Home Blog Page 148

Meet the man who thinks he ‘screwed up’ college football with a Supreme Court win

0

Meet the man who thinks he ‘screwed up’ college football with a Supreme Court win

SPORTS(NBC) – As a century-old college sports conference teeters on the brink of extinction and student-athletes brace for exhaustive cross-country travel, the attorney arguably responsible for these drastic changes says he’s not particularly happy about it at all.

Andrew Coats, the lawyer who convinced the U.S. Supreme Court in 1984 to allow universities to maximize football revenue, leading to a television-driven money-grab and today’s sweeping upheaval, now looks back with regret on the landmark case he successfully argued.

“I think I screwed up college football across the board, because I think the case did it,” Coats recently told NBC News, reflecting on his role in NCAA v. Board of Regents of the University of Oklahoma.


READ MORE : Asia Cup India Squad 2023 Announced | Expected Playing 11 | Match Dates | Captain Check Details Here

America’s highest court ruled in favor of Coats’ clients and said that the governing body of intercollegiate athletics couldn’t restrain the trade rights of schools and their conferences.

Now, the once-stable world of college football has turned into a near-nonstop swap meet in which universities constantly change conference affiliations, seeking more lucrative TV contracts. As a result, the Pac-12, a 108-year-old conference, will be reduced to four schools, and likely dissolve altogether.

These massive deals have caused the value of televised college football games to skyrocket in recent decades, largely at the expense of student-athletes who, in all sports, regularly travel thousands of miles for routine games once within reach of short plane rides or bus trips.


A ‘complete disaster’

Earlier this week, Notre Dame Athletic Director Jack Swarbrick called the conference shifting a “complete disaster.”

“I think the decision-making has lost its way in terms of the focus on the student-athlete and what’s primarily best for them,” he told “The Dan Patrick Show” on Wednesday. “I’m all for more regional scheduling. I think it makes a load of sense.”

While the 1984 case concerned football on TV, the practical impact has been on all programs — with athletes of nonrevenue and Olympic sports bearing an equal or greater burden of long travel.

Oregon softball player Paige Sinicki recently winced at the new reality of conference games as far away as New Jersey, a cross-country trip she suggested she didn’t sign up for when committing to the Ducks.

“I picked to play in a high level softball conference where being close to home would allow my parents to come watch my games,” Sinicki said recently on X, the social media platform formerly known as Twitter. “It’s unfortunate to hear that my senior year I’ll be playing as far as New Jersey-Rutgers as well as other east coast schools.”

“Just hope that us student athletes will be taken care of for all the travel, time changes, and hours on the road we will experience weekly!” she wrote in another post.

Marshall University announcer Ben Westfall — voice of the Thundering Herd soccer, volleyball, baseball and softball — said decision-makers are not thinking enough about athletes in nonrevenue sports who are bearing the brunt of long travel.

Marshall is about to start its first academic year in the Sun Belt Conference, the New Orleans-based league that now stretches as far west as San Marcos, Texas.

“This is more than money, and this realignment doesn’t just affect football and basketball,” Westfall wrote on X. “It affects everyone, especially the athletes. It is sad what college athletics is turning into.”

This money-driven path was paved by Coats and his clients, leading to round-the-clock football on TV and conference instability.

‘Annihilated the idea of geography’

Virtually every game in college football’s highest tier, the Football Bowl Subdivision, is now at least streamed or shown on national or regional TV.

The 2023-24 FBS season kicks off Saturday as Navy takes on Notre Dame in a game that’ll air at 2:30 p.m. EDT on NBC from Dublin.

On a typical fall Saturday, a college football fan can sit on their couch to watch a Big Ten game kick off at noon ET and stay planted there — with a remote in one hand and a drink in the other — until the final West Coast contest or a Hawaii game wraps up at 2 a.m. (or later) Sunday.

With the right cable or satellite packages and streaming services, more than 100 games can be seen every autumn Saturday.

By David K. Li

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Trump arrested, booked and released at Fulton County Jail in Georgia election case

0

Trump arrested, booked and released at Fulton County Jail in Georgia election case

Trump surrendered on racketeering and other charges and had his mug shot taken before he was released on a $200,000 bond.

ATLANTA (NBC)— Former President Donald Trump turned himself in Thursday night at the Fulton County Jail to be booked on felony charges in connection with efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia.

Trump arrived at the jail shortly after 7:30 p.m. ET in a presidential-style motorcade and was booked, fingerprinted and photographed for a mug shot within minutes, according to jail records. Trump was quickly released, according to the records. He was in and out of the jail in about 20 minutes.

“What has taken place here is a travesty of justice,” Trump told reporters on the tarmac moments before he boarded his plane to leave Atlanta. “We did nothing wrong at all, and we have every single right to challenge an election we think is dishonest.”


READ MORE : Trump calls GOP Senate hopeful Joe O’Dea ‘stupid’ over 2024 White House remarks

The arrest was Trump’s fourth since April, and it was the first time he — or any former U.S. president — had his mug shot taken. The booking took place in a state that was largely ground zero for his bogus stolen election claims, despite enormous pushback against him from the Republican governor and top election officials in a state he had won in 2016. Trump’s continued insistence that the election results could not be trusted helped cost Republicans control of the U.S. Senate in a runoff election on Jan. 5, 2021.

Trump, 77, had left his summer home in Bedminster, New Jersey, shortly before 4 p.m. ET and took his private plane to Atlanta, where he was indicted last week on state racketeering and conspiracy charges.

“I have to start getting ready to head down to Atlanta, Georgia,” to “get ARRESTED by a Radical Left, Lowlife District Attorney, Fani Willis,” Trump, 77, said Thursday afternoon in a post on his social media platform, Truth Social, where he also exaggerated the crime rate in Atlanta.

He gave a thumbs-up to the cameras as he walked off the plane at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport.

After he arrived at the jail, Trump was processed and released under the terms of a $200,000 bond agreement his attorneys struck with Willis’ office this week. Booking records listed his height as 6-foot-3 and his weight as 215 pounds, which would be 29 pounds lighter than he was at the time of his last White House physical in 2020. The source of the jail’s information is unclear, and it appeared online before he arrived at the jailhouse.

A date for his arraignment hasn’t been announced.

Trump has maintained he’s not guilty of any wrongdoing and has accused Willis, a Democrat, of “election interference” for charging him because he’s again running for president.

The majority of Trump’s 18 co-defendants in the sprawling case have already surrendered, including his former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, who was booked Thursday afternoon before he was released under the terms of his $100,000 bond agreement.

Willis set a deadline of noon Friday for the defendants to turn themselves in before arrest warrants would be issued. The Fulton County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Thursday night that it’s “expected that the remaining 7 defendants, named in the Georgia election interference indictment, will surrender by Friday.”

Earlier Thursday, Trump shook up his legal team in the case, replacing lawyer Drew Findling with attorney Steven Sadow.

Sadow said in a statement ahead of Trump’s appearance that he “should never have been indicted. He is innocent of all the charges brought against him. We look forward to the case being dismissed or, if necessary, an unbiased, open-minded jury finding the president not guilty.”

No trial date has been set. Willis initially proposed a trial date in March, but on Thursday she recommended the trial start Oct. 23 after one of the defendants, Kenneth Chesebro, filed a motion for a speedy trial date.

Trump, who has said this and the three other criminal trials he faces should be delayed until after the 2024 presidential election, then filed a motion saying that he opposes the request and that he’ll file be filing another motion to sever his case from Chesebro’s and the cases of “any other co-defendant who files such a demand.”

In a ruling late Thursday, Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee signed on to Chesebro’s request and the DA’s proposed trial date but added, “At this time, these deadlines do not apply to any co-defendant.”

Charlie Gile reported from Atlanta and Dareh Gregorian from New York

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

G20 poured record levels of public money into fossil fuels in 2022: Report

0

G20 poured record levels of public money into fossil fuels in 2022: Report

New Delhi (IANS) – In 2022, G20 members spent $1.4 trillion to support fossil fuels and they could raise an additional $1 trillion per year by establishing a carbon tax floor of $25-50/tCO2e.

These funds could help solve some of the most pressing global issues, according to a new report released on Wednesday.

 

G20 members provided a record $1.4 trillion in public money to support fossil fuels in 2022, according to the study “Fanning the Flames: G20 Provides Record Financial Support for Fossil Fuels” by the International Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD) and partners.

 

That amount, which includes fossil fuel subsidies ($1 trillion), investments by state-owned enterprises ($322 billion), and lending from public financial institutions ($50 billion), is more than double the pre-COVID-19 and pre-energy crisis levels of 2019.

 

“These figures are a stark reminder of the massive amounts of public money G20 governments continue to pour into fossil fuels despite the increasingly devastating impacts of climate change,” said Tara Laan, Senior Associate at IISD and the lead author of the study.

 

“The G20 has the power and the responsibility to transform our fossil-based energy systems. It is crucial for the bloc to put fossil fuel subsidies on the Delhi Leaders’ Summit agenda and take meaningful actions to eliminate all public financial flows for coal, oil, and gas,” Laan said.

 

The researchers found that G20 members could raise an additional $1 trillion every year by setting minimum carbon taxation levels of $25–75/tCO2e, depending on country income. tCO2e stands for tonnes (t) of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent (e).

ISD experts highlight that there are much better ways to support people during a crisis and that fuel subsidies are, in fact, a notoriously inefficient way to help the poor.


READ MORE : G20 should lead way on energy transition plans at COP28, event president says

Governments should instead provide social welfare through other mechanisms, like targeted welfare payments.

The report highlights the notable progress of some G20 members in this area. As the current G20 president, India can confidently demonstrate global leadership in this area, having reduced its fossil fuel subsidies by 76 per cent from 2014 to 2022 while significantly increasing support for clean energy.

Experts note that shifting less than a quarter of the $2.4 trillion generated from subsidy reform and carbon taxation could help close the wind and solar energy investment gap, $450 billion per year until 2030, to limit global temperature rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius, with public support leveraging additional funds from private investors.

It could also be used to help end world hunger ($33 billion/year), provide universal access to electricity and clean cooking globally, in ways aligned with net-zero emissions ($36 billion/year), and close the climate finance gap that developed countries committed to mobilize for developing nations ($17 billion/year).

Removing subsidies could also save thousands of lives by reducing fossil fuel-related air pollution, which is responsible for over five million deaths per year in G20 members and one in five deaths globally.

The study emphasises the active role that needs to be played by state-owned enterprises, which dominate the energy landscape in many G20 member countries, and public financial institutions, which engage in considerable lending to fossil energy projects.

Governments should, in particular, set a deadline for these state-owned institutions to create ambitious net-zero roadmaps that will allow them to diversify their businesses and lending portfolios and avoid the risks inherent in continued investments in fossil fuels, such as stranded assets.

“With fossil fuel companies gaining record profits amid the energy crisis last year, there is little incentive for them to change their business models in line with what’s needed to limit global warming. But governments have the power to push them in the right direction,” Laan added.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Envoys of Six Nations Present Credentials to the President of India

0

Envoys of Six Nations Present Credentials to the President of India

The President of India, Smt Droupadi Murmu accepted credentials from the Ambassador/High Commissioner of Venezuela, Colombia, Algeria, Brazil, Australia and Netherlands at a ceremony held at Rashtrapati Bhavan today (August 21, 2023).

Those who presented their credentials were:

1.   H.E. Mrs Capaya Rodriguez Gonzalez, Ambassador of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela

2.   H.E. Mr Victor Hugo Echeverri Jaramillo, Ambassador of the Republic of Colombia

3.   H.E. Mr Ali Achoui, Ambassador of the People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria

4.   H.E. Mr Kenneth Felix Haczynski da Nobrega, Ambassador of the Federative Republic of Brazil

5.   H.E. Mr Philip Green, High Commissioner of Australia

6.   H.E. Mrs Marie Louisa Gerards, Ambassador of the Kingdom of Netherlands


READ MORE : Top Chinese diplomat proposes talks with Japan, South Korea

Envoys of Six Nations Presenting their Credentials to President of India . Photo : @rashtrapatibhvn

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

 

California Earthquake : Earthquake shakes parts of California during storm

0

California Earthquake : Earthquake shakes parts of California during storm

BBC- As people across Southern California sheltered from Hurricane Hilary; another natural disaster hit – a magnitude 5.1 earthquake.

Its epicentre was northwest of Los Angeles and #hurriquake was soon trending on social media.

It did not cause major damage, and the hurricane has also since been downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone.

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said over 100 fire stations were checking buildings for damage.

Ms Bass said in a tweet. that there were no initial reports of structural damage caused by the earthquake or any injuries.


READ MORE : Heavy rain in Germany causes flooding and leads to flight cancelations in Frankfurt

Seismologist Dr Lucy Jones told NBC news it was “interesting” to have the earthquake near Ojai, and was the “first time we’ve had a five since 1932 in exactly this location, and even within the Ventura basin”.

She warned more aftershocks were likely over the next few days.

The quake hit at the same time as post-tropical cyclone Hilary, which left many residents unsure where they should seek cover.

BBC News reporter Regan Morris said she was walking her dog when her phone’s emergency alert system went off.

One of her neighbours ran out of his house in a panic saying he didn’t know where to go and she could hear other people shouting inside their homes as the quake struck.

Another video from inside a supermarket showed items fall from the shelves as the quake struck, as a man ran with his daughter from the shop.

Meanwhile, the National Hurricane Service said the “ongoing and historic” amount of rain caused by the storm was expected to cause life-threatening to locally catastrophic flooding, as well as other issues like mudslides and landslides.

California Governor Gavin Newsom declared a state of emergency across most of Southern California, with more than 7,500 troops deployed to help people prepare for the storm.

Residents in San Bernadino county were evacuated due to the intense rainfall, and the National Weather Service warned of life-threatening flooding in Ventura county after almost two inches (five centimetres) of rain fell within two hours.

Videos shared to social media by San Bernardino county showed rain water wash rocks onto roads, as trucks drove through the mud.

Already, the storm has caused heavy rain in areas that are usually arid desert. Experts warned those areas were more susceptible to flash flooding, as the ground would struggle to absorb the water.

That played out in areas like Palm Springs; famously a desert town, which recorded its heaviest hour of rain ever, Mr Newsom said.

Parts of Death Valley, notorious for having some of the hottest temperatures on earth, were also flooded by intense rainfall.

Tropical storms are unusual in the area because dry air, cool water and wind conditions off the coast tend to suppress hurricanes.

CBS News reporter Jason Allen said the storm was “absolutely unprecedented”, and many residents were confused by the weather event.

“I was at a station where they were filling up sandbags and one man remarks, ‘I live in the desert. I’m not supposed to be doing this’,” he told CBS.

There were no immediate reports of significant damage. The Ventura County Sheriff’s Department conducted an aerial survey of Lake Casitas Dam, Matilija Dam and the city of Ojai and found no damage.

The hashtag #hurriquake quickly began trending on X following the early afternoon quake.

The earthquake occurred at the same time as a rare tropical storm hit the Los Angeles area for the first time in decades. For the first time ever, Southern California is under a tropical storm warning, and most of Los Angeles County is under a flash flood warning with rain expected into Sunday night.

No tropical storm has made landfall in Southern California since Sept. 25, 1939, when a system lost its hurricane status just before moving onshore in Long Beach. The results were catastrophic.

Millions of Southern Californian’s received urgent back-to-back emergency alerts on their phones Sunday — the first indicated a flash flood warning, the second warning of the Ventura County earthquake.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Asia Cup India Squad 2023 Announced | Expected Playing 11 | Match Dates | Captain Check Details Here

0

Asia Cup India Squad 2023 Announced | Expected Playing 11 | Match Dates | Captain Check Details Here

ICC- Asia Cup India Squad 2023: Asia Cup 2023, which will be played in September 2023 is a most awaited cricket event for all cricket lovers from all over the world. A total of six teams are going to face off against each other in the Asia Cup 2023, which will be played before the ICC World Cup 2023 scheduled in October and November.


READ MORE : Man City vs Newcastle, Highlights; Premier League 2023: City eke out a 1-0 win over Newcastle

Group A

Pakistan: Babar Azam (c), Abdullah Shafique, Fakhar Zaman, Imam-ul-Haq, Salman Ali Agha, Iftikhar Ahmed, Tayyab Tahir, Mohammad Rizwan, Mohammad Haris, Shadab Khan, Mohammad Nawaz, Usama Mir, Faheem Ashraf, Haris Rauf, Mohammad Wasim Jnr, Naseem Shah, Shaheen Afridi.

India: Rohit Sharma (c), Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, KL Rahul, Shubman Gill, Suryakumar Yadav, Tilak Varma, Ishan Kishan, Hardik Pandya (vc), Ravindra Jadeja, Axar Patel, Shardul Thakur, Jasprit Bumraj, Mohammed Shami, Mohammed Siraj, Kuldeep Yadav, Prasidh Krishna, Sanju Samson (travelling reserve).

Nepal: Rohit Paudel (c), Kushal Bhurtel, Aasif Sheikh, Bhim Sharki, Kushal Malla, Aarif Sheikh, Dipendra Singh Airee, Gulshan Jha, Sompal Kami, Karan KC, Sandeep Lamichhane, Lalit Rajbanshi, Pratish GC, Mousom Dhakal, Sundeep Jora, Kishore Mahato, Arjun Saud


Group B

Bangladesh: Shakib Al Hasan (c), Litton Das, Tanjid Hasan Tamim, Najmul Hossain Shanto, Towhid Hridoy, Mushfiqur Rahim, Mehidy Hasan Miraz, Taskin Ahmed, Mustafizur Rahman, Hasan Mamhud, Mahedi Hasan, Nasum Ahmed, Shamim Hossain, Afif Hossain, Shoriful Islam, Ebadot Hossain, Mohammad Naim

Afghanistan: Squad yet to be announced

Sri Lanka: Squad yet to be announced

Cricket fans from India and other countries are curious to know the Asia Cup India Squad 2023 so that they know about the list of players who are going to play in Asia Cup 2023. The Asia Cup India Squad 2023 is released along with the names of batsmen, bowlers, all-rounders, and wicket Keepers who are going to be a part of the Indian cricket team during the Asia Cup 2023.

Now as the list of Indian players is out, you can check the India squad for Asia Cup 2023 in this article. You’ll also find the complete Asia Cup 2023 Schedule and details about Asia Cup 2023 Venue so that you have the information about the timings and details of each match of Asia Cup 2023.


 

The announcement of the Asia Cup India Squad 2023 has been done to release the list of Indian cricketers who will be playing in the Asia Cup. The Asia Cup 2023 will be played in September 2023 and cricket teams from six Asian countries will be participating in the event. The list of countries participating in the Asia Cup 2023 are:

  • India
  • Sri Lanka
  • Bangladesh
  • Nepal
  • Afghanistan
  • Pakistan

Each country has released a list of players who will be a part of the cricket team of the country. The announcement of Asia Cup India Squad 2023 is also done and now you can check the name of the captain under whose leadership the Indian cricket team will play.

In Multan, Pakistan and Nepal will play in the opening game of the 2023 Asia Cup. If you’re also wondering about the names of players on the list then continue reading the article and check the Asia Cup 2023 Players List

Asia Cup India Squad 2023 Overview Table

PARTICULARS DETAILS
Name of Event  Asia Cup 2023
Asia Cup 2023 Schedule  31 August to 17 September 2023
Asia Cup 2023 Venue Pakistan and Sri Lanka
Countries participating in Asia Cup 2023 India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Nepal, Afghanistan, Pakistan
Asia Cup India Squad 2023  Captain Name Rohit Sharma
Format of Match  ODI
Category  Sports

 

India Squad For Asia Cup 2023

India squad for Asia Cup 2023 is announced and the list of players for different roles has been out now. To know the captain, openers, middle over, wicketkeeper, all-rounders, spinners and fast bowlers, check the Asia Cup India Squad 2023 table shared further in this article. A total of 15 players from India will be a part of the India squad for the Asia Cup 2023.

Asia Cup India Squad 2023
Openers Rohit Sharma (C), Shubman Gill, KL Rahul
Middle Over Virat Kohli, Shreyas Iyer, Suryakumar yadav
Wicketkeeper Ishan Kishan
All-rounders Hardik Pandya (VC), Ravindra Jadeja, Shardul Thakur, Axar Patel,
Spinners Kuldeep Yadav
Fast Bowlers Jasprit Bumrah, Mohd. Shami, Mohd. Siraj, Prasidh Krishna
stand by- Sanju samson

 

Asia Cup 2023 Schedule

A total of 13 ODI matches will be played in the Asia Cup 2023 in which six Asian countries are going to compete against each other. These matches are scheduled in August and September 2023 and will be played at different locations. We have talked about the Asia Cup 2023 Venue also in this article. The first match of Asia Cup 2023 will be played on 31 August and the last match is scheduled on 17 September 2023.

Asia Cup 2023 Venue

Earlier, the venue for Asia Cup 2023 was decided to be Pakistan and UAE but due to different situations, the venue has now changed. As per the latest information, Pakistan and Sri Lanka will be the Asia Cup 2023 Venue where all thirteen ODI matches will be played of the event.

Out of these total 13 matches, nine matches will be played in Sri Lanka while the remaining four matches will be played in Pakistan. On September 2, Team India will face Pakistan in their opening match in Kandy.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Man City vs Newcastle, Highlights; Premier League 2023: City eke out a 1-0 win over Newcastle

0

Man City vs Newcastle, Highlights; Premier League 2023: City eke out a 1-0 win over Newcastle

MCI vs NEW: Sportstar’s highlights of the 2023 Premier League game between Manchester City and Newcastle United at the Ettihad Stadium.

UK (SKY SPORTS)- Match report and free highlights as Julian Alvarez struck a first-half winner to earn Man City their second victory of the season, capping off an evening of celebration of last season’s treble at the Etihad; masterful Phil Foden teed up the Argentine with a clever no-look pass

Manchester City cruised to their second victory of the season thanks to a stunning Julian Alvarez strike, earning a deserved 1-0 win over Newcastle.

Two of the Premier League’s big winners on opening weekend squared off at a jubilant Etihad Stadium, but there was no sign of the Newcastle that put five past Aston Villa, with Pep Guardiola’s side outclassing their visitors in almost every department.

Newcastle haven’t won in 18 league visits to City’s Manchester home – which treated fans to a treble celebration pre-match, complete with a trio of trophies and rousing fireworks, before Alvarez got to work dismantling the latest side to fall victim of City’s imperious home record.


READ MORE : Wander Franco allegations draw mixed reactions in Tampa, Dominican Republic
Phil Foden was majestic in possession, using a no-look pass to tee up Alvarez’s smasher in the 31st minute, which somehow ended up being the only breakthrough of a game littered with chances for Erling Haaland – although only half of the forward’s four efforts hit the target.

Newcastle improved after the break but were powerless to prevent the newly-crowned Super Cup champions from extending their impressive run to 17 straight home wins, as they move joint top of the Premier League standings with Brighton.

“This is the second game of the season but it is proof of the reason why we won a lot,” Guardiola reflected, “the mindset and mentality of this group of players amazes me every time.”


How City overpowered Newcastle

Julian Alvarez scored his first goal of the new season

Newcastle, buoyed by last week’s Villa rout, had travelled the 145 miles south in hope of claiming their first league win at City for almost 23 years. Hopes were ultimately in vain.

Guardiola’s side, perhaps a little fatigued from midweek exploits in Athens, weren’t at their fluid best throughout, but produced a professional performance to follow up last week’s Burnley success, with forward pairing Alvarez and Foden the brightest players on the pitch.

City began to pressurise midway through the first half and threatened for the first time when Manuel Akanji curled a long-range attempt over, before Haaland failed to connect with Alvarez’s low cross.

Julian Alvarez celebrates with team-mate Phil Foden after scoring Man City’s winner

Having stepped into the playmaker role vacated by long-term absentee Kevin De Bruyne, Foden then began dictating centrally, creating seven chances from open play overall – his competition best, 131 appearances in.

“I enjoy playing in there, hopefully in the future I can pick up more games there and show people what I can do,” Foden said post-match. “The manager spoke to me a few times, he said to remain patient, you’ll get your opportunity.”

The No 47 was predictably at the heart of the game’s only opening, wriggling into space before pulling a clever reverse pass towards Alvarez, who arrowed into Nick Pope’s top right. Foden then slipped Haaland in on goal but the Norwegian’s low shot dragged wide of the far post.

Erling Haaland only managed to steer two of his four shots on target

City’s failure to kill the match allowed Newcastle the chance to get back into it as the game became more stretched late on, but neither Miguel Almiron nor Harvey Barnes had the desired effect, with the latter registering Newcastle’s only shot on target – which Ederson caught comfortably.

In the end, Alvarez’s strike was enough and City, who began the evening parading last season’s silverware, could celebrate another job well done.

By Laura Hunter

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Tenerife wildfire : Tens of thousands evacuated as wildfire burns out of control on Spain’s Tenerife

0

Tenerife wildfire: Tens of thousands evacuated as wildfire burns out of control on Spain’s Tenerife

TENERIFE, Canary Islands, Spain (Reuters) – Thousands more people were evacuated from their homes on the Spanish island of Tenerife on Saturday as a wildfire raging in the north of the island remained out of control, but the flames have so far avoided major tourist areas.

The Canary Islands emergency services said more than 26,000 people had been evacuated by Saturday afternoon, according to provisional estimates, a sharp rise from 4,500 on Friday. Some 11 towns are now affected.


READ MORE : Hawaii fires: Death toll climbs in Maui as historic town destruction surveyed

Fierce flames lit up the night sky overnight, and on Saturday helicopters were seen dropping water on areas close to homes where smoke was billowing into the air.

The blaze broke out on Wednesday in a mountainous national park around the Mount Teide volcano – Spain’s highest peak – amid hot and dry weather.

More evacuations were ordered on Saturday morning due to worsening weather overnight, including a rise in temperatures and stronger winds, regional leader Fernando Clavijo told a press conference.

He said thick smoke was hampering efforts to extinguish the fire from the air.

Some 5,000 hectares (12,000 acres) have been burned so far with a perimeter of 50 km (30 miles).

The fire was at a scale that has never been seen before in the Canary Islands, Tenerife Council President Rosa Davila told reporters.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

Russian missile attack kills 7 in northern Ukrainian city as Zelenskyy visits NATO candidate Sweden

0

Russian missile attack kills 7 in northern Ukrainian city as Zelenskyy visits NATO candidate Sweden

CHERNIHIV, Ukraine (AP) — A Russian missile attack in the center of a northern Ukrainian city on Saturday killed seven people and wounded over a hundred others, including children, Ukrainian officials said.

The attack in Chernihiv happened as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy arrived in Sweden on his first foreign trip since attending a NATO summit in Lithuania last month.

Images of the aftermath showed badly damaged buildings including a theater with its roof blown away, mangled cars and survivors walking amid the debris with bloodstained clothes. The dead in the daytime strike included a 6-year-old girl, while 15 children were among the 129 wounded, Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko said.


READ MORE : US, Japan and South Korea agree to expand security ties at summit amid China, North Korea worries

The square in front of the theater building had been bustling with life, with people returning from church after celebrating the Apple Feast of the Savior religious holiday, baskets of consecrated apples in hand, Klymenko said. Following the strike, debris from the theater roof littered the square, along with shattered glass from the windows of nearby cars and restaurants.

The strike hit the theater during a gathering of drone manufacturers and aerial reconnaissance training schools, organizer Mariia Berlinska confirmed. Berlinska said that the event was officially agreed in advance with both the local authorities and the venue. The Chernihiv City Council denied that they had approved the event or issued any permits.

Zelenskyy said the attack showed Russia was a “terrorist state” and that the world must unite against it.

“A Russian missile hit right in the center of the city, in our Chernihiv,” he wrote on Telegram. “A square, the polytechnic university, a theater. An ordinary Saturday, which Russia turned into a day of pain and loss.”

Chernihiv was surrounded by Russian forces at the start of the war but they withdrew after Ukrainian forces retook control of areas north of Kyiv in April last year.

Zelenskyy arrived in Sweden on an unannounced visit Saturday — his first to the Scandinavian country since the start of the full-scale invasion. The war prompted Sweden to abandon its longstanding policy of military nonalignment to support Ukraine with weapons and apply for NATO membership, though it is still waiting to join the alliance.

At a joint news conference, Zelenskyy and Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson announced the two countries had agreed to cooperate on the production, training and servicing of Swedish CV90 infantry fighting vehicles. Zelenskyy said Ukraine would start manufacturing the vehicles as part of the deal.

He also encouraged Kristersson to “share” Sweden’s Gripen fighter aircraft with Ukraine.

“We do not have superiority in the air, and we do not have modern aircraft. In reality, the Swedish Gripen is the pride of your country, and I believe that the prime minister could share this pride with Ukraine,” Zelenskyy said.

Sweden has said it will allow Ukrainian pilots to test the Gripen planes but has so far ruled out giving any to Kyiv.

Zelenskyy said “appropriate actions” would be taken in coming weeks to help Ukraine obtain “appropriate aircraft.”

“I will also have negotiations with several other states tomorrow and the day after tomorrow. I am confident that we, together with our partners, will do everything and achieve the appropriate result in the sky so that the Russians do not have an advantage there,” he said.

Denmark and the Netherlands said Friday that the United States had given its approval for the countries to deliver U.S.-made F-16 fighter jets to Ukraine.

Sweden says it has provided 20 billion kronor (1.7 billion euros) in military support to Ukraine, including Archer artillery units, Leopard 2 tanks and CV90 armored vehicles.

Zelenskyy met with Kristersson and other Swedish officials at Harpsund, the prime minister’s official summertime residence, about 120 kilometers (75 miles) west of Stockholm. He and first lady Olena Zelenska later met Sweden’s King Carl XVI Gustaf and Queen Silvia at a palace in the area.

Kyiv this week has claimed counteroffensive gains on the southeastern front, regaining control of the village of Urozhaine in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region on Wednesday.

The leader of the Russian battalion fighting to maintain control of Urozhaine called for “freezing the front” on Thursday, saying his troops “cannot win” against Ukraine.

“Can we bring down Ukraine militarily? Now and in the near future, no,” Alexander Khodakovsky said in a video posted to Telegram.

Overnight into Saturday, Ukraine’s air force said it shot down 15 out of 17 Russian drones targeting northern, central and western regions.

The deputy governor of the western Khmelnytskyi region, Serhii Tiurin, said two people were wounded and dozens of buildings damaged by an attack.

In the northwestern Zhytomyr region, a Russian drone attack targeted an infrastructure facility and caused a fire, but no casualties were reported, said Gov. Vitalii Bunechko.

— Ritter reported from Stockholm. Morton reported from London.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |

US, Japan and South Korea agree to expand security ties at summit amid China, North Korea worries

0

US, Japan and South Korea agree to expand security ties at summit amid China, North Korea worries

CAMP DAVID (AP) — President Joe Biden and the leaders of Japan and South Korea agreed Friday to expand security and economic ties at a historic summit at the U.S. presidential retreat of Camp David, cementing a new agreement with the allies that are on an increasingly tense ledge in relations with China and North Korea.

Biden said the nations would establish a communications hotline to discuss responses to threats. He announced the agreements, including what the leaders termed the “Camp David Principles,” at the close of his talks with South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol and Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida.

“Our countries are stronger and the world will be safer as we stand together. And I know this is a belief that all three share,” Biden said.


READ MORE : China confirms Xi will attend BRICS summit in South Africa followed by state visit

“The purpose of our trilateral security cooperation is and will remain to promote and enhance peace and stability throughout the region,” the leaders said in a joint statement.

Biden maintained, as have US, South Korean and Japanese officials, that the summit “was not about China” but was focused on broader security issues. Yet, the leaders in their joint summit concluding statement noted China’s “dangerous and aggressive” action in the South China Sea and said they “strongly oppose any unilateral attempts to change the status quo in the waters of the Indo-Pacific.”

Yoon noted in particular the threat posed by North Korea, saying the three leaders had agreed to improve “our joint response capabilities to North Korea’s nuclear and missile threats, which have become sophisticated more than ever.”

He said as the three appeared before reporters that “today will be remembered as a historic day, where we established a firm institutional basis and commitments to the trilateral partnership.”

Japan’s Kishida said before the private talks that “the fact that we, the three leaders, have got together in this way, I believe means that we are indeed making a new history as of today. The international community is at a turning point in history.”

The visitors spoke in their home languages, their comments repeated by a translator.

The U.S., Japan and South Korea agreed to a new “duty to consult” security pledge committing them to speak with each other in the event of a security crisis or threat in the Pacific.

The pledge is intended to acknowledge that they share “fundamentally interlinked security environments” and that a threat to one is “a threat to all,” according to a senior Biden administration official. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity to preview the announcement.

Under the pledge, the three countries agree to consult, share information and align their messaging with each other in the face of a threat or crisis, the official said.

The Camp David retreat, 65 miles (104.6 kilometers) from the White House, was where President Jimmy Carter brought together Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in September 1978 for talks that established a framework for a historic peace treaty between Israel and Egypt in March 1979. In the midst of World War II, President Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill met at the retreat — then known as Shangri-La — to plan the Italian campaign that would knock Benito Mussolini out of the war.

Kishida and Yoon were mindful of Camp David’s place in U.S. and world history, making repeated references to its past and now their place in it during their comments at the news conference after the meeting with Biden. The leaders arrived in Washington on Thursday and, as guests of Biden, on Friday were flown separately to Camp David on U.S. military helicopters like the ones Biden uses.

Biden’s focus for the gathering was to nu dge the United States’ two closest Asian allies to further tighten security and economic cooperation with each other. The historic rivals have been divided by differing views of World War II history and Japan’s colonial rule over the Korean Peninsula from 1910 to 1945.

But under Kishida and Yoon, the two countries have begun a rapprochement as the two conservative leaders grapple with shared security challenges posed by North Korea and China. Both leaders have been upset by the stepped-up cadence of North Korea’s ballistic missile tests and Chinese military exercises near Taiwan, the self-ruled island that is claimed by Beijing as part of its territory, and other aggressive action.

Yoon proposed an initiative in March to resolve disputes stemming from compensation for wartime Korean forced laborers. He announced that South Korea would use its own funds to compensate Koreans enslaved by Japanese companies before the end of World War II.

Yoon also traveled to Tokyo that month for talks with Kishida, the first such visit by a South Korean president in more than 12 years. Kishida reciprocated with a visit to Seoul in May and expressed sympathy for the suffering of Korean forced laborers during Japan’s colonial rule, The effort to sustain the trilateral relationship won’t be without challenges.

Beijing sees the tightening cooperation efforts as the first steps of a Pacific-version of NATO, the transatlantic military alliance, forming against it. U.S. officials expect that North Korea will lash out—perhaps with more ballistic missile test and certainly blistering rhetoric.

Polls show that a solid majority of South Koreans oppose Yoon’s handling of the forced labor issue that’s been central to mending relations with Japan. And many in Japan fear that bolstering security cooperation will lead the country into an economic Cold War with China, its biggest trading partner. Biden’s predecessor (and potential successor) Republican Donald Trump unnerved South Korea during his time in the White House with talk of reducing the U.S. military presence on the Korean Peninsula.

“If an ultra-leftist South Korean president and an ultra-right wing Japanese leader are elected in their next cycles, or even if Trump or someone like him wins in the U.S., then any one of them could derail all the meaningful, hard work Biden, Yoon and Kishida are putting in right now,” said Duyeon Kim, an adjunct senior fellow at the Center for a New American Security ’s Indo-Pacific Security Program.

__

Associated Press writers Mari Yamaguchi in Tokyo and Hyung-Jin Kim in Seoul contributed to this report. Lee reported from Washington.

Follow Us: Facebook | Instagram | Twitter | Youtube |