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Today — 26 June 2024Main stream

State of Origin 2024 Game 2 live: NSW Blues v Qld Maroons – latest updates

26 June 2024 at 06:48
  • Updates from second game of the series at the MCG
  • Any thoughts? Get in touch on email or X @meganmaurice

The teams are now entering the field for the pre-match ceremony. There’s a huge roar for the Maroons as they’re led out by Daly Cherry-Evans. The Blues get a much more frosty reception. Though maybe the crowd is shouting Boo-lues and not boo? We can never be certain.

Superstar NBA player Patty Mills is delivering the game ball in a Maroons jersey, which is apparently a thing that happens now. Hopefully we’ll see him doing some warm ups with a Steeden before an NBA game at some point in the near future.

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© Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

Worcestershire v Surrey, Essex v Durham, and more: county cricket – live

26 June 2024 at 06:45
  • Updates from around the grounds on day four
  • You can email Tanya or comment below the line

Ali ponders England’s chances:

Good morning Tim Maitland! “Spent more time than I’d care to admit trying to decide who to watch now that Yorkshire have been so inconsiderate as to win inside three days. I’ve plumped for Essex v Durham on the basis that it’s the most significant in terms of the championship itself and that I should at least get a spirited rearguard action from second-placed Essex.

”Judging from the second over of the day Dean Elgar is not going to last long facing Callum Parkinson and a Kalahari Desert of rough outside the left-handers off stump. And the nightwatchman Jamie Porter has gone for 3. A beautiful ball from Matthew Potts nipped in a fraction to literally take the top of off: it would have done for better batsmen.Essex 43 for 2.

”It’s something to do while I get the char siu and poached eggs on rice ready.” Sounds delicious. While you’re at it, I think buginabreeze was up for a lunch order…

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© Photograph: Gavin Ellis/TGS Photo/REX/Shutterstock

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© Photograph: Gavin Ellis/TGS Photo/REX/Shutterstock

Euro 2024: England await last-16 opponents as group stage comes to end – live

26 June 2024 at 06:43

The lopsided draw explains away the general bafflement about why England are favourites with the bookies. There are better teams on what we’ve seen so far but the odds on England’s main rivals are kept higher due to their more complicated paths to the final. England’s are artificially lower as they avoid most of the big guns and have less to beat.

Euro 2024 odds: 4/1 England, 9/2 Germany, Spain, 5/1 France, 6/1 Portugal, 14/1 Netherlands, 18/1 Belgium, Italy, 25/1 Austria, 40/1 Switzerland, 66/1 Denmark. The rest 100/1 or more.

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© Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

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© Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

TV sales for Euro 2024 help triple profits at retailer AO World

26 June 2024 at 06:35

Annual pre-tax profits climbed 186% to £34.3m, lifted by television upgrades and tumble dryers

The online electrical goods seller AO World has enjoyed a near-tripling of profits thanks in part to booming tumble dryer sales during the wet winter and televisions for Euro 2024.

Revenues at the retailer, which sells 15% of all domestic appliances in the UK, were also bolstered by the continued popularity of air fryers, with the company attributing this to customers looking for a cheaper alternative to takeaways amid the cost of living crisis.

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© Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images

The Spin | Carlos Brathwaite on the good and bad of 2016: ‘I fell out of love with the game’

26 June 2024 at 06:00

West Indies all-rounder’s T20 World Cup final heroics left him feeling listless but joy of playing eventually returned

“Will 2016 be the sole focus of the piece?” comes the text back. That’s after a couple of friendly nudges and even more days of SMS silence. Carlos Brathwaite doesn’t really want to talk about his T20 World Cup-winning exploits at Kolkata in 2016. Three more pixellated dots unfurl on the phone screen … here we go. That drawing board is getting a revisit any second now. “Sorry, I don’t just want to regurgitate the same story.”

Fair enough. With the latest T20 World Cup reaching the business end in the Caribbean, the footage of a 27-year-old Brathwaite peppering the Eden Gardens stands eight years ago while the bowler – a body-buckled Ben Stokes – looks on in pained disbelief, will do the rounds once more.

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© Photograph: Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP/Getty Images

Race, celebrity and greatness: Is Caitlin Clark v Angel Reese really the WNBA’s Magic v Bird?

26 June 2024 at 04:00

The Lakers legend sees parallels between the WNBA rookies and the rivalry that defined his career. Both relationships have plenty to say about America itself

In the 1970s, the NBA was sputtering. Playoff games were on tape-delay. Many of the league’s teams were in debt, baseball was still firmly America’s game and lesser-known small market franchises were winning titles. But then an influx of talent changed the entire operation. The 1979-80 NBA season saw rookies Magic Johnson and Larry Bird explode on to the scene with the Los Angeles Lakers and Boston Celtics, respectively. But even then, the two were known quantities and so, too, was their budding rivalry. It all began in college the year prior. The 1979 NCAA title game featured Johnson’s Michigan State team defeating Bird’s Indiana State in what is still the most-watched basketball game ever in the US. It was a matchup that featured Magic’s flash and charisma against Bird’s quiet genius. Two skilled passers making their teams better. Fast-forward 45 years and history is repeating itself, this time with the WNBA’s Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark. Just ask Magic himself.

“Larry and I heightened the NBA’s overall popularity,” Johnson wrote on X on Monday. “The Lakers and Celtics sold out arenas throughout the league and increased television viewership exponentially. The higher viewership numbers led to the NBA signing significantly larger TV contracts which then led to higher salaries for the players. Caitlin and Angel are now doing the same thing, selling out arenas and increasing the viewership.”

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© Photograph: Jeff Haynes/NBAE/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Jeff Haynes/NBAE/Getty Images

Portugal stand in way of fearless Georgia’s pursuit of the unthinkable

26 June 2024 at 03:00

Euro 2024’s lowest-ranked team have already made history – now Sagnol and Kvaratskhelia are dreaming of the last 16

“But, I mean, it’s Portugal,” came the typically frank and measured reply from the Georgia manager, Willy Sagnol. Minutes earlier, such was the giddiness surrounding the nation’s first point at a major tournament on Saturday, he had been given a standing ovation as he entered the press conference room in Hamburg from journalists who follow the team. The same went for Giorgi Mamardashvili, after his staggering goalkeeping display.

Conversation, however, soon flipped to the game in Gelsenkirchen on Wednesday night and it was a case of carefully dousing the flames of unfiltered excitement. The obvious thing to say at this juncture is Georgia won’t stop dreaming.

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© Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Dan Mullan/Getty Images

The Knowledge | Which tournament winners took the longest time to score their first goal?

26 June 2024 at 03:00

Plus: second-tier stadiums in the Euros; the player who was even younger than Lamine Yamal and more

“When is the latest in a tournament a team has scored a goal and gone on to win it, or at least made the final?” asks John McDougall. “For example: qualifying for the knockouts with three 0-0 draws, then maybe winning on penalties after another 0-0 draw before finally in the quarter-final …”

We’ve been through every World Cup, European Championship, Copa América and Africa Cup of Nations where data is available, because what else is there to do in a heatwave. Alas there are no goalless runs to match John’s hypothetical scenario, but there are some decent tales nonetheless.

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© Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Roberto Schmidt/AFP/Getty Images

Yesterday — 25 June 2024Main stream

Oleksandr Usyk vacates IBF world title in ‘present’ to Dubois and Joshua

25 June 2024 at 20:33
  • Usyk vacates belt in order to pursue Tyson Fury rematch
  • Dubois now expected to fight Joshua for title at Wembley

The undisputed world heavyweight champion, Oleksandr Usyk, has confirmed he will vacate his IBF title, clearing the way for Daniel Dubois and Anthony Joshua to fight for it in September.

The Ukrainian became the first heavyweight to hold the IBF, WBO, WBA and WBC belts when he beat Tyson Fury in Saudi Arabia last month – but has been forced to relinquish one of the belts just five weeks after becoming undisputed champion.

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© Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Richard Pelham/Getty Images

Gareth Southgate claims England fans are creating ‘unusual environment’

  • Plastic beer cups thrown at manager after Slovenia draw
  • Southgate: ‘I understand the narrative towards me’

Gareth Southgate talked about being in “an unusual environment” after having plastic beer cups thrown at him by England fans and hearing his team booed off after their 0-0 draw with Slovenia on Tuesday night.

Although a point was enough for England to go through to last 16 as winners of Group C, the reaction in the stands at the Cologne Stadium was hardly complimentary after another ineffective attacking ­display against opponents ranked 57th in the world.

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© Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

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© Photograph: Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters

Harry Kane paradox leaves England talisman grasping to find his former self | Jonathan Liew

The captain is too good a passer to be left up front, too good a poacher to be a No 10 and not fit enough to do both

Around 48 minutes into this musty, vaguely icky game – a game that felt like it was a few weeks past its sell-by date, a game that came coated in a thin, unidentifiable layer of mildew – Bukayo Saka got the ball in England’s right channel and played a simple short pass into Harry Kane.

For all his current travails, the vagaries of form and fitness, Kane is nothing if not a fearsome striker of a football. When he really connects, as he did here, the ball simply explodes off his boot: all gunpowder and venom and pure, coiled power. Two problems. First, Kane was facing away from goal. Second, he wasn’t actually attempting a shot but, in fact, trying to bring the ball under control.

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© Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

Ralf Rangnick says ‘incredible’ Austria side are not ruling out Euro 2024 glory

  • Austria top Group D ahead of France after win
  • Rangnick: ‘The lads want to go as far as possible’

Ralf Rangnick praised a “­courageous and energetic” performance from his Austria team that brought a 3-2 victory against the Netherlands and has thrown them into the discussion around contenders for this European Championship.

Austria unexpectedly finished top of Group D, their win arriving in tandem with France’s surprise draw against Poland, and Rangnick would not completely discount a run all the way to the final for his high-intensity dark horses.

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© Photograph: Alex Livesey/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Alex Livesey/Getty Images

England disappoint again but still top group after stalemate with Slovenia

It had been universally accepted that England needed a performance to reinvigorate their fans here in ­Germany after the toil of their ­opening Euro 2024 ties against Serbia and Denmark. One of the principal takeaways from a claustrophobic and emotional night was that the fans were certainly connected.

Moved to boo at the interval after a display that lacked bite, they raised the intensity in the second period, belting out their songs for almost the duration of it. There was something faintly heroic about their efforts. They got louder and louder because they believed that a goal was coming. And if they did not believe, they sang anyway, ­losing themselves in the moment, the occasion. Call it blind faith.

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© Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Stu Forster/Getty Images

Denmark edge through as runners-up but Serbia exit after tame draw

Any thesis on why 24 teams should never have been permitted in the European Championship finals must feature this game.

On a stiflingly hot evening in Bavaria, Denmark and Serbia did absolutely nothing to prove the expansion of this tournament has enhanced entertainment levels. The occasion was notable for Christian Eriksen winning his 133rd cap, a record for a male Danish player, and … that was about it.

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© Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images

Deschamps admits ‘we deserve to be second’ but expects France to click

  • France finish second after 1-1 draw with Poland
  • ‘We will be ready for the round of 16,’ says manager

Didier Deschamps has conceded France have made life difficult for themselves after failing to top Group D but said he is optimistic his team will fully click in the last 16 and that they should treat the knockout stage as “a new competition”. France, two-time European champions, finished second after recording a single victory and failing to score a goal themselves in open play.

Kylian Mbappé’s penalty on his return was not enough to secured victory against the eliminated Poland, with the former Borussia Dortmund striker Robert Lewandowski equalising from the spot in the 79th minute.

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© Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

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© Photograph: Jose Breton/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

England set to discover if they created T20 monster by jolting India into life

25 June 2024 at 13:38

Defending champions trounced semi-final opponents in 2022 but face a revitalised team with form and focus

Ben Duckett was a bit cheeky when he suggested India’s Test team had been inspired by Bazball earlier in the year. But in the second semi-final of the men’s T20 World Cup on Thursday, at Providence Stadium, Guyana, England’s white-ballers meet a side they influenced – or at least jolted into life – two years ago.

Much like the rollercoaster this time around, England had scraped their way into the knockouts in 2022 before delivering a thumping 10-wicket victory over India in Adelaide. “We were unbelievable with the bat,” said Moeen Ali as the defending champions jetted off to Georgetown on Tuesday, recalling the day Jos Buttler and Alex Hales vaporised a target of 169 with a staggering four overs to spare.

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© Photograph: Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Alex Davidson-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

Borthwick turns down Lions role to concentrate on improving England

25 June 2024 at 07:00
  • Head coach will devote time to developing English rugby
  • Way clear for Farrell to appoint an Irish lieutenant for trip

The England head coach, Steve Borthwick, will not be ­joining Andy Farrell’s British & Irish Lions ­management team for next year’s tour of Australia. Borthwick wants to concentrate on reshaping ­England’s fortunes and is not set to be involved in the 2025 series against Joe Schmidt’s Wallabies.

Borthwick toured with the 2017 Lions to New Zealand alongside ­Farrell as forwards coach and his ­specialist lineout knowledge remains in high demand. His work ethic is also second to none but since taking his current role 18 months ago he has devoted all his time and energy to upscaling English rugby.

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© Photograph: Steve Bardens/RFU/The RFU Collection/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Steve Bardens/RFU/The RFU Collection/Getty Images

England v Slovenia: Euro 2024 – live

By: Rob Smyth
25 June 2024 at 15:52

Conor presses really well and his forward running is an important asset. We think he can stretch them defensively and also win second balls in midfield.

We’ve spoken to the players about trying to win the ball higher, and then use it with more composure. We’ve been very honest about our assessment of our performances; we know there’s more to come. But we can talk all we like, we have to go and do it.

#ConnorGallagher is already trending. Come on England fans: if you’re gonna slag him off, at least show your support by spelling his name correctly.

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© Photograph: Lee Smith/Reuters

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© Photograph: Lee Smith/Reuters

Denmark v Serbia: Euro 2024 – live

25 June 2024 at 15:48

Mac Millings gets in touch: “John dearest,. Well, here i am, at the Allianz Munich Football Arena. Consider me your inside man (I mean, apart from the proper journalist your Super Soaraway Guardian actually has on the inside -- I’m seated under the media centre, by the way, and am waving in the direction of...I don’t know...Jonathan Wilson?) Anyway, great atmosphere already, Danes outnumbering Serbs by a wide margin, but all very convivial, and a joyous reaction from all concerned when the PA announced that Austria had beaten the Dutch. Updates as I get them.”

Anders Van Bruun gets in touch: “The Guardian’s coverage of Denmark’s first game mistook Victor Kristiansen (“VK”) and Rasmus Nissen Kristensen (“RK”). It was VK who played and gave the goal away, RK has yet to play a minute in Germany, despite the player rating attributed to him. In the hope of a resounding Danish win (but realistically a nervy 2-1).”

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© Photograph: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Miguel Medina/AFP/Getty Images

France settle for second place as Robert Lewandowski earns Poland point

There was the moment of unbridled joy Kylian Mbappé had presumably visualised in recent days: whipping off his black mask and celebrating before thousands of France supporters in the imposing, iconic steep Sudtribune. He struck a second-half penalty to relieve France’s goalscoring frustrations but by the end of a stodgy team performance he cut a contrasting figure, fidgeting with the mechanics of his mask in sticky heat. Mbappé was easily France’s best player but the bad news for France was there was another returning forward in the shape of Robert Lewandowski, who earned an unlikely point, also scoring from the spot.

It was a damaging goal with ramifications in Group D, Austria beating France to top spot. Lewandowski, Poland’s all-time record goalscorer and captain who scored 74 goals for Borussia Dortmund, had to retake his penalty after the France goalkeeper Mike Maignan jumped off his line prematurely to save his effort from 12 yards. Lewandowski kept his cool to repeat the same staggered run-up, waiting for Maignan to blink first, and he squeezed his shot into the same corner down to the goalkeeper’s right. Mbappé moved towards the touchline to ask questions of the fourth official, Rade Obrenovic, about the validity of Lewandowski’s second effort. There would be no reprieve.

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© Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters

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© Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters

Austria top group with Netherlands in third after Sabitzer strike settles thriller

Should Austria be taken seriously as European Championship-winning material? They emerged from one of the group stage’s most entertaining games with three points and, firmly against the odds, top spot in a fiendish Group D. They were handed a head start by Donyell Malen’s own goal but perhaps the most impressive aspect of another high-octane performance was the way Ralf Rangnick’s team just kept coming.

They were pegged back by Cody Gakpo and then, after Romano Schmid’s response, again by Memphis Delay. But Marcel Sabitzer’s winner, which could change the shape of this competition, means they will probably face Turkey or Czech Republic in Leipzig on Saturday. For the third-placed Netherlands, creative but wide open in defence, a meeting with England is not out of the question.

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© Photograph: Ronny Hartmann/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Ronny Hartmann/AFP/Getty Images

‘Frightening’ Spain have 100% record, 25 players firing – and Lamine Yamal

25 June 2024 at 14:00

Luis de la Fuente is excited by his squad’s variety and says his 16-year-old forward was ‘touched by God’s wand’

Luis de la Fuente is losing sleep and it’s only getting worse, yet it isn’t panic, it is preparation. Spain have known for five days where and when they are going to play their last-16 tie – Cologne on Sunday night – but not who they are going to play against, only that it will be someone who finished third in Group A, D, E or F. By the time they find out, a week will have passed since they secured their passage. When they reached the dressing room in Düsseldorf after their final group game, 11 teams could still be their next opponents; the reward for excellence is uncertainty.

“If we’ve only slept two, three hours a night so far, we’re going to have to go a few with almost no sleep at all because we’ll have to study more opponents and be ready for anything until we know for sure,” Spain’s coach said. “It will be Wednesday night before we do but there’s no other choice. In any case, we’ll be prepared, mentally ready to try to go through.”

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© Photograph: Foto Olimpik/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

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© Photograph: Foto Olimpik/NurPhoto/REX/Shutterstock

Duckworth-Lewis co-creator Frank Duckworth dies aged 84

By: PA Media
25 June 2024 at 13:42
  • Statistician devised formula alongside Tony Lewis
  • ICC adopted method in 1999 and it remains in use

Frank Duckworth, one half of the team who pioneered the Duckworth-Lewis method for calculating target scores in limited-overs cricket matches abridged by bad weather, has died at the age of 84.

Along with his fellow statistician Tony Lewis, Duckworth devised the formula that was officially adopted by the International Cricket Council in 1999 and remains the means by which affected matches are decided.

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© Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images

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© Photograph: David Rogers/Getty Images

Athing Mu’s fall exposed the self-defeating cruelty of the US Olympic trials

By: Beau Dure
25 June 2024 at 13:32

The defending 800m Olympic champion won’t defend her title after a stumble in a single race. Her absence is a needless wound for Team USA

The track and field events at this summer’s Olympics don’t start until August, but Team USA are already losing medals in June.

Athing Mu, who won gold in the women’s 800m in Tokyo and followed up with a world championship the next year at the age of 20, isn’t going to Paris. Neither are Brooke Andersen, the 2022 world champion in the women’s hammer throw, or Laulauga Tausaga-Collins, the 2023 world champion in the women’s discus.

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© Photograph: Kirby Lee/USA Today Sports

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© Photograph: Kirby Lee/USA Today Sports

Manchester United Women moved out of training building to accommodate men

25 June 2024 at 13:08
  • Women’s team moved into portable buildings
  • Facilities go to men during Carrington revamp

The Manchester United women’s team will be moved into portable buildings at the club’s Carrington training complex this season to allow the men’s squad to use the women’s building while the men’s indoor facilities are being revamped.

Renovation work began on Monday on a £50m investment to moder­nise the men’s first-team building at Carrington, with the club ­announcing on 14 June that all areas of the men’s building were “being refurbished to deliver a world-class football ­facility with a positive culture to support future success”. The building works are expected to last for the duration of the 2024-25 campaign.

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© Photograph: The Guardian

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© Photograph: The Guardian

‘The war affects us every day’: Ukraine feel burden of lifting spirits at home

Veteran midfielder Taras Stepanenko knows his team carry a responsibility beyond the pitch as they face Belgium

Taras Stepanenko used to be the great hope of Ukrainian football. Perhaps he lacked a little pace, but he read the game superbly and was a fine passer of the ball. Most of all, he had an assurance, an aura of quality that made him stand out. When he joined Shakhtar Donetsk from ­Metalurh Zaporizhzhya shortly before his 21st birthday, the route to a major ­western European club seemed clear. ­Fourteen years later, a lot has happened, but he is still there.

He has won 11 Ukrainian league titles and eight cups, but he has only ever played 262 minutes in the knockout stage of the Champions League. There used to be a sense of Stepanenko as an unfulfilled ­talent, but loyalty has an additional value in Ukraine these days. It may be his achievements with Ukraine at this Euros have a significance that ­reverberate far beyond anything he has achieved at club level.

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© Photograph: Sven Beyrich/SPP/REX/Shutterstock

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© Photograph: Sven Beyrich/SPP/REX/Shutterstock

Stonehenge likely to be put on world heritage danger list over tunnel plan

25 June 2024 at 12:16

Unesco officials recommend adding Wiltshire stone circle amid fears road scheme would compromise its integrity

Stonehenge is likely to be put on a list of world heritage sites that are in danger because of the plan to build a tunnel under the precious landscape.

Unesco officials have recommended adding the Wiltshire stone circle and the area around it to the list because of concerns that the tunnel would “compromise the integrity” of one of the Earth’s great prehistoric sites.

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© Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

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© Photograph: Steve Parsons/PA

Manchester United and Chelsea part of four-way tussle for Lille striker Jonathan David

25 June 2024 at 12:05
  • Tottenham and West Ham also interested in forward
  • Hammers expected to bid again for Wolves’ Kilman

Jonathan David is at the heart of a tussle between Chelsea, Manchester United, Tottenham and West Ham, with all four clubs making checks on the Lille striker as part of their search for attacking reinforcements.

David, who is representing Canada at the Copa América, could be one of the bargains of the transfer window given that he has less than 12 months left on his deal and is not minded to sign an extension. Lille are expected to cash in on the forward, who is ready for a move to the Premier League, and he could be available for as little as £20m.

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© Photograph: Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Franck Fife/AFP/Getty Images

Raducanu’s renewed love for tennis on show in demolition of Sloane Stephens

  • Briton blitzes American 6-4, 6-0 in Eastbourne debut
  • Boulter eases through but Norrie crashes out

Emma Raducanu arrived in Eastbourne injury-free, with a growing number of matches under her belt, and she made it clear that she was very happy. The challenge, as she lined up for her opening match at the tournament, was to translate those good vibes into even more wins.

So far, so good. In her tournament debut at the Eastbourne International, the final stop before Wimbledon, Raducanu continued to gain confidence and self-belief on grass as she battled through a tight opening set against the 2017 US Open champion Sloane Stephens before ­spectacularly pulling away, winning 6-4, 6-0 to reach the second round.

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© Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

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© Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

‘I had his poster’: Italy’s Zaccagni delights in recreating Del Piero goal

25 June 2024 at 09:31

The Lazio winger scored a late equaliser against Croatia reminiscent of legend’s goal against Germany in 2006

Mattia Zaccagni grew up wanting to be like Alessandro Del Piero. How could he not, as an Italian aspiring No 10 who celebrated his 11th birthday in the summer of 2006?

He watched as Del Piero helped the Azzurri to a World Cup final, scoring the second of two goals in the dying moments of extra-time to defeat the hosts Germany. Italy went on to lift the trophy after beating France on penalties.

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© Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

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© Photograph: Matt West/Shutterstock

Euro 2024 Daily | Luka Modric and a plea for him to ‘never retire’ that we can all get behind

25 June 2024 at 08:37

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You’ve probably already seen the post-match photo of Luka Modric doing the rounds. Fresh after his player-of-the-match performance in Croatia’s last-gasp draw with Italy that cruelly denied his country second place in Group B and qualification to the Euro 2024 knockout stages, Modric has the hollow look of a squire on a medieval tapestry, skewered by some sort of sword, a thousand-yard stare normally reserved for Glastonbury goers making their way back to reality on a Monday morning after a long, hard festival. One eye on what has come before, one eye on what is to come.

We’re getting soaked. It’s like being at the Ally Pally” – Danny Murphy is the latest victim of fans throwing full pints of Tin in the air when a goal is scored at the Euros. On this occasion it was Luka Modric who caused the BBC co-commentator to get drenched.

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© Photograph: Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Christophe Simon/AFP/Getty Images

Vitesse Arnhem face potential bankruptcy after having licence revoked

25 June 2024 at 07:06
  • Dutch club were relegated from Eredivisie in April
  • Interim managing director says they will appeal decision

Vitesse Arnhem are facing ­potential bankruptcy after they had their ­professional football licence revoked for failing to submit the correct documentation before last week’s deadline.

The decision, which was ­confirmed by the Netherlands ­football ­association, the KNVB, after it had granted Vitesse a month’s extension, means the club will be blocked from participating in next season’s ­domestic competitions. It caps a dramatic reversal in fortunes for the 132-year-old club – the ­country’s second oldest – who last month were relegated from the Eredivisie where they had played continuously for more than three decades.

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© Photograph: ANP/Getty Images

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© Photograph: ANP/Getty Images

Afghanistan cause stir after contentious behaviour in historic T20 World Cup win

25 June 2024 at 07:00
  • Gulbadin appeared to suffer injury at crucial moment
  • Rashid: ‘it’s not brought a massive difference in the game’

The Afghanistan all-rounder Gulbadin Naib has found himself at the centre of controversy following his side’s historic progress to a T20 World Cup semi-final after commentators accused him of faking – or at least exaggerating – an injury during the dramatic rain-affected match.

Gulbadin and his teammates needed to overcome Bangladesh in St Vincent to secure their spot and a final-four clash with South Africa at Australia’s expense – but their narrow eight-run victory, via the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method, has come under scrutiny following the incident when Gulbadin indicated he had cramp.

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© Photograph: Darrian Traynor-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Darrian Traynor-ICC/ICC/Getty Images

David Squires on … Scotland facing the music after another early tournament exit

25 June 2024 at 06:50

Our cartoonist on a predictably Scottish outcome, England being England and Ronaldo finding his benevolent side

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© Illustration: David Squires/The Guardian

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© Illustration: David Squires/The Guardian

The Breakdown | New Zealand face a discernible sense of nervousness before England visit

25 June 2024 at 05:00

An absence of familiar names and a new head coach has cast doubt on the immediate outlook of the All Blacks

Every incoming visitor’s first instinct upon arriving in New Zealand on Monday morning was to ask: “Where is it?” The fog over large chunks of the country was thick enough to ground many domestic flights, threatening to delay the bleary-eyed UK-based reporters heading down to the South Island for the All Blacks’ first squad announcement. The only thing currently less clear, say the locals, is the immediate outlook for their national rugby side.

Not for a couple of decades, the greybeards reckon, has there been less certainty around the All Blacks, as they prepare to return to the Test match fray next month. They have not played since last October’s Rugby World Cup final and are missing a Who’s Who of familiar names. Sam Whitelock, Brodie Retallick, Sam Cane, Aaron Smith and Richie Mo’unga are either retired or unavailable. Add in the arrival of a new head coach, Scott Robertson, and something even rarer then New Zealand’s endangered fairy tern hangs in the murky winter air: a discernible sense of Kiwi nervousness.

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© Photograph: Joe Allison/Getty Images

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© Photograph: Joe Allison/Getty Images

Nigeria keeps building airports – but where are the passengers?

25 June 2024 at 00:00

Proliferation of airport projects is at odds with concentration of air passenger traffic

Last Thursday the governor of Zamfara, one of Nigeria’s poorest states, held a ceremony to mark the start of construction on an international airport in the state capital Gusau.

“The economic benefits and multiplier effects … are quite enormous,” Dauda Lawal said. “The airport will have a tremendous impact on the ease of doing business and other social interactions [here].”

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© Photograph: Sunday Alamba/AP

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© Photograph: Sunday Alamba/AP

Before yesterdayMain stream

Heartbreak for Croatia as Italy leave it late to progress - Football Daily

Max Rushden is joined by Barry Glendenning, George Elek and Nicky Bandini as Italy score a stoppage-time equaliser that sees them through to the round of 16 at Euro 2024

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On the podcast today; a fantastic finish from Mattia Zaccagni sees Italy progress ahead of Croatia. It wasn’t a particularly thrilling game of football but Italy ultimately got the job done.

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© Photograph: Petr David Josek/AP

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© Photograph: Petr David Josek/AP

"I hope my manager allows me to play next week"

By: Wordshore
14 June 2024 at 14:46
GQ: "It's happening very fast," said Saurabh Netravalkar, the Team USA cricket player with the world-famous LinkedIn profile ... Several fans in attendance held up signs calling Kohli a god; one held up a sign asking Netravalkar for a job reference. Guardian: As it happened: USA beat Pakistan. The Athletic: So, for a son of Mumbai to inflict such a humiliating defeat on the old enemy was a case of Netravalkar - in the words of his younger sister Nidhi on social media - "making two countries happy". Times of India: Balancing his dual roles as a cricketer and a software engineer at Oracle, Netravalkar manages his demanding career alongside his sports commitments. Interviewed in cricbuzz: "I filed for a patent. It was an innovation algorithm that we had."

Cricinfo: After the Pakistan win, a screen grab of his Slack out-of-office message was all over social media. It said he would be away from work until June 17, when the group phase of the World Cup ends. Netravalkar is not thinking ahead to whether he might have to extend his leave of absence in case USA make it to the Super 8s... ...update on that: As of an hour ago, the USA have enough points so they can't be caught by Ireland, Canada or Pakistan in their group. This means the USA qualify, along with India, into the final group stage of the current World Cup: this also gives the USA automatic qualification for the same World Cup tournament in 2026, two years before cricket returns to the Olympics in Los Angeles. Saurabh is going to need to ask for an extension to WFWCM (Work From World Cup Matches).

Is turbulence getting worse? And where were the worst flight paths in 2023 – video

28 May 2024 at 22:13

We know turbulence is a common part of flying – but are some routes more prone? And where is it the worst? Turbulence is the leading cause of in-flight injuries to crew and passengers and after the fatal Singapore Airlines incident and injuries to passengers above Turkey on a Qatar Airways flight, you might be wondering if flights are about to get bumpier. Incidents of severe turbulence are on the rise – increasing by 55% between 1979 and 2020 – and the climate crisis is thought to be a responsible factor

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© Photograph: Flight Radar | Microsoft | Earthstar Geographics | SIO | Lisa Favazzo

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© Photograph: Flight Radar | Microsoft | Earthstar Geographics | SIO | Lisa Favazzo

Introducing the Digital Footprint Portal

10 April 2024 at 09:01

Digital security is about so much more than malware. That wasn’t always the case. 

When I started Malwarebytes more than 16 years ago, malware was the primary security concern—the annoying pop-ups, the fast-spreading viruses, the catastrophic worms—and throughout our company’s history, Malwarebytes routinely excelled against this threat. We caught malware that other vendors missed, and we pioneered malware detection methods beyond the signature-based industry standard.  

I’m proud of our success, but it wasn’t just our technology that got us here. It was our attitude.  

At Malwarebytes, we believe that everyone has the right to a secure digital life, no matter their budget, which is why our malware removal tool was free when it launched and remains free today. Our ad blocking tool, Browser Guard is also available to all without a charge. This was very much not the norm in cybersecurity, but I believe it was—and will always be—the right thing to do.  

Today, I am proud to add to our legacy of empowering individuals regardless of their wallet by releasing a new, free tool that better educates and prepares people for modern threats that abuse exposed data to target online identities. I’d like to welcome everyone to try our new Digital Footprint Portal.  

See your exposed data in our new Digital Footprint Portal.

By simply entering an email address, anyone can discover what information of theirs is available on the dark web to hackers, cybercriminals, and scammers. From our safe portal, everyday people can view past password breaches, active social media profiles, potential leaks of government ID info, and more.  

More than a decade ago, Malwarebytes revolutionized the antivirus industry by prioritizing the security of all individuals. Today, Malwarebytes is now also revolutionizing digital life protection by safeguarding the data that serves as the backbone of your identity, your privacy, your reputation, and your well-being online.  

Why data matters 

I can’t tell you how many times I’ve read that “data is the new oil” without reading any explanations as to why people should care.  

Here’s my attempt at clarifying the matter: Too much of our lives are put online without our control.  

Creating a social media account requires handing over your full name and birthdate. Completing any online shopping order requires detailing your address and credit card number. Getting approved for a mortgage requires the exchange of several documents that reveal your salary and your employer. Buying a plane ticket could necessitate your passport info. Messaging your doctor could involve sending a few photos that you’d like to keep private.  

As we know, a lot of this data is valuable to advertisers—this is what pundits focus on when they invoke the value of “oil” in discussing modern data collection—but this data is also valuable to an entirely separate group that has learned to abuse private information in novel and frightening ways: Cybercriminals.  

Long ago, cybercriminals would steal your username and password by fooling you with an urgently worded phishing email. Today, while this tactic is still being used, there’s a much easier path to data theft. Cybercriminals can simply buy your information on the dark web.  

That information can include credit card numbers—where the risk of financial fraud is obvious—and even more regulated forms of identity, like Social Security Numbers and passport info. Equipped with enough forms of “proof,” online thieves can fool a bank into routing your money elsewhere or trick a lender into opening a new line of credit in your name.  

Where the risk truly lies, however, is in fraudulent account access.  

If you’ve ever been involved in a company’s data breach (which is extremely likely), there’s a chance that the username and password that were associated with that data breach can be bought on the dark web for just pennies. Even though each data breach involves just one username and password for each account, cybercriminals know that many people frequently reuse passwords across multiple accounts. After illegally purchasing your login credentials that were exposed in one data breach, thieves will use those same credentials to try to log into more popular, sensitive online accounts, like your online banking, your email, and your social media.  

If any of these attempts at digital safe-cracking works, the potential for harm is enormous.  

With just your email login and password, cybercriminals can ransack photos that are stored in an associated cloud drive and use those for extortion. They can search for attachments that reveal credit card numbers, passport info, and ID cards and then use that information to fool a bank into letting them access your funds. They can pose as you in bogus emails and make fraudulent requests for money from your family and friends. They can even change your password and lock you out forever. 

This is the future of personal cybercrime, and as a company committed to stopping cyberthreats everywhere, we understand that we have a role to play in protecting people.  

We will always stop malware. We will always advise to create and use unique passwords and multifactor authentication. But today, we’re expanding our responsibility and helping you truly see the modern threats that could leverage your data.  

With the Digital Footprint Portal, who you are online is finally visible to you—not just cybercriminals. Use it today to understand where your data has been leaked, what passwords have been exposed, and how you can protect yourself online.  

Digitally safe 

Malwarebytes and the cybersecurity industry at large could not have predicted today’s most pressing threats against online identities and reputations, but that doesn’t mean we get to ignore them. The truth is that Malwarebytes was founded with a belief broader than anti-malware protection. Malwarebytes was founded to keep people safe.  

As cybercriminals change their tactics, as scammers needle their way onto online platforms, and as thieves steal and abuse the sensitive data that everyone places online, Malwarebytes will always stay one step ahead. The future isn’t about worms, viruses, Trojans, scams, pig butchering, or any other single scam. It’s about holistic digital life protection. We’re excited to help you get there.  

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