot of press. Athletics teams taking a stand and protesting about something is going to make a huge impact.”

    On 26 August 2020, the NBA team Milwaukee Bucks refused to play the fifth game of their playoff series against Orlando Magic following the shooting of African American Jacob Blake by a police officer near their home stadium. This led the NBA not only to reschedule this match, but also all the other games to be played that night. And several other sports followed, supporting the athletes’ decisions to boycott a match: sports including baseball, football and tennis.

    For Franklin, every sport has a voice and should speak out against racism - no matter its profile. “Of course, we definitely have a voice," she said. "Our voice is obviously not as big as the NBA, but there have been many athletes who have protested in competition - Gwen Berry in 2019 at the Pan-Americans games, Noah Lyles did it this year, at Monaco (Athletics Diamond League meeting), wearing a glove and putting up the Black fist. "And numerous athletes have been posting on their social media, going out on protesting, just being very involved - myself included."

    The biggest platform for athletics is the Olympic Games - an event that, had coronavirus not happened, would have been the focal point of the sporting year. And throughout history, athletes have used the Olympics to bring awareness to social and political issues, something the International Olympic Committee (IOC) does not allow.

    In January 2020, with the Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics in sight, the IOC published fresh guidelines explaining the meaning of rule 50, a longstanding rule which states that “no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas.” The IOC explicitly condemned “hand gestures or kneeling” and any “refusal to follow the Ceremonies protocol”.

    This came following the incident at the 2019 Pan-American Games which Tori Franklin referred to, when American hammer throw-winner Gwen Berry raised her fist at the end of the medal ceremony and fencing winner Race Imboden knelt down during his medal ceremony to protest against racial inequality in the US. Both were put on a probation for 12 months, and Berry said she lost sponsorship. Such a stand comes with a serious cost for the athletes - not just financial but for their lives too.

    The most iconic display of this remains Americans Tommie Smith and John Carlos who stood on the 200m podium shoeless with black socks, black gloves and fists raised at the 1968 Mexico Games. Both, with silver medallist Australian Peter Norman, were also wearing Olympic Project for Human Rights badges.

    The Americans were suspended and banned from the Olympic village. All of them were ostracised when they went back to their countries and Australia only officially apologised years after Norman's death. But today, the three men are celebrated as legends and heroes, even by the IOC itself.

    At the 2016 Olympics in Rio, the marathon silver medallist Feyisa Lilesa surprised the world when he held up his crossed wrists above his head (as if they were shackled) while he crossed the finish line, a sign bringing awareness to the Oromo protests happening in Ethiopia at that time, against social and political marginalisation. Ethiopia's Prime minister resigned two years later with the new leader implementing many reforms. If the change was not directly caused by Lilesa's stand, there is no doubt he forced the world to look at what was happening in his country at that time. But the IOC's rule 50 is clear - such a demonstration is not allowed at the Olympics.

    Tori Franklin says that athletes are trying to find a common ground with the Olympic authorities. “The athletes have created the Athletics Association which is run by a few track and field’s athletes. They’re doing their part as well, trying to urge the US Olympic committee to allow protests within competition without getting punishment for those athletes.”

    In the documentary Jesse Owens Returns To Berlin, the legendary Black American athlete - whose dominance at the 1936 Olympics, under Hitler's gaze, proved everything wrong with the Nazi's horrific ideology - says, “there is a bond among athletes of every race, religion and colour that transcends all prejudice.” Sprinter Owens won four golds that Olympics. He knew all about the power of sport to break down racial barriers. An example of it was his friendship with German long jump athlete Luz Long - the physical archetype of Hitler’s Aryan theory - at a time in history when everything in the world seemed to oppose them. But they maintained a shared humanity through sport and, perhaps, their faith.

    Some 84 years later, athletes across sports united to make a stand against racism, It may have been sparked by events in the US, but the reaction was global. Look at Burnley captain Ben Mee, seething with barely-contained anger in a live interview in response to a plane being flown over his club's ground with a White Lives Matter banner. “What next?” was the question that followed the NBA Milwaukee Bucks' boycott on 26 August. It’s a long road” said Tori Franklin, reflecting on the year. “But I do think that the things that we are doing are making an impact”.

    It will require more than just sport to change the world for better. But history has proved that sport has power; the power to unite people, inspire change, create hope and break down racial barriers.

  • How the University of Wolverhampton celebrates Kabaddi World Cup success

    The University of Wolverhampton proudly celebrated the success of the Kabaddi World Cup 2025, after hosting the men’s quarter finals, and the women’s semi-finals at its Walsall Campus, contributing to a historic moment as the first time the competition has been hosted outside of Asia.

  • How Tom Ilube became the first Black RFU chair

    Appointed as chair of the Rugby Football Union (RFU) in August 2021, Tom Ilube CBE is the first Black chair in the organisation’s History, after replacing Andy Cosslett at Twickenham, with the aim of overseeing the restoration of grassroots rugby.

  • How underdog Keys overcame favourite Sabalenka to win Australian Open

    Underdog, Madison Keys, finally got her hands on a Grand Slam trophy after holding off defending champion Aryna Sabalenka to win the Australian Open women's title.

  • Hudson-Smith and Hodgkinson shine as stars prepare for Paris

    Matthew Hudson-Smith smashed his European 400m record and Keely Hodgkinson set a national 800m record as Great Britain's Olympic gold medal hopes produced statement performances at the London Diamond League.

  • Hudson-Smith breaks European record at Bislett Games

    Great Britain's Matthew Hudson-Smith beat his own 400m European record with a convincing victory in his season opener at the Diamond League in Oslo.

  • Hugh Kent and Manami Martin win Guam Ko’ko’ Road Race

    The Guam Ko’ko’ Road Race, a Guam Visitors Bureau signature event returned after a long six-year hiatus for its 13th edition.

    The Guam Visitors Bureau (GVB) and the Guam Running Club (GRC) finished with an epic Ko’ko’ Weekend as 587 runners descended into Governor Joseph Flores Memorial Park (Ypao Beach) this morning for the 13th Guam Ko’ko’ Road Race. The GVB signature event has returned after a long six-year hiatus.

  • Hull KR beat Wigan Warriors in Grand Final to complete treble glory

    Hull KR became only the fifth team to win a Super League Grand Final as they put in a stunning performance to beat Wigan Warriors at Old Trafford and complete the treble.

  • Hundreds of thousands gather as Brazil legend Pele lies in state in Santos

    Hundreds of thousands of highly emotional mourners gathered for the 24-hour memorial wake to pay their final respects to Brazil legend Pele who is lying in state at the Urbano Caldeira stadium – home of his former club Santos, in Sao Paulo.

    His coffin was placed in the centre of the pitch as fans lined the streets to get inside the ground, with a procession through the streets of Santos to a private family burial set for today.