-
EU council president arrives in India to seal trade pact
-
Gauff hopes history repeats itself after reaching Melbourne quarters
-
Alcaraz, Djokovic into Melbourne last eight as next gen roars
-
Djokovic into Melbourne quarter-finals after Mensik withdraws
-
Ukrainian sumo wrestler wins second straight title
-
Tien thrashes Medvedev after nosebleed to make maiden Slam quarter-final
-
'Don't want to jinx it' as Zverev barrels into Melbourne quarters
-
Split decision: war divides Myanmar constituency
-
Fans bid farewell to Japan's only pandas
-
Gauff sees off Muchova to make Australian Open last eight
-
Alcaraz has Djokovic on his case as Sabalenka faces teen prospect
-
Alcaraz eases into last eight in bid for maiden Melbourne title
-
Defiance as a profession: Pakistan's jailed lawyer Imaan Mazari
-
Bangladesh says star cricketer Shakib can return
-
India's Bollywood bets big on 'event cinema'
-
Doncic soars as Lakers down Mavericks, Knicks edge 76ers
-
American daredevil free-climbs Taiwan's tallest building
-
'Dream partner': Sabalenka keen for mixed-doubles date with Djokovic
-
Olivia Wilde slams ICE after Minneapolis shooting
-
On-fire teenager Jovic sets up Melbourne quarter-final with Sabalenka
-
Myanmar general looms over poll seen as cementing junta's power
-
Sabalenka rolls into last eight as Alcaraz steps up Melbourne bid
-
Second killing in Minneapolis by US federal agents sparks uproar
-
India's solar-panel boom: full throttle today, uncertain tomorrow
-
Sabalenka surges past teenager Mboko into Australian Open quarter-finals
-
Saudi Arabia's UAE 'mudslinging' threatens new Gulf crisis
-
US Fed set to keep rates steady as officials defend independence
-
Home qualifier gets life-changing Melbourne money after Osaka pullout
-
Knicks edge 76ers as Warriors-Wolves suspended
-
Kim Si-woo leads top-ranked Scheffler, teen Brown in La Quinta
-
Djokovic says 'great champion' Wawrinka's legacy will live on
-
Final round of Myanmar vote set to seal junta ally's victory
-
US skeleton racer appeals for Olympic spot after 'corrupted' qualifier
-
WHO chief says reasons US gave for withdrawing 'untrue'
-
Mbappe double at Villarreal takes Real Madrid top of La Liga
-
Dupont inspires Toulouse to Pau thumping despite sin binning
-
Nwaneri scores on Marseille debut as Lens lose top spot
-
Mbappe double fires Real Madrid to win at Villarreal
-
Pittsburgh Steelers appoint Mike McCarthy as head coach
-
Republicans eye 'Trump-palooza' convention ahead of US midterms
-
Liverpool running on empty in Bournemouth defeat, says Slot
-
Man City success 'despite' refereeing calls, claims Guardiola
-
Pakistani court jails rights activist and husband for 10 years
-
US immigration agents shoot dead another person in Minneapolis
-
This is spinal... brat? Charli xcx stars in mockumentary 'The Moment'
-
Bournemouth snap Liverpool's unbeaten run to up pressure on Slot
-
Grizzlies' Morant sidelined by elbow sprain
-
Lacklustre Bayern 'punished' in shock defeat, says Kane
-
Bucks' Antetokounmpo expects to miss to miss at least a month
-
US says Russia, Ukraine took 'big step', will meet again next week
Ukrainian sumo wrestler wins second straight title
Ukrainian sumo wrestler Danylo Yavhusishyn won his second straight tournament on Sunday to take his meteoric rise in the ancient Japanese sport to new heights.
The 21-year-old, who fled the war in Ukraine three years ago, triumphed at the New Year Grand Sumo Tournament in Tokyo for the second title of his fledgling career.
Yavhusishyn, who is known by his ring name Aonishiki, became the first wrestler from Ukraine to win a competition when he came out on top at the Kyushu Grand Sumo Tournament in November.
That earned him promotion to sumo's second-highest rank of ozeki in record time, having made his debut in July 2023.
His second title takes him a step closer to promotion to the exalted highest rank of yokozuna, a feat no European-born wrestler has ever achieved.
Yavhusishyn is only the fourth European to become an ozeki, following wrestlers from Estonia, Bulgaria and Georgia.
During the latest 15-day tournament to Sunday, he achieved a 12-3 win-loss record and tied with rival wrestler Atamifuji.
Then the two battled in a nail-biting playoff, which began with the Ukrainian on his back foot.
His heavier rival unleashed a powerful attack and quickly pressed Yavhusishyn to the edge of the ring.
But Yavhusishyn unleashed a left-arm "kubinage" neck throw, forcing the Japanese wrestler on the sand ring.
"I was able to win, thanks to you," Yavhusishyn said in a winner's address to the roaring, sold-out crowd at the Kokugikan sumo arena.
He set his sights on climbing the sumo hierarchy, pledging to do ever better in the next tournament.
"I will do my best so that I will have better records than this tournament," he said in fluent Japanese.
Yavhusishyn will have the chance to make it a hat-trick of titles when he competes in the Spring Grand Sumo Tournament in Osaka in March.
Another win would likely put him in contention for promotion to the rank of grand champion, something only wrestlers from Japan, the United States and Mongolia have achieved.
Yavhusishyn was born in central Ukraine and took up sumo at the age of seven, becoming a national champion at 17.
His age meant he narrowly avoided Ukraine's military draft for men aged 18 and older after Russia invaded and he sought refuge in Germany, before moving to Japan.
His parents stayed in Germany and he arrived in Japan knowing nothing of the language.
He became the second Ukraine-born professional sumo wrestler when he made his debut, following in the footsteps of Serhii Sokolovskyi, better known as Shishi.
H.E.Young--AMWN