Two-time World Championship gold-medallist javelin thrower Anderson Peters on Tuesday pulled out of the Neeraj Chopra Classic attributable to an ankle damage, dealing one other blow to the showpiece.
The 27-year-old Grenada stalwart, who had taken the bronze medal behind Neeraj on the Paris Olympics final 12 months, has been changed by Poland’s Cyprian Mrzygłód within the occasion schedule for Saturday.
Mrzygłód is a 2019 European U23 champion and his greatest throw of 84.97 metres got here through the occasion.
“Anderson Peters has been ruled out of the Neeraj Chopra Classic 2025 due to an ankle injury sustained during his last competition. Poland’s Cyprian Mrzygłód has been named as his replacement in the final lineup,” the organisers stated an announcement.
Organised by double Olympic medallist Neeraj Chopra in collaboration with JSW Sports and sanctioned by the Athletics Federation of India (AFI), the world-class occasion that includes 12 javelin throwers, together with 5 Indians, has already seen three replacements.
Peters has had a protracted rivalry with Chopra. He efficiently defended his World Championships title in 2022, defeating Neeraj with three throws over 90 metres. Peters then went on to win a silver medal on the 2022 Commonwealth Games, the place Neeraj didn’t compete.
On Monday, Indian thrower Kishore Jena, scuffling with an ankle damage, had pulled out of the NC Classic and was changed by Yashvir Singh.
On June 6, Poland’s Martin Konecny had changed Asian Games bronze medallist Genki Dean of Japan.
India’s first-ever worldwide javelin competitors, initially slated for May 24, was postponed attributable to army tensions between India and Pakistan.
The confirmed worldwide lineup now contains Mrzygłód, Poland’s Martin Konecny, 2016 Olympic gold medallist Thomas Röhler (Germany), 2015 world champion Julius Yego (Kenya), Curtis Thompson (USA), Luiz Mauricio da Silva (Brazil), and Rumesh Pathirage (Sri Lanka).
The Indian contingent will function Asian Championships silver medallist Sachin Yadav, Rohit Yadav, and Sahil Silwal, Yashvir Singh apart from Neeraj.
The occasion, granted Category A standing by World Athletics, is taken into account a “dream project” of Chopra and goals to determine India as a reputable host of elite-level athletics occasions.






