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Sports

Manchester United must let Cristiano Ronaldo leave

Former Manchester United forward Wayne Rooney has said that the club must let Cristiano Ronaldo leave if they are to build a successful team for the future under new manager Erik ten Hag.

The 37-year-old Ronaldo, who re-signed for United from Juventus last season, reportedly wants to move away from Old Trafford after the team’s failure to qualify for the Champions League.

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“I think United should let Cristiano Ronaldo go. It’s not that Ronaldo can’t play in a Ten Hag team. He can play in any team,” Rooney, who now manages Major League Soccer side DC United, wrote in a column for the Times.

“Ronny will always score you goals. But my personal view is that United aren’t ready to challenge for the title now, so the aim has to be to build a team that can win the league in the next three to four years, and you have to plan for that.”

United kick off their Premier League campaign at home to Brighton & Hove Albion on Sunday and Ronaldo was named on the bench.

He netted 24 times in all competitions last season, emerging as one of the few bright sparks in an otherwise forgettable campaign for United that saw them finish sixth.

Ten Hag this week said he was happy to have a “top striker” like Ronaldo in the squad and looking forward to working with him.

Rooney, who is United’s all-time leading scorer, added he was hopeful that Ten Hag would be able to establish a clear playing style at his former club.

“I couldn’t work out what they were trying to do in terms of game plan, or see any patterns of play,” Rooney said of last season.

“I think one of the big things you’ll see from Ten Hag is him really trying to put his stamp on the playing identity.”

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US

Body found in Southern Grand Marina

ROBINSON TOWNSHIP, Mich. (WOOD) — A body was found in the Southern Grand Marina late Saturday evening, the Ottawa County Sheriff’s Office said.

Just before midnight, deputies were sent to the Southern Grand Marina, located at 10367 North Cedar Dr., after receiving a report that a body was in the water.

First responders found a 59-year-old man dead in the water, the sheriff’s office said. The cause of death “was not apparent.”

The man’s name is being withheld pending notification of family.

The circumstances surrounding his death are under investigation.

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US

Biden steps out of the room and finds legacy-defining wins

WASHINGTON (AP) — Over five decades in Washington, Joe Biden knew that the way to influence was to be in the room where it happens. But in the second year of his presidency, some of Biden’s most striking, legacy-defining legislative victories came about by staying out of it.

A summer lawmaking blitz has sent bipartisan bills addressing gun violence and boosting the nation’s high-tech manufacturing sector to Biden’s desk, and the president is now on the cusp of securing what he called the “final piece” of his economic agenda with the sudden resurrection of a Democrats-only climate and prescription drug deal. And in a counterintuitive turn for the president who has long promoted his decades of Capitol Hill experience, Biden’s aides chalk up his victories to the fact that he’s been publicly playing the role of cheerleader rather than legislative quarterback.

“In a 50-50 Senate, it’s just true that when the White House takes ownership over a topic, it scares off a lot of Republicans,” said Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn. “I think all of this is purposeful. When you step back and let Congress lead, and then apply pressure and help at the right times, it can be a much more effective strategy to get things done.”

Democrats and the White House hope the run of legislative victories, both bipartisan and not, just four months before the November elections will help resuscitate their political fortunes by showing voters what they can accomplish with even the slimmest of majorities.

Biden opened 2022 with his legislative agenda at a standstill, poll numbers on the decline and a candid admission that he had made a “mistake” in how he carried himself in the role.

“The public doesn’t want me to be the ‘President-Senator,’” he said. “They want me to be the president and let senators be senators.”

Letting the senators be senators was no easy task for Biden, whose political and personal identities are rooted in his formative years spent in that chamber. He spent 36 years as a senator from Delaware, and eight more as the Senate’s president when he was valued for his Capitol Hill relationships and insights from him as Barack Obama’s vice president.

As Biden took a step back, he left it to aides to do much of the direct negotiating. His legislative strategy, instead, focused more on using his role as president to provide strategic jolts of urgency for his agenda both with lawmakers and voters.

In the estimation of many of his aides and advisers, leaving the Senate behind was key to his subsequent success. The heightened expectations for Democrats, who hold precarious majorities in Congress but nonetheless have unified control of Washington, were dragging Biden down among his supporters of him who wanted more ambitious action.

The sometimes unsavory horse-trading required to win consensus often put the president deep in the weeds and short on inspiration. And the dramatic negotiating breakdowns on the way to an ultimate deal proved to be all the more tantalizing because Biden himself was a party to the talks.

In the spring of 2021, Biden made a big show of negotiating directly with Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, RW.Va., on an infrastructure bill, only to have the talks collapse over the scope of the package and how to finance it. At the same time, a separate bipartisan group had been quietly meeting on its own, discussing how to overhaul the nation’s transportation, water and broadband systems. After the White House gave initial approval and then settled the final details with senators, that became the version that was shepherded into law.

The president next tried to strike a deal on a sweeping social spending and climate package with Sen. Joe Manchin, going as far as inviting the West Virginia lawmaker to his home in Wilmington, Delawareuntil the conservative Democrat abruptly pulled the plug on the talks in a Fox News interview. Manchin would later pick up the negotiations again, this time with just Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, DN.Y., and the two would eventually reach an agreement that is now on the verge of Senate approval after more than a year of legislative wrangling.

In late 2021, White House aides persuaded the president to clamor up about his conversations with the Hill, as part of a deliberate shift to move negotiations on his legislative agenda out of the public eye. The West Wing, once swift with the news that Biden had called this lawmaker or invited that caucus to the White House for a meeting, kept silent.

The new approach drew criticism from the press, but the White House wagered that the public was not invested in the details and would reward the outcomes.

Biden and his team “have been using the bully pulpit and closely working with Congress to fight for policies that lower costs for families and fight inflation, strengthen our competitiveness versus China, act against gun violence” and help veterans, said White House spokesman Andrew Bates . “He also directed his Cabinet, senior staff and legislative team to constantly engage with key lawmakers as we work together to achieve what could soon be the most productive legislative record of any president” since Lyndon Johnson.

Some of the shift, White House aides said, also reflected the changing dynamics of the COVID-19 pandemic, which kept Biden in Washington for most of 2021; his meetings of him with lawmakers amounted to one of the few ways to show he was working. As the pandemic eased and Biden was able to return to holding more in-person events with voters and interest groups, he was able to use those settings to drive his message directly to people.

The subtle transformation did not immediately pay dividends: Biden’s approval rating only continued to slide amid legislative inertia and soaring inflation.

Yet in time, Biden’s decision to embrace a facilitating role rather than being a negotiator in chief — which had achieved mixed success — began to pay off: the first substantive gun restrictions in nearly three decades, a measure to boost domestic production of semiconductor computer chips, and care for veterans exposed to toxic burn pits.

White House officials credit Biden’s emotional speech after the school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, with helping to galvanize lawmakers to act on gun violence — and even his push for more extensive measures than made it into the bill with giving the GOP space to reach a compromise. And they point to a steady cadence of speeches over months emphasizing the need to lower prescription drug costs or to act on climate with keeping those issues in the national conversation amid the legislative fits and starts.

In turn, both Democratic and GOP lawmakers say that Biden removing himself directly from the negotiations empowered senators to reach consensus among themselves, without the distraction of a White House that may have repeatedly pushed for something that would be unattainable with Republicans or could be viewed as compromising by some Democrats.

“The president kind of had said that we’re staying out,” Sen. Rob Portman, R-Ohio, said, referring to the gun talks earlier this year. “I think that was helpful.”

Being hands off, however, by no means meant the administration was absent.

Rather than be in the room as a gun deal was coming together, White House aides stayed by the phone, explaining how the administration would likely interpret and regulate the law that senators were drafting. Murphy spoke with White House officials every day, and when the Connecticut senator met personally with Biden in early June to offer an update, the president never gave him an ultimatum on what he was or was not willing to sign — continuing to defer to lawmakers.

At another point during the gun negotiations, rumors flew that the administration was considering barring the Pentagon from selling certain types of surplus ammunition to gun dealers, who then sold the ammunition commercially, according to two people familiar with the deliberations. But Republicans, chiefly Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, urged the White House to scrap those plans because it would run counter to the parameters of what the gun negotiators had discussed, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss details of private negotiations.

The White House eventually did so, issuing a statement to a conservative publication that no such executive order on ammunition was under consideration.

On the semiconductor package that Biden plans to sign into law Tuesday, the administration organized classified briefings for lawmakers that emphasized how China is gaining influence in the computer chip sector and the national security implications. Republicans were regularly in touch with Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, a Biden Cabinet official who has developed warm relationships across the aisle.

And on the Democrats’ party-line climate and health care package, Manchin has emphasized that it is impossible to craft legislation of this magnitude without White House input, although he did not deal with Biden directly until near the end, when the president called to let Manchin know the White House would support his agreement with Schumer, according to an official with knowledge of the call.

Biden also stayed out of the last-minute deliberations involving Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., and she and the president did not speak even as Democrats finalized an agreement that accommodated her demands.

“In his heart, Joe is a US senator,” said Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., the chief Democratic author of the burn pits legislation who also helped hash out the infrastructure law last year. “So he understands allowing this to work is how you get it done.”

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US

McKinney fire has destroyed nearly 90 homes and is only 40% contained

The blaze, the largest wildfire in California so far this year, erupted on July 29 in the forest near the California-Oregon border and grew rapidly, fueled by winds from thunderstorms.

The office said a further four structures had minor damage from the fire, with the damage assessment more than 50% complete.

The Klamath River community remains under an evacuation order, it said.

CNN Meteorologist Derek Van Dam said weather conditions were unlikely to help quell the fire over the weekend.

“Conditions have remained sunny and hot around the McKinney fire within the past 24 hours lending to the dry conditions near the incident. High temperatures have neared the triple digits in the valley floors, with excessive heat continuing through Monday before slightly cooler temperatures move in, “he said.

Flames burn inside a tree along Highway 96 in Klamath National Forest.

“The combination of the heat, low humidity values, dry conditions and downslope winds mean that further spread of the fire can be anticipated through the weekend and into early next week. Although a thunderstorm cannot be ruled out over the fire region today, it won ‘t likely contain any meaningful rainfall.”

The Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office said it was working to try to allow residents back to their properties but that numerous hazards remained in the evacuation zone. Four bodies have been recovered from the burn area, it said earlier in the week.
Search and Rescue teams from California and southern Oregon had contributed more than 1,000 volunteer hours to the operation, the sheriff’s office said in a post on Facebook.

“At least 150 SAR members have been staffing our Law Enforcement Command Post, planning and organizing daily operations, going downriver to assist with searching structures and homes, and everything else that goes into a large incident. We have also had 10 search and rescue K9 teams, starting early in the morning each day,” it said.

Homes burned to the ground

Among the homes that burned down was that of Kayla Dailey, who fled the blaze with her family on the due date for her third child.

“I could see nothing but smoke and the fire coming down the mountain,” Dailey told CNN earlier this week. Dailey, her two young sons, husband Levi and the family’s roommate Dalton Shute left in their small car with few possessions.

Dailey later learned the fire had started just 3 miles away from their home, which they had relocated to from Indiana just four months ago.

When she spoke to CNN, Dailey was concerned that the evacuation of the nearest hospital meant she faced a 2-hour trek through the mountains to give birth at a hospital in Medford, Oregon.

Flames make run uphill in the McKinney Fire on August 1.
On Friday, she shared the news that the local hospital began accepting patients on a limited basis when Dailey went into labor and her baby daughter was born safely via emergency C-section on Thursday.
Her brother-in-law has established a GoFundMe page to help the family, which lost everything in the fire.
  As California's McKinney Fire rages, evacuated residents grapple with losses and an uncertain future

Shute, the Dailey’s friend and roommate, told CNN that he had lost his mother to a house fire when he was 6 years old. “I feel that sort of emptiness I felt when I was a child,” he said.

But he was optimistic that he and his friends would rebound. “We’re definitely not going to let this set us back,” Shute said.

Valerie Linfoot and her husband, both retired forest firefighters, lost their home of more than three decades.

“We’ve fought fires and seen homes burn up and been in a place of being the firefighters there doing that work, but to have it happen to yourself, it’s just unimaginable,” Linfoot told CNN earlier in the week. “I’m still overwhelmed that we’re the victims of this horrible, horrible convergence of weather and fire, which so many times we’ve seen other people suffer.”

For Linfoot, the hardest part is thinking about the irreplaceable items that were left behind when her home burned down, such as her wedding rings, the ashes of her mother and grandmother and her children’s baby photographs.

The Linfoots set up a GoFundMe page to help them with recovery and rebuilding.

“It’s a small community and this is absolutely devastating to Klamath River,” she said. “I don’t know how they’re gonna recover. None of us are rich people. We’re all hardworking and resilient people, but most people that were down there are middle class, regular working folks or retirees.”

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Categories
US

Donald Trump hints at 2024 White House comeback bid

Former President Donald Trump strongly indicated he is preparing to run for president and suggested an announcement will come soon.

Trump, who has repeatedly said that he’s made a decision on the 2024 race, was asked by Fox News Digital at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Texas when Republicans could expect a formal announcement.

“It’s certainly not a very long period, the time is coming,” said the former president. “I think people are going to be very happy, our country has never been in a position like this, we’ve lost everything.”

Trump said that America was facing both domestic and foreign policy crises. In particular, I have argued the country’s “prestige” had been damaged by President Biden’s botched withdrawal from Afghanistan.

“Our country has never been at a worse point,” said Trump. “They gave away $85 billion worth of equipment, dead soldiers, you still have Americans over there probably as hostages, eventually will be hostages, there has never been a time like this.

“We’ll be making an announcement in the not too distant future,” Trump added.

Former US President Donald Trump speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, US, on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022.
Trump has repeatedly said that he’s made a decision on the 2024 race.
Yuki Iwamura for NYPost

The remarks came shortly after CPAC unveiled its straw poll showing Trump as the overwhelming favorite for the 2024 GOP nomination among the conservative grassroots. Trump captured nearly 70% of the ballots cast at the conference, with Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis coming in at a distant second at 23.7%.

Since leaving the White House in January 2021, Trump has maintained an active presence within the Republican Party.

The former president has endorsed an expansive list of candidates running for everything from local and state offices to the United States Senate.

Former US President Donald Trump speaks during the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) in Dallas, Texas, US, on Saturday, Aug. 6, 2022. Yuki Iwamura for NYPost
Trump said that America was facing both domestic and foreign policy crises.
Yuki Iwamura for NYPost

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Categories
Technology

Pokemon Scarlet & Violet’s Grusha Gives Fans an interrogation to sexuality

More details about Pokemon Scarlet & Violet were revealed earlier this week, as the game introduced many more characters such as academy director Clavell, homeroom teacher Jacq, and your shy new rival Penny. We also looked at the most famous gym leaders in the game, with most fans focused their attention on Grusha, the Ice-type leader. Exactly like Professor Turo and Sada earlier this year, fans were so excited.

The GAMER VIDEO DAYS!

A lot of the supporters at NSFW floodfed Twitter and relevant sites that you might expect. However, Game Freak itself caused chaos and made fan artists question their sexuality when they revealed that, despite her more feminine appearance, Grusha is actually a guy with a pronouns. According to his official description of him, Grusha is a cool snowboarder who shares his true emotions in heated battles.

The Gamer’s Biologist Explains Why Pokemon Scarlet andamp; Violet’s Fidough Are Busted.

When Grusha’s gender was confirmed, the NSFW fan artists had to knees before already having drawn multiple saucy drawings of Grusha thinking he was a woman. One fan — especially — went in full denial mode and decided to completely reject this new information. Some fans said they would embrace their bisexual awakening, one of them saying that “if Grusha a guy calls me gay,” a person saying. You know all the rage about Grusha, because bisexuals can stay in a standing position.

To mention the new Gym Leaders, we also got a first look at Paldea, the revelation that legendaries will be rideable from the beginning, and a showcase of the game’s new battle gimmick. Game Freak showed a few new Pokemon for Scarlet and Violet, with an adorable doggo made of bread called Fidough and a Paldean form for Wooper, making him the first Poison/Ground type to be added to the series since Gen 1.

Pokemon Scarlet & Violet will be launched on November 18 later this year.

Categories
Sports

Citi Open 2022 tennis news

Nick Kyrgios has reached his second consecutive final for the first time in his career in extraordinary circumstances in Washington.

Kyrgios’ 7-6(4) 6-3 victory over Mikael Ymer at the Citi Open was his third win in the space of just two days as bad weather in the US capital forced a number of delays.

On Friday, Kyrgios first defeated Reilly Opelka, before saving five match points in an epic quarter-final win over Frances Tiafoe.

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After his semi-final win over Ymer, Kyrgios revealed he barely slept after his two wins on Friday.

“I didn’t get to sleep until 4.50am. I had so much adrenaline. I ate some dinner, got some treatment and just my body was so sore after last night,” he said courtside.

“It was an epic battle (against Tiafoe). I didn’t really do much today and I felt like my energy was a little flat today early on.

“It’s understandable – I’m only human – but my adrenaline for the final is going to be right there. I’m super excited for it.

“I’m just happy to be in another ending,” Kyrgios said.

Kyrgios has adjusted well to the hot, humid conditions at the hard-court US Open warm-up. He won an uncharacteristic 24-shot rally on Ymer’s serve to go ahead 5-4 in the first-set tiebreak and served it out from there.

In the second set, Krygios secured the only service break of the match on a cross-court half-volley from no-man’s land to move ahead 5-3.

The 27-year-old Australian is No.63 in the rankings but would move to 37th if he takes the title on Sunday. Kyrgios won at Washington in 2019, the most recent of his six ATP titles.

Top-seeded Andrey Rublev was playing Yoshihito Nishioka in the second men’s semifinal on Saturday night.

Earlier in the women’s draw, Kaia Kanepi moved within one victory of her first title in nine years, overwhelming Daria Saville 6-3 6-1.

Kanepi, a 37-year-old from Estonia, won the last of her four WTA titles in 2013 in Brussels. But she has enjoyed a resurgence this year, reaching the quarterfinals of the Australian Open, and credits smart scheduling for her continued good form.

“It was amazing, actually, for me. I never thought I would make quarters in Australia. I thought it’s not just my place,” Kanepi, who previously reached the quarter-finals in the other three grand slam tournaments, said.

“But I played really well, and then I continued playing well. I actually didn’t put any pressure on myself to achieve something special.”

Kanepi’s match record this year is 19-10, her winningest year since 2013, and she is ranked No.37. She plans to play two more hard-court tournaments before the US Open, which starts August 29.

In the final, Kanepi will face 60th-ranked Liudmila Samsonova, who breezed past Xiyun Wang 6-1 6-1. The 23-year-old Samsonova is seeking her second WTA singles title. She won a hard-court event in Connecticut in 2017.

— with Damien McCartney

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Categories
US

4 teens shot in Duquesne

Four teenagers were shot late Saturday night in the city of Duquesne.It happened around 9:40 pm along Orchard Park Avenue and Ridge Street.Duquesne police officers responded to multiple calls for gunshots and people injured at Allegheny County Orchard Park Housing Community.Once on scene, they found the four victims. Two 17-year-old boys were found with lower body gunshot wounds. Another 16-year-old boy suffered a graze wound to the head. One 17-year-old girl suffered a gunshot wound to her lower body de ella as well. All four victims were transported to the hospital in stable condition. Police have not released information anymore but are investigating into how this shooting happened.

Four teenagers were shot late Saturday night in the city of Duquesne.

It happened around 9:40 pm along Orchard Park Avenue and Ridge Street.

Duquesne police officers responded to multiple calls for gunshots and people injured at Allegheny County Orchard Park Housing Community.

Once on scene, they found the four victims. Two 17-year-old boys were found with lower body gunshot wounds. Another 16-year-old boy suffered a graze wound to the head. One 17-year-old girl suffered a gunshot wound to her lower body from her as well.

All four victims were transported to the hospital in stable condition.

Police have not released information anymore but are investigating into how this shooting happened.

Categories
Technology

Intel says GPUs supporting older games is a work in progress

Intel has just shared a video update regarding the current state of gameplay on its Arc Alchemist GPUs. In a previous video, it was made clear that Intel’s cards may struggle with games that aren’t running on DirectX 12.

The video makes it clear that optimizing Intel Arc for DirectX 11 and older is still very much a work in progress that might never come to an end. On the other hand, AMD and Nvidia generally don’t share those problems. Will gamers even entertain trying out Intel Arc with these issues in mind?

Intel shared a quick Q&A video with Ryan Shrout and Tom Petersen, in which both the experts give an honest update on the state of things for the graphics card. While we still didn’t get any of the (perhaps even more pressing) juicy news, such as a release date, we’re slowly getting to learn more about the performance of Intel Arc.

The topic of DirectX 12 and Vulkan versus DirectX 11 first came up in a recent Linus Tech Tips video that both Shrout and Petersen also took part in. In the video, Linus noted that going from DX12 to DX11 resulted in a 45% performance drop in Shadow of the Tomb Raider. There’s no way to sugar coat this — this can be a problem.

While it’s a good thing that Intel Arc is so well optimized for DirectX 12, which means it will run some AAA titles with relative ease, a graphics card can’t only be used for the latest games. Plenty of older (and not even that much older) titles still rely on DirectX 11 or even older versions, and gamers are right to expect that they’ll be able to play these titles on their modern-day rig, too.

The problem is that DirectX 11 and 9 as well as other older APIs are much different from DX12 and Vulkan. Where DirectX 12 and Vulkan both chiefly rely on the game engine to handle all of the heavy-lifting, older APIs mostly apply pressure to the GPU driver.

This is something both AMD and Nvidia have had years to get used to and work with. This is why, whether you buy one of the best graphics cards or opt for something budget-friendly, you can feel safe in the knowledge that you’ll get decent performance in older games. Your mileage may vary, but you shouldn’t experience the kind of drop in frames per second (fps) that Intel is seeing right now, with nearly twice the performance in DX12 as opposed to DX11.

Intel Arc Alchemist reference design render.

Intel is certainly aware of the problem, as can be seen in the refreshingly open Q&A. Petersen said, “We expect DX12 and Vulkan titles to be very good performance relative to the competition. […] On some DX11 titles, we’re gonna do great, but on other DX11 titles, we’re not gonna do great. It’s gonna be progress and improvement over time.”

Petersen then went on to note that Intel Arc hardware is a lot different than Nvidia and AMD, so Intel is now forced to go back and fine-tune all the things that developers have come to expect from a GPU driver. He also said that improving DX11 performance is going to be a “labor of love forever.”

It’s hard not to appreciate Intel’s transparency here. The truth is that if you’ll mostly be playing the games that Arc works well with, you might be fine — but it’s hard to expect gamers to only stick to a select few titles and never stray from those. Because of that, unless Intel Arc can keep working on optimization, it will have a hard time, as will the people who choose to buy it.

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Sports

ClermontFoot vs. Paris Saint-Germain – Football Match Report – August 6, 2022

Lionel Messi scored a sensational bicycle-kick goal as Paris Saint-Germain began the defense of their Ligue 1 title with an emphatic 5-0 victory over Clermont at the Stade Gabriel Montpied on Saturday.

Messi netted a brace to go with goals from Neymar, Achraf Hakimi and Marquinhos as they followed up last weekend’s 4-0 Trophee des Champions victory over Nantes with another easy win.

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It took only nine minutes for them to get in front as Messi brilliantly flicked the ball into the path of Neymar, who finished an excellent move.

Hakimi scored midway through the first half from a lightning counterattack, before Marquinhos headed Neymar’s free kick into the net.

Neymar then provided a fourth for Messi, before the Argentine forward capped off an excellent performance with a stunning goal, chesting a pass from Leandro Paredes and providing a bicycle-kick finish.

PSG were without the third member of their star forward trio, Kylian Mbappe, due to injury. New coach Christophe Galtier handed Ligue 1 debuts for PSG to summer arrivals Vitinha, Hugo Ekitike and Nordi Mukiele.

There was also a debut for Warren Zaire-Emery, who, aged 16 years, four months and 29 days, became the youngest player ever to feature for PSG in a competitive match.

“A lot of satisfaction, first and foremost with the win,” Galtier said afterward. “Winning the game and scoring five goals is important, as is not granting any chances and maintaining high levels throughout, even when the gaps were getting larger.

“I liked the way that the team expressed itself in attack, of course. But also when the block needed to put in the team effort to win the ball back. There was a lot of effort put in for one and other, and putting in that effort for teammates is something that we are really insisting on a lot.

“I know that I have a very talented team with players who are very talented, but they need to play as a team, and that needs to happen over the whole of a match and then throughout the season.”

Earlier, Monaco won 2-1 at Racing Strasbourg after the home side had a last gasp equalizer ruled out by VAR.

Monaco, who play away in the Champions League preliminary round against PSV Eindhoven on Tuesday, went up 2-0 through Krepin Diatta and Sofiane Diop before Habib Diallo pulled one back in the 65th minute.

Diallo thought he had another goal, two minutes into stoppage time, when he headed home but teammate Alexander Djiku was found to be offside as he made the assist and the strike was ruled out to hand Monaco victory.