Millennium Post

Heena tops selection trial at KSS Shooting

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NEW DELHI: Ace shooter Heena Sidhu of ONGC topped the charts for the Selection Trials 5 in the 10M Air Pistol Women’s category while parashoote­r Rubina Francis from Madhya Pradesh clinched a gold and silver in the senior and junior class of the 10M Air Pistol (IPC) Championsh­ip in the 18th KSS Memorial Shooting here.

Sidhu scored a mammoth 240.9 to top the list but Punjab’s Harveen Sarao who clinched a bronze in the 10M Air Pistol event yesterday, was breathing down the 2013 ISSF World Cup gold medallist’s neck but couldn’t catch up to her. She eventually had to settle for second spot with a score of 240.3.

Double gold medallist at the 2010 Commonweal­th Games Rahi Sarnobat took the third spot on the podium with a 217.7.

The junior category saw Maharashtr­a’s Abhidnya Patil score 237.8 to annex the top spot while Haryana’s Anjali Chaudhary missed the first spot by a margin of .4 (237.4). Another shooter from Haryana, Priya Raghav, got on the third spot of the podium with a 210.9.

In the 10M Air Pistol (IPC) Championsh­ip event, Rubina missed her second gold by a whisker when she scored 549, the same as Pooja Agarwal who eventually clinched gold.

Of inner 10 shots but on the virtue of countback, the difference of score on last series aided Delhi’s Pooja while Rubina had to settle for silver.

Maharashtr­a’s Annaya Batra scored 525 to take the bronze.

For the junior category, Rubina Francis’ 549 score helped her annex the gold while Maharashtr­a’s Annaya Batra clinched the silver with 525. With two contestant­s in fray, the third spot was left vacant.

In the men’s event of the 10M Air Rifle (IPC) Senior Championsh­ip, Haryana’s Deepak clinched the gold while Rajasthan’s Avani Lakhera took the silver. Delhi’s Naresh Kumar Sharma clinched the bronze on his home turf. COLOMBO: Sri Lanka skipper Dinesh Chandimal in St Lucia appealed against the ICC’S decision to suspend him from the third Test of the ongoing tour of the West Indies due to ball-tampering.

Chandimal had been charged by the ICC for balltamper­ing during the second Test here after video evidence suggested that he applied saliva to the ball shortly after putting what appeared to be a sweet in his mouth.

He pleaded not guilty to the charge, before attending the hearing where match referee Javagal Srinath, after utilising the time available to him under the code to make his decision, handed Chandimal the maximum punishment, which was two suspension points and a fine of 100 percent of his match fee. “Dinesh Chandimal has appealed against the match referee’s findings that saw him suspended for one Test after being found guilty of changing the condition of the ball,” the ICC said on its twitter handle.

He was found guilty of changing the condition of the ball during the second day’s play of the second Test, which concluded here on Monday.

During a hearing held at the end of the Test, in which video evidence was used in the presence of the Sri Lanka team management as well as the match officials, Chandimal admitted putting something in his mouth but wasn’t able to recall what it was.

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