Tag: Sport

  • French bill would ban headscarves in sport; Amnesty International says it’s discriminatory

    French bill would ban headscarves in sport; Amnesty International says it’s discriminatory

    • A bill to ban all “ostensibly religious” clothing and symbols, including headscarves, during competitions will be debated from Tuesday in the upper house of the French parliament.
    • Amnesty International is urging French lawmakers to reject the bill, saying it would be discriminatory.
    • The French parliament’s lower house will have the final say. To pass there, the bill would need a coalition of forces that don’t usually collaborate.

    Amnesty International is urging French lawmakers to reject a bill this week that would ban headscarves in all sporting competitions.

    The bill is backed by right-wing senators and will be debated from Tuesday in the upper house of the French parliament. Its aim is to ban all “ostensibly religious” clothing and symbols during competitions. Amnesty International says the move would be discriminatory.

    The vote is likely to refuel the lingering debate on secularism — still volatile more than a century after the 1905 law on separation of church and state that established it as a principle of the French Republic.

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    Until now, sporting federations have been free to decide whether or not to allow headscarves, with two of the country’s most powerful sports, soccer and rugby, opting to ban them.

    The bill is at an early stage and this week’s vote marks the beginning of a long legislative process with an uncertain outcome. Even if senators vote in favor, the bill’s future will remain unclear since the lower house has the final say.

    To pass, the bill would need a coalition of forces that don’t usually collaborate in the deeply divided lower house.

    Morocco’s Nouhaila Benzina walks around the ground during a familiarization tour ahead of her Women’s World Cup Group H match with Germany in Melbourne, Australia, on July 23, 2023. (AP Photo/Victoria Adkins, File)

    Amnesty International’s calls come after French sprinter Sounkamba Sylla said last summer she was barred from the opening ceremony at the Paris Olympics because she wears a hijab. She was eventually allowed to take part, wearing a cap to cover her hair.

    France enforces a strict principle of “laïcité,” loosely translated as “secularism.” At the Games, the president of the French Olympic Committee said its Olympians were bound by the secular principles that apply to public sector workers in the country, which include a ban on hijabs and other religious signs.

    “At the Paris Olympics, France’s ban on French women athletes who wear headscarves from competing at the Games drew international outrage,” said Anna Błuś, an Amnesty International researcher on gender justice.

    “Just six months on, French authorities are not only doubling down on the discriminatory hijab ban but are attempting to extend it to all sports.”

    Experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council have previously criticized the decision by the French soccer and basketball federations to exclude players wearing the hijab, and the French government’s decision to prevent its athletes wearing headscarves from representing the country at the Paris Games.

    Amnesty International said the bill in reality targets Muslim women and girls by excluding them from sporting competitions if they wear a headscarf or other religious clothing.

    “Laïcité…which is theoretically embedded in the French constitution to protect everyone’s religious freedom, has often been used as a pretext to block Muslim women’s access to public spaces in France,” Amnesty International said.

    “Over several years, the French authorities have enacted laws and policies to regulate Muslim women’s and girls’ clothing, in discriminatory ways. Sport federations have followed suit, imposing hijab bans in several sports.”

    Two years ago, France’s highest administrative court said the country’s soccer federation was entitled to ban headscarves in competitions even though the measure can limit freedom of expression.

    Wielding the principle of religious neutrality enshrined in the constitution, the country’s soccer federation also does not make things easy for international players who want to refrain from drinking or eating from dawn to sunset during Ramadan, an Islamic holy month.

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    Supporters of the bill cite growing attacks on secularism in sport, arguing that its core values are based on a principle of universality. To protect sports grounds from any non-sporting confrontation, they say, a principle of neutrality needs to be implemented to ensure that no political, religious or racial demonstration or propaganda can be promoted.

    The bill also states that using part of a sports facility as a place of worship would be a misuse of its purpose, and bans the wearing of religious clothing, such as the burkini, in public swimming pools.

    “By placing the wearing of a headscarf on the spectrum of “attacks on secularism,” which range from “permissiveness” to “terrorism,” this legislation, if passed, would fuel racism and reinforce the growing hostile environment facing Muslims and those perceived to be Muslim in France,” Amnesty International said.

  • Trump’s love for golf can be ‘very helpful’ in quest to reunite sport, Adam Scott says

    Trump’s love for golf can be ‘very helpful’ in quest to reunite sport, Adam Scott says

    President Donald Trump recently met with members of the PGA Tour, including Tiger Woods, in efforts to get the tour and LIV Golf to finally strike a deal after roughly two years of discussion.

    PGA Commissioner Jay Monahan recently said the tour “asked” Trump “to get involved for the good of the game, the good of the country and for all the countries involved.” 

    Adam Scott, a member of the PGA Tour’s Player Advisory Board, was at the meeting, and echoed the commissioner’s sentiments about their meeting, in which he credited Tiger Woods for kick-starting.

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    Former President Donald Trump plays golf ahead of the LIV Golf Invitational at Trump National Golf Club Bedminster in New Jersey, on Aug. 9, 2023. (Timothy A. Clary/AFP via Getty Images)

    “It was all really positive… it’s just a positive thing that the president of the United States is such a lover of the game of golf and understands some of the challenges facing the professional game at the moment…” Scott told the Golf Channel at Torrey Pines this week ahead of the Genesis Invitational. “He’s a lover of the game and hopefully can be very helpful in getting a resolve for the professional game and help everybody move forward.”

    “It’s pretty easy to tie him to the game of golf. He’s passionate about it, he owns several golf properties, fabulous destinations around the world, and he has a relationship with Saudi Arabia, the Public Investment Fund, and he’s a fan of the PGA Tour as well, certainly a fan of Tiger Woods, like we all are,” Scott added. “Given that this has been tied up in government beliefs, he can be very helpful.”

    Tiger Woods and Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump presents the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Tiger Woods at the White House. (Scott Taetsch-USA Today Sports)

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    LIV has played at several Trump-owned courses since its first year of play in 2022; the PGA Tour has also made stops at the president’s course, as well.

    Golf star Rory McIlroy said in November he believed Trump becoming president for the second time could help “clear the way” for a deal between the PGA and LIV. 

    Trump LIV Golf

    Former President Donald Trump during the LIV Golf Invitational – DC at Trump National Golf Club on May 27, 2023, in Sterling, Virginia. (Rob Carr/Getty Images)

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    Even former Tour player Brandel Chamblee, who has long opposed LIV Golf, said that after he played a round with Trump, he has since grown to “understand why we acquiesce and need Saudi Arabia as a partner in the Middle East,” and the president made convincing arguments to “[make] me think of Yasir as a partner in the game of golf.”

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  • Ex-MLB All-Star Kenny Lofton praises Sluggball’s reimagined approach to the sport: ‘Top Golf of baseball’

    Ex-MLB All-Star Kenny Lofton praises Sluggball’s reimagined approach to the sport: ‘Top Golf of baseball’

    A mostly lost art in the game of baseball is being revived in an innovative way this year, and one former Major League Baseball star is happy to advise. 

    Sluggball is a reimagined way to play the sport, and it is being viewed by six-time MLB All-Star Kenny Lofton, who serves as an advisor for the company, as something similar to a recreational version of another sport. 

    “This is almost like the Top Golf of baseball,” Lofton told FOX Business Digital over the phone. “It’s a competition, and you get guys who play the game and want to have fun with this.”

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    A hitter readies a swing during a “Sluggball” tournament. (Sluggball / Fox News)

    Sluggball was co-founded by a Philadelphia-based partnership group that includes former MLB player and Philadelphia Phillies GM Ruben Amaro Jr. and his brother, David Amaro. The Major League Baseball Players Alumni Association, Victus Bats and Blast Motion are also collaborators with the brand, while Evan Kaplan, managing director of MLB Players, Inc., serves as an advisor alongside Lofton. 

    The premise of the reimagined version of baseball is to reignite situational hitting in a fun format that allows players of all ages to compete in 4-on-4 competitions at various minor league parks in New Jersey, Ohio and New York this year. 

    Situational hitting is an aspect of today’s big-league game that is not a priority like it was in Lofton’s time playing the game. It hurts the former high-average outfielder to see power as the main component behind hitting, which is why he hopes Sluggball’s format can bring situational, contact hitting back to the forefront. 

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    “I think my favorite part about this whole thing is that you can have the smaller people be a part of the game, and it was more about, for me, situational hitting,” Lofton, who played 17 MLB seasons and amassed 2,428 hits over 2,103 games, said. “I think that’s what I saw, and I felt like how important that was to the game, and it resonated with me because I wasn’t a power hitter. This game is so set up with power, power, power. I’m like that is not the only part of what makes this game so special. Just to have the opportunity for guys who played college ball, high school ball in this Sluggball to have an opportunity to get back into the game again because they love it. 

    “You don’t have to be the most power hitter, but you can still know how to handle the bat and Sluggball puts guys in that situation to put a little team together and go out there and do something and have this competitive edge like a lot of guys want to get back to.”

    The rules for Sluggball are simple. First, teams of six to eight players are registered to their respective event this year with their own batting-practice-style pitcher brought to the stadium. The team’s lineup for their games – two four-round games are guaranteed upon entry – will have four hitters, and at-bats are limited to eight swings or 35 seconds. 

    Hitter at Sluggball tournament

    A hitter prepares to swing during a “Sluggball” tournament. (Sluggball / IMAGN)

    Each game consists of four rounds of situation hitting, when points are scored by hitting the ball in accordance to each round’s situation. That would be the pull side, up the middle, opposite field and around the horn, depending on which side of the plate the hitter is on. 

    A batted ball only counts if it is hit to the outfield on the side the round is in and remains in fair territory. Most total team points in the round wins that round, and there is no need for running or field – only hitting. 

    Sluggball hosted an invite-only pilot event at the Trenton Thunder Ballpark in September 2024, when Phillies legend Larry Bowa was the onsite MLB ambassador, who spent time signing autographs and interacting with the participants. The event saw a great reception from the players and those who attended with them alike, leading to optimism heading into 2025. 

    “A guy who’s 65 years old who knows how to work the bat, he can score points in this situation,” Lofton said, referencing one of the pilot event player’s age. “You can hit the ball up the middle, you can hit the ball to left field, right field when it’s your time to do it. That’s what excited me.

    “We know it’s BP, but again, I always say you got to learn how to work the bat. …Maybe Sluggball can get that opportunity to say, ‘Hey, this is also part of the game that’s important that got pushed away because of analytics and the Ivy League people.’”

    Sluggball currently has six events available for registering, with “Opening Day” at the Trenton Thunder Ballpark on May 10. Fees are $1,795 per team, and it includes a two-game guarantee with a chance to play in the championship game for a $3,000 cash prize. 

    Players also get on-field team apparel, including UnderArmour shorts and a shirt and a hat from Branded Bills. Catered lunch and cash bar, post-event player performance analytics, signed memorabilia from the guest MLB alumni and more is in store for each team’s experience. 

    So, much like Top Golf, those still in love with the game can get those competitive juices flowing alongside others who want to do the same. 

    Kenny Lofton swings

    Team Cleveland’s Kenny Lofton swings at a pitch in the 2019 legends and celebrity softball game at Progressive Field. (Ken Blaze-USA TODAY Sports / IMAGN)

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    While Sluggball is looking to bring back that lost art, it is also expanding the camaraderie the game of baseball naturally has. 

    “That’s one thing I miss about the game – the camaraderie to go out there every day and have fun with the guys because you guys are all like-minded,” Lofton said. “You got people who are like-minded and want to enjoy the game the way it is. Again, you don’t have to be the most athletic. You just have to know how to swing the bat and put the ball in different areas of the field and not worry about putting it out of the ballpark.”

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  • Jallikattu 2025 Begins in Tamil Nadu: This Year’s First Bull-Taming Sport Organised at Thatchankurichi Village in Pudukkottai (Watch Video)

    Jallikattu 2025 Begins in Tamil Nadu: This Year’s First Bull-Taming Sport Organised at Thatchankurichi Village in Pudukkottai (Watch Video)

    Jallikattu 2025 begins in Tamil Nadu at Thatchankurichi village in Pudukkottai. Over 600 bulls from districts like Trichy, Dindigul, and Manapparai are participating. More than 350 participants, all medically examined, are ready for the thrilling bull-taming event. In each round, over 30 participants will attempt to tame the bulls, preserving the excitement and tradition of this age-old event celebrated during Pongal. Jallikattu involves releasing a bull into a crowd, where participants try to grab its hump to bring it to a stop. Jallikattu 2025: Class 5 Girl Trains Bull for Upcoming Jallikattu Event in Tamil Nadu’s Madurai.

    Jallikattu 2025 Begins in Tamil Nadu

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