Great Britain’s David Weir says he will do “all I can” to stop Swiss great Marcel Hug equalling his record tally of eight London Marathon wins after both athletes were confirmed for this year’s race.
World record holder Hug, a three-time Paralympic Games marathon gold medallist, will bid to win the London Marathon for a sixth consecutive year on Sunday, 26 April.
The 46-year-old Weir, who achieved his most recent victory in London in 2018, said: “Marcel is an incredible athlete operating at the peak of his powers.
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The announcement of the elite wheelchair fields at the 2026 London Marathon followed Monday’s unveiling of the elite British men and women participants.
Weir will be joined by fellow Britons Sean Frame, Simon Lawson, Nathan Maguire, Michael McCabe and Johnboy Smith in the men’s wheelchair race.
Eden Rainbow-Cooper competes in the women’s event, alongside another dominant Swiss athlete in Catherine Debrunner, winner of the past two London Marathons.
‘One win away from a legend’
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The London Marathon became the first marathon to award equal prize money to wheelchair and non-disabled elite athletes in 2024.
Hug, the course record holder in London, said: “For me, it is more than a race. It is an organisation that has done so much to put wheelchair racing and us, as athletes, at the very heart of the event.
“It is for this reason that I am proud to have enjoyed the success I have here, and to be one win away from a legend like David Weir is incredible.”
The 40-year-old and Weir are long-time rivals, and the Briton finished runner-up to Switzerland’s Hug in their most recent head-to-head at last year’s New York City Marathon.
Weir’s eight London victories span 16 years, with his first coming in 2002. He finished sixth last year.
Coco Gauff looked for a place without cameras to channel her frustration after a straight-sets loss to Elina Svitolina in the Australian Open quarterfinals, but was unhappy to find out that a video of her smashing her tennis racket on the floor was broadcast to viewers worldwide.
Twice Grand Slam winner Gauff was visibly upset with her performance on Tuesday, as she committed 26 unforced errors and lost the match 6-1 6-2 in 59 minutes.
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The American third seed went behind a wall near the match call area inside the venue, where a camera caught her hitting the racket repeatedly against the floor.
“I tried to go somewhere where there were no cameras,” the 21-year-old told reporters.
“I kind of have a thing with the broadcast. I feel like certain moments – the same thing happened to Aryna [Sabalenka] after I played her in the final of the US Open – I feel like they don’t need to broadcast.”
World number one Sabalenka, who will take on Svitolina in the semifinals, had smashed her racket in a training area after losing to Gauff in the 2023 US Open final, and video of the incident was also made public.
“I tried to go somewhere where they wouldn’t broadcast it, but obviously they did. Maybe some conversations can be had, because I feel like at this tournament the only private place we have is the locker room,” Gauff added.
“I think for me, I know myself, and I don’t want to lash out on my team. They’re good people. They don’t deserve that, and I know I’m emotional,” Gauff said.
“I just took the minute to go and do that. I don’t think it’s a bad thing. Like I said, I don’t try to do it on court in front of kids and things like that, but I do know I need to let out that emotion.
Hamza Al-Rubaie is one of at least 17,000 children to have lost both parents in Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza, but his tragedy doesn’t end there. His three siblings were also killed, leaving an aunt to raise the young boy. Al Jazeera’s Moath al-Kahlout has their story.
When Harry Kane joined Bayern Munich in 2023, it was widely expected that the England captain would only stay for a few years to fulfil his dream of winning a handful of trophies before returning to the Premier League.
Much has been made of Kane ranking second in the Premier League’s all-time goalscorer list and that he only needs another 48 goals to break Alan Shearer’s record.
But perhaps an individual record is not as important to Kane as leaving a legacy at a major European club.
Max Eberl, Bayern’s head of sport, has revealed that the club are working on extending Kane’s contract which currently runs until 2027. Obviously, that subject matter had to come up at some point during this season, because, if Kane rejects an extension, Bayern could only make money by selling him in the upcoming summer or January transfer windows.
Fascinatingly, Eberl seemed quite positive when he spoke to reporters at Monday’s New Year reception of the German Football League (DFL), saying: “We are speaking with Harry.”
The sentiment has vastly changed from when Kane made the move from Tottenham to Bayern. The record German champions are more confident than ever they can keep Kane beyond 2026 or 2027.
Chasing Lewandowski’s record
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It is fair to say that Kane will go down in history as one of the best strikers to ever play in the Bundesliga. He essentially succeeded Robert Lewandowski, although there was a one-year gap between Lewandowski’s departure to Barcelona and Kane’s arrival in Munich, and is proving every bit as effective as the Poland striker was for Bayern for years.
Kane has scored 119 goals in 126 games thus far, with no signs of slowing down.
This season, he is effectively chasing Lewandowski’s single-season record in the Bundesliga. The Poland international scored 41 goals in the 2020-21 season, while Kane has scored 21 goals after 19 matchdays of what is a 34-game campaign.
Some might say that he dominates the penalty area against inferior opponents, and there is something to be said about the limited quality of the bottom third of Bundesliga teams, but that bottom third is not weaker than the bottom third in La Liga or Serie A.
20 hours ago
1 hour ago
30 October 2025
Respected, popular and a headline-maker for right reasons
Goals alone don’t tell the entire story of Kane’s impact on and off the field. Similar to his role for the Three Lions, Kane likes to drop deep into midfield and deliver long passes to the wingers. He is more than just a goalscorer.
And he is more than just a key player, too. Kane immediately moved into a leadership role upon his arrival in Munich, while also establishing great relationships with several players over time.
Some of these relationships came naturally, especially with London-born Michael Olise or Jamal Musiala, who spent years in London as a youth player. Eric Dier, Kane’s friend and former Tottenham team-mate, spent 18 months at Bayern before moving to Monaco last summer.
But even beyond his England-driven friendships, Kane seemingly gets along with virtually everyone and is highly respected for his career achievements and the way he conducts himself.
Relaxed life in Munich
Getty Images
Another decisive factor that may lead to Kane extending his contract is his wife Kate. She and their four children – Ivy, Vivienne, Louis, and Henry – enjoy life in Munich, including the fact that Kane is rarely chased by any fans or photographers.
There is the occasional picture in a newspaper showing Kane and his family doing mundane activities, but they don’t feel much, if any, intrusion into their private life.
When the Kanes came to Munich, they didn’t know what to expect, which is why they were surprised by how normally they are able to move around the city.
His most difficult challenge might not be getting past goalkeepers but learning German.
He attended his first lessons shortly after joining Bayern but has admitted that using his language skills on the street remains difficult. The distinct Bavarian dialect spoken in Munich certainly does not help in that regard.
When Harry Kane joined Bayern Munich in 2023, it was widely expected that the England captain would only stay for a few years to fulfil his dream of winning a handful of trophies before returning to the Premier League.
Much has been made of Kane ranking second in the Premier League’s all-time goalscorer list and that he only needs another 48 goals to break Alan Shearer’s record.
But perhaps an individual record is not as important to Kane as leaving a legacy at a major European club.
Max Eberl, Bayern’s head of sport, has revealed that the club are working on extending Kane’s contract which currently runs until 2027. Obviously, that subject matter had to come up at some point during this season, because, if Kane rejects an extension, Bayern could only make money by selling him in the upcoming summer or January transfer windows.
Fascinatingly, Eberl seemed quite positive when he spoke to reporters at Monday’s New Year reception of the German Football League (DFL), saying: “We are speaking with Harry.”
The sentiment has vastly changed from when Kane made the move from Tottenham to Bayern. The record German champions are more confident than ever they can keep Kane beyond 2026 or 2027.
Chasing Lewandowski’s record
Getty Images
It is fair to say that Kane will go down in history as one of the best strikers to ever play in the Bundesliga. He essentially succeeded Robert Lewandowski, although there was a one-year gap between Lewandowski’s departure to Barcelona and Kane’s arrival in Munich, and is proving every bit as effective as the Poland striker was for Bayern for years.
Kane has scored 119 goals in 126 games thus far, with no signs of slowing down.
This season, he is effectively chasing Lewandowski’s single-season record in the Bundesliga. The Poland international scored 41 goals in the 2020-21 season, while Kane has scored 21 goals after 19 matchdays of what is a 34-game campaign.
Some might say that he dominates the penalty area against inferior opponents, and there is something to be said about the limited quality of the bottom third of Bundesliga teams, but that bottom third is not weaker than the bottom third in La Liga or Serie A.
20 hours ago
2 hours ago
30 October 2025
Respected, popular and a headline-maker for right reasons
Goals alone don’t tell the entire story of Kane’s impact on and off the field. Similar to his role for the Three Lions, Kane likes to drop deep into midfield and deliver long passes to the wingers. He is more than just a goalscorer.
And he is more than just a key player, too. Kane immediately moved into a leadership role upon his arrival in Munich, while also establishing great relationships with several players over time.
Some of these relationships came naturally, especially with London-born Michael Olise or Jamal Musiala, who spent years in London as a youth player. Eric Dier, Kane’s friend and former Tottenham team-mate, spent 18 months at Bayern before moving to Monaco last summer.
But even beyond his England-driven friendships, Kane seemingly gets along with virtually everyone and is highly respected for his career achievements and the way he conducts himself.
Relaxed life in Munich
Getty Images
Another decisive factor that may lead to Kane extending his contract is his wife Kate. She and their four children – Ivy, Vivienne, Louis, and Henry – enjoy life in Munich, including the fact that Kane is rarely chased by any fans or photographers.
There is the occasional picture in a newspaper showing Kane and his family doing mundane activities, but they don’t feel much, if any, intrusion into their private life.
When the Kanes came to Munich, they didn’t know what to expect, which is why they were surprised by how normally they are able to move around the city.
His most difficult challenge might not be getting past goalkeepers but learning German.
He attended his first lessons shortly after joining Bayern but has admitted that using his language skills on the street remains difficult. The distinct Bavarian dialect spoken in Munich certainly does not help in that regard.
New Delhi, India – India and the European Union have signed a free trade agreement that both sides have hailed as “the mother of all deals”.
The agreement, announced on Tuesday, came together over nearly two decades of intermittent negotiations and during a geoeconomic crisis triggered by United States President Donald Trump’s trade war.
The deal between India and the 27-nation EU covers about 2 billion people and represents a combined market of nearly $27 trillion and about 25 percent of the global gross domestic product (GDP).
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa joined Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi on Monday as honorary guests for Republic Day and its annual military parade.
“This agreement will bring major opportunities for the people of India and Europe,” Modi said while addressing an energy conference virtually on Tuesday before an India-EU summit.
“Europe and India are making history today,” von der Leyen wrote in a post on X. “We have created a free-trade zone of two billion people, with both sides set to benefit. We will grow our strategic relationship to be even stronger.”
The deal is expected to significantly reduce tariffs for India and the EU.
So what’s in the deal? And how will Trump – who slapped India with 50 percent tariffs last year in part as punishment for continuing to buy Russian oil – take it?
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas and Indian External Affairs Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar sign an EU-India security and defence partnership on January 27, 2026 [Altaf Hussain/Reuters]
What does the deal cover, and how significant is it?
The deal is India’s largest and most comprehensive trade agreement and covers goods, services and investments across the EU’s customs union.
In 2023, the EU withdrew its generalised scheme of preferences (GSP) benefits for India, exposing its exporters to higher tariffs. The new deal, analysts noted, could give India an edge in several sectors, including textiles, pharmaceuticals, machinery, steel, petroleum products and electrical equipment.
Overall, the EU is giving India access to 144 services subsectors while India is opening 102 subsectors to the EU, including in the financial, maritime and telecommunications industries.
On Tuesday, Modi told Indian workers and industry leaders in sectors such as textiles, gems and jewellery that “the agreement will prove very helpful for you,” adding that it will not only boost manufacturing in India but will also expand India’s services sector.
“This free trade agreement will strengthen confidence in India for every business and every investor in the world. India is working extensively on global partnerships in all sectors,” Modi said.
The final draft of the trade agreement must still pass legal scrutiny in Brussels and New Delhi and may only become operational next year, said Biswajit Dhar, a trade economist who has been involved with multiple Indian trade negotiations.
Anil Trigunayat, a former Indian diplomat who has dealt with regional trading blocs, described the trade deal as “excellent, providing professional market access while taking care of the bureaucratic labyrinth of the EU”.
“Unlike 20 years ago, today India has the capacity to work together with the Europeans and provides a good market for them,” Trigunayat said. “There will be much more to look into other than cheaper wines or BMWs, including trade investments.”
“It’s a very significant deal for both India and the EU,” Dhar told Al Jazeera, “and a major step towards consolidating India’s trade and economic relations with its largest trade partner.”
Crucially, Dhar said, this deal represents an opportunity for both sides to “diversify and look beyond the US and grow beyond their dependence on the American market”.
Cars made by Germany-based BMW, on sale in Mumbai, are now subject to high Indian tariffs, but those duties will fall dramatically under the trade pact [File: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters]
Is India opening its much-protected automobile industry?
India has been criticised in the past for its protectionist approach to the automobile sector, including by Tesla owner Elon Musk. It has been levying tariffs as high as 110 percent on foreign vehicles.
Negotiations to reach a trade deal between India and the EU broke down in 2013 over New Delhi’s reluctance to open its automobile sector.
Under the deal announced on Tuesday, however, New Delhi will open its domestic automobile market to EU imports, slashing tariffs on most cars from the EU to 30 to 35 percent, which are to be then phased down to 10 percent over several years.
It is understood that EU cars priced below 15,000 euros ($17,800) are excluded from the deal and will remain subject to higher tariffs. Cars costing more than this will be divided into three categories, each with quotas and separate tariffs.
Electric vehicles, however, will be excluded from import duty reductions for the first five years to protect investments by domestic Indian electric car manufacturers.
After that, imports from the EU will be restricted to 160,000 internal combustion engines and 90,000 electric vehicles per year.
Despite these safeguards, shares in Indian carmakers dipped by about 1.6 percent after the announcement of the trade deal.
Modi, von der Leyen and Indian Defence Minister Rajnath Singh attend the Republic Day parade in New Delhi on January 26, 2026 [Adnan Abidi/Reuters]
How will the deal benefit the EU?
Indian tariffs on 30 percent of goods imported from the EU will fall to zero immediately.
Overall, tariffs on 96.6 percent of EU goods exports to India will be eliminated or reduced, EU officials said. The deal will save up to 4 billion euros ($4.74bn) a year in duties on European products.
Besides the relaxation of tariffs on car imports from the EU, existing Indian tariffs of up to 44 percent on machinery, 22 percent on chemicals and 11 percent on pharmaceuticals will, for the most part, be eliminated.
Tariffs on EU aircraft and spacecraft will also be eliminated for almost all products while those on optical, medical and surgical equipment will be eliminated for 90 percent of products.
Meanwhile, spirits and wines imported to India from the EU, currently tariffed at 150 percent, will be cut to 20 to 30 percent for wines, 40 percent for spirits and 50 percent for beer.
India will also provide improved access for EU firms in financial and maritime services, and both sides will simplify customs rules and provide stronger intellectual property protections.
How will the deal benefit India?
The EU will scrap all tariffs on 90 percent of Indian goods, and within seven years, that will be extended to 93 percent of Indian goods.
Among those benefitting from zero tariffs immediately are marine/seafood products, such as shrimp and frozen fish (currently levied at up to 26 percent); chemicals (12.8 percent); plastics and rubber (6.5 percent); leather and footwear (17 percent); textiles (12 percent); apparel (4 percent); base metals (10 percent); and gems and jewellery (4 percent).
There will be partial tariff cuts and quotas for about 6 percent of Indian goods, bringing the EU’s average tariff rate down from 3.8 percent to 0.1 percent.
Overall, 99.5 percent of bilateral trade will benefit from some form of tariff concession.
India is still seeking improvements in tariff-free steel export quotas, and the outcome of these talks is due by June 30 before EU rules take effect on July 1. Under the deal as it stands, India would be allowed to export 1.6 million tonnes of steel to the EU duty-free, but this is only about half what it exports annually at present.
The EU has not granted India an exemption from its carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM), which taxes “carbon-intensive” goods – those that require large amounts of energy to produce, such as steel, cement, fertiliser and electricity.
Only countries that are associated with the EU, such as Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein and Switzerland are exempt from these due to their participation in the EU emissions trading system or related agreements. Countries whose emissions-trading systems are linked directly to the EU’s, such as Switzerland, are also exempt.
However, India will be able to negotiate this if the EU grants flexibility to another country.
How significant is India-EU trade now?
The US remains the biggest overall trading partner for both India and the EU.
However, over the past decade, goods trade between India and the EU has grown substantially, rising from about $74bn in 2020 to $136bn in 2024-2025, making the EU India’s largest goods trading partner.
India has a favourable trade surplus with the EU of more than $15bn as its exports of $75.85bn outpace imports of $60.68bn.
EU exports are heavy on machinery, transport equipment and chemicals while India mostly exports chemicals, base metals, mineral products and textiles.
The two sides hope to increase that to about $200bn by 2030.
From 2019 to 2024, India-EU trade in services also grew with Indian exports rising from $22.5bn to $44bn while EU exports increased from about $17bn to $34bn. The two mainly trade in business consulting and IT services.
India is the EU’s ninth largest trading partner, accounting for 2.4 percent of its total trade, compared with 17.3 percent for the US and 14.6 percent for China.
As of 2024, 931,607 Indians resided in the EU, according to the Indian government. Comparative figures for EU citizens living in India are not available.
The EU says about 6,000 European companies operate in India while about 1,500 Indian companies have a presence in the EU.
US President Donald Trump and Modi are pictured in a mirror at a joint news conference at the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025 [Nathan Howard/Reuters]
Do both economies have tensions with the US?
Yes, on several fronts.
Despite Modi having relatively good relations with the US president, India is one of the countries most heavily tariffed by the US – at 50 percent on goods – as a result of Trump’s trade war. Half of that is punishment for India’s continued purchase of Russian crude oil, which White House officials said is financing the Kremlin’s war on Ukraine.
EU tensions with the Trump administration have been building as well, particularly over Trump’s insistence that the US be allowed to buy Greenland, which is a territory of EU member Denmark.
This month, Trump threatened additional tariffs of 10 percent – rising to 25 percent in June – against eight European countries that had objected to Trump’s demand to buy Greenland. Both Greenland and Denmark have repeatedly stated that the island, which is politically part of Europe but is geographically located in North America, is not for sale.
However, during the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, last week, Trump walked back this threat and said he would not impose tariffs. Instead, he said, constructive talks had laid the basis for a framework of an agreement over Greenland.
The EU is still subject to up to 15 percent tariffs by the US under an EU-US trade deal signed last year.
Experts said the finalisation of the India-EU trade agreement has been expedited, in part, in response to this pressure from the Trump administration.
“The global trade disruptions have become a norm, and there is an urgent necessity for both [India and the EU] to provide a certain degree of certainty to their businesses,” Dhar said. “The US is mired in uncertainty, and one just doesn’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow.”
How will the US react to the India-EU trade deal?
The White House has already criticised the agreement.
US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent lashed out at the EU over the pact with New Delhi. “We have put 25 percent tariffs on India for buying Russian oil. Guess what happened last week? The Europeans signed a trade deal with India,” Bessent told ABC News on Sunday.
“They [the Europeans] are financing the war against themselves,” he added.
While the EU signed a trade deal with the US fairly quickly after Trump announced his trade war last year, New Delhi is still trying to negotiate one with Washington. It is also seeking to diversify trade to other parts of the world.
“India has taken a policy of strategic patience [in dealing with Trump’s trade war],” Trigunayat said. “The deal with the EU is part of the same process to cushion the impact and find new partners.”
Harsh Pant, vice president of the New Delhi-based Observer Research Foundation think tank, told Al Jazeera: “You have two big economic players coming together, which is a signal to the US that they are willing to move forward with their own agenda.”