Root and Stokes grind down weary India to stretch lead beyond 100

PRESTONPANS is a small fishing town eight miles east of Edinburgh. It is renowned as the site of the battle fought near there in 1745 between the Jacobite forces of pretender to the British throne, Charles Edward Stuart, and the government forces of Hanoverian Redcoats, led by Sir John Cope.
It was the first battle of the ill-fated Jacobite uprising of the same year and ended after 30 minutes with the Hanoverian forces being routed in the face of the famous Highland charge.
Prestonpans’s most famous son today is Josh Taylor, a boxer who fights for nobody’s throne but his own. This weekend he steps into the ring to face California’s likewise undefeated Jose Ramirez in Las Vegas for the right to be considered the undisputed king of the light welterweight division.

Mary Kom’s fists made history in the boxing world. Malak Mesleh’s never got the chance. One story ends in glory, the other in grief — but both highlight the defiance of women who dare to fight, writes JOHN WIGHT

The Khelif gender row shows no sign of being resolved to the satisfaction of anyone involved anytime soon, says boxing writer JOHN WIGHT

When Patterson and Liston met in the ring in 1962, it was more than a title bout — it was a collision of two black archetypes shaped by white America’s fears and fantasies, writes JOHN WIGHT

In the land of white supremacy, colonialism and the foul legacy of the KKK, JOHN WIGHT knows that to resist the fascism unleashed by Trump is to do God’s work