Category: 6. Sports

  • Pep expects smaller City squad after transfer window – Manchester City FC

    1. Pep expects smaller City squad after transfer window  Manchester City FC
    2. ‘Four or five’ – Pep Guardiola expects more Man City departures this month  Manchester Evening News
    3. Explained: Why Man City need to axe FIVE players before summer transfer window closes – with Pep Guardiola facing a race against time  Goal.com
    4. ‘They will all be leaving’ – Jack Grealish to lead five-man Man City exodus  Football Insider
    5. Man City in race against time to meet Premier League and Champions League rules  Daily Express

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  • Some people brag about it more than I do

    Some people brag about it more than I do

    Is Lyles in form?

    Were those comments a shot at Lyles?

    After all, Lyles being referred to as the “world’s fastest man” was based on him winning Olympic gold, admittedly the biggest crown in the 100m.

    But his 9.79 Paris time was still slower than last year’s world lead (9.77, also belonging to Thompson).

    “As athletes, our biggest competitors are ourselves and injuries,” Thompson added in Budapest before his 9.95-second win.

    Lyles can attest to that, having started his own season late. He’s raced in just two 100m races this year, at the London Diamond League — he came second in 10.00 seconds to Oblique Seville — and the heats of the USA Track & Field Outdoor Championships.

    While it’s an eagerly awaited rematch, is Lyles in the required form?

    The U.S. sprint star may be playing the long game, with the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo in September still ahead to wrap up the season.

    And the story might not be just Thompson versus Lyles.

    With Kenny Bednarek — with whom Lyles has also had recent disagreements —, Akani Simbine, Christian Coleman, Courtney Lindsey and Trayvon Bromell all also in the field, the Paris rematch might not take the headlines by the end of the race.

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  • Every word from Mikel’s pre-Man United presser | Press conference | News

    Every word from Mikel’s pre-Man United presser | Press conference | News

    Mikel Arteta has been speaking to the press ahead of our opening game of the Premier League season against Manchester United.

    During the press conference at the Sobha Realty Training Centre, Mikel was asked about the squad availability, facing the Red Devils and the success of our academy.

    Find out what he had to say with our transcript below!

    on how excited he is for the new season:
    I’m super excited, I can’t wait. It’s been a really productive pre-season. We’ve made such an evolution in the squad as well and we’re ready to go.

    on the mood in the place:
    The mood of the place, the energy around it, the enthusiasm that the boys, the staff came with from day one, now we’re going to do better, to keep improving as a team and to win. That’s what drives my energy and that’s why I’m so excited.

    on Leandro Trossard’s availability:
    I think he’s much better. I think he will be able to train again tomorrow and if that’s the case, he will be fit.

    Read more

    Quiz: All our Premier League opening day opponents

    on if we need to make a sales in the transfer window:
    I’ll leave that to Andrea [Berta] and the club. My main focus is just about performing, preparing the games in the best possible way and winning. Now we start the season, it’s been a long off-season, pre-season with the market and being so active in it.

    on starting the season with tough games:
    We need to play each other, we need to play at some point, and we’ll start at an incredible stadium with so much history and a beautiful way to start the season. We will go game-by-game and make the best preparations and then perform to earn the right to win the game.

    on the potential for winning the title:
    Yes, especially the consistency that we’ve shown in the last three years. Now the margins, we know how small they are, we know the competition as well has increased the level, with recruitment, with another year together and we’re going to have to win.

    on how many teams can win the Premier League:
    A lot, too many! And it’s getting stronger and stronger. There are teams that maybe you don’t put them on a piece of paper right now, but suddenly they will surprise everybody. The squads, the quality of the managers, the structure they have in the clubs, they are so strong. It’s going to be very difficult.

    on what to expect from Manchester United:
    They will be different as well. The manager will have more time with them, they have a pre-season, they make some really good signings as well, like anybody else. I think they strengthened and they will be better than last year, like the rest of the teams.

    on what made us sign Viktor Gyokeres:
    I can just talk about Viktor and how happy we are to have him. I think he’s going to have a tremendous impact in the team. The adaptation has been very, very good and we’re really happy to have him.

    on Odegaard being our captain:
    Well, my opinion is clear. It’s not just my opinion, it’s all the staff and especially the players. I asked them to vote the captain and I got the result yesterday. And by a mile, by a big, big 100 marks, everybody’s choosing the same person, which is Martin Odegaard, which is the most clear sign that you can have, how they feel about who has to be their captain to defend, improve and win the matches that we want to win. So, I mean, there’s no question about that.

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    Merino on helping our Spanish contingent settle

    on how much the club has supported him in the transfer window this summer:
    It’s not just supporting me, of course, but supporting the team, supporting the vision, the idea and especially the ambition. And the level that we are playing, the competition we have and what we expect to do. So, we have to improve the squad, we have to improve the quality and the depth of that squad. And we certainly have done it in a really great way.

    on getting the best version of Gyokeres:
    Well, we want to do everything. First of all, understanding the player and exposing the player to the conditions that he can fulfil his incredible potential. Then that’s going to be the key, and the good thing is that many players, many strikers, they have come from different leagues, they have come to the Premier League and been successful. And it’s for us, creating the right context for Viktor to do what he does best, which is to score goals.

    on standout memories against Manchester United:
    Well, it’s a lot. Some great memories. It’s history, you know. The clashes when I was younger as well, there were some massive characters as well, playing for both teams. And it created something different in those games. And now it is different, but I think it’s going to be super intense and very exciting.

    on if he’s as excited as he was ahead of previous seasons:
    I think it gets you more and more excited. And the more I spend time with the players and the staff, the more reason they give me to come every single day with a big smile on my face, with a lot of energy, I’m very enthusiastic about what we do and very privileged.

    on the chance to get wins from difficult games early on:
    Yes, 100 per cent. It’s a big opportunity to go to Old Trafford on day one and go there and play the way we want to play and win the game. That’s the focus and the energy.

    on if there is more pressure on us to win the title this season:
    You keep digging, digging, digging. You have to keep digging because one day, the gold is going to be there. That’s all the time, what I’ve been taught, I’ve been educated and that’s it. For three seasons, we have more points than any other team in this league. It’s incredible, that’s why we have all the consistency. Now we have to do it in a season, to earn one more point or the same amount of points and more goals different than any other team. That’s the objective.

    on having multiple young players available from our academy:
    Well, that shows the great work that has been done in the academy throughout the years. Especially because those players have come to the first team and performed at the highest level without any professional experience. And that’s a very different case to any other player at a big club that has been playing at 17, 18, 19, 20 with many other experiences before that that is long, so playing at different teams. So that shows again what the academy has done, the preparation of these boys,  the maturity of these boys, and as well the quality that we have in this squad to support the young players, to feel so comfortable immediately to perform at the highest level. So it’s a compliment for everybody at the club.

    on if Gyokeres is ready to start on Sunday:
    Yeah, he’s getting better and better every day. He’s normally a really fit player. It’s true that he hasn’t trained so much with us. He had those two moments in games when he’s participated and the feeling was very good. So let’s see what we do on Sunday. 

    on if he’s had to manage availability differently with Calafiori and Havertz:
    Well, especially because those two cases, they were players that were coming back from long-term injuries. So, we have to be very cautious throughout pre-season, especially when you start to travel abroad and there are so many conditions that change for those players. We have more players, more balance as well in terms of availability. We have improved that in relation to the individual qualities of players as well and it’s going to be key to maintain them for as long as we possibly can. Fit, available, at their best. 

    Read more

    Relive six classic away wins at Manchester United

    on if Zubimendi is available for Sunday:
    Yes, he had a great integration. As everybody can see this immediately, a very big impact on the team. I’m really happy and he will be fit. 

    on if it’s a fight between Gyokeres and Havertz for the number nine position:
    Well, it’s always good. I play with 11 players, there are going to be some players on the bench that are going to be used, some others that cannot be used, some players that we’re going to have to leave in the stands. That’s the level. That’s the next level that we’re going to face, something that we probably haven’t faced before and then I heard a lot that you have two players per position. Well, we have three and four because there are players that can play in different positions as well. So, it’s going to be about earning the right to play, to compete and when you don’t have the chance to do that, to cooperate in the right way with any teammate to improve the level. It’s going to happen to all of them because the season is going to be so demanding that the first week is going to be a little bit different. But the moment we start to play three times a week, it’s going to flow in a really natural way.

    on if we have enough in attacking midfield:
    I think we have great versatility, very different qualities in relation to the opposition as well. We can manipulate that and have some great cohesion within those units. So, I’m very happy with that. 

    on what he’s earned going into this season from last season’s reflections:
    It was a long list of things. First of all, with the amount of situations we have to deal with, I think the team showed an incredible capacity to adapt and win a lot of matches in a very different context. Something that is not common and I revised that in the last Premier League for 20 years and what happened. After that, how we have to evolve as well, the squad, the individuals, certain roles that have changed and it’s the moment to move away from that. And then what is the real deal? What are the things that we have to continue to do or do better to give us the best possible chance to win the major trophies? And that’s clear. 

    on the evolution of our midfield:
    There are a few in relation to the players that we have and their qualities. Now we have probably elements and possibilities that we never had before and some others that will emerge naturally that probably are not in the book. So that’s a really good weapon to have. 

    on the players voting for who our captain is:
    Especially because we change a lot and we change all the leadership groups because a lot of the players that were there, they are gone. So, we need to re-establish that, and it gives you so much information, how they feel about themselves and who they see as a leader and how they see the people that can join that leadership group.
    So, it was really interesting to analyse all the data and to gather information. 

    Read more

    Memorable debuts: Laca, Gabi, Freddie and Saliba

    on the captaincy qualities Martin has:
    We all see it different and if we’re going to talk about leadership and the kind of leaders, we can be here for hours. So at the end, what matters the most is how these guys feel about who needs to lead them, how they feel comfortable, who’s going to push them, who’s going to give them support when it’s happening. Basically, who do you want to represent the club and the team when we go out there and face any opposition? That’s the key.

    on tweaks to the rules in the Premier League and what happened last season:
    It was very particular, and it only lasts for a few weeks and we were really punished for those few weeks but hopefully it won’t happen again.
    I think they’ve been very clear, we have very good meetings with the referees when we came here and in the manager’s meeting as well. I think it’s very clear what to expect and wish everybody the best. I think we’re going to need the best of all of us and to have the best Premier League ever, which I think is going to happen, and hopefully we’re going to come on top of that.

    on if the rules will be implemented more consistently:
    I think, and a lot of the data says, that there have been many, many improvements as well in the last year or two and we need to reinforce that message and try that process and support it. 
     

    Copyright 2025 The Arsenal Football Club Limited. Permission to use quotations from this article is granted subject to appropriate credit being given to www.arsenal.com as the source.

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  • Argentina star Lionel Messi's India tour receives final approval – Mid-day

    1. Argentina star Lionel Messi’s India tour receives final approval  Mid-day
    2. Lionel Messi’s India tour gets final seal of approval, first stop is Kolkata  The Hindu
    3. Messi mania: Safety of fans, celebs top priority for promoters  National Herald
    4. Shubman Gill, Shah Rukh Khan, Virat Kohli may share stage with Lionel Messi at Kotla  Telegraph India
    5. Lionel Messi To Meet PM Modi On His ‘GOAT Tour Of India 2025’  Oneindia

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  • Guardiola provides fitness update ahead of Wolves – Manchester City FC

    1. Guardiola provides fitness update ahead of Wolves  Manchester City FC
    2. Man City XI vs Wolves: Latest team news, predicted lineup and injury updates for Premier League clash  London Evening Standard
    3. Man City get triple training boost before first Premier League game  Manchester Evening News
    4. Wolves vs Manchester City predictions, team news, betting tips, odds and Bet Builder  Racing Post
    5. Ederson, Savinho not part of Manchester City squad for Wolves match, confirms Guardiola  Sportstar

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  • Swiatek doesn’t know what to believe about Taylor Swift’s new album

    Swiatek doesn’t know what to believe about Taylor Swift’s new album

    Iga Swiatek has seen the theories. The Hologic WTA Tour’s biggest Taylor Swift fan is ready for October after the pop star’s recent announcement that her 12th studio album, The Life of a Showgirl, is coming out this fall. 

    Competing this week at the Cincinnati Open, Swiatek said that she was “awake, but wasn’t on the internet” when Swift dropped the news of the album at at 12:12 a.m. on Aug. 12 — via a teaser trailer of her upcoming appearance on the weekly sports podcast “New Heights,” hosted by Swift’s boyfriend and Kansas City Chiefs player Travis Kelce and his brother Jason.

    But catching the news after it broke did little to temper her excitement.

    “Oh my God,” Swiatek gushed on Tennis Channel with Steve Weismann on Wednesday when asked about her reaction to the news. “I’m just super happy. But first, I’m waiting for the podcast and we’ll see what she tells us … there’s a lot to think about and to be excited about.”

    Speculation on the track list, tone and tenor of the album — which was developed during the mega-hit global ‘Eras Tour’ last year — has already been spreading like wildfire online, and Swiatek says she’s been scrolling.

    “I heard some rumors that it might come out before October but I’m not sure,” she said, doubling down that she has no insider knowledge on what’s coming.

    “Swifties have a lot of theories, so I don’t know what to listen to, but I’m super excited and I hope it’s going to be a good one.”

    There’s one aspect of the album that’s confirmed, however: Its cover art was revealed in the aftermath of the announcement, and it centers a glittering image of Swift an orange and mint-green.

    And if Swiatek has her way, her apparel sponsor On might be working those colors into a match kit that’ll debut after the album’s release.

    “I think they’re quite set for the US Open — no orange there,” she said, “but I’ll ask them for the next ones!”

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  • Marshall Islands football team ‘proud’ of first ever match

    Marshall Islands football team ‘proud’ of first ever match

    Marshall Islands Soccer Federation The Marshall Islands' first international team pose for a group shot after facing off the US Virgin Islands on Thursday in Springdale, Arkansas. They are at the pitch, looking away from the camera.Marshall Islands Soccer Federation

    The Marshall Islands’ first international team took on the US Virgin Islands in Springdale, Arkansas

    A football team has said they “made history” of playing its first ever international match for its country.

    The Marshall Islands’ first faced off the US Virgin Islands on Thursday in Springdale, Arkansas.

    Despite a 4-0 loss to the recognised FIFA nation, the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation posted on Facebook to say it was “so proud of what was accomplished”.

    Head coach Lloyd Owers, from Banbury in Oxfordshire, previously said it was “definitely surreal” and that even the team “thought it wouldn’t happen”.

    Marshall Islands Soccer Federation A group of young boys wearing orange and pick sports vests over their t shirts are getting instruction from a their coach. He is wearing sunglasses and there are palm trees in the backgroundMarshall Islands Soccer Federation

    Lloyd Owers from Banbury was tasked to build the Marshall Islands’ first international team three years ago

    The Pacific Island nation is home to about 40,000 people and had previously been the self-proclaimed “last country on Earth without a football team”.

    Its first match formed part of the 2025 Outrigger Challenge Cup – the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation annual competition to create more opportunities for nations in our region to play competitive soccer and raise awareness of the sport.

    The team’s group shot after the game has an inscription “Whatever the score, so proud of what was accomplished. Tonight, we made history”.

    They will also be playing against Turks and Caicos.

    Marshall Islands Soccer Federation A team of young men pose on a pitch with a football and the flag of the Marsahall Islands - which is blue, with a white star and diagonal white and orange stripes. There is a small sports stand behind them and the sea beyond.Marshall Islands Soccer Federation

    The country used to be the self-proclaimed last nation on Earth without a football team

    The four team tournament in the US was organised by the Marshall Islands Soccer Federation, and is seen as first step towards the team joining FIFA and competing in World Cup qualifying matches.

    “We’ve got players that are coming from all different parts of the world, we’ve got a lot of US-based players that are experienced but we’re also combining them with players from the Marshall Islands,” Mr Owers said of the playing squad.

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  • ‘I am tough’ – Emma Raducanu on legacy of her US Open win, stalking ordeal and why therapy won’t help her | Emma Raducanu

    ‘I am tough’ – Emma Raducanu on legacy of her US Open win, stalking ordeal and why therapy won’t help her | Emma Raducanu

    For four arduous years, so much of Emma Raducanu’s life has played out in public. Every decision relating to her career has been dissected and debated. The most banal details surrounding her personal life have been transfigured into headline news. In order to find herself on and off the tennis court, Raducanu has had to learn how to tune out the noise, which at times can be deafening.

    Only one month ago at Wimbledon, the discourse surrounding the 22-year-old reached diabolical lows. Even though her on-court performances were strong, it was impossible to escape the speculation surrounding her personal life. In the bowels of center court at the Cincinnati Open, I offer my own blunt perspective: I have never cringed as much as I did while watching people trying to pry into her romantic relationships at the All England Club. “Yeah, and Cam’s questions, too,” Raducanu responds, laughing. “That was terrible. Terrible.”

    Raducanu was referring to her compatriot Cameron Norrie’s post-match press conference, when a reporter asked him whether he was dating Raducanu. Norrie, who was being supported in his player box that day by his long-term partner, was as baffled as he was bemused. For Raducanu, though, such brazen intrusiveness from strangers has simply become part of her everyday life. “I know, I know,” she says, smiling. “I guess I’m like, it comes with the territory, people being so curious. I think they’re more curious about this news than any tennis results and tennis news. But I just keep myself to myself, my private life to one side. It’s always funny when people try to find something out, but I try not to read into it so much.”

    That curiosity is not isolated to the internet and tabloids. When Raducanu is out in London, paparazzi photographers will find her, even when she is doing nothing more than stepping on to a 345 bus somewhere in Wandsworth. “It’s really freaky, because you don’t know that they’re there. And then you’ll see a photo of yourself the next day, and you’ll be like: ‘There’s no way they were there,’” she says.

    Emma Raducanu with the US Open trophy in 2021. Photograph: John G Mabanglo/EPA

    Considering her well-documented encounters with stalkers – one was arrested and handed a five-year restraining order after stealing items from her front door in 2021 and another fixated person followed her across four different countries earlier this year – Raducanu has genuine concerns regarding her safety: “I think after the Dubai incident, that was probably the worst [public attention] I’ve had,” she says. “I remember straight afterwards, I found it very difficult going out. I definitely had a bit of a leftover lag effect. But I’ve been a lot more astute, a lot more, I’d say, safe and have someone with me. I don’t really go out on my own as much. No solo walks. Just always having someone watching my back.”

    Everything leads back to those three fateful weeks at the US Open in the summer of 2021, where Raducanu became the first qualifier to win a grand slam title. The spoils of victory were significant but Raducanu’s rapid success yielded considerable challenges. Along with the difficult results and constant criticism, her body constantly betrayed her. In 2023, after struggling physically for a long time, she underwent surgeries on both wrists and her left ankle.

    While she tried to prove herself on the court, Raducanu says, people within her team would tell her she wasn’t tough: “I was obviously like: ‘Oh, no, I am tough enough.’” says Raducanu. “And it wasn’t good to hear, because I always prided myself on being a hard worker and being tough. And I believe I am. I actually think it was more the people around me that were maybe incorrect, and I think it led me down to having three surgeries and double wrist surgery, because I was overtraining and just covering it up, not saying anything, and not saying I was in pain, even when I was. So it was really tough to hear. But I think as I’ve grown with experience, I kind of realised my body a bit more and trusted myself a bit more.”

    Mentally, things were even more challenging. As she failed to follow up her breakthrough victory with similar results, there were times when her mind twisted her US Open triumph into a negative memory, the source of her struggles. It was not until this year that she understood how to focus on her improvement and daily work, however gradual, rather than comparing every result to the 2021 US Open. Still, it remains a work in progress. “It’s [comparisons to the US Open] something that never fully leaves you,” Raducanu says. “I think it’s been four years now, I don’t think it’s fully gone away. Maybe in a few years, maybe when I’m older, more mature, but it’s hard to put that aside completely. It’s always in the back of your mind, but it’s more just being aware of those thoughts and then not letting it crash your day or ruin the work that you’re doing, and bringing it back to what I’m doing now, and the process.”

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    Considering her many difficulties, an obvious question is whether sports psychology or therapy have been a part of her life over the past few years: “I’ve tried. I’ve tried,” she says. “I’ve been obviously recommended a lot to do it with what I went through. It was something that not many people, well, actually no one has gone through, which is probably the reason that I did like two sessions and I stopped. I was like: ‘Look, these guys, they don’t relate.’ And, to be honest, no other athlete has done what I’ve done, so I don’t know why I’m taking advice from them. So I was like: ‘OK, well, the only person who can help me is myself.’”

    For a long time the four defining cities of Raducanu’s life were listed in her biographies across her social media platforms. Her parents, Ion and Renee, originally come from Bucharest, Romania, and Shenyang, China, respectively while she was born in Toronto, Canada, and grew up in London, England. Her mother’s solo immigration from China to Canada has been an inspirational tale throughout her life. “I would say it’s funny when people ask where you’re from,” she says. “Obviously, I feel British. I’ve always grown up there, But there are certain things, the way I think, I don’t think I am completely. So you have a little question about your identity. But I try not to read too much into it and try to just take the best from all the different worlds that I’ve been exposed to and grown up in.”

    Regardless of the subject at hand, Raducanu frequently notes the support and significance of her parents. She describes her upbringing as rigid and strict, but their tough love has made her the person she is today: “I was always brought up with really high standards, high expectations of myself, not much sympathy,” says Raducanu. “So when I was younger, that was tough, and even now. But I think it really shaped me to be the player I am, the person I am; pretty down to earth. They never got impressed by anything glitzy or high or anything.”

    Emma Raducanu during her narrow defeat by Aryna Sabalenka in the Cincinnati Open. Photograph: Dylan Buell/Getty Images

    Both Raducanu’s parents worked in finance and they passed on their numerical, logical mindsets. Over the past few years, however, part of her evolution as an adult has been understanding herself as a person. Her injury layoff in 2023, which initially seemed like a catastrophe, turned out to be essential for her personal development. Raducanu spent her time away from tennis travelling, including a long trip to China, trying different hobbies and gradually learning more about herself. She learned that she is also creative, which has significantly influenced her playing style on the court. “I kind of discovered the more artistic side – the piano, the painting, the reading, the philosophy, all of those things,” she says. “And I really think it opened my eyes to another world. Now I’m kind of seeing how I can find an area where those two intersect, and have the creative side, but also have the quantitative side.”

    With age and experience, Raducanu also has a greater understanding of her preferences when making general decisions. While discussing her decision making, Raducanu’s mind shifts to another source of criticism: her coaching history. “I think I’m a lot more clear on what I do and don’t like,” she says. “I think the experiences that I’ve had with different coaches – people love to say I’ve had so many different coaches but, if I went into the details of a lot of them, people would not be kind of saying the same things. I just don’t do that, because I don’t want to ‘out’ these people. So keep it to myself.”

    Is it ever tempting? “I would say, like, when you see things and you’re like: ‘Oh, Emma on her ninth coach’ or something, I’m like: ‘Guys, come on.’ Certain ones don’t count. If you’ve had a trial, you don’t have to carry on after the trial. A few have been trials, a few have been other situations. And I just try and take the high road,” she says. Then she laughs. “And try to do what the royal family would do.”

    After years of rolling with the punches and gradually coming to understand herself, Raducanu seems to finally be in a positive place again. She speaks effusively about the great enjoyment she has found in her consistent daily work and she has thrown herself into becoming the best player she can be each day. Raducanu’s results are reflective of that shift and her ranking is clearly on the rise. Her time in Cincinnati, her first week with her new coach, Francisco Roig, ended with a colossal three-hour battle with Aryna Sabalenka, the world No 1, where she narrowly lost 7-6 in the final set. Over the next few days, she will return to New York for the US Open more self-assured than she has been since she won the title.

    Our second conversation ends with a final question on Raducanu’s ambitions for the next few years beyond her results. After a beat, she shrugs. The hope, she says, is that the passion and joy she now feels each day about her daily work will endure. “I want to continue for the next few years, to just keep enjoying because I would rather not do anything else or be anywhere else,” she says, shrugging. “I see my friends, like, somewhere in the south of France, and they’re chilling on a boat or whatever, and I’m just like: ‘OK, well, it looks amazing,’ but when I’m putting in double session practices with the people around laughing, that fills me up so much more. So I’m really happy to have gotten to this place and [I want] to just continue that.”

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  • UCI fails to confirm rule clarification request despite teams tracking system co-operation

    UCI fails to confirm rule clarification request despite teams tracking system co-operation

    We are shocked and disappointed by the UCI’s decision to disqualify several teams, including ours, from the Tour de Romandie Féminin.

    Earlier this week, all affected teams sent formal letters to the UCI expressing support for rider safety but raising serious concerns about the unilateral imposition of a GPS tracking device to just one of the riders per team.

    We made clear that:

    • We would not select a rider ourselves, nor install, remove, or maintain the device.
    • The UCI or its partner was free to select a rider and install the device at their own liability if they believe they are in their right to do so.

    Despite our cooperation and the existence of a proven and collaborative safety tracking system already tested successfully in other major races (fully operational for the whole peloton and offered to the UCI), the UCI has chosen to impose this measure without clear consent, threaten disqualification, and now exclude us from the race for not selecting a rider ourselves. The reason why they don’t want to nominate a rider themselves is still unknown and unanswered.

    Despite multiple requests by the teams over the last two days, the UCI commissaires were unable to demonstrate on the basis of which precise UCI rule teams are obligated to discriminate one rider against other riders in terms of obligations (except for officially refering to an email of the teams’ union) but have nevertheless decided to carry on and disqualify the teams with their riders.

    This action disregards the rights of teams and riders, applies the measure in a discriminatory manner, and contradicts the UCI’s own stated commitment to dialogue with stakeholders.

    We are always at the forefront to make cycling a safer sport, but it should be achieved through collaboration, not coercion.


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  • Official Weigh-In Results | UFC 319: Du Plessis vs Chimaev

    Official Weigh-In Results | UFC 319: Du Plessis vs Chimaev

    UFC 319: DU PLESSIS vs CHIMAEV will take place Saturday, August 16 at United Center with the main card at 10 p.m. ET/7 pm PT on ESPN+ PPV. The prelims will be available on ESPN (joined in progress at 7pm ET), ESPN Deportes and Disney+, as well as simulcast in English and Spanish on ESPN+, at 8 pm ET/5 pm PT. The early prelims will kick off at 6 pm ET/3 pm PT on ESPN+ and UFC Fight Pass.

    How To Watch UFC 319 In Your Country

    Main event scheduled for five rounds. All other bouts scheduled for three rounds.

    UFC 319: Du Plessis vs Chimaev Official Weigh-In Results:


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