Coal India Hockey India League 2016 – Total Cash Reward over @5.70 Crores
Individual Performance to be rewarded at Coal India Hockey India League 2016
– Total Cash Reward over @5.70 Crores
– Cash award purse doubles for CIL Most Valuable Player of the Tournament, Man of the Match
& Goal of the Match –
New Delhi, 13thJanuary 2016: The 4th edition of the Coal India Hockey India League, the premier league for Hockey in the World today has promises to get better this season, with double the amount of cash rewards for individual performances as compared to the last three seasons. The six team annual franchise based hockey league, the flagship event of Hockey India – the apex body governing the sport in the country and sanctioned by the International Hockey Federation (FIH) is scheduled to be played across six venues in India from 18th January – 21st February 2016.
Hockey India today announced a cash reward of INR 50.00 Lakhs for the ‘Coal India Player of the Tournament’ and there is further good news for individual performers as well, as the Coal India Goal of the Match award is increased to INR 50,000. The ‘Man of the Match’ award will also increase to INR 50,000 and will be awarded by the host franchisees in each of their home matches. Further tournament awards include the Upcoming Player of the Tournament award for Rs 20.00 Lakhs to the best player Under 21 years and the Maximum Goal Award also for Rs 20.00 Lakhs to the individual player who scores the most goals.
The winning team of the 4th edition of the Coal India Hockey India League will take home a whopping INR 2.50 Cr while the runner’s up will walk away with an INR 1.75 Cr prize money. A cash reward of INR 75.00 Lakhs will also be awarded to the team finishing third in the tournament.
The six Franchises battling for supremacy in the richest field hockey league in the world are Jaypee Punjab Warriors, Delhi Waveriders, Kalinga Lancers, Uttar Pradesh Wizards, Dabang Mumbai and defending champions Ranchi Rays.
DETAIL
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CATEGORY OF AWARD
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GROSS PRIZE MONEY
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Winner Prize
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Tournament
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2,50,00,000
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Second Prize
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Tournament
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1,25,00,000
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Third Prize
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Tournament
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75,00,000
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CIL Most Valuable Player of the Tournament
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Tournament
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50,00,000
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Ponty Chadha Upcoming Player of the tournament
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Tournament
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20,00,000
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Dhruv Batra Maximum Goals Award
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Tournament
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20,00,000
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Fair Play Award
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–
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–
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CIL Goal of the Match Award (34 Matches @ Rs 50,000)
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Match
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17,00,000
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Man of the Match Award (34 Matches @ Rs 50,000)
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Match
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17,00,000
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GRAND TOTAL
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5,74,00,000
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HOCKEY INDIA LEAGUE PARTNERS
Coal India
Star Sports
Technology Frontier
Shiv Naresh
Private consumption main driver of OECD GDP growth in the third quarter of 2015
According to the OECD Quarterly National Accounts, Real GDP growth in the OECD area slowed slightly to 0.5% in the third quarter of 2015, compared with 0.6% in the previous quarter. Private consumption was again the main driver of overall growth with a contribution of 0.4 percentage point, followed by investment and government consumption contributing 0.1 percentage point each. Contribution from net exports was negligible while destocking reduced GDP growth by 0.1 percentage point.
Source: PHD Research Bureau, complied from OECD
Among the Major Seven economies, developments were more diverse:
In Canada, GDP growth turned positive (0.6%), mainly as a result of positive contributions from net exports (1.0 percentage point), but negative contributions from destocking, investment and government consumption moderated the impact. In the United States, the positive contributions from private consumption (0.5 percentage point) and investment (0.2 percentage point) were the main drivers of overall GDP growth (0.5%).
In the United Kingdom on the other hand, stock building contributed 0.7 percentage point to overall GDP growth (0.4%), followed by private consumption (0.5 percentage point). In Germany,private consumption was the main contributor to GDP growth (0.3%), with 0.3 percentage point, followed by government consumption and stock building (0.2 percentage point each).
In France, stock building was the main driver of overall GDP growth (0.3%) with 0.7 point percentage, with private and government consumption providing minor positive contributions. InItaly, GDP grew by 0.2%, with positive contributions mainly coming from private consumption and government consumption (0.3 and 0.2, respectively). In Japan , GDP growth became positive (0.3%), with minor positive contributions of all expenditure categories, except destocking which slightly dragged down growth by 0.2 percentage point.
Source: PHD Research Bureau, complied from OECD
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Hero Women’s Professional Golf Tour 2016 – Leg 2
Vani grabs lead on day 2
Ahmedabad, 13 January 2016: Vani Kapoor fired 4 under 68 in the second round to grab the lead in the second leg of the Hero Women’s Professional Golf Tour at the Kalhaar Blues & Greens here on Wednesday. Trailing by a margin of four strokes in tied second position are Kiran Matharu and Amandeep Drall with a total score of 146. The INR 7,00,000 event will culminate tomorrow.
Hero Order of Merit leader Vani Kapoor started the day at tied second position after playing a birdie-less round yesterday. However, the youngster from Delhi was in supreme form today. She played a bogey-free front nine with two birdies on the 2nd and 3rd holes. She fired four more birdies in the latter half on the 11th, 12th, 13th and 15thholes while dropping just two shots on the 10th and 18th to finish with a total score of 142 after 36 holes. Her tally of six birdies was the maximum by any player in the second round. With a four stroke cushion, Vani will be eyeing her second consecutive title of the season tomorrow.
Overseas player Kiran Matharu carded 1 under 71, only the second sub-par score of the round to jump into tied second position. She started impressively, carding two birdies on the 1st and 3rd holes. She added another on the 12th hole, but two bogies on the 10thand 11th meant that she had to settle for a tied second place. Panchkula’s Amandeep Drall carded an even par 72 on the day to retain her tied second position. Her round included three birdies on the 2nd, 5thand 13th holes with an equal number of bogies on the 4th, 10th and 18th to finish with a total score of 146 after the second round.
Kapurthala golfer Gursimar Badwal carded 1 over 73 in the second round to take the fourth position with a score of 150. She carded five birdies on the 2nd, 6th, 11th, 13th and 14th holes, while dropping shots on the 10th and 18th along with two double bogies on the 3rd and 15th. Overnight leader Smriti Mehra could not reproduce her form of yesterday, and carded 7 over 79 in the second round. She is tied for the fifth position with Delhi’s Ankita Tiwana with a total score of 152. Following them are Chandigarh’s Saaniya Sharma and Delhi’s Mehar Atwal who are placed seventh and eighth respectively.
Dalai Lama F O R T H C O M I N G E V E N T S
“Today, as we wish each other a Happy New Year, let us determine to be sincere, compassionate, warm-hearted human beings,
trying to make our word a more equal place. That way we’ll actually make it happy year.” – The Dalai Lama
F O R T H C O M I N G E V E N T S
FILMS ON ‘SPIRITUALITY & THE OTHER DIMENSION’
a series of monthly screenings
in collaboration with the India International Centre
Curated by Rajiv Mehrotra
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a series of monthly screenings
in collaboration with the India International Centre
Curated by Rajiv Mehrotra
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Auditorium, India International Centre
Max Mueller Road, New Delhi – 110003
Max Mueller Road, New Delhi – 110003
20 January 2016, Wednesday, 6:30 pm
WHAT ARE ANIMALS THINKING?
A film by Michael Bicks and Anna Lee Strachan, 60 minutes
WHAT ARE ANIMALS THINKING?
A film by Michael Bicks and Anna Lee Strachan, 60 minutes
Have you ever wondered what’s going on inside your pet’s mind? We’ll find out how a beehive resembles a human brain and whether your dog is really feeling guilty when it gives you that famous “guilty” look.
Do dogs feel guilty? Can rats feel empathy? We project very complex- and human-emotional lives onto our animal companions. Now, scientists studying animal cognition are finally revealing the machinery of animals’ moral compasses.
17 February 2016,Wednesday, 6:30 pm
YOUNG DR. FREUD
A film by David Grubin, 110 minutes
YOUNG DR. FREUD
A film by David Grubin, 110 minutes
‘Young Dr. Freud ‘ retraces the early life of Sigmund Freud, from his birth in 1856 to the publication of his landmark book the Interpretation of Dreams in 1900. With Freud’s own words, vivid recreations, and the commentary of psychoanalysts and scholars, this two-part special examines how Freud created the revolutionary theories that have become part of the fabric of 20th century life and have shaped our notions of identity, memory, childhood and sexuality.
16 March 2016, Wednesday, 6:30 pm
WHAT DARWIN NEVER KNEW
A film by John Rubin, Rushmore Denooyer, Serena Davies and Sarah Holt, 60 minutes
WHAT DARWIN NEVER KNEW
A film by John Rubin, Rushmore Denooyer, Serena Davies and Sarah Holt, 60 minutes
Earth teems with a staggering variety of animals, including 9,000 kinds of birds, 28,000 types of fish, and more than 350,000 species of beetles alone. What explains this explosion of living careatures -1.4 million different species discovered so far, with perhaps another 50 million more to go?
BY PRIOR REGISTRATION ONLY
No Charges, Limited Seats
write to
workshops@furhhdl.org
with full name(s), address and cell no.
allow at least a week for confirmation
———-
workshops@furhhdl.org
with full name(s), address and cell no.
allow at least a week for confirmation
———-
21st (Thu) to 23rd (Sat) January, 2016 @ Casuarina Hall
24th (Sun) January, 2016 @ Gulmohar Hall
24th (Sun) January, 2016 @ Gulmohar Hall
6:30pm – 08:00 pm
India Habitat Centre
Lodhi Road, New Delhi – 110003
in collaboration with the India Habitat Centre
PEACEFUL LIVING, PEACEFUL DYING
Lodhi Road, New Delhi – 110003
in collaboration with the India Habitat Centre
PEACEFUL LIVING, PEACEFUL DYING
with Ven. Sangye Khadro
About the Workshop:
Each of us will have to go through the experience of dying one day. Before that happens, we will probably experience the deaths of loved ones and friends. This workshop will explore ways to prepare oneself for death, to be able to die with a peaceful and positive state of mind, and how to be of benefit to others when they are dying.
The workshop will encompass:
The workshop will encompass:
- perspectives on death,
- the truth of impermanence,
- meditating on death, preparing for death,
- helping others who are dying,
- exercises and meditation
About the Resource Person:
Ven. Sangye Khadro (Kathleen McDonald) began studying Buddhism with Tibetan lamas in Dharamsala, India, in 1973. She became a nun in Nepal the following year, and received full ordination (bhikshuni) in 1988. She is a graduate of the Masters Program in Buddhist Studies in Sutra and Tantra at Lama Tsong Khapa Institute, Italy (2008-2015). Ven. Khadro was ABC’s resident teacher for eleven years until 1990s. She is the author of “How to Meditate“, a book published under her lay name, Kathleen McDonald.
“I first taught this workshop in Singapore in the early 90s, and since then have taught it in many other places around the world. It is always very popular, because people want to know about this topic, but they often find that others don’t want to talk about it, they are so frightened of it! ”.Portfolio”.
New additions build hope for Delhi Waveriders at Coal India Hockey India League 20
16
January 13th, New Delhi: Delhi Waveriders are all set to start their season of the Coal India Hockey India League 2016 with a new stadium and a new squad. The team which managed to beat Uttar Pradesh Wizards last year in a third place playoff has made some crucial buys for the 4th edition of the Coal India Hockey India League the premier League for hockey in the world today. The six team annual franchise based hockey league, the flagship event of Hockey India – the apex body governing the sport in the country and sanctioned by the International Hockey Federation (FIH) will see Delhi Waveriders open their account for the 2016 season against last year Runner’s up Jaypee Punjab Warriors at Chandigarh on 20 January 2016.
The team under the guidance of Head Coach Cedric D’ Souza, will look forward to an impressive season this year, acquiring a good set of Indian and overseas players. The Indian players who will be on display for the Delhi Waveriders are young and full of promise. The major Indian retentions which has been made by the Delhi team include star forward Yuvraj Walmiki who has been making a mark for himself in the sport. Yuvraj, who spent some time last year away from the sport will be looking forward to make the Coal India HIL 2016 his pavement to make an entry back into the Indian national team. The forward line for Delhi Waveriders also features the 22 year old Talwinder Singh who will look forward to continue with his good form. Talwinder will be accompanied by his team mate Mandeep Singh who was acquired for a sum of $70,000 by the franchise. Star defender Rupinder Pal Singh, who also hit the winning goal for India in the Bronze medal match against Netherlands in the Hero Hockey World League Finals, Raipur last year, fetched a price of $68,000 from the franchise and will be one of the key players in the defence line of the team. Another young star who was retained by the team was the Indian junior men’s national hockey team captain Harjeet Singh who with his recent achievements will be a crucial player in the midfield.
Cedriz D’ Souza, Head Coach, Delhi Waveriders said, “We did put up a good show with a podium position finish in the last edition of the Hockey India League but I believe with each new season we should set different expectations. The Indians and overseas players are jellying pretty well and it will really help the team to play as one unit or dictate the terms in any match.”
The overseas players in the form of New Zealander Simon Child who was the highest scorer from Delhi in the tournament with 4 goals will be looking to repeat a similar performance with the franchise. The addition of Devon Manchester in between the goalposts will give an added spark to the team. Devon was purchased by the team for a sum of $27,000 against a base price of $15,000. Along with Simon, Australian midfielder/ defender Tristan White has also been retained by the team. The other key foreign players who will be seen will in the form of Mark Pearson from England in the Midfield, Steven Edwards from New Zealand and Benjamin Stanzl from Austria. The defence will see the presence of Iain Lewers from England and Justin Reid – Ross from South Africa.
HOCKEY INDIA LEAGUE PARTNERS
Coal India
Star Sports
Technology Frontier
Shiv Naresh
HOCKEY INDIA LEAGUE PARTNERS
Coal India
Star Sports
Technology Frontier
Shiv Naresh
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