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General
Awareness Updates – January 2016 Sports MOTORRACING Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Winner: Nico Rosberg
(Germany/Mercedes) Second: Lewis Hamilton
(Britain/Mercedes) Third: Kimi Raikkonen
(Finland/Ferrari) Brazilian Grand Prix Winner: Nico Rosberg
(Germany/Mercedes) Second: Lewis Hamilton
(Britain/Mercedes) Third: Sebastian Vettel
(Germany/Ferrari) Mexican Grand Prix Winner: Nico Rosberg
(Germany/Mercedes) Second: Lewis Hamilton
(Britain/Mercedes) Third:
Valtteri Bottas (Finland/Williams-Mercedes) TENNIS Barclays ATP World Tour Finals, London Men’s Singles Winner: Novak
Djokovic (Serbia) Runner-up: Roger Federer
(Switzerland) Men’s Doubles Winners: Jean-Julien Rojer
(Netherlands)/Horia Tecau (Romania) Runners-up:
Rohan Bopanna (India)/Florin Mergea (Romania) BNP Paribas WTA Final, Singapore Women’s Singles Winner: Agnieszka
Radwanska Runner-up: Petr Kvitova
(Czech Republic) Women’s Doubles Winner: Sania Mirza
(India)/Martina Hingis (Switzerland) Runner-up:
Garbine Muguruza (Spain)/Carla Suarez Navarro (Spain) BNP Paribas Paris Masters, Paris Men’s Singles Winner: Novak
Djokovic (Serbia) Runner-up: Andy Murray (G.
Britain) Men’s Doubles Winner: Ivan Dodig
(Croatia)/Marcelo Melo (Brazil) Runner-up:
Vasek Pospisil (Canada)/Jack Sock (U.S.) The International
Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) temporarily suspended the Russian
Athletics Federation following an ongoing doping scandal. This means Russian
athletes are now banned from competition for an unspecified period. The
President of the IAAF is Sebastian Coe. The decision will
take immediate effect and means that Russia’s track and field teams will
not be able to take part in international competitions, as the sport’s
governing body in Russia, the Russian Athletics Federation (ARAF) has been
suspended. It is now unclear whether Russia’s athletes will be able to compete
at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, as no timeline has been given as to
when the suspension may be lifted. To regain membership, Russia would have to
fulfil a list of criteria that has not been disclosed. The scandal erupted
after the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) published a report saying that
Russian athletes were involved in systematic state sponsored doping. WADA
recommended imposing a ban on all Russian track and field team’s participating
in all international competitions including the 2016 Olympic Games. It also
insisted on life-term bans for a number of Russian sportsmen and women and
coaches. Soon after the
scandal broke, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an inquiry into
allegations of major drug abuse in athletics. The president also declared that
a foreign specialist could take over its discredited testing laboratory. N. Srinivasan
has been removed from his post of the Chairman of the International
Cricket Council (ICC) by the Board for Control of Cricket in India (BCCI).
Shashank Manohar, the President of the BCCI, is the new Chairman of the ICC. The tenure of Mr
Srinivasan, who took over in June last year, was to end next year in the same
month and the remainder of the term would be completed by Mr Manohar as it is
India’s turn to hold the top position. The Tamil Nadu
strongman will thus lose his grip on Indian cricket for good after having
already been ousted as the BCCI President owing to the 2013 IPL spot-fixing
scandal in which his son-in-law Gurunath Meiyappan was held guilty of betting
charges. Although Mr Srinivasan was not personally indicted for the damaging
scandal but the Supreme Court-appointed R. M. Lodha committee had chided him
for not acting on the elements which corrupted the IPL. With his sacking as
ICC chairman, Mr Srinivasan now only remains the president of Tamil Nadu
Cricket Association. His company India Cements had owned the IPL franchise Chennai
Super Kings, which was suspended for two years after its officials were held
guilty of betting. |
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