Categories
Sports

Boyle makes dream return for Hibs with last-gasp equalizer against Hearts | scottish premiership

Martin Boyle enjoyed a fairytale return to Hibernian as he stepped off the bench to score a 95th-minute equalizer against city rivals Hearts in front of a full house at Easter Road. Lawrence Shankland’s first competitive goal looked like it was going to be enough to secure a third Edinburgh derby victory in succession for the visitors.

But Boyle, who signed for the Easter Road club on Saturday just seven months after sealing a lucrative transfer to the Saudi Arabian side Al Faisaly, struck with the last kick of the game, sparking a mini pitch invasion from the jubilant home support.

Hibs boss Lee Johnson made one change to the team from the opening-day win at St Johnstone as Josh Campbell, who got the winner at McDiarmid Park, replaced the suspended Jair Tavares. Hearts made two changes to the side that started the campaign with victory over Ross County, with Liam Boyce and Jorge Grant replacing Toby Sibbick and Nathaniel Atkinson.

After a frantic opening to the game, Hibs had the first notable attempt in the 10th minute when Marijan Cabraja released Elie Youan with a ball down the left channel – the French striker saw an angled shot beaten away by Craig Gordon as he burst into the box . The hosts had another opening two minutes later as Chris Cadden flashed a brilliant low delivery across the face of goal which just eluded Elias Melkersen and Ewan Henderson in the six-yard box.

Hearts’ first chance came in the 17th minute when Shankland saw a shot from just inside the box deflected over by Rocky Bushiri after he was played in down the left by a Barrie McKay pass. Moments later, Craig Halkett headed over from a Grant cross.

Having played their way into the game, the visitors took the lead in the 21st minute after some sublime attacking play. McKay clipped a lovely pass over the top to Shankland, who brought the ball down brilliantly on his chest before getting away from Nohan Kenneh and deftly prodding it through the legs of David Marshall from 10 yards out.

Lawrence Shankland of Hearts holds off a challenge.
Lawrence Shankland opened the scoring for Hearts with his first competitive goal for the club. Photograph: Eric McCowat/Alamy

Shankland then made a decisive intervention at the other end on the half hour when he hooked the ball out from just in front of his own goalline after Kenneh met Joe Newell’s free-kick at the back post and steered it beyond Gordon. Moments later, Newell shot over after being set up just inside the box by a Henderson cutback.

The hosts came even closer to getting an equalizer in the 33rd minute when Youan glanced at a header goalwards from Melkersen’s cross but Gordon pulled off a superb instinctive save to keep his team in front.

Hearts started the second half on the front foot and McKay had a good chance to break free of the home defense within a minute of the restart, but Ryan Porteous got back to make a vital interception on the edge of the box. A minute later Marshall had to pull off a double save to deny Shankland and McKay in quick succession, with the former Scotland goalkeeper’s second block particularly impressive.

Hibs, in need of inspiration, introduced Boyle for his second debut for the club as a 62nd-minute replacement for Campbell. The move temporarily ignited the crowd, although one member of the home support let themselves down when the visiting left-back Alex Cochrane appeared to be struck by an object thrown from the East Stand as he prepared to take a throw-in.

Hearts continued to be the more dangerous side and Grant saw a low shot saved by Marshall in the 72nd minute before Atkinson had a 79th-minute strike blocked by Bushiri after McKay released Boyce down the right. The visitors looked like they would see the game out before Boyle latched on to a Youan cutback and drove home the equaliser.

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US

University City Townhomes cleared by Philadelphia Sheriff’s Office, residents protest

Sheriff’s officers cleared out an encampment at University City Townhomes on Monday morning, as West Philadelphia residents and supporters protested the displacement of 69 households from the complex, which is being sold.

As the officers dismantled tents that had been set up on the lawn of the affordable housing complex at 40th and Market Streets, up to 100 demonstrators chanted: “Housing is a human right.”

The encampment of about 15 tents, set up in early July, was a demonstration against the residents’ loss of housing. IBID Associates LP, the owner of the townhomes, announced plans last year to end its federal affordable housing contract and sell the property it purchased more than 40 years ago.

The sale means displacement for its predominantly Black and Latino residents, who received one year’s notice and have until Sept. 7 to move using housing vouchers. Some are still trying to find a place to live.

The residents, along with other West Philadelphians and housing activists, have vehemently protested the plan, calling on the city to purchase the complex. The property is for sale but has not yet been sold; a spokesperson for IBID said he could not provide any updates.

The tenants and supporters forming the encampment were ordered by a judge to leave by Monday morning. About 20 sheriff’s officers and other law enforcement personnel arrived at 9 am — as the crowd shouted, “Shame on you!” — and took down the tents in a little more than 15 minutes.

Longtime UC Townhomes resident Sheldon Davids shook his head at the empty lawn after the clearing was complete.

“They have torn down a powerful expression of solidarity,” he said.

» READ MORE: Owner of West Philly subsidized townhouses plans to sell, displacing dozens of families. It’s an example of the vulnerability of affordable housing.

During the clearing, two altercations took place between police, who appeared to push demonstrators, and the protesters. Philadelphia Police Department officers did not make any arrests or issue any citations, a department spokesperson said.

Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Teresa Lundy confirmed one person who got into a “physical brush” with officers was issued a citation for disorderly conduct.

Residents said they were protesting to protect their quality of life.

“We’re going to stand in solidarity. This is our home,” said Maria Lyles, who has lived at the townhomes for 25 years.

The townhomes were built after mostly Black residents were displaced from the area that is now University City in the 1960s and ’70s, when the city razed the neighborhood known as Black Bottom. The development was meant to be part of a city commitment to low-income housing in West Philadelphia, and its demise highlights issues of affordable housing, racial justice, and gentrification — displacing low-income residents of color who say it’s difficult to find comparable housing elsewhere.

Residents also don’t want to leave their neighborhood, where their lives are rooted. Moving can mean changing jobs, schools, services, and commutes, and losing support or professional networks.

At a Friday court hearing, a lawyer for IBID, the property owners, said the people in the encampment were trespassing. After the ruling by Common Pleas Court Judge Joshua Roberts, the property owners said in a statement that they “respect people’s right to protest” but that those in the encampment have “no legal right” to be on the private property.

After the clearing, a spokesperson for IBID said in a statement: “The owners appreciate the work of the Sheriff’s personnel and the Philadelphia Police Department who completed this task under difficult conditions.”

The owners are covering the costs of relocation for residents who seek assistance. But many residents worry landlords won’t accept their Section 8 housing vouchers, which the federal government provides for affordable housing and began being distributed to the townhomes’ residents in June.

Rasheda Alexander, who has lived in the townhomes since 2008, said residents felt set up for failure because so little adequate affordable housing is available. Amirah Brown, 59, agreed: The apartments she was shown as replacements, she said, sat on run-down blocks that felt unsafe.

“The places are horrible and look abandoned,” Brown said.

As the sheriff’s department came to carry out the judge’s order, Darlene Foreman, a member of the People’s Townhomes Residents Council, an encampment leadership group, led a chant calling on the city to purchase the property: “Stop the sale! Buy the block!”

Some residents also criticized City Councilmember Jamie Gauthier, who introduced a bill last fall to temporarily halt the demolition of the 70-unit property and rezone the block-sized tract of land to preserve affordable housing in the future. IBID sued in federal court, accusing Gauthier and the city of violating the company’s “constitutional right to sell the property.” Court records indicate Gauthier is no longer a defendant, but the West Philadelphia lawmaker said she could not discuss UC Townhomes because the lawsuit against the city remains ongoing.

An altercation occurred around 9:45 am as officers were dismantling a fence made of wooden pallets that circled the encampment. As protesters tried to hold onto the last length of the fence they had built, a scuffle broke out.

As protesters shouted at the officers, “Who do you protect? Who do you serve?,” a couple of officers appeared to push a few demonstrators. An officer pulled one man back by the waist; a few moments later, an officer could be seen throwing the same man to the ground before handcuffing him. Officers led him away in handcuffs.

Lundy, the sheriff’s office spokesperson, said the single person who was cited for disorderly conduct allegedly assaulted a sheriff’s deputy.

Another altercation happened earlier, when a protester was pushed back by a bicycle police officer. Another demonstrator then locked bikes with the officer. They separated their bikes, and the officer then used his el to push at the crowd.

» READ MORE: Judge orders University City Townhomes encampment to vacate property

Philadelphia Sheriff Rochelle Bilal said that her officers were simply doing their jobs in dismantling the protesters’ encampment.

“They should understand they’re all trespassing. And our job as the arm of the courts is to enforce that court order. And that’s all we’re doing,” Bilal said. “We are not judging them. We feel for them as far as what’s going on. But we have to do our job.”

In a statement on behalf of Bilal’s office later, Lundy said the lack of affordable houses was “an important issue that needs to be addressed by the legislative and executive branches,” saying Bilal was sympathetic to displacement issues and “keeping people in their homes. ”

The crowd marched on Market Street before heading back to the townhomes.

“What do we want?” shouted a woman with a megaphone as they marched. “Housing!” the residents shouted back.

Wearing T-shirts that read “Stop displacing Black communities,” the protesters also stopped in front of the president’s house of the University of Pennsylvania, which had a role in forcing out Black residents when the university expanded more than 50 years ago. Some Penn students and staff had previously called on the university to try to help stop the sale.

By noon, the protest over, some people returned to UC Townhomes to play music and string their protest signs back up between the trees.

With the Sept. 7 move-out deadline looming and many tenants still searching for housing, they said they would continue organizing and lobbying.

“They came and they got the tents, but the tents were symbolic,” said Alexander. “We are not the tents, and it doesn’t stop our voices. And we’re going to continue to fight.”

Staff videographer Jenna Miller contributed to this article.

The Philadelphia Inquirer is one of more than 20 news organizations producing Broke in Philly, a collaborative reporting project on solutions to poverty and the city’s push toward economic justice. See all of our reporting at brokeinphilly.org.

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Categories
Technology

HBO Max Finishes ‘Re-Platforming’ Before House the Dragon

HBO Max is no longer the streaming service you once knew — and I don’t say that because its content is disappearing or because it plans to shack up with Discovery+. No, as of today HBO Max is now literally based on a bedrock of new technology compared to what it had under the hood a year ago: The service announced that it’s pushed out its final updates in its plan to overhaul its back end, initiated in 2021 following a bad reputation of crashes and customer complaints. The update isn’t a drastic makeover — HBO Max still looks like HBO Max — but it improves stability across devices and adds a smattering of features that were previously unavailable.

Here are the big changes, according to the company’s announcement:

• Shuffle button functionality expanded to mobile devices — previously only available on the desktop and connected TVs
• SharePlay support for iPhone and iPad users (in the US) to sync watching with friends and family while on FaceTime calls.
• A dedicated home for downloaded content
• Tablet support for landscape and portrait orientations
• An enhanced screen-reader experience with new navigation elements and functionality
• The ability to split screens with other apps on behavior-supported mobile devices
• Updated overall navigation
• Refinements to visual design
• Chromecast stability improvements

Doing this so-called “replatforming” thing while the app is live is a challenge, but it’s important. Longtime HBO subscribers probably remember how disastrous the earlier days of HBO Go were, when one episode premiere of game of Thrones could grind millions of screens to a halt and cause mass fandom hysteria. Sarah Lyons, a former product executive with HBO Max who worked on the overhaul, likened the process to “changing the engine of the plane while flying the plane” in April. The company made sure to have the updates done just in time for the release of prequel series House of the Dragon on August 21. It also undoubtedly dovetails with Warner Bros. Discovery’s long-term strategy of merging Discovery+ and HBO Max, which is on the books for summer 2023. Before The Sopranos and 90 Day Fiancé go head to head, HBO Max will at least run a little more smoothly.

Categories
Entertainment

Neighbours’ April Rose Pengilly visits London after show ends

neighbors star April Rose Pengilly has landed in London for a holiday with her boyfriend, Adam Paul, after the Aussie soap’s conclusion.

The Chloe Brennan actress, who first appeared on the soap in 2018, has posted a series of photos from her trip so far on Instagram, including a trip to the Tower of London, some nights out, and shopping in Harrods.

She captioned her post about visiting the Tower: “Tower of London. My second time, but it’s OK because I inexplicably cannot remember a single thing about the first.”

april rose pengilly as chloe brennan in neighbors

FremantleChannel 5

It was recently announced that the actress will be joining neighbors‘upcoming Farewell Tour, which will see some of the soap’s much-loved actors touring across Britain next spring, as they reminisce about the iconic soap’s 37 years on air.

“I am so excited to be part of the neighbors UK tour!” the actress said. “We have the most incredible fans and I cannot wait to come and meet them all in person.”

April joins Alan Fletcher and Jackie Woodburne, who play the iconic Ramsay Street couple Karl and Susan Kennedy, as well as Ryan Moloney, with further casting to be announced.

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It was recently announced that last month’s hour-long final episode was watched by over 4 million viewers on Channel 5, making it the most-watched show of the entire week on the channel.

Returning stars Kylie Minogue, Jason Donovan, Margot Robbie and Guy Pearce, as well as Jesse Spencer, Delta Goodrem, Kym Valentine, Carla Bonner and Natalie Imbruglia all made cameo appearances in the finale, no doubt increasing the number of viewers tuning in.

Bosses also revealed a sneak peek at the final script for the emotional final scene, featuring fan-favorite Susan Kennedy’s monologue.

neighbors has now come to an end, but catch-up episodes are available via My 5 (UK) and 10 Play (Australia).

Read more neighbors coverage on our dedicated homepage

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Sports

Elliott commits until 2025

Jamie Elliott has signed a three-year deal that will see him remain at the Club until the end of 2025.

Turning his back on a free agency, the 29-year-old is now set to play out the remainder of his career at Collingwood.

The medium forward reached a milestone 150 AFL games on Friday night in the side’s seven-point victory against Melbourne.

Since his 2012 debut, Elliott has kicked 220 goals for the side, including his recent post-siren goal that won the game for the Pies by four points against Essendon in Round 19. A moment that will continue to be spoken about long after Elliott’s career .

Following only 13 games in 2021 due to injury, 2022 is arguably shaping up to be a career-high season for Elliott. The forward leads the Club for ground-ball gets inside 50, marks on the lead, disposals inside 50 and tackles inside 50.

Collingwood GM of Football Graham Wright congratulated Elliott.

“We’re pleased to extend Jamie for another three years, and to hopefully see him play out his career at the Club,” Wright said.

“Jamie is an instrumental figure in our program. Across 11 seasons he has a wealth of football smarts which is invaluable to the youth of our group.

“The likes of Ash Johnson, Jack Ginnivan, Beau McCreery and Ollie Henry are products of great improvement credit to Elliott’s influence in the forward line.

“In addition to this, Jamie is a player who stands up in the moments that matter, inspiring all members of our program.

“We respected the fact Jamie was a free agent at the end of this year, and we are glad to come to terms that see him at the Club until the end of 2025.”

Categories
US

These 30 companies will help employees pay off their student loans

Federal student loan payments, most of which were paused during the pandemic, are set to resume in September.

And yet, 93% borrowers say they are not financially prepared to restart payments, according to a survey by the Student Debt Crisis Center and Savi. With no break in sight for rising prices, many Americans are simply stretched too thin, other studies show.

The Biden administration is currently deciding how to proceed with student loan forgiveness, and there are signs that the repayment pause may be extended yet again. But in the meantime, more employers are offering to help.

More from Personal Finance:
What we know about student loan forgiveness
Here are the ‘most employable’ college degrees
5 things borrowers can do while they wait for loan forgiveness

About 8% of employers offered student loan debt in 2021 but 33% were considering adding it, according to the most recent data from Willis Towers Watson, a compensation assistance consulting firm.

“There’s a lot of interest across the board,” said Lydia Jilek, Willis Towers Watson’s senior director for voluntary benefits. “A greater swath of the population has student loan debt than many people think.”

“It continues to be a benefit of significant interest and value for employees as well as employers,” she added.

Remote-friendly companies offering student loan help

Meanwhile, many Americans also want to continue working remotely instead of going back to the office, at least some of the time. A Prudential survey found that financial stability, job benefits and a better work/life balance are top priorities going forward.

To that end, FlexJobs identified 30 companies — now hiring — that offer student loan repayment assistance as well as the ability to work-from-home.

Many of the employers on the list will provide a monthly payment towards student loans, while others make yearly contributions. The payments range from $50 to several thousands, usually with a maximum lifetime benefit, and may depend on full-time or part-time status, according to FlexJobs.

  1. Abbott
  2. Aetna
  3. American Family Insurance
  4. Americas
  5. Atticus Law
  6. BAM Communications
  7. Chow Now
  8. Common Bond, Inc.
  9. cross media
  10. evercommerce
  11. Fidelity Investments
  12. Google
  13. GumGum
  14. HCA Healthcare
  15. Homesite Insurance
  16. live nation
  17. Main Street Bank
  18. Medix
  19. new york life
  20. NVIDIA
  21. Parallon
  22. Platoon
  23. pricewaterhousecoopers
  24. Pure Insurance
  25. Real Chemistry
  26. SoFi – Social Finance
  27. teachable
  28. The Hartford
  29. vituity
  30. weedmaps

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Categories
Technology

Secret two player mode found in Super Punch-Out!! after 28 years

In this day and age of data-mining, it’s not often something stays hidden or secret in a game’s code. Now, 28 years after release someone has found a secret two player mode in the Super Nintendo title Super Punch-Out!!

The cheat code to unlock it was discovered by Unlisted Tweets on Twitter, the game already has cheats for other things but they’ve now discovered this two player mode. The cheats are pretty easy to do, but you’ll need two controllers to do it – obviously.

If you don’t have a SNES lying around, the mini SNES has Super Punch-Out!! as does Nintendo Switch Online, so you can try it out today!

About The Author

Daniel Vucković

The Owner and Creator of this fair website. I also do news, reviews, programming, art and social media here. It is named after me after all. Please understand.

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Categories
Entertainment

Sunrise interview halted live on air after Vanessa Amorosi learns of Olivia Newton-John death

Australian singer Vanessa Amorosi has broken down while speaking to Natalie Barr and David Koch about the death of beloved entertainer Olivia Newton-John.

Amorosi was in Birmingham, having just performed for an international audience at the Commonwealth Games Closing Ceremony when she learned of the devastating news.

Watch: The moment Vanessa Amorosi’s interview is halted

Watch Sunrise on Channel 7 and stream it for free on 7plus >>

“I just literally had one of the highest endorphins that just happened out there, to being extremely sad by coming offstage and checking my phone,” Amorosi said on Sunrise.

Vanessa Amorosi performs at the Birmingham 2022 Closing Ceremony, just before learning of Olivia Newton-John’s death. Credit: DARREN ENGLAND/AAP
Amorosi said she went from the high of performing to an international audience to the low of learning of Newton-John’s passing. Credit: Alastair Grant/AP

The singer was part of the Sydney 2000 Olympics Opening Ceremony alongside Newton-John and Tina Arena.

Olivia Newton-John, Vanessa Amorosi and Tina Arena share a joke at a press conference to announce the performers at the opening ceremony for Sydney 2000 in Melbourne. Credit: Darrin Braybrook/Getty Images/Files

“Both of these women are women I’ve looked up to since (I) was a kid.”

“I’m actually very sad about Olivia, to be honest.”

Vanessa Amorosi speaks to Natalie Barr and David Koch on Sunrise. Credit: Sunrise

Seeing that Amorosi was unable to continue with the interview, hosts Barr and Koch ended the interview by saying they felt for the singer.

Watch: Olivia Newtown John’s final interview

Watch: Olivia Newtown John’s final interview

Sydney 2000

Amorosi was still new on the music scene when the then 19-year-old was selected to perform the song Heroes Live Forever at the Sydney 2000 Olympics Opening Ceremony.

Vanessa Amorosi performs at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games. Credit: DAVE HUNT/AAP

Newton-John also performed at the event, singing Dare To Dream with her friend John Farnham before an estimated worldwide audience of 3.7 billion people.

John Williamson, Julie Anthony, John Farnham, Olivia Newton-John, Vanessa Amorosi and Tina Arena celebrate the launch of the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games Opening Ceremony. Credit: JULIAN SMITH/AAPIMAGE/FILE

Amorosi went on to perform at several fundraisers for Newton-John’s charities in the years since.

The greatest hits of Olivia Newton-John.

The greatest hits of Olivia Newton-John.

Massive lightning strike kills two outside White House.

Massive lightning strike kills two outside White House.

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Categories
Sports

Commonwealth Games Birmingham 2022 closing ceremony

Live

Diving stalwart Melissa Wu carried the Australian flag at the Commonwealth Games closing ceremony in Birmingham.

Wu was given the honor after competing at her fifth Commonwealth Games.

The 30-year-old is a triple gold medalist – her latest gold came in Birmingham on the synchronized 10m platform with 14-year-old Charli Petrov, the youngest member of Australia’s team.

Wu was the sole flagbearer at Monday night’s ceremony and led about 250 Australian athletes and officials into Alexander Stadium.

”Melissa competed at her fifth Games, which is an incredible achievement in itself,” Australia’s chef de mission Petria Thomas said.

”She has been an outstanding representative of Australia for a number of years now.

”It has been an outstanding Games for Australia. Here in England we knew it wasn’t going to be easy, but the team has performed extremely well.”

The final day in Birmingham ended in seventh heaven for Australia’s men’s hockey players.

Australia finished atop the medal tally – but only just.

England was two medals behind, with 176.

The 178 won by Australian athletes comprised of 67 Gold, 57 Silver and 54 Bronze.

The 1994 Games in Victoria, Canada, remain Australia’s best Commonwealth Games in terms of gold medals – 87. And overall, the 221 medals in 2006 in Melbourne remain the nation’s benchmark.

But the team chief cautioned against measuring Australia’s Birmingham team purely on numbers.

“They have been great ambassadors for Australia,” Ms Thomas said.

“Regardless of whether they won medals or not, we are just super-proud of everyone.

“The special part of it is, regardless of the outcome, it’s the spirit with which they compete.

“They never give up. They compete as hard as they possibly can. And at the end of the day, that is all we can ever ask of them.

“They conduct themselves in an exemplary way.”

The wonder from Wollongong, Emma McKeon, was the unrivaled star of these Games.

The swimmer collected six golds, a silver and a bronze. If she was a country, she would have finished 14th on the medal table.

McKeon swam through uncharted waters, setting historic marks.

She now has 20 medals in her glittering commonwealth career, more than any other athlete. And 14 are gold. Again, more than anyone.

Australia has plenty of other champions to be proud of, with the tally showing our athletes medaled in all but two of the 19 different sports.

Badminton and squash were our weak points.

Here’s a quick round up of our achievements on the final day in Britain.

Kookaburras win seven straight

The Kookaburras won a seventh consecutive Commonwealth Games gold to catapult leader Eddie Ockenden into rare air hockey.

Monday night’s 7-0 annihilation of India was a fourth title for Birmingham flag bearer Ockenden, drawing the modest champion level with Kookaburras legend Mark Knowles on the Games medal tally.

The victorious Australian team celebrates its seventh consecutive men’s hockey gold in Birmingham on Monday. Photo: AAP

A potentially testing examination between the Tokyo Olympic silver and bronze medalists quickly became a celebration of Australia’s hockey entertainers on the Games’ final day.

They exploded out of their semi-final slumber – a 3-2 defeat of England on Saturday being a rare vulnerable moment – ​​to score five first-half goals and all but order team staff to place the champagne on ice.

No gold but nine-medal Lay still smiling

All things come to those who wait – and Jian Fang Lay’s golden smile in her latest Commonwealth Games table tennis near-miss suggests she may not be quite finished yet.

In her 50th year and on the final day of her sixth Games, the queen of Australian table tennis grabbed the ninth Commonwealth medal of her distinguished career on Monday.

Only one problem. Once again, for Melbourne’s try-try-and-try again 49-year-old mum of two, it was of the wrong hue.

Striving to at last strike that elusive gold after 20 years of perseverance, Lay and her partner Minhyung Jee were comprehensively beaten 11-1 11-8 11-8 by the brilliant Singapore pairing of Tianwei Feng and Jian Zeng in the women’s doubles final.

But was Lay, who now owns a remarkable five silvers to go with her four bronze, disheartened that she’d enhanced her frustrating record of being the most bemedalled Games athlete without a gold?

Not a bit of it.

”No, it’s unbelievable! After 20 years I still keep my level – to get a silver, that’s unbelievable,” she said.

”Of course, I’m jinxed for gold, but the opponents are so strong, you know. We just tried the best.”

Asked if she felt she was an inspiration to other women of the same age, she burst into laughter, ”I didn’t think I was 49 years old out there – but at the finish, I know my age!”

Mixed synchro divers snare Games silver

Despite scant practice together, Australian divers Maddison Keeney and Shixin Li have won a silver medal in the mixed synchronized three-metre springboard at the Commonwealth Games.

Keeny and Li only started training together a week before arriving in Birmingham.

”It was our first time diving together (in competition),” Keeney said.

”We haven’t been really practicing together a lot and we have also got very different styles.

”We had our first session a week before we came over here.

”It was a last-minute decision to enter into mixed synchro and Shixin has always wanted to have a go at it with me so I was like ‘Yeah, why not’.

”It was difficult, but we had a lot of fun.”

Despite the limited preparation, Keeney and Li almost grabbed gold – they finished just 1.98 points behind Scotland’s James Heatley and Grace Reid.

Australia’s Domonic Bedggood and Anabelle Smith finished fifth.

In the synchronized mixed 10m platform final, Australia’s Cassiel Rousseau and Emily Boyd finished fifth and compatriots Bedggood and Melissa Wu placed eighth.

-with APA

Categories
US

Taiwan warns China drills show ambitions beyond island

PINGTUNG, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan warned Tuesday that Chinese military drills aren’t just a rehearsal for an invasion of the self-governing island but also reflect ambitions to control large swaths of the western Pacific, as Taipei conducted its own exercises to underscore it’s ready to defend itself.

Angered by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent visit to Taiwan, China has sent military ships and plans across the midline that separates the two sides in the Taiwan Strait and launched missiles into waters surrounding the island. The drills, which began Thursday, have disrupted flights and shipping in one of the busiest zones for global trade.

Ignoring calls to calm tensions, Beijing instead extended the exercises without announcing when they will end.

Taiwanese Foreign Minister Joseph Wu said that beyond aiming to annex the island democracy, which split with the mainland amid civil war in 1949, China wants to establish its dominance in the western Pacific. That would include controlling of the East and South China Seas via the Taiwan Strait and imposing a blockade to prevent the US and its allies from aiding Taiwan in the event of an attack, he told a news conference in Taipei.

The exercises show China’s “geostrategic ambition beyond Taiwan,” which Beijing claims as its own territory, Wu said.

“China has no right to interfere in or alter” Taiwan’s democracy or its interactions with other nations, he added.

Wu’s assessment of China’s maneuvers was grimmer than that of other observers but echoed widespread concerns that Beijing is seeking to expand its influence in the Pacific, where the US has military bases and extensive treaty partnerships.

China has said its drills were prompted by Pelosi’s visit, but Wu said Beijing was using her trip as a pretext for intimidating moves long in the works. China also banned some Taiwanese food imports after the visit and cut off dialogue with the US on a range of issues from military contacts to combating transnational crime and climate change.

Pelosi also dismissed China’s outrage as a public stunt, noting on NBC’s “Today” show that “nobody said a word” about a Senate delegation a few visit months ago. Later on the MSNBC news network, she said Chinese President Xi Jinping was acting like a “scared bully.”

“I don’t think the president of China should control the schedules of members of Congress,” she said.

Through its maneuvers, China has pushed closer to Taiwan’s borders and may be seeking to establish a new normal in which it could eventually control access to the island’s ports and airspace. But that would likely elicit a strong response from the military on the island, whose people strongly favor the status quo of de-facto independence.

The US, Taipei’s main backer, has also shown itself to be willing to face down Beijing’s threats. Washington has no formal diplomatic ties with Taiwan in deference to Beijing, but is legally bound to ensure the island can defend itself and to treat all threats against it as matters of grave concern.

That leaves open the question of whether Washington would dispatch forces if China attacked Taiwan. US President Joe Biden has repeatedly said the US is bound to do so — but staff members have quickly walked back those comments.

Beyond the geopolitical risks, an extended crisis in the Taiwan Strait, a significant thoroughfare for global trade, could have major implications for international supply chains at a time when the world is already facing disruptions and uncertainty in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic and the war in Ukraine. In particular, Taiwan is a crucial provider of computer chips for the global economy, including China’s high-tech sectors.

In response to the drills, Taiwan has put its forces on alert, but has so far refrained from taking active counter measures.

On Tuesday, its military held live-fire artillery drills in Pingtung County on its southeastern coast.

The army will continue to train and accumulate strength to deal with the threat from China, said Maj. Gen. Lou Woei-jye, spokesperson for Taiwan’s 8th Army Command. “No matter what the situation is… this is the best way to defend our country.”

Taiwan, once a Japanese colony, had only loose connections to imperial China and then split with the mainland in 1949. Despite never having governed the island, China’s ruling Communist Party regards it as its own territory and has sought to isolate it diplomatically and economically in addition to ratcheting up military threats.

Washington has insisted Pelosi’s visit did not change its “one China policy,” which holds that the United States has no position on the status of the two sides but wants their dispute settled peacefully.

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Associated Press writer Ashraf Khalil in Washington contributed to this report.

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