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  • Looking back with grandeur: Oasis kick off reunion tour in Cardiff with triumphant, nostalgic gig | Oasis

    Looking back with grandeur: Oasis kick off reunion tour in Cardiff with triumphant, nostalgic gig | Oasis

    Swaggering, cocksure and incredibly loud, Oasis burst back on to the live music scene on Friday night with an accomplished – if ever so slightly distanced – debut gig on their reunion world tour.

    Playing Cardiff’s Principality Stadium, the six-piece impressed at the start of what is arguably the most anticipated tour of the century, focusing overwhelmingly on songs from their 1990s heyday – only one song, Little By Little, was taken from their final four albums.

    For years it looked as if Liam and Noel Gallagher would never patch up their fractious fraternal relationship. A backstage bust-up in 2009 brought Oasis to an end, after a 16-year career in which they became the pre-eminent British rock’n’roll band, and the Gallaghers continued to snipe at each other in the press and social media in the following years – most memorably with Liam dubbing Noel a “potato”. Even when Oasis announced a reunion in August 2024 – “The guns have fallen silent. The stars have aligned. The great wait is over” – some fans wondered if another ruction between the brothers would scupper the plans.

    But following support slots from Britpop peers Cast and Richard Ashcroft, Oasis did indeed appear, with Liam’s arm around his brother as they stepped out on stage. They kicked straight into gear without a word to the crowd, playing Hello, the song that begins (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?, their 18-times platinum album which is outsold in the UK only by Queen and Abba’s greatest hits.

    “Because we need each other, we believe in one another”, Noel sang on the second track, Acquiesce: a statement of unity that inspired delirious moshing and crowd surfing. But the actual relations between the Gallaghers were relatively frosty, with little acknowledgment of each other thereafter aside from a brief pat on the back at the end, and original guitarist Paul “Bonehead” Arthurs stationed between them on stage.

    ‘This one is for all the people in their 20s who have never seen us before’ … Noel Gallagher performing at the Principality Stadium, Cardiff. Photograph: Jordan Pettitt/PA

    The Gallaghers were backed by Arthurs, the rhythm guitarist on their era-defining first two albums Definitely Maybe (1994) and (What’s the Story) Morning Glory? (1995), plus 1997 follow-up Be Here Now, which was less critically acclaimed but still enormous in terms of sound and commercial success. More recently, Arthurs had played with Liam’s solo band.

    Arthurs, who was successfully treated for tonsil cancer in 2022, was replaced in Oasis in 1999 by Gem Archer, who also features in the new lineup having played with both Liam and Noel during their solo careers. Andy Bell, the co-founder of Ride – Oasis’s labelmates on Creation Records – and another 1999 Oasis appointee, played bass. The American musician Joey Waronker, known for his work with Beck, REM and Radiohead’s Thom Yorke, was on drums, having recently collaborated with Liam Gallagher on his 2024 album with Stone Roses guitarist John Squire.

    Noel took the lead on a three-song run of Talk Tonight, Half the World Away and Little By Little – the only post-millennium song, from 2002’s Heathen Chemisty – in the middle of the set, with Liam bringing his trademark sneer and brio back for D’You Know What I Mean?, which led into another Be Here Now song, Stand By Me.

    Thereafter it was a return to the middle of the mid-1990s, with one-off singles and B-sides such as Whatever and The Masterplan, and a run of the band’s very biggest hits including Live Forever, Rock ’n’ Roll Star, Don’t Look Back in Anger, Wonderwall and Champagne Supernova.

    The latter-day Oasis albums aren’t as well loved as the first three, but they certainly contain songs fans might have expected to hear including Stop Crying Your Heart Out, Lyla, Songbird and Go Let It Out. But there were no curveballs or deep cuts, and Oasis delivered the crowdpleasers most fans were hoping for.

    There were also tributes to the late Portuguese footballer Diogo Jota, who died yesterday in a car crash at the age of 28: he was well known to British fans, having won the Premier League and FA Cup with Liverpool. Cast dedicated their own football anthem, Walkaway to him, and an image of Jota was displayed during Oasis’s performance of Live Forever.

    For a famously gobby band, there was relatively little stage banter, though Liam beseeched the crowd at one point: “I want you to turn around and put your arms around each other … and jump up and fucking down.”

    He also made a brazen reference to the pricing scandal that made headlines when tickets went on sale: a “dynamic pricing” mechanism meant that the popularity of the tickets drove up the cost, prompting anger from fans and promises from culture secretary Lisa Nandy to look into the practice. “What’s happening? Everyone having a good time yeah? Is it worth the £4,000 you paid for a ticket?”, Liam asked the crowd.

    Noel meanwhile thanked the band’s younger fans as he began the encore with a rendition of The Masterplan: “This one is for all the people in their 20s who have never seen us before who have kept us shit hot for the last 20 years.”

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  • Israeli settlers and Palestinians clash in West Bank village

    Israeli settlers and Palestinians clash in West Bank village


    JERUSALEM/GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: Hamas said it was ready to start talks “immediately” on a proposal for a ceasefire in Gaza, where the civil defense agency said Israel’s ongoing offensive killed 20 people on Saturday.


    The announcement came after it held consultations with other Palestinian factions and before a visit on Monday by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to Washington, where President Donald Trump is pushing for an end to the war, now in its 21st month.


    “The movement is ready to engage immediately and seriously in a cycle of negotiations on the mechanism to put in place” the terms of a draft US-backed truce proposal received from mediators, the militant group said in a statement.


    Israel meanwhile said Saturday it was still mulling its response to a positive reaction from Hamas to the latest US-sponsored proposal for a Gaza ceasefire.


    “No decision has been made yet on that issue,” a government official said on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak publicly about it. Israel’s security cabinet was due to meet later on Saturday, after the end of the Jewish sabbath at sundown, Israeli media reported.


    Hamas ally Islamic Jihad said it supported ceasefire talks, but demanded “guarantees” that Israel “will not resume its aggression” once hostages held in Gaza are freed.


    Trump, when asked about Hamas’s response aboard Air Force One on Friday, said: “That’s good. They haven’t briefed me on it. We have to get it over with. We have to do something about Gaza.”


    The conflict in Gaza began with Hamas’s October 2023 attack, which sparked a massive Israeli offensive aimed at destroying Hamas and bringing home all the hostages seized by Palestinian militants.


    On Friday, Netanyahu again pledged to bring home the hostages, after coming under massive domestic pressure over their fate.


    Two previous ceasefires mediated by Qatar, Egypt and the United States have seen temporary halts in fighting, coupled with the return of Israeli hostages in exchange for Palestinian prisoners.


    Efforts to broker a new truce have repeatedly failed, with the primary point of contention being Israel’s rejection of Hamas’s demand for guarantees that any new ceasefire will be lasting.


    A previous round of talks broke down in May with Hamas and Israel trading blame for its failure.


    The Palestinian militant group said it had given a “positive response” to a truce proposal from US special envoy Steve Witkoff, but its request for a guarantee that hostilities would not resume had been rejected by Israel.


    A Palestinian source familiar with the negotiations told AFP earlier this week that the latest proposal included “a 60-day truce, during which Hamas would release half of the living Israeli captives in the Gaza Strip” — thought to number 22 — “in exchange for Israel releasing a number of Palestinian prisoners and detainees.”


    Out of 251 hostages seized by Palestinian militants during the October 2023 attack, 49 are still held in Gaza, including 27 the Israeli military says are dead.


    Nearly 21 months of war have created dire humanitarian conditions for the more than two million people in the Gaza Strip, where Israel has recently expanded its military operations.


    Civil defense spokesman Mahmud Bassal said Israeli military operations killed 20 people across the war-battered territory on Saturday.


    Media restrictions in Gaza and difficulties in accessing many areas mean AFP is unable to independently verify the tolls and details provided by the civil defense agency.


    Bassal said five of the dead were killed in a strike on a school in Gaza City.


    A second strike near another school in the city where displaced civilians had found shelter killed three people and wounded around 10, including children, he said.


    Many Gazans have sought shelter in schools and other public buildings since the war began with Hamas’s October 2023 attack on Israel.


    Contacted by AFP, the Israeli military said it could not comment on specific strikes without precise coordinates.


    The civil defense agency said Israeli strikes and gunfire killed at least 52 people on Friday.


    The Hamas attack of October 2023 resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on Israeli official figures.


    Israel’s retaliatory military campaign has killed at least 57,268 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory’s health ministry. The United Nations considers the figures reliable.

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  • ‘Liam hasn’t sounded that good since the 90s’: fans react to the first night of the Oasis reunion tour | Oasis

    ‘Liam hasn’t sounded that good since the 90s’: fans react to the first night of the Oasis reunion tour | Oasis

    The atmosphere on the concourses in Cardiff after the first Oasis gig of their long-awaited reunion tour was one of speechlessness that the once-estranged Gallagher brothers had pulled it off.

    Leigh, from Cardiff, could hardly find the words to describe the two and a half hours he had just witnessed. “They were quiet at the beginning, then the crescendos went wild, then they were non-stop wild,” he said. “It went supernova – crazy. I couldn’t believe it. I don’t know what to say – I was 18 again.”

    He had attended with his 22-year-old daughter and her boyfriend. “They didn’t know Oasis and came for the experience. It was the best night. They’ve been to concerts before but never like this – it was a new level.” During Stand By Me, the trio had a cuddle – or a cwtch, in Welsh – “two generations together. I’ve convinced her throughout the years that they’re the best band, and she was ecstatic to get to this point on her journey.”

    The show had been “100%” worth the money, he said. “I could’ve gone away with the family for two weeks, all-inclusive, in the sun, but I wouldn’t swap it.”

    Jack from Stockport, described the concert as “biblical: the presence, everything,” he said. “There was no silence during the set at all, everyone was singing as one.”

    It wasn’t until the very end of the set that Liam and Noel Gallagher acknowledged each other: Liam walked towards his brother, clapped him on the back twice, and then immediately escaped in a Range Rover waiting on the side of stage to drive him to sanctuary; presumably a similar car awaited Noel on the other side. “The one time they interacted, they looked like actual brothers,” said Jack. “Though Liam didn’t look as if he was giving Noel a lift home.”

    Oasis fans singing along inside. Photograph: Suzanne Plunkett/Reuters

    His partner, Beth, appeared out of the women’s loos, heavily pregnant with the pair’s twins – their first in utero gig. Beth was born a month after the band’s famous performance at Knebworth in August 1996. Had they considered Noel and Liam as potential names? “They’re girl twins,” she said. “But we did think about Lyla” – a song from 2005’s Don’t Believe the Truth – “as a name for a little bit.”

    Couple Jarvis and Valentina had travelled from north London for the show. “It was absolutely incredible,” he said. “Liam’s voice hasn’t sounded that good since the mid-90s. At the end of the 00s his voice was shot. That’s incredible.”

    The pair knew what they were talking about: Valentina said they saw them about 40 times during their initial incarnation. She had moved from Italy to the UK in the year 2000 because of her love for the band. “We used to follow them everywhere,” she said of herself and her teenage girl friends. Once in Florence, she said, they snuck into the band’s hotel “and spent the afternoon drinking with them.”

    She clarified: “There was no malice. We were good Italian girls. But Liam was drinking from 2pm until 7pm, and by the end I was seeing double. We talked about the Beatles. We would follow them everywhere and if we didn’t have a ticket, they would say, ‘Girls, do you have a ticket?’ and get us in.”

    Tonight’s show, she said, brought back “so many memories of happy, better times, lots of us cried. They’re a working-class band and they attract that audience: no band has touched a generation like that.”

    “If I’d dreamed it,” said Jarvis, “they couldn’t have been better.”

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  • Canada set for Semi-Final match against United States after win over Colombia

    Canada set for Semi-Final match against United States after win over Colombia

    SANTIAGO (Chile) – Canada will face off against the United States after claiming victory over Colombia 73-49 on Friday afternoon at Centro de Deportes Colectivos. The team will compete in the Women’s AmeriCup Semi-Finals for the ninth consecutive edition, and has medaled in seven of the previous eight editions.

    It was Canada’s fourth win over Colombia in four AmeriCup meetings.

    Turning point

    Canada’s second-quarter efforts helped them extend a 7-point lead to a 21-point lead at the half, thanks to scoring 24 points to Colombia’s 10.

    Despite shooting 39 percent as a team, Canada shot 45.5 percent from two-point range and 84 percent from the foul line compared to Colombia’s 57.1 percent.

    Player of the game

    While Shay Colley and Yvonne Ejim both dumped in 12 points for Canada, Colley was a perfect 100 percent from two-point range and also grabbed 8 rebounds, 3 assists, and 2 steals for Canada in the win.

    Kayla Alexander has 8 points, 9 rebounds, and 3 blocks, which led her to rise in the latest rankings in the three categories: she reached 269 points in her history in the AmeriCup (12th), 220 rebounds (2nd), and 19 blocks (9th).

    Stats don’t lie

    Canada continued to win the battles in transition, scoring 13 points on the fast break, and turned 18 turnovers from Colombia into 15 points on top of that.

    Also dominating down low, Canada out-rebounded Colombia 46-32, and scored six second chance points while keeping Colombia to zero.

    Bottom line

    Canada continued to use its rotation to get the best out of the game, with six players scoring seven or more points in the win. The team also had four players grab four or more rebounds and tallied 12 steals as a group.

    Canada will now face United States in the Semi-Finals.

    They said

    “We were locked in pretty defensively today, we’ll let that offense run a little smoother tomorrow, and it will put us in a better position,” said head coach Nell Fortner.

    “We did a great job as a team coming in and applying the pressure of pushing the pace at the start of the game. I thought our defense was good the first half of the game … we just have to stay locked in for 40 minutes,” said Colley.

    FIBA

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  • Wimbledon recap: Jarry beats Fonseca as South American tennis makes mark at All England Club

    Wimbledon recap: Jarry beats Fonseca as South American tennis makes mark at All England Club

    An earlier version of this article misstated Nicolás Jarry’s nationality. He is Chilean, not Argentinian.

    Follow The Athletic’s Wimbledon coverage

    Welcome to the Wimbledon briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories on each day of the tournament.

    On day five, a South American derby delivered, fortune favored a lucky loser and a second-week appearance meant more to one player than most.


    Unexpected South American success in SW19

    South America is having itself a pretty solid Wimbledon, just not in the way anyone might have expected.

    When the tournament started, names like Fonseca or Haddad Maia seemed far more likely for runs to the second week than the surviving South Americans.

    When the dust settled Friday evening, it had two players in the rounds of 16, in Nicolás Jarry of Chile and Solana Sierra of Argentina. It’s hard to overestimate how hard they had to get there. More on Sierra in a bit.

    Jarry has barely won matches since he made the Italian Open final last year. He had to survive qualifying to earn a first-round date with Holger Rune, where he came back from two sets down to win. On Friday he beat João Fonseca, tipped for stardom when he is a little older, in four sets.

    South America, a continent with a fervent tennis fan base, doesn’t get a proportional share of attention from the tours. North America has four 1,000-level events, just below the Grand Slams. Europe has five. There is one in Dubai and one in Doha, plus the WTA Tour Finals in Saudi Arabia, which is earmarked to get a 1,000 in the future. South America has zero.

    Hopes for changing that may rest with Fonseca, a supreme talent from Brazil, the continent’s largest country, which has been without a big-time player since Gustavo Kuerten of Brazil a quarter-century ago. Tennis officials describe Fonseca as a potential game-changer.

    That’s a lot to put on the shoulders of a teenager playing his first year of ATP Tour tennis. Fonseca has said he can feel the pressure. He knows what the sport and Brazilians at home and abroad are hoping for him.

    It’s going to take a little time, and the third round of his first Wimbledon is a very respectable showing given that he has barely played on grass. Carlos Alcaraz only made the second round of his first Wimbledon in 2021, when he was 18. He made the third round of the French Open that year and the second round of the Australian Open.

    Fonseca has made the last 32 here and in Paris, and the second round in Australia.

    After the loss to Jarry, he spoke about how much he is learning about Grand Slam tennis and ups and downs of a five-set match. In Australia, he wondered whether he could last five sets. Now he knows he can, and that things can change very quickly.

    “When you go to a Grand Slam, the players play differently,” he said. They are much more focused.”

    He hears the noise, people saying he is the next Sinner or Alcaraz. He appreciates it, but is trying to stay inside his head, no matter what anyone else says.

    “I’m just going to be me,” he said. “Some people understand that.”

    Matt Futterman


    At a Wimbledon of upsets, fortune favors the lucky loser

    Now for Sierra. Amid all the chaos and upsets this week, it’s fitting that Friday saw another first for the underdog.

    By beating Cristina Bucșa, Solana Sierra became the first lucky loser to reach the Wimbledon fourth round in the Open Era.

    Lucky loser is the term given to players who lose in qualifying but then get a spot in the main draw when someone pulls out. So they are ranked outside the top 100, and have just lost to players in a similar postcode: the underdog’s underdog.

    Sierra, 21 and from Argentina, is ranked No. 101. She had never won a Grand Slam match before this week, and only had eight wins at WTA Tour level with none on grass. She won 52 of 72 matches in 2024 on the third-tier ITF World Tennis Tour, but lost her only match on grass then too — in Wimbledon qualifying.


    Solana Sierra celebrates becoming the first lucky loser to reach the Wimbledon fourth round since 1968. (Mike Hewitt / Getty Images) 

    Her run follows Eva Lys, another lucky loser, reaching the fourth round of the Australian Open in January, which is also an Open Era first.

    Next up for Sierra is a last-16 match against Siegemund on Sunday. Who, appropriately enough for this Wimbledon, is ranked lower than her, at No. 104.

    Yet another reminder of the depth in women’s tennis — and of the randomness of this year’s Wimbledon.

    Charlie Eccleshare


    Two very different Wimbledons for one player

    At Wimbledon 2024, Russian tennis player Andrey Rublev reached the bottom of a very deep hole. In a first-round defeat to Argentina’s Francisco Comesana, Rublev obliterated his racket against his leg in frustration, as had become a habit for him.

    Rublev, who has reached 10 major quarterfinals but never gone beyond the last eight at a Grand Slam, later discussed the impact of tennis on his mind at that time. He acknowledged that defeats had left him without control of his thoughts off the court, that he had reached a point when he did not “see the reason of living life.”

    “Sometimes you learn the most from the worst cases,” Rublev said during an interview in Dubai earlier this year, another place of things were coming full circle. At the 2023 Dubai Tennis Championships, Rublev was defaulted from a match against Alexander Bublik after he screamed in the face of the line judge and was alleged to have used a Russian expletive. Rublev was defaulted from the match, and was stripped of his prize money and ranking points from the tournament, but they were later reinstated.

    For Rublev, learning meant speaking to a psychologist, as well as reconfiguring his feelings about himself as a tennis player. No, he has never reached a Grand Slam semifinal. But going deep in the biggest events and being a reliable fixture at them? That makes him a good player. How can he put himself down about that, he would think.

    That mindset explains why reaching the second week this year is such a milestone. Rublev returned to a site of one of his most painful moments, and has produced a calm, consistent level of tennis even while so many seeds around him are losing.

    “Now this year, of course, I’m happy that I am able to win three matches,” he said in his news conference after beating Adrian Mannarino 7-5, 6-2, 6-3 to reach the fourth round.

    “So I did better than last year. It’s already better than nothing.”

    James Hansen


    Other notable results on day five

    • Aryna Sabalenka (1) was pushed all the way by Emma Raducanu and the Centre Court crowd, but came through 7-6(6), 6-4.
    • Madison Keys (6) was bamboozled by a grass masterclass from Germany’s Laura Siegemund. Keys, who then skipped her media duties due to illness, lost 6-3, 6-3.
    • Taylor Fritz (5) got past a bleeding elbow and a blistered foot to beat Alejandro Davidovich Fokina (26) in four sets, 6-4, 6-3, 6-7(5), 6-1.
    • And Carlos Alcaraz (2) dropped a set to the all-attack German Jan-Lennard Struff, but came through 6-1, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4.

    Recommended reading

    Shot of the day

    Day six matches you should actually watch

    🎾 Men’s singles, 6 a.m. ET on ESPN/ESPN+

    Flavio Cobolli (22) vs. Jakub Menšík (15)

    A match between two rising prospects, who are high on talent but have struggled to produce it in tight moments at Grand Slams. Menšík has a gigantic serve but his forehand can get shaky in tight moments, while Cobolli can find himself overpowered despite his skill and flair.

    🎾 Women’s singles, 11 a.m. ET on ESPN/ESPN+

    Iga Świątek (8) vs. Danielle Collins

    Świątek has a 7-2 record against Collins, but a strangely one-sided beef between them, which started with Collins calling Świątek insincere at the 2024 Olympic Games, gives this contest some bite. Collins also thrashed Świątek in their last meeting.


    Wimbledon men’s draw 2025

    Wimbledon women’s draw 2025

    Tell us what you noticed on the fifth day…

    (Top photo of TK: Getty Images; design: Eamonn Dalton / The Athletic)

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  • The Powerful Alienware Area-51 RTX 5090 Gaming PC Drops to the Lowest Price Ever for 4th of July

    The Powerful Alienware Area-51 RTX 5090 Gaming PC Drops to the Lowest Price Ever for 4th of July

    If you’re seeking the absolute best of the best in PC gaming performance, look no further. For 4th of July (and as part of its greater Black Friday in July Sale), Dell has just dropped the price of its flagship Alienware Area-51 prebuilt gaming PC, equipped with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card starting at $4,449.99 with free shipping. This is an outstanding price for a prebuilt RTX 5090 gaming PC compared to the similar off-the-shelf prebuilts on Amazon, especially since the Alienware brand normally has a high markup. The RTX 5090 is undisputedly the most powerful graphics card on the market and is pretty much impossible to find for under $3,000 by itself.

    Alienware Area-51 RTX 5090 Gaming PC From $4,449.99

    Alienware Area-51 Intel Core Ultra 7 265K RTX 5090 Gaming PC (32GB/2TB)

    Alienware Area-51 Intel Core Ultra 9 285K RTX 5090 Gaming PC (32GB/2TB)

    Alienware Area-51 Intel Core Ultra 9 285K RTX 5090 Gaming PC (32GB/2TB)

    This least expensive Alienware Area-51 RTX 5090 gaming PC configuration is equipped with an Intel Core Ultra 7 265K processor with 240mm liquid cooling, 32GB of DDR5-6400MHz RAM, and 2TB SSD storage. For an extra $250, you can upgrade to the Core Ultra 9 285K with 360mm liquid cooling. The Core Ultra 7 is already an excellent gaming CPU and you won’t see any uplift in performance going with the Core Ultra 9. However, if you’re a professional in need of the extra cores that the Core Ultra 9 offers (for example with AI generation), then the upgrade is worth it.

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    The new Alienware Area-51 is a behemoth compared to the Alienware Aurora R16.

    The RTX 5090 Is the Most Powerful Graphics Card Ever

    The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 has emerged as the most powerful consumer GPU on the market. Although Nvidia has prioritized software updates, AI features, and DLSS 4 technology to improve gameplay performance, the 5090 still boasts an impressive 25%-30% uplift over the RTX 4090 in terms of pure hardware-based raster performance. The 5090 also has more (32GB vs. 24GB) and faster (GDDR7 vs. GDDR6) VRAM compared to the 4090. This GPU is extremely difficult to find at retail price and is currently selling for $3,500-$4,000 on eBay.

    Check out more of the best Alienware deals

    Check out our Best Alienware Deals article with all of Dell’s currently ongoing deals on gaming laptops and desktop PCs. Not everyone is the DIY type. If you’re in the market for a prebuilt gaming PC, Dell is one of the best brands we’d recommend. Alienware desktops and laptops feature solid build quality, top-of-the-line gaming performance, excellent cooling (further improved on the newer models), aggressive styling, and pricing that is very competitive with other pre-built options. Best of all, there are plenty of sales that happen throughout the year, so it’s not difficult to grab one of these computers at considerably less than their retail price.

    Eric Song is the IGN commerce manager in charge of finding the best gaming and tech deals every day. When Eric isn’t hunting for deals for other people at work, he’s hunting for deals for himself during his free time.

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  • Cricket-West Indies stage stunning fightback to trail Australia by 45 in Grenada

    Cricket-West Indies stage stunning fightback to trail Australia by 45 in Grenada

    July 4 (Reuters) – West Indies were bowled out for 253 in their first innings of the second test in Grenada on Friday, trailing Australia by 45 runs at stumps after a dramatic second day that saw early promise turn to utter collapse before a thrilling lower-order fightback.

    Australia were 12 for two when play was called off, having lost Sam Konstas for a duck when he was bowled by Jayden Seales, and Usman Khawaja for two runs when Seales trapped him lbw.

    What began as a Friday of fluctuating fortunes for the hosts became a tale of extraordinary resilience, with the West Indies tail staging a spirited recovery to keep alive the test match and series.

    The morning session belonged to John Campbell until a moment of madness cost him his wicket on 40.

    The West Indies left-hander looked in fine touch, striking five fours and a six, before attempting an ambitious shot off Beau Webster that he could only sky for a simple catch to Mitchell Starc at mid-on.

    Kraigg Brathwaite’s milestone 100th Test got off to the worst possible start when he fell for a duck in just the second over after being caught and bowled by Josh Hazlewood.

    Keacy Carty also departed cheaply for six, falling to a spectacular catch by Pat Cummins off his own bowling.

    The afternoon session began ominously for West Indies when Roston Chase became Hazlewood’s second victim in the first over after lunch, falling lbw for 16 via a successful Australian review.

    Brandon King and Shai Hope then steadied the ship with a patient partnership that saw King reach 75 with some authoritative strokeplay.

    King’s innings was a masterclass in controlled aggression, while Hope grew in confidence alongside him, striking boundaries with a flourish and looking increasingly comfortable.

    The session was not without its lighter moments either, as play was briefly interrupted when a dog wandered on to the field, trotting around casually before Cummins helped to shepherd it back over the boundary rope.

    Cummins, as he so often does, produced a moment of magic to break the crucial King-Hope partnership and swing the tide back in Australia’s favour.

    The Australian captain cleaned up Hope on 21 with an absolute peach of a delivery, triggering a collapse that saw West Indies slump from a promising position to 174 for seven, after King and Justin Greaves (1) departed soon after.

    At that point, the hosts seemed headed for a substantial deficit chasing Australia’s first innings total of 286, but the West Indies tail had other ideas.

    Alzarri Joseph was the chief architect of the fightback, smashing 27 from 49 balls, while Shamar Joseph provided equally valuable support with 29, before falling to Starc.

    The tail-end resistance proved nothing short of remarkable, with Anderson Phillip contributing a gritty 10 from 40 balls and Seales adding a valuable seven runs as the last-wicket partnership frustrated Australia’s bowlers.

    The lower order added 79 crucial runs for the last three wickets to keep alive West Indian hopes.

    The final wicket of the hosts’ innings fell when Travis Head took a low catch to dismiss Phillip, with the third umpire ruling the catch clean despite replays suggesting it was touch-and-go.

    Nathan Lyon was Australia’s most successful bowler with three wickets for 75 runs from 19 overs. Hazlewood and Cummins claimed two wickets apiece but even they could not prevent their hosts from rallying.

    Australia’s failure to deal with the West Indies tail will be a source of frustration for the tourists, but they can take comfort from the fact that their narrow lead could still prove crucial if the pitch deteriorates further.

    Australia lead the three test series 1-0 after winning the opener in Bridgetown. (Reporting by Simon Jennings in Toronto)

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  • Semi-Final Preview: Battle-tested USA brace for kiwi chaos – fiba.basketball

    Semi-Final Preview: Battle-tested USA brace for kiwi chaos – fiba.basketball

    1. Semi-Final Preview: Battle-tested USA brace for kiwi chaos  fiba.basketball
    2. USA beat Canada in a must-watch classic  fiba.basketball
    3. Game day preview: Team USA vs. Canada at the FIBA U19 Quarterfinals  UK Wildcats Wire
    4. How Daniel Jacobsen Performed in USA’s Quarterfinal Win Over Canada in FIBA World Cup  Yardbarker
    5. BYU’s Dybantsa pushes USA to semifinals at FIBA U19 World Cup  heraldextra.com

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  • Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 Officially Announced

    Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 Officially Announced

    During its panel at this year’s Anime Expo in Los Angeles, CD PROJEKT RED proudly announced that they reunited with studio TRIGGER to create a new standalone anime series set in the world of Cyberpunk 2077 titled Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2.

    Snapshot:

    • Today’s panel revealed the logo and poster art for Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 and confirmed Kai Ikarashi as director.
    • Panelists included Hugo Award-winning writer Bartosz Sztybor, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners director Hiroyuki Imaishi, and voice actors Emi Lo (Lucy Kushinada) and Zach Aguilar (David Martinez) with host Joey “The Anime Man” Bizinger.
    • Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 is being created by CD PROJEKT RED alongside the legendary studio TRIGGER and will be released on Netflix.

    At this year’s Anime Expo, taking place between July 2–6, CD PROJEKT RED invited attendees to the livestreamed panel “Cyberpunk: Edgerunners — Behind the Scenes With its Creators” featuring story writer and producer Bartosz Sztybor and voice actors Emi Lo (Lucy Kushinada) and Zach Aguilar (David Martinez) with host Joey “The Anime Man” Bizinger and a special guest appearance by Cyberpunk: Edgerunners director Hiroyuki Imaishi.

    Following a lively discussion about the critically acclaimed anime’s legacy, insights into its creation, and more behind-the-scenes tidbits, Sztybor announced the new collaboration between CD PROJEKT RED and animation studio TRIGGER to create Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2. Together with Imaishi, he shared an exclusive reveal of the anime’s official logo and its poster art.

    Imaishi also took the opportunity to officially pass the torch to Kai Ikarashi (Cyberpunk: Edgerunners, SSSS.Gridman), who will make his directorial debut with Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2. Ikarashi joined the panel with a recorded video message and debuted a Director’s Voice video to share more about his motivations for the anime.

    Watch the livestream

    “David’s story might be over, but there’s plenty more to discover in Night City. And to again have the legendary animation studio TRIGGER along for the ride makes us at CD PROJEKT RED so excited to introduce a raw, real chronicle of redemption and revenge, something unlike what we’ve done before,” said Sztybor, Showrunner, Story Writer, and Producer on Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2. He will be joined by lead character designer Kanno Ichigo (Promare, Cyberpunk: Edgerunners) and Masahiko Otsuka (Gurren Lagann, Promare), who will be responsible for the screenplay adaptation. The panel ended with an invitation to a closed-door viewing of new teaser footage at the Peacock Theater during studio TRIGGER’s panel later in the evening.

    Cyberpunk: Edgerunners 2 is created in collaboration with CD PROJEKT RED and animation studio TRIGGER and is now in production with a planned release on Netflix in the future. More information about the anime can be found on the official website, its newsletter, or X, Facebook, and Instagram.


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  • Smartphone bans in Dutch schools have improved learning, study finds | Netherlands

    Smartphone bans in Dutch schools have improved learning, study finds | Netherlands

    Bans on smartphones in Dutch schools have improved the learning environment despite initial protests, according to a study commissioned by the government of the Netherlands.

    National guidelines, introduced in January 2024, recommend banning smartphones from classrooms and almost all schools have complied. Close to two-thirds of secondary schools ask pupils to leave their phones at home or put them in lockers, while phones are given in at the start of a lesson at one in five.

    Researchers surveyed 317 secondary school leaders, 313 primary schools and conducted 12 focus groups with teachers, teaching assistants, students and parents. Secondary schools reported that children found it easier to concentrate (75%), the social environment was better (59%) and some said results had improved (28%).

    Dr Alexander Krepel, a researcher at the Kohnstamm Instituut, said interactions between pupils had improved the most. “It’s not possible to secretly take a picture of someone in the classroom and then spread it in a WhatsApp group, so there’s an increase in social safety,” he said. “Especially in the breaks between the lessons, students would be on their phones and now they’re forced to talk … Maybe they also get into a fight a bit more often but schools, teachers and students are quite happy with how the atmosphere is better.”

    Initial fears surrounding the ban proved unfounded, according to Freya Sixma, spokesperson for the VO-raad secondary education council, which represents schools and governing boards. “There was quite a lot of protest at first from schools, teachers, students, parents, questions about how it would all work,” she said. “But now you see that actually everyone is pretty happy.”

    The study showed in special schools, where exceptions can be given for learning support devices, about half reported that the ban had had a positive or very positive effect. In primary schools, smartphones did not have a huge effect before the ban, but a quarter were positive about it.

    Mariëlle Paul, the minister for primary and secondary education, said the national guideline helped classroom discipline. “Teachers and school leaders indicated that if an individual teacher wanted to ban the mobile from his or her class it would always be a discussion,” she said. “More inexperienced teachers would have difficulties enforcing that.”

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    Statistics Netherlands reports that 96% of children go online almost every day, mostly through their phones. Last month, the caretaker government advised parents to ban social media for under-15s and limit screen time, while one MP has proposed a total ban on smartphones in schools.

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