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Category: 6. Sports

  • FAN VOTE: Who will be the best player in the Final?

    FAN VOTE: Who will be the best player in the Final?

    LAUSANNE (Switzerland) – The stage is set for the Final of the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025, as Germany and USA prepare to battle for the crown. With so much talent on the floor, the spotlight will shine brightly on the stars expected to step up when it matters most.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be crowned U19 World Cup 2025 champions?

    From Christian Anderson and Hannes Steinbach leading the charge for Germany, to USA’s deep arsenal featuring Mikel Brown Jr. and AJ Dybantsa, the so-called “Final MVP” could come from anywhere.

    Who do you think will be the best player in the Final?

    Cast your vote below and have your say!

    Disclaimer: This Fan Vote is not an official statement from FIBA. It is created solely to enhance the experience of the fans following the FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025.

    Let us know what you think and vote:

    Who will be named FIBA U19 Basketball World Cup 2025 TISSOT MVP?

    FIBA

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    July 6, 2025
  • Kidambi Srikanth’s semi-final exit wraps up India’s campaign

    Kidambi Srikanth’s semi-final exit wraps up India’s campaign

    Former world No. 1 Kidambi Srikanth bowed out in the semi-finals of the men’s singles event at the Canada Open 2025 badminton tournament in Ontario on Saturday as India’s campaign at the BWF Super 300 tournament concluded.

    Kidambi Srikanth, 49th in the men’s singles badminton rankings, won the first game but squandered the lead to lose 19-21, 21-14, 21-18 to Japan’s Kenta Nishimoto, the world No. 12 and third seed, in an hour and 18 minutes.

    The Indian badminton player, who upset top seed Chou Tien-chen of Chinese Taipei in the quarter-finals, made a bright start against Kenta Nishimoto too. Despite trailing 18-16 at one stage, Kidambi Srikanth fought back to take the opening game.

    Srikanth took the momentum into the second game and raced to a 9-4 lead before Kenta Nishimoto drew level at 14-all. From that point, the Japanese shifted up a gear and took the next seven points in succession to draw level in the match.

    The decider, a tense one, swayed like a pendulum. Once 6-1 behind, a fruitful phase in the middle saw Srikanth lead 12-8. Kenta Nishimoto also responded to draw level at 18-18 before wrapping up the game and match.

    This was Kidambi Srikanth’s fifth loss to Kenta Nishimoto in 11 meetings. The head-to-head was tied at five-all heading into Saturday’s fixture.

    Kidambi Srikanth was the only Indian challenge left at the Canada Open.

    Shriyanshi Valishetty was ousted in the quarter-finals of the women’s singles event on Friday, while mixed doubles top seeds Dhruv Kapila and Tanisha Crasto, the only Indian team in action, were knocked out in the first round.

    Indian badminton players will be in action next on the BWF World Tour at the Super 750 Japan Open, which begins on July 15.

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    July 6, 2025
  • NBA Summer League: Standout players from Day 1

    NBA Summer League: Standout players from Day 1

    Top 5 picks VJ Edgecombe (No. 3, 76ers) and Ace Bailey (No. 5, Jazz) hit the floor for summer action.

    • Download the NBA App
    • Summer League: Complete Coverage

    Saturday tipped off NBA summer action as the California Classic and Salt Lake City Summer League both delivered doubleheaders. With a 20-point pairing from the Grizzlies and VJ Edgecombe (No. 3 overall) going head-to-head with Ace Bailey (No. 5), here’s a sampling of the top individual performers:


    Salt Lake City Summer League

    Jaylen Wells & GG Jackson, Memphis Grizzlies

    With the Grizzlies often sending seasoned rosters into summer action as their developmental conveyor continues to churn, Wells – a Kia Rookie of the Year finalist out of the second round – and Jackson – who has shown scoring promise throughout his two-season run – are the latest to pop off the page.

    In a 92-80 victory over the Thunder, Wells continued building on his First Team All-Rookie campaign, putting up 20 points, four rebounds, three assists and two steals, offsetting inefficient shooting from the floor (5-for-14 FGs) with determined driving and a perfect (7-for-7) showing at the line. Jackson matched the 20 points, connecting on eight of his 15 attempts, including a solid 3-for-8 from 3-point range. He added three rebounds, limiting the turnovers to a pair in 28 minutes.


    VJ Edgecombe, Philadelphia 76ers | Ace Bailey, Utah Jazz

    Philadlephia’s VJ Edgecombe scores 28 points on 13-for-26 shooting with 10 rebounds and four assists in his NBA Summer League debut.

    The No. 3 overall pick, Edgecombe landed with the 76ers and joins a roster looking to turn the page toward contention after a disastrous 2024-25 campaign. Bailey, a mystery man heading into Draft night after skipping all individual workouts, was plucked by new GM Austin Ainge for the developing core in Utah.

    The Jazz stayed in front on the team side, winning 93-89, but Edgecombe unquestionably landed the strongest impression. The Baylor product delivered the day’s most prolific performance, pouring in 28 points on 13-for-27 shooting (48.1%), despite a 1-for-7 mark from range. And he added 10 rebounds, four assists, two blocks and a steal to boot.

    Bailey’s overall line was more muted – eight points and seven rebounds while shooting 3-for-13 (1-5 3PM) – but the Rutgers forward delivered a huge on-ball block in the third quarter, sticking with the driver and forcing a floater up, up and onto the fingertips. The potential, as always, remains evident.


    Nikola Topić, Oklahoma City Thunder

    On the other side of the Grizzlies’ resounding victory, Topić made his stateside debut after the Thunder drafted him a year ago in the wake of an ACL tear overseas. The tall (6-foot-6) guard showed why he earned the commitment, racking up 14 points on 6-for-11 shooting (2-4 3PM) along with four assists and two steals, though the seven turnovers will need to come down.


    California Classic

    Kel’el Ware, Miami Heat

    Kel’el Ware alley-oops home two of his 14 points on Saturday.

    A standout early and often throughout last year’s run, Ware was right back at it in the Heat’s 82-69 rout of the Spurs, turning in the kind of robust line one wants to see from second-year talent: 14 points, seven rebounds, two steals and three blocks. Several of the plays earned a spot in the highlight reel, though the 5-for-14 shooting could stand to come up.


    Cole Swider, L.A. Lakers

    The Lakers couldn’t quite overtake a balanced Warriors effort on Saturday, ultimately falling 89-84 to a team whose high scorers topped out at 13 points. But Swider turned in an impressive individual outing on offense, dropping 24 points on 6-for-8 shooting from 3-point range (7-for-10 overall). Also racking up eight rebounds, Swider delivered a two-pronged performance that could slot in nicely alongside high-usage orchestrators LeBron James, Luka Dončić and Austin Reaves.

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    July 6, 2025
  • The Olympic Studies Centre welcomes Moroccan National Olympic Committee as second partner of Olympic World Library Network

    The Olympic Studies Centre welcomes Moroccan National Olympic Committee as second partner of Olympic World Library Network

    Among the more than 1,500 publications in the CNOM collection, around 650 are exclusive documents that highlight the CNOM’s activities and Morocco’s participation in the Olympic Games. The portal also provides access to the CNOM’s Studies and Documentation Centre and its Digital Olympic Academy.

    “After several months of work on data migration, the CNOM is proud to be among the pioneering NOCs to join the OWL, contributing to the promotion of the Olympic values, providing access to its documentation related to sport and Olympism, and preserving its history and Olympic heritage for the widest possible audience,” Chekroun added.

    “As the global centre of reference for Olympic knowledge, the development of the Olympic World Library Partner network represents an important strategic pillar for the Olympic Studies Centre moving forward,” said Bogner. “We know that many institutions in the Olympic Movement have important reference libraries, but struggle to make these visible and accessible. By joining the OWL network, not only do they benefit from a low-cost turn-key solution to professionalise the management of their library, they also maximise the visibility of their collection to a worldwide audience.”

    About the Olympic World Library (OWL)

    With more than 42,000 titles, over 15,000 digital documents and over 400,000 pages viewed per year, the OWL is the number-one resource for Olympic knowledge and literature. Its unique collection includes all publications by the IOC, the Organising Committees for the Olympic Games (OCOGs) and a large collection of academic books and articles covering all historical, cultural, social and economic dimensions of the Olympic Movement.

    You can discover the Olympic World Library here.

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    July 6, 2025
  • Brescia: One of Serie A’s founding members attempting rebirth

    Brescia: One of Serie A’s founding members attempting rebirth

    Brescia were founded in 1911, when professional football in Italy was in its early stages, and earned promotion to the top flight two years later.

    When Serie A was formed in 1929 to implement a stronger two-tier structure throughout the country, they were among the 18 clubs included.

    A solid 10th-placed finish in that debut campaign was an early sign of the relative anonymity to follow. The industrial town of Brescia, population 200,000, has always been in the shadows of regional powerhouse Milan, 50 miles to the west, and the same was true on the football field.

    So, for the next nine decades Brescia were remarkably unremarkable: a mid-size provincial club plodding along between relegations and promotions, never winning anything but always on the scene, with no major trophies and their sole ‘achievement’ was holding Italian football’s longest unbroken spell in Serie B (1947 to 1965).

    An exceptional burst into the spotlight came at the turn of the century, when divinely pony-tailed genius Roberto Baggio – one of Italy’s greatest players – ended his injury-hit career with a successful four-season spell at Brescia.

    The flamboyant forward was briefly joined by another iconic veteran, Spain’s Pep Guardiola, along with rising midfield star Andrea Pirlo, who was born locally and came through the club’s youth system to launch his legendary career.

    Inspired by Baggio, Brescia flourished. Finishing eighth in 2001 was the club’s best season and led to a spot in that summer’s Uefa Intertoto Cup, a now-defunct tournament for Europe’s mid-ranking teams.

    Stepping onto the continental stage for the first time, Baggio’s penalty was not enough to avoid defeat by Paris St-Germain on away goals in one of three finals – the other two ‘champions’ were Aston Villa and Troyes…yes, three champions…it was a strange tournament.

    Baggio retired in 2004, Brescia were relegated a year later, and that was that: the club’s brief flirtation with the elite was finished and the previous routine of relegation-promotion-relegation was resumed.

    Until now.

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    July 6, 2025
  • US v Mexico in Gold Cup final: Self-belief or pre-World Cup panic on line for United States

    US v Mexico in Gold Cup final: Self-belief or pre-World Cup panic on line for United States

    The Gold Cup is Concacaf’s Euros and Copa America equivalent. Sunday’s final against Mexico is the United States’ last competitive match before the World Cup, which explains the sense of urgency going into it.

    Pochettino’s side have experienced a promising campaign despite missing some key players. Their presence in the final reflects that progress.

    It has been a bonding experience for the players involved, but it’s likely the XI that starts their first World Cup game in Inglewood next June will look significantly different.

    Due to a combination of injury, the Club World Cup and fatigue, this current squad is without familiar names such as Fulham’s Antonee Robinson, Juventus pair Weston McKennie and Timothy Weah, AC Milan duo Yunus Musah and Christian Pulisic and Monaco striker Folarin Balogun.

    Star man Pulisic’s decision to rest this summer rather than take part in the Gold Cup was particularly controversial given the context of building for next year’s home World Cup.

    The players Pochettino has been able to call upon have developed into a useful unit as the tournament has progressed and it’s the most together and determined a US group has looked since he took over.

    He might wish this togetherness could have been created with his first-choice group but, on the other hand, it has given him a good chance to test fringe players in a competitive, high-pressure environment with a trophy on the line.

    Some of this contingent have made a good case for inclusion in next summer’s 26-man squad.

    Diego Luna has long been touted as a player with the potential to offer the United States something they’ve been missing. The 21-year-old energetic playmaker, who plays his club football for Real Salt Lake in MLS, has come into his own in the Gold Cup as one of this team’s star players.

    In goal, Matt Freese, of Manchester City’s US relative New York City, has been given the nod ahead of Nottingham Forest’s Matt Turner all tournament and, bar one mistake against Haiti, has pushed for inclusion at the World Cup.

    Freese’s penalty shootout heroics in the quarter-final against Costa Rica gave him a tournament highlight, doing his chances of a 2026 call-up no harm at all.

    Elsewhere, midfielder Jack McGlynn, who was also eligible to represent the Republic of Ireland, has showcased his talent on the international stage, Bayer Leverkusen-linked Malik Tillman has impressed in a role just off the striker, and Crystal Palace defender Chris Richards has strengthened his claim for a starting centre-back role.

    Regardless of what happens against Mexico, this Gold Cup has been a useful experience and a productive exercise – but there’s an argument it needed to be more.

    Sooner rather than later, Pochettino needs to turn this work in progress into a fully prepared first-choice team.

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    July 6, 2025
  • ‘Thank you, for making so many people happy’ – Gondomar mourns Diogo Jota, their humble hero

    ‘Thank you, for making so many people happy’ – Gondomar mourns Diogo Jota, their humble hero

    It was approaching midday and the first-team players at FC Pacos de Ferreira were being put through their paces. They ran and ran under a scolding sun. At the top of the hour, their work done, they walked off, in ones and twos, to seek refreshment and shade.

    It looked a lot like a normal day of pre-season training. Just around the corner, though, on Rua do Estadio, the club’s flag flew at half mast. Visible above the west stand of Pacos’ stadium was an electronic billboard bearing a message and a photo.

    “Forever,” it read. The photo was of Diogo Jota.


    Flag at half-mast outside the Pacos ground

    Inside the main stand is the old first-team changing room. The floor is green and white checkerboard, the wooden lockers starting to show their age. It was here, in October 2014, that Jota pulled on the yellow Pacos jersey ahead of his first match in senior football. When he left to join Atletico Madrid two years later, the windfall allowed the club to build new a new eastern stand with more modern facilities.

    “We call that the Diogo Jota stand,” explained Paulo Goncalves, the club’s long-serving technical secretary.


    The old first-team changing room at Pacos

    Outside, Goncalves pointed to the far end of the pitch. “That was where he scored his first goal,” he said. He pointed towards the tribune. “He ran and hugged his mum over there.”

    Jota only played 45 times for Pacos. When his career clicked into gear, taking him from this modest club to stardom, he might easily have moved on, cut ties. But his gratitude to Pacos — for launching his career, for taking a chance on him when the country’s big hitters would not — forged a strong connection.

    He acted as a ‘godfather’ to youth players during a summer tournament last year, lending advice and support from afar. He would drop in when he was in the area. “He was always in touch, always sending us messages,” said Goncalves, the emotion audible on his voice. “Especially in difficult moments.”


    A wreath laid by Scottish Liverpool fans at Pacos de Ferreira’s stadium

    One thing that has become apparent since the death of Jota and his brother, Andre Silva, is that everyone has a story about him — little examples of his decency, his humanity, his heart. The tales come from Liverpool, from Wolverhampton, from a hundred other places.

    Travelling through the north of Portugal, though, what really struck home was the regionality of this tragedy.

    Jota was born in Porto. He spent his childhood in Gondomar, a sleepy satellite city, played for the local team. His grandfather still lives there, down a bumpy path off Rua da Minhoteira. Jota’s parents were in the house next door; the kids learnt to play football in the connecting yard. When Jota left SC Gondomar, it was only for Pacos, 30 minutes away. He later returned to the region with FC Porto. His brother played for Penafiel, another local team. Their father, Joaquim, spent his youth in Foz de Sousa, just to the south. Jota’s widow, Rute Cardoso, grew up in Jovim.

    The entire region is in mourning for the loss of two of its sons. For huge numbers of locals, the loss is all the more acute for being personal.

    Take Vitor Borges, a taxi driver who worked for years with Jota’s mother, Isabel, at the Ficosa car factory in Porto. “Her and her husband overcame a lot to raise those boys,” he said, shaking his head. “And all of it gone, just like that. No one deserves this, but least of all her.”

    Or Miguel Pereira, a former neighbour of Jota and Silva, slightly older but young enough to remember kick-arounds at the red asphalt court at the top of their road. He brought up a photo on his phone: his son Vasco with Jota, taken in May 2024. “It was a year ago but it feels like yesterday,” he said.

    Pereira had come to the headquarters of Gondomar SC to pay his respects. Vasco and his cousin Goncalo play for the club’s under-eight team. They recently won their local league title and had brought a replica of the trophy with them to lay down in tribute. They wound a Gondomar scarf around it before setting it down.


    Goncalo and Vasco Pereira prepared their tribute

    Gondomar’s academy is named after Jota. His face adorns the side of the main stand. On the clubhouse there are images of him as a boy, in Gondomar’s shirt, and as an adult, playing for the Portugal national team. On Friday afternoon the site had been transformed into a temporary shrine. There were flowers, candles and scarves, photos and drawings. There were football jerseys bearing messages written in marker pen. “You will always be our hero,” read one. “Diogo and Andre, forever sons of this land,” read another.

    At the back of the main stand is a training pitch, the astroturf degraded, and an old club minibus. Jota played here between 2005 and 2013; there’s a good chance that minibus took him and his brother to games in nearby towns, their paths criss-crossing the foothills.


    Tributes outside the academy at SC Gondomar’s stadium

    On the main pitch, the sprinklers were on. Six starlings perched behind the goal. Through the main gate, more people came: two teenage girls in Liverpool shirts, three young men on their lunch breaks.

    Pedro Figueiredo, a Porto fan, had felt an urge to pay his respects. “He played for my club and I admired him a lot,” he said. “He came from nothing and worked immensely hard.”

    Eugenia Dias had brought her granddaughter, Bernadita. They laid a hortencia down together. “Diogo was an idol to the people of Gondomar,” she said. “My son played with him when they were small, maybe five or six. We’re all in mourning. We felt he was ours, in a way.”


    A tribute from a child at SC Gondomar

    A sign just off the main route into Gondomar informs you that this is Portugal’s goldsmith capital. There are around 450 businesses producing jewellery in the city. Their products are sold around the globe.

    There is an obvious resonance here. Not just because Jota was a gem but because he needed working; we are not talking here about a sure thing, one of those kids who was only ever going to be a superstar. He was still playing for Gondomar at 17. Porto did not want him, hence the move to Pacos. His was a grinding, blue-collar path to the top. It made it all the more meaningful to those who followed it.

    “He was a humble man, someone who fought for everything he had in his life,” said Gondomar resident Maria Nogueira. “He was a symbol of the region.”

    She was stood outside the Matriz de Gondomar church. It was Friday afternoon, just before 4pm. The public wake for Jota and Silva was yet to start but already a large crowd had gathered. Some people strained for a view of the chapel, for a sight of the family. Others took shelter under trees.


    The scene outside the chapel in Gondomar

    When the doors opened, people formed a line. They waited in the afternoon heat: men in polo shirts, men with walking sticks, women with flowers, families. They kissed their neighbours and friends, shared pallid smiles. They came to leave wreaths, to say prayers, to say nothing at all, to be silenced by the senselessness of it all.

    “I just thought it was important to pay tribute,” said Fernando Eusebio, who wore a Porto shirt and admitted he did not know how he would react to seeing the coffins inside. Another man clutched a large bouquet to his chest. He said he was a childhood friend of Cardoso, Jota’s widow. The sentence got caught in his throat; he struggled to get the last words of it out at all.

    As the public entered, friends and relatives of the family began to depart. There was a girl, wrapped in a Portugal flag, crying. The Porto president Andre Villas-Boas was ashen-faced, as was Diogo Dalot, Jota’s Portugal team-mate. At the chapel’s exit, an elderly woman wiped away tears. Her husband stared into space.

    Their devastation was comprehensible. The scene inside — Jota’s parents sobbing, Cardoso stricken by grief — was one of almost unbearable sadness.

    When the church bells rang at 5pm, the queue was still growing, people arriving at the end of their work days, wearing suits and supermarket uniforms, exhausted but present. They kept coming, too, the line eventually winding around the side of the cemetery, the flow only slowing when the sun had finally begun to tire of its own vigil.


    Flowers and tributes outside the chapel in Gondomar

    The following day, the funeral would bring further emotion. New faces, too: the Liverpool delegation, more of Jota’s Portugal team-mates, flown in from the four corners of the globe. Ruben Neves and Joao Cancelo played in Florida on Friday night at the Club World Cup and were here at 10am on Saturday morning. It would be a world event — testament, in its way, to football’s reach, as well as to the breadth of lives touched by Jota.

    Being here, though, among the queuing locals, it was impossible not to think about roots: those that ground us, that keep us connected to where we come from, if we allow them to. It is obvious that Jota nourished his. Cherished them, too. That, far more than his ability as a footballer, made these people love him.

    For the family, there is only pain, as raw as it is unjust, a wound they cannot even yet fully comprehend, let alone cauterise. But later, you hope, that will soften into gratitude — for the 28 years they had with him, for the memories, for the beauty he gave not just to their lives but those of so many others.

    Waiting to enter the chapel and say a prayer for Jota, Maria Nogueira held a bunch of flowers with a note attached.


    Maria Nogueira’s flowers and message

    “Thank you, Diogo,” it read, “for making so many people happy.”

    (All photos: Jack Lang/The Athletic; Illustration: Demetrius Robinson / The Athletic; Top Photos: Rene Nijhuis/MB Media, Octavio Passos/Getty Images, Jack Lang/The Athletic)

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    July 6, 2025
  • One Year On: Rome 2024 World Masters Championships – A Historic Celebration of Table Tennis for All

    One Year On: Rome 2024 World Masters Championships – A Historic Celebration of Table Tennis for All





    One Year On: Rome 2024 World Masters Championships – A Historic Celebration of Table Tennis for All – International Table Tennis Federation

























    World Veterans Championships




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    July 6, 2025
  • In Sinaloa’s capital, news of a boxing scion’s arrest and allegations of cartel ties cause unease

    In Sinaloa’s capital, news of a boxing scion’s arrest and allegations of cartel ties cause unease

    CULIACAN, Mexico — Inside a sports arena in Sinaloa state’s capital, the crowd was sparse early on the card as young amateur boxers in puffy headgear threw punches and danced about the ring. Outside stood a bronze statue of Julio César Chávez in boxing trunks, one glove raised.

    The event Friday was organized by one of Chávez’s brothers and “The Legend” himself was advertised as a specially invited guest. But Chávez didn’t appear. It had been a difficult week for the family.

    Chávez’s eldest son, Julio César Chávez Jr., was arrested by U.S. immigration agents outside his home in Los Angeles on Wednesday, accused of overstaying his visa and lying on a green card application.

    But more significant here in Culiacan was that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security also noted that there was an active warrant for his arrest in Mexico for alleged arms and drug trafficking and suggested ties to the Sinaloa Cartel. The agency said he would be processed for expedited removal.

    The name Julio César Chávez in Culiacan is like saying Diego Maradona in Argentina. People stop and conversations begin.

    Chávez is the city’s idol and source of pride, known simply as “The Legend.” He went from a working class neighborhood along train tracks to the highest echelons of boxing fame and became a national hero.

    But when the questions turn to Chávez’s eldest son and the Sinaloa Cartel, conversation ends and eyes avert.

    There was a time when many in Culiacan would speak of the cartel that carries their state’s name, perhaps with euphemisms, but openly all the same, because its control was complete and for that they largely lived in peace.

    But since a bloody feud erupted between factions of the cartel last year, following the abduction of Ismael “El Mayo” Zambada to the United States by one of the sons of former leader Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán, it’s safer to avoid any mention at all.

    In the stands Friday night, the arrest of The Legend’s son, was on the minds of many, but discussed only in hushed voices.

    Óscar Arrieta, a sports reporter in Culiacan, covers boxing and said Chávez Jr.’s arrest had had a big impact in Culiacan, largely because the “harsh” way U.S. authorities linked him to organized crime.

    U.S. authorities did not detail the alleged ties between Chávez Jr. and the cartel other than to mention that he married a U.S. citizen who is the mother of a granddaughter of Guzmán.

    He mused at why if there had been a Mexican arrest warrant since 2023, hadn’t there been any effort to capture him. He was a very public figure, active on social media and for the past six months or more, training for a highly promoted fight in California.

    On Friday, Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum said that he had mostly been in the U.S. since the arrest warrant was issued.

    “I think it was also a way for the United States to expose the Mexican government in a way, but without a doubt much more impactful, because normally sports doesn’t mix with anything else, much less with organized crime,” Arrieta said.

    Culiacan’s boxing gyms had mostly been quiet since Thursday’s announcement of Chávez Jr.’s arrest, in preparation for Friday’s event.

    There had already been weigh-in for Friday’s fights and most fighters weren’t around.

    At one that was mostly covered outdoor spaces, teenagers tightly wrapped their wrists, bounced and shuffled, shadow boxing in a circle.

    Jorge Romero is a former professional boxer who trained under another Chávez brother. Now he’s a trainer at Sinaloa Autonomous University.

    Romero said he knows Chávez Jr., regards him “an excellent person, a great human being” who had really focused on his training ahead of his bout in California just a week ago. He expressed full support for him.

    Questions of ties between Chávez Jr. and organized crime, Romero said, were “too delicate” to touch. But in general, he said boxing and the cartel walked separate paths in Culiacan.

    “We don’t have anything to do with organized crime,” he said. “On the contrary, it’s a clean sport, very healthy from my point of view.”

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    July 6, 2025
  • Birnbeck Pier, cannabis arrests, wheelchair ‘attack’

    Birnbeck Pier, cannabis arrests, wheelchair ‘attack’

    Rachel Candlin

    BBC News, West of England

    Getty Images Looking across to Birnbeck Pier from the shore on an overcast day. The pier is dilapidated and looks neglectedGetty Images

    Here’s our weekly roundup of stories from across local websites in the West of England.

    We have a daily round up as well. Make sure you look out for it on the website and the local section of the BBC News app.

    What have been the big stories in the West this week?

    Swindon Advertiser reported on a 14-year-old child with disabilities who was pulled from his wheelchair by a student and then kicked and punched in the head. His mother said she was “heartbroken” after the incident at Commonweal School. A spokesperson for the school said they were taking the incident “very seriously”.

    A six-year-old boy from Burnham-on-Sea was said to be “cured” of epileptic seizures by pioneering neurosurgery, according to ITV West Country. Since having brain surgery at Bristol Children’s Hospital six months ago, Finley hasn’t had “a single seizure”.

    A video of the moment three men were arrested for running a same-day cannabis delivery service was a top post for Bristol Live.

    The RNLI’s decision to pull out of Birnbeck Pier restoration project has been a strong talking point this week, with significant negative reaction to the decision.

    Two rare Roman cavalry swords found near Chipping Camden – which led to the discovery of a settlement – was popular for Stroud News. According to Historic England the new evidence “will help us understand more about what happened around the period of the Roman conquest, which must have been a tumultuous time”.

    Top five local stories for the BBC in the West

    Something longer to read

    Bristol 24/7 has taken an in-depth look at the difficulties experienced by people affected by brain injury.

    Feature writer, Hannah Massoudi, talked to the Barton Hill based charity, Headway, which has been supporting survivors of brain injuries for more than 40 years.

    She spoke to Lindsay Forbes, whose partner Colin suffered a brain injury 19 years ago as a result of an unmotivated attack.

    Ms Forbes first approached Headway as she said there was “very little information about what to expect during the recovery process”.

    She says “one of the biggest reasons that those living with brain injuries are misunderstood is because many of the effects of brain injury are invisible and often stigmatised”.

    Explore more with our daily roundups

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    July 6, 2025
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