Category: 6. Sports

  • WOC 2025: Qualification kicked off the championships in Finland

    WOC 2025: Qualification kicked off the championships in Finland

    The World Orienteering Championships in Finland kicked off on Tuesday morning with the qualification for Wednesday’s middle distance.

    Here, the athletes were divided into three heats per gender with the goal of finishing in the top 15 to qualify for the final.

    And from the start, they were thrown into demanding Finnish terrain in the race, which was held right across from the WOC event center in Tahko.

    An challenging area with many details and many short legs made up the first part of the courses, which today was 3.3 kilometers for women and 3.9 kilometers for men before ending down a ski slope at the finish area.

    The women’s heat winners in today’s qualification were Natalia Gemperle (SUI), Simona Aebersold (SUI) and home favorite Venla Harju.

    On the men’s side, the Swiss were also strong. Here, the reigning middle distance world champion Matthias Kyburz was fastest in heat 1, while Fabian Aebersold (SUI) and Kasper Fosser (NOR) won the other heats.

    Find results, GPS-tracking and the livestream from today’s qualification in IOF LIVE.


    Timo Sild (EST) was third in heat 1 today. By Kristina Lindgren

    Wednesday’s Middle distance final takes place in Neulamäki close to the host city Kuopio.

    The first start is at 13:40 EEST (UTC +3) and the TV broadcast begins at 14:30 and runs until 18:20.

    Find all you need to follow the Middle final in IOF LIVE

    Reigning middle distance World Champions from Switzerland two years ago are Tove Alexandersson (SWE) and Matthias Kyburz (SUI).

    Watch the WOC 2023 Middle distance in YouTube here

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  • All 13 teams at LIV Golf Andalucia

    All 13 teams at LIV Golf Andalucia

    4. STINGER GC

    At LIV Golf Dallas, Stinger GC charged on Sunday, shooting 5-under as a team to finish in 4th place on the team leaderboard, narrowly missing out on their first podium finish since LIV Golf Hong Kong. The team was led by a resurgent performance from their captain, Louis Oosthuizen, who finished T2 after coming up short in a four-man playoff won by Patrick Reed.

    Oosthuizen’s revival comes at a perfect time for the Stingers. The South African is a great fit for Valderrama and finished T4 at LIV Golf Andalucía last season. Oosthuizen’s teammate, Dean Burmester, is slowly rounding into form, having finished T23 in Virginia and T18 in Dallas. If Burmester can build off those performances this week, he will form a formidable duo with Oosthuizen. Branden Grace, who’s struggled for most of the last two seasons, may also be finding some form. He finished T19 in Virginia and T26 and Dallas, where he gained 0.7 strokes per round on approach, his best performance in the category since LIV Golf Singapore in March. At a golf course that favors strategy and precision, I believe the Stingers can contend this week.

    5. FIREBALLS GC

    This may feel like a disrespectful spot in the power rankings for Fireballs GC, who are the defending champions, but their lack of recent form is difficult to ignore. After three straight victories in Adelaide, Hong Kong and Singapore, the Fireballs have missed out on a podium finish in five consecutive events. Sergio Garcia, who of course won this event last year, has struggled of late. His best finish since LIV Golf Miami in April (3rd) was a T25 finish at LIV Golf Dallas. Last week, the Fireballs captain missed the cut at the BMW International Open on the DP World Tour.

    David Puig has certainly been a bright spot for the Fireballs. The 23-year-old finished T13 in Dallas after missing LIV Golf Virginia with an injury and finished T11 at the BMW international Open on the DP World Tour last week. Abraham Ancer was also extremely helpful in Dallas where he finished T16 and contended for most of the week before slipping down the leaderboard on Sunday.

    With the question marks surrounding Garcia, even at his favorite course, and lackluster recent play from newly acquired Josele Ballester, the Fireballs will look to bounce back in Spain.

    6. RIPPER GC

    Since their win at LIV Golf Miami followed by a runner-up finish at LIV Golf Mexico City, Ripper GC has been on a relative cold streak, failing to finish better than 5th in the team standings in their last three events.

    A bounce back week for Ripper GC could be in store at Valderrama if their captain, Cameron Smith, can find some of the form that made him one of the best players in the world over the past handful of seasons. Smith finished T6 at LIV Golf Andalucía last year and T12 the year before.

    Lucas Herbert, who earned medalist honors at the West Lancashire Open Championship qualifier last week, should be a strong contender this week. The Australian is having a strong season and is looking to win his first LIV Golf individual title.

    Marc Leishman , who won LIV Golf Miami earlier this year, finished T10 at Valderrama last season and enters the week having gained strokes on approach in six consecutive starts.

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  • British and Irish Lions 2025: Lions need to be ruthless against Brumbies

    British and Irish Lions 2025: Lions need to be ruthless against Brumbies

    In the minutes before the Lions ran out to play the Queensland Reds in Brisbane, Maro Itoje gathered his players together in the dressing room and appealed to their inner grunt.

    The captain made a point about wanting to play hard and direct rugby. “Get us through the front door,” he demanded of his team. “Forwards – set the tone with our physicality.”

    And that’s the ongoing confusion with these Lions. They have all the artillery they need to blast through the guts of any team in Australia, but they just haven’t done it nearly often enough.

    Head coach Andy Farrell has said regularly that the Lions are absolutely at their best when driving at the heart of the opposition and then, when they have them beaten up, playing from there. It’s like that old line about the first step to making chicken soup – catch a chicken.

    And yet against the Waratahs they were still shovelling the ball out the backline without doing the hard yards up front. They should be better than this. They are better than this.

    Last month, Itoje addressed some of the side-to-side stuff the Lions delivered in the defeat by Argentina and called it “tippy-tappy”. And it’s still a bit tippy-tappy.

    Now that the Test series is looming on the horizon, maybe they’re about to unload. Maybe now is the time the hounds of hell are unleashed and the gameplan shifts to a more balanced and more belligerent version of what we’ve seen so far.

    Before the Brumbies game, Itoje was asked if more direct rugby was in the offing. “That’s definitely the ambition,” he replied.

    “Rugby doesn’t change too much, whether it’s under-14s rugby or the Lions. You have to go forward. You have to earn the right – the famous saying – to go wide. And that is definitely the case for us. We need to punch holes, get forward, then space opens up, wherever that may be.”

    Does he feel they’ve been too lateral in their attack on this tour?

    “At times, perhaps. At times we’ve been very good in playing direct and playing through teams. But at times we probably look to go wide before we earn the right.”

    And going wide before earning the right to go wide is why they ran into so much trouble against the Waratahs, who were waiting for them. The amount of handling errors from exceptionally talented players was maddening – not quite self-defeating, but a little too close for comfort.

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  • Bazball’s nine biggest blunders: Where do Edgbaston, Shoaib Bashir and the reverse theory rank? And why should one controversial decision NOT be on the list?

    Bazball’s nine biggest blunders: Where do Edgbaston, Shoaib Bashir and the reverse theory rank? And why should one controversial decision NOT be on the list?

    England’s Bazballers have given their fans some amazing moments since Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum joined forces in 2022.

    Following a harrowing run of one win in 17 Tests under Joe Root and Chris Silverwood, the Bazball era has delivered 24 wins from 38 matches – the highest win percentage of any country in world cricket in that time.

    But among the highs, there have also been some clangers. Stokes and McCullum’s daring nature means the risks are often as high as the rewards, and that can backfire.

    Here, Wisden Editor LAWRENCE BOOTH looks at the nine worst Bazball blunders – which do you agree and disagree with, which was the worst, and are there any you would add to the list? 

    1. Enforcing the follow-on at Wellington

    When New Zealand, 1-0 down with one to play, slipped to 103 for seven in reply to England’s 435 for 8 at Wellington, there could be only one winner.

    But Tim Southee smashed 73 off 49 balls to get the hosts to 209, at which point Ben Stokes enforced the follow-on. Mistake.

    Had England batted again, with a lead of 226, they would have won easily. Instead, they offered New Zealand their only conceivable route back into the game.

    And they gratefully took it, reaching 483 in their second innings, then bowling England out for 256 to win by one run.

    It deprived Stokes’s team of a fourth successive series win heading into the Ashes, and raised questions about their desire to get on the golf course. Clanger rating: 7/10

    England became just the fourth team to lose a Test after enforcing the follow-on, at Wellington in 2023, when they came up one run short

    2. Rushing Jonny Bairstow back for the Ashes

    Bairstow ended up enjoying a good series in 2023, thrashing a memorable 99 not out at Old Trafford and an important 78 at The Oval. His glovework, too, improved.

    But he wasn’t match fit at the start of the series, when he still seemed to have problems diving low to his left, following the awful fracture he suffered on the golf course.

    That meant he failed to go for an edge provided by Usman Khawaja off Jimmy Anderson at the start of Australia’s pursuit of 281 at Edgbaston. Khawaja anchored the chase with a five-hour 65, and Australia won by two wickets.

    It left England needing to win three of the last four Tests to regain the Ashes, but they were scuppered by the Manchester weather. Bairstow’s body, more than Stokes’s first-evening declaration, proved the difference. Clanger rating: 7/10

    3. Happy hookers

    One-nil down after the thriller at Edgbaston, England had their chance at Lord’s when Nathan Lyon tore a calf muscle with the scoreboard reading 182 for one in reply to Australia’s 416.

    But instead of forcing the Australians’ three frontline seamers to work for their wickets while the spinner was in hospital, England walked headlong into a trap.

    Faced with a barrage of bouncers, they cheerfully hooked their way to defeat, despite Stokes’s second-innings fireworks. It was game-management of the most thoughtless kind. Clanger rating: 8/10

    Harry Brook, well set on 50, falls into Australia's trap and hooks Mitchell Starc down the throat of Pat Cummins at Lord's. England lost the match by 43 runs to go 2-0 down in the Ashes

    Harry Brook, well set on 50, falls into Australia’s trap and hooks Mitchell Starc down the throat of Pat Cummins at Lord’s. England lost the match by 43 runs to go 2-0 down in the Ashes

    4. Reverse, reverse!

    Then, as now, England and India were all square at 1-1 heading to the third Test at Rajkot. And when they reached 224 for two in reply to India’s 445, they had manoeuvred themselves into a position of strength.

    Instead, Joe Root played perhaps the most notorious shot of the Bazball era, reverse-scooping Jasprit Bumrah into the hands of Yashasvi Jaiswal in the slips.

    England collapsed to 319 and ended up losing by 434 runs. What made the shot harder to understand was the absence that day of India’s No 1 spinner, Ravichandran Ashwin, who was visiting his sick mother.

    Shades of Nathan Lyon and Lord’s… Clanger rating: 8.5/10

    5. Taking liberties at the Oval

    England arrived in Kennington for the final Test of the 2024 summer hoping to pull off their first clean sweep in a home season for 20 years.

    But the selection of Leicestershire’s young left-arm seamer Josh Hull, after a dreadful time at county level, suggested they were not taking Sri Lanka as seriously as they should have done.

    Hull bowled well enough, but dropped a crucial catch as the tourists exploited some sloppy cricket to romp to an eight-wicket win, and ensure England’s summer ended on a needless low. Clanger rating: 6/10

    Josh Hull, on his Test debut, drops a catch off Dhananjaya de Silva at the Oval. Sri Lanka went on to win by eight wickets

    Josh Hull, on his Test debut, drops a catch off Dhananjaya de Silva at the Oval. Sri Lanka went on to win by eight wickets

    6. Falling asleep in Rawalpindi

    In the decisive third Test in Pakistan in October, the hosts were struggling at 177 for seven in reply to England’s 267.

    The jugular beckoned, but Ben Stokes went curiously defensive, allowing Saud Shakeel to push singles at will while tailenders Noman Ali and Sajid Khan had fun at the other end.

    It later emerged that Stokes’s mind was, understandably, on other things – he had become too fixated on his own recovery from a hamstring injury and his family home back in Castle Eden had been burgled.

    Pakistan put on 167 for the last three wickets, and cruised to a series-clinching win, by which time Stokes had apologised to team-mates for his grumpiness. Clanger rating: 6/10

    Noman Ali and Sajid Khan tortured England with the bat, then the ball, as they claimed 19 of the tourists' 20 wickets in the third Test victory at Rawalpindi in October last year

    Noman Ali and Sajid Khan tortured England with the bat, then the ball, as they claimed 19 of the tourists’ 20 wickets in the third Test victory at Rawalpindi in October last year

    7. Mustn’t upset India

    England’s desire to stay on the right side of India meant an agreement by which centrally contracted ECB cricketers who had signed on the IPL’s dotted line would have to see out the tournament.

    And so it was that Jacob Bethell, who had shone at No 3 in his first Test series over the winter in New Zealand, continued to warm the bench for Royal Challengers Bengaluru while England took on Zimbabwe at Trent Bridge.

    Needless to say, Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope each made a hundred, blocking Bethell’s return against India.

    And at Edgbaston, Crawley and Pope managed 43 runs in four innings between them as England’s top order caved in. It all felt so self-inflicted. Clanger rating: 6/10

    8. Bowling first at Edgbaston

    Let’s be honest: England got away with the tactic at Headingley because India’s tail collapsed so feebly in both innings.

    But at Edgbaston last week, Stokes pushed his luck, bowling once again against an Indian side who had learned their lesson and stiffened their tail.

    It’s not unreasonable for England to say they didn’t get the conditions they were promised, but could they not have assessed the surface for themselves?

    At least Brendon McCullum had the good grace to admit they got it wrong. But where does it leave them if they win the toss at Lord’s? Clanger rating: 7/10

    England were blown away on a road of a pitch at Edgbaston, losing by a mammoth 336 runs

    England were blown away on a road of a pitch at Edgbaston, losing by a mammoth 336 runs

    9. Sticking with Shoaib

    Perhaps more than any other player, Shoaib Bashir encapsulates the Bazball ethos: picked in part on a hunch, he has been made to feel ‘10ft tall’, as per the dressing-room mantra, by a management team who believe his natural attributes of height and bounce will one day translate into a match-winning off-spinner.

    And he has had his moments, not least against West Indies and Zimbabwe, both at Trent Bridge.

    But in 11 of the 21 innings in which he has bowled more than 15 overs, he has conceded at least 100. Of spinners with at least 50 Test wickets, his economy rate of 3.80 is the joint-highest in the history of the game.

    India are milking him. Australia could murder him. And all because he has potential, which could be years from fruition. Clanger rating: 6/10

    India are milking Shoaib Bashir's bowling and Australia could murder it Down Under this winter

    India are milking Shoaib Bashir’s bowling and Australia could murder it Down Under this winter

    Mulder and sullied 

    South Africa’s stand-in captain Wiaan Mulder will go down in history as the man who declared on himself with just 34 needed to break Brian Lara’s Test record of 400 not out against England in Antigua.

    Mulder had 367 at lunch on the second day of the second Test against Zimbabwe at Bulawayo, but called it a day with the scoreboard reading 626 for five.

    He later explained: ‘For someone of that stature to keep that record is pretty special. I think if I get the chance again, I would probably do the same thing.’

    Excuse me? Zimbabwe are a full member of the ICC, this was a five-day Test match, and there were 11 sessions left to complete victory. (Sure enough, Zimbabwe were soon following on).

    So why be so squeamish? Matthew Hayden wasn’t when he took advantage of Zimbabwe’s bowling to beat Lara’s 375 in 2003.

    Garfield Sobers had no compunction in flaying a weakened Pakistan attack for 365 at Kingston in 1957-58. Records exist to be broken and Mulder has just passed up his crack at eternity.

    Wiaan Mulder somehow found an excuse not to break a world record for South Africa

    Wiaan Mulder somehow found an excuse not to break a world record for South Africa

    Ashes arms race falling flat 

    Last week, this column looked at the struggles of Australia’s top order – and that was before teenage opener Sam Konstas scored 25 and 0 in the second Test against West Indies in Grenada.

    England fans, though, might have welcomed Cameron Green’s second-innings 52, as it may persuade Australia’s selectors to keep him at No 3 for the Ashes.

    And yet England are in no position to titter, what with the continued inconsistency of Zak Crawley and Ollie Pope.

    The pre-Ashes phoney war is beginning to feel like a reverse arms race.

    Shakib’s warning for Sai 

    Surrey have signed Indian slow left-armer Sai Kishore for two championship matches as they look to win a fourth title on the bounce. But these short-term arrangements don’t always work out.

    Last summer, Shakib Al Hasan played one match for Surrey, ended up on the losing side at Taunton, and was then reported by the umpires for throwing. Here’s hoping Kishore enjoys better luck.

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  • Holting Nilsson & Andersson, Anouk & Zoe debut in top 10 of World Ranking

    20-year-old Jacob Holting Nilsson and 19-year-old Elmer Andersson, coached by the distinguished Rasmus Jonsson, reached another important milestone in their young team’s journey. In Gstaad, they started from the qualifications and made it all the way to the second place on the podium, earning their first Elite-level hardware. The silver came with 1,100 World Ranking points, the highest amount they have collected from a single tournament. Their new ninth best result was dropped from their score, so they netted 800 points towards a new total of 4,880, which lifted them seven positions to number 10, the highest this Swedish duo has ever reached.

    Gold medalists Cherif Younousse & Ahmed Tijan of Qatar, former World Ranking leaders, now climbed two spots from last week’s number seven to return among the top five for the first time since October 2023. They pocketed the 440-point difference between the 1,200 points that came with last week’s gold and their fifth-place result at Gstaad 2024 and improved to a 5,720 total.

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  • OFFICIAL RULES OF THE PARIS 1 YEAR ANNIVERSARY PRIZE DRAW (“Rules”)

    Article 3: Draw Key Stages

    3.1 Access to the Draw

    3.1.1 Users may access the Draw via the Platform by filling in and submitting the Registration Form.

    3.2 Entry Period 25th July – 15th August

    3.2.1 The Draw period commences on 25th July 14:00 pm CET Central European Time (“CET”) and shall end on 15th August 13:30pm CET (“Draw Period”).

    3.2.2 Only Users who successfully complete and submit the Registration Form during the Draw Period shall be eligible to participate in the Draw. Registration outside of the Draw Period shall not constitute valid entry into the Draw. Entries received outside of the Draw Period shall therefore be automatically disqualified.

    3.3 Entry details and mechanism

    When a User enters the Platform they move to the voting page.

    Users will need to vote on one of five videos from selected moments from the Paris. Users can click the video they wish to put forward to vote. When a User has cast his/her vote to be able to get into the Draw the Winner will need to fill in a data collection form which asks for email, place of residence and necessary consents (confirmation of age, agreement to T&Cs and optional IOC Marcomms).

    To be eligible to win, the User needs to be a resident of the following territories: GERMANY, the United Kingdom, BRAZIL, INDIA, MEXICO, JAPAN, FRANCE AND USA.

    For five more chances to win, a User can fill in an IOC survey with five questions and then submit his/her responses. Only people resident in Germany, the United Kingdom, Brazil, India, Mexico, Japan, France or USA are eligible to win. Completion of the survey is optional and can be skipped by the User. Your non-completion of the survey will not affect your participation in this promotion. The questions are a combination of drop downs, checkboxes and free text fields. Completed surveys will enter the User five more times to the promotion, improving the chance of winning by five times.

    When Users complete the experience, they are thanked for entering and offered links /CTAs to other Olympic experiences.

    3.4 Selection of Winners

    3.4.1 All eligible Users who participate in the Draw shall have the opportunity to be selected as a winner (each a “Winner” and collectively the “Winners”).

    3.4.2 There shall be 5 Winners in total.

    3.4.3 The Winners shall be selected by random draw performed by a computer process from all eligible entries within approximately seven (7) days of the end of the applicable Draw Period (“Prize Draw”).

    3.4.4 Each eligible User who participates in the Draw shall receive one (1) entry into the Prize Draw, and five (5) additional ones if they complete the IOC survey. The User is eligible to win only one (1) Prize.

    3.4.5 Actual odds of winning depend on the number of eligible entries received during the Draw Period.

    3.5 Notification of Winners

    3.5.1 NDL and/or the IOC will notify the Winners by e-mail within approximately seven (7) days after the Draw Period to the e-mail address provided by the User when submitting the entry form (“Winner Notification”).

    3.5.2 Neither NDL nor the IOC will be responsible for any undelivered Winner Notification, including any Winner Notification that is not received because of a Winner’s privacy or spam filter settings.

    3.6 Claiming the Prize

    3.6.1 A Winner will be notified of the details of their Prize in the Winner Notification.

    3.6.2 If the User has won a Prize, the Winner must follow the link provided in the Winner Notification and respond to the Winner Notification by providing the details required to claim their Prize (including delivery address and contact details of the Winner) within seven (7) days of the date on which the NDL/IOC sends the Winner Notification, unless the local law or regulations of the Winner’s jurisdiction of residence require that prize winners must have a longer period of time to claim their prize. In such cases, Winners will be required to explain to the IOC what the requirement in their jurisdiction is and provide evidence that they reside in this jurisdiction.

    3.6.3 Prizes will be delivered within sixty (60) days of date on which NDL sends the Winner Notification and will only be delivered to addresses in the Eligible Territories.

    3.6.4 A Prize may not be claimed by a third party on a Winner’s behalf. The IOC does not accept any responsibility if a Winner is not able to take up a Prize.

    3.6.5 All potential Winners are subject to verification of eligibility and compliance with these Rules. Winners may be required to legally declare their eligibility and their compliance with these Rules.

    3.6.6 In the event of any dispute as to an entry, the authorised account holder of the relevant email address will be deemed to be the entrant. A potential Winner may be required to show proof of being the authorised account holder for the relevant email before they may claim their Prize. The IOC reserves the right to disqualify any potential Winner who is not able to show such proof and award the Prize to the next eligible Winner selected in accordance with these Rules.

    3.6.7 If any Winner Notification or Prize is returned as undeliverable, or if a Winner does not provide the details required to claim their Prize within ten (10) days of the date on which NDL sent the Winner Notification (unless the local advertising regulations of the Winner’s home jurisdiction require that prize winners must have a longer period of time to claim their prize – see clause 3.5.2), or if a Winner declines their Prize, or if a Winner is disqualified, found to be ineligible or in breach of these Rules, such Prize will be forfeited and may (at the IOC’s sole discretion) be awarded to the next User who is selected as Winner in accordance with these Rules. In the event of Prize forfeiture, the IOC shall not be liable to the Winner (nor to any other entrant) and no compensation will be given to that Winner.

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  • Preview: ACT Brumbies v The British & Irish Lions

    Preview: ACT Brumbies v The British & Irish Lions

    As the Wallaby Test series draws ever closer, the Qatar Airways British & Irish Lions Tour to Australia 2025 heads to the capital for a clash with the Brumbies in Canberra.

    Fresh from making it a hat-trick of wins on Australian soil, The British & Irish Lions now have just two more matches before the Test series gets underway.

    For Head Coach Andy Farrell, that means another look at potential Test combinations, as he finetunes the side that will run out in Brisbane for the first Test.

    They take on a Brumbies side who triumphed in this fixture 12 years ago, Tevita Kuridrani with the sole try in a 14-12 success.

    Maro Itoje will captain the Lions this time around, with an enticing half-back pairing of Jamison Gibson-Park and Finn Russell, their second start after playing in the win over the Reds.

    Elsewhere, Ollie Chessum is given a chance to show what he can do at blindside flanker, while Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose start together for the first time in the midfield on this Tour.

    While they will be missing a number of front line Wallabies, it is still a Brumbies team featuring many of the players who helped them reach the semi-finals of Super Rugby Pacific.

    So the Lions will need to be at their best to remain unbeaten in Australia on this Tour.

    Where to watch

    Sky Sports will be showing all the action live in the UK, Ireland and Gibraltar throughout this Tour.

    Welsh language channel S4C will broadcast extensive same-day highlights of each game every evening.

    For a full breakdown, click here.

    What they said

    Brumbies coach Stephen Larkham said of the Hooper brothers: “It’s been amazing to watch the growth of both Tom and Lachie over the past few years. And it’s special that they may get the opportunity to play alongside each other in a Brumbies shirt on Wednesday night.

    “Not only that, but it’s against a world-class team in the British & Irish Lions, who tour our country only every 12 years. They’ll be chomping at the bit to contribute positively to the team.

    “The boys have been back in training for a couple of weeks and they are aware of how big an opportunity this is for them to take on the Lions. We’re under no illusions at the challenge that lies ahead, they are an incredibly strong and powerful side.”

    British & Irish Lions Head Coach Andy Farrell said: “In 2013 the Brumbies beat The British & Irish Lions in Canberra and this year they were the leading Australian team in Super Rugby – so we are fully aware of the challenge in front of us.

    “It will also be a special occasion for Mack Hansen as he returns to his hometown and gets the opportunity to play for and represent the Lions against some of his old teammates.”

    Key Battle Tom Hooper v Ollie Chessum

    The battle of the blindsides has the potential to be very influential on Test selection for both teams.

    Tom Hooper is a back-rower capable of filling in at lock when required, while Ollie Chessum is more of a lock who has it in him to switch back to the back row if necessary.

    Hooper was used off the bench against Fiji last weekend, and has come straight back into this encounter – his last for the Brumbies before he heads north to play for Exeter Chiefs.

    Chessum, meanwhile, gets his first start of the Tour at blindside flanker, a role previously filled by Tadhg Beirne. With his size and work-rate, Chessum should equip himself comfortably in the lineout and around the park as the Lions search for the perfect back-row balance.

    Should Chessum holds his own against the Brumbies, he will start to put serious pressure on in the race for a Test spot.

    Oval Insights

    • There is no Welsh involvement in the matchday squad for the first time in over a century. No Welshman toured Argentina in any of the three non-test playing tours in 1910, 1927 and 1936, whilst the sole Wales representative on the 1899 tour to Australia, centre Gwyn Nichols missed only two games, against Mount Morgan on 11 July and New England on 25 July.

    • Lions have played ACT on three previous occasions, in the amateur era in 1989 at Seiffert Oval in nearby Queanbeyan, winning 41-25 and twice against the Brumbies at GIO Stadium in 2001, winning 30-28 and in 2013 losing 12-14.

    • The Lions have played two other fixtures in the ACT, beating the Combined ACT/NSW Country side 47-3 in 1950 and NSW Country Eagles 6-3 in 1966. Both games were played at Manuka Oval in Canberra.

    • Mack Hansen played twenty-one games for the Brumbies between 2019-2021, ten of those were at GIO Stadium, scoring just three tries all in the same game against the Waratahs at GIO Stadium in Super Rugby Australia in February 2021.

    • Ben O’Donnell and Mack Hansen played together once for Connacht, appearing on opposite wings against Dragons in October 2021.

    • Ben O’Donnell and Bundee Aki played together once for Connacht against Ospreys in the Rainbow Cup in June 2021

    • Billy Pollard and Corey Toole scored 11 tries apiece in Super Rugby this year – the joint-second most among all the players. Toole also made the joint-most line breaks (24).

    • Tom Hooper made the most carries (166) and post-contact metres (186) for the Brumbies in Super Rugby this year. He also made the second-most tackles (197), and won the second-most turnovers (15).

    • The Brumbies conceded the fewest penalties per 80 minutes (7.8) in this year’s Super Rugby. They had a ruck success rate of 96.6% (2nd), a scrum success rate of 97.1% (2nd), and a lineout success rate of 87% (3rd).

    • Alex Mitchell beat seven defenders and made two line breaks vs Waratahs. His try and try assist took him to five try involvements on tour so far – more than any other Lion.

    • Josh Van Der Flier made more tackles than any other Lion (15) and won a turnover last weekend; he had a 100% tackle success rate

    Teams

    ACT Brumbies: 15. Andy Muirhead, 14. Ben O’Donnell, 13. Ollie Sapsford, 12. David Feliuai, 11. Corey Toole, 10. Declan Meredith, 9. Ryan Lonergan (c), 1. Lington Ieli, 2. Lachlan Lonergan, 3. Rhys van Nek, 4. Lachie Shaw, 5. Cadeyrn Neville, 6. Tom Hooper, 7. Rory Scott, 8. Tuaina Taii Tualima

    Replacements: 16. Liam Bowron, 17. Cameron Orr, 18. Feao Fotuaika, 19. Lachie Hooper, 20. Luke Reimer, 21. Harrison Goddard, 22. Jack Debreczeni, 23. Hudson Creighton

    The British & Irish Lions: 15. Blair Kinghorn, 14. Tommy Freeman, 13. Garry Ringrose, 12. Bundee Aki, 11. James Lowe, 10. Finn Russell, 9. Jamison Gibson-Park, 1. Ellis Genge, 2. Dan Sheehan, 3. Tadhg Furlong, 4. Maro Itoje (c), 5. Joe McCarthy, 6. Ollie Chessum, 7. Tom Curry, 8. Jack Conan

    Replacements: 16. Ronan Kelleher, 17. Andrew Porter, 18. Will Stuart, 19. Josh van der Flier, 20. Henry Pollock, 21. Alex Mitchell, 22. Marcus Smith, 23. Mack Hansen

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  • Noa Essengue & Matas Buzelis ready to lead fast-paced 2025 Summer League Bulls – NBA

    Noa Essengue & Matas Buzelis ready to lead fast-paced 2025 Summer League Bulls – NBA

    1. Noa Essengue & Matas Buzelis ready to lead fast-paced 2025 Summer League Bulls  NBA
    2. Noa Essengue Meets Ozzie Guillen 🤝 #chicagobulls #whitesox #mlb #nba #nbadraft #ozzieguillen  BVM Sports
    3. Chicago Bulls analyst believes team has makings of strong defensive duo  chicitysports.com
    4. 2025 NBA Draft Recap: Noa Essengue, Lachlan Olbrich, and Other Moves  On Tap Sports Net
    5. Noa Essengue takes to court for practice with Bulls  CBS News

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  • German GP classics: Sachsenring stunners

    German GP classics: Sachsenring stunners

    Round 11 of 2025 brings us to the Liqui Moly Grand Prix of Germany, which means one thing – we’re Sachsenring bound. We’ve had some fantastic races at the historic layout, and to get yourselves in the mood for our latest chapter, why not enjoy some that we’ve picked out for free?

    2003: Rossi vs Gibernau

    Less than a tenth – 0.060s to be exact – split the rivals at the flag in 2003, with Sete Gibernau getting the better of Valentino Rossi coming out of the final corner in a superb finish to a brilliant encounter. The duo were in a league of their own, with Troy Bayliss 13s away from the fight in P3 for Ducati.

    2006: Rossi vs Melandri vs Hayden vs Pedrosa

    Four riders all fighting for victory until the final lap? That’s exactly what MotoGP fans were treated to back in 2006 as title-chasing Rossi and Nicky Hayden were joined at the front by Marco Melandri and star rookie Dani Pedrosa. Rossi eventually came out on top, but the quartet crossed the line just 0.3s apart, with Pedrosa the one narrowly missing out on a podium.

    2009: Rossi vs Lorenzo

    Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo have treated us to plenty of memorable moments, and the 2009 German GP was one of them. Pedrosa stuck with the Yamaha pair for as long as he could, but the 25-point fight was between the #46 and #99, with 0.099s the gap in favour of the Italian.

    2010: Pedrosa vs Stoner vs Lorenzo

    In a red-flagged race at the Sachsenring, we enjoyed a Pedrosa vs Lorenzo vs Casey Stoner battle at the front. Three legends all racing for different manufacturers. In the end, Pedrosa came out on top to claim his second MotoGP victory at the venue.

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  • TOYOTA GAZOO Racing debuts hydrogen Rally2 car at Rally Finland

    TOYOTA GAZOO Racing debuts hydrogen Rally2 car at Rally Finland

    Accelerating its efforts to create ever-better motorsports-bred cars and realise a carbon-neutral society, TOYOTA has been competing with a hydrogen-engine Corolla since 2021 in the Super Taikyu series in Japan. Jari-Matti Latvala, Team Principal of TOYOTA GAZOO Racing World Rally Team, has been among the drivers who have raced with the innovative powertrain and provided their feedback in its development.

    In 2022, the technology was demonstrated on the rally stages of Europe for the first time when the experimental GR Yaris H2 made its debut at the FIA World Rally Championship round in Belgium, driven by Akio Toyoda and Juha Kankkunen.

    Since then, development has continued to create the Rally2 H2 Concept, which will be demonstrated at Rally Finland to allow rally fans to experience the potential of hydrogen as one of the options for the future of motorsport in a carbon neutral society.

    The car is based upon the successful GR Yaris Rally2 chassis and fitted with an internal combustion engine fuelled by compressed hydrogen, delivering near-zero emissions while retaining the sounds and sensations so enjoyed by rally fans.

    The GR Yaris Rally2 H2 Concept has been developed at TGR-WRT headquarters in Jyväskylä, Finland, and tested on local roads, including runs on gravel forest roads like those used in Rally Finland. For its public debut, the car will be demonstrated on the mixed-surface Harju stage in the centre of Jyväskylä, which runs as the opening stage of the rally on Thursday evening and again as SS10 on Friday. Four-time world champion Kankkunen, Deputy Team Principal of TGR-WRT, will be at the wheel.

    The car will also be exhibited in the service park during the event alongside other hydrogen vehicles like the Toyota Mirai and Tundra, as part of a wider showcase of hydrogen technology across the city of Jyväskylä.

     

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