Tower of Fantasy will be officially released this week, and now that interested players have pushed the pre-registration numbers to over 4 million, the team has announced some more bonuses those pre-registered players will get after launch.
There will be two additional limited time rewards added since the numbers exceeded expectations and show a strong amount of interest. The first release, Shoulder to Shoulder: Round 1 will start at launch on August 10th and run through August 17th. The second, Shoulder to Shoulder: Round 2 will begin on August 17th and also run for a week, through August 24th.
This will work like the other pre-registration bonuses will, with the need to complete a certain early part of the main story in order to unlock and access your account’s rewards page. After completing “Ecological Station Intruders”, this will open up.
Rewards for this new round will include Vehicle 2613, red nucleus x10 and gold nucleus x10, with the red nucleus available in the second week post-launch. Still, these rewards join all of the rest of the pre-registration loot and should help anyone get off to a good start.
With release so close, if you’re still interested in pre-registering, this will still be open for just over two more days for the global launch. Tower of Fantasy‘s shared open-world RPG gameplay, emphasis on group dynamics in an anime-inspired, and fast-paced sci-fi fantasy world is all nearly here. If you’re curious just what this is all about, how teaming up will look, and much more about this new title from Hotta Studio, check out our recent preview.
Players can begin pre-loading the game tomorrow, ahead of the launch time in various regions. That launch time will be 8pm PDT / 11pm Eastern on August 10th.
For more on the Shoulder to Shoulder bonuses, head over to Tower of Fantasy.
There’s good and bad news for the Storm with Nick Meaney returning at fullback but also star halfback Jahrome Hughes out with a shoulder injury.
Meanwhile, interim Warriors coach Stacey has recalled young five-eighth Daejarn Asi, allowing Wayde Egan to shift back to hooker for Friday’s clash with the Bulldogs.
And the Sharks and Tigers have had to fill holes in their backline after injuries to key players last week.
Read on for all the NRL Teams for Round 22.
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THURSDAY
Penrith Panthers vs Melbourne Storm 7.50pm at BlueBet Stadium
panthers team: 1. Dylan Edwards 2. Taylan May 3. Izack Tago 4. Stephen Crichton 5. Brian To’o 6. Jaeman Salmon 7. Sean O’Sullivan 8. Moses Leota 9. Apisai Koroisau 10. Matt Eisenhuth 11. Chris Smith 12 Liam Martin 13. Isaah Yeo 14. Mitch Kenny 15. Scott Sorensen 16. Spencer Leniu 17. Sunia Turuva 18. Charlie Staines 19. J’maine Hopgood 20. Robert Jennings 21. Kurt Falls 22. Viliame Kikau
storm-team: 1. Nick Meaney 2. David Nofoaluma 3. Marion Seve 4. Justin Olam 5. Xavier Coates 6. Cameron Munster 7. Cooper Johns 8. Jesse Bromwich 9. Harry Grant 10. Nelson Asofa-Solomona 11. Tom Eisenhuth 12. Kenny Bromwich 13. Josh King 14. Brandon Smith 15. Tui Kamikamica 16. Chris Lewis 17. Tyran Wishart 18. Alec MacDonald 19. Dean Ieremia 20. Young Tonumaipea 21. Jordan Grant 22. Jack Howarth
Broncos set to make changes after losses | 01:53
FRIDAY
Warriors vs Canterbury-Bankstown Bulldogs 6pm at Mt Smart Stadium
warriors team: 1. Reece Walsh 2. Dallin Watene-Zelezniak 3. Viliami Vailea 4. Marcelo Montoya 5. Edward Kosi 6. Daejarn Asi 7. Shaun Johnson 8. Addin Fonua-Blake 9. Wayde Egan 10. Tohu Harris 11. Euan Aitken 12 Jack Murchie 13. Josh Curran 14. Freddy Lussick 15. Bunty Afoa 16. Eliesa Katoa 17. Jackson Frei 18. Bayley Sironen 20. Adam Pompey 21. Taniela Otukolo 22. Tom Ale 23. Rocco Berry
bulldogs team: 1. Jake Averillo 2. Jacob Kiraz 3. Aaron Schoupp 4. Braidon Burns 5. Josh Addo-Carr 6. Matt Burton 7. Kyle Flanagan 8. Max King 9. Jeremy Marshall-King 10. Paul Vaughan 11. Josh Jackson 12 Jackson Topine 13. Raymond Faitala-Mariner 14. Zach Dokar-Clay 15. Joe Stimson 16. Harrison Edwards 17. Chris Patolo 19. Declan Casey 20. Kurtis Morrin 21. Bailey Biondi-Odo 22. Jeral Skelton 23. Phillip Makatoa
Parramatta Eels vs South Sydney Rabbitohs 7.55pm at CommBank Stadium
eels team: 1. Clinton Gutherson 2. Maika Sivo 3. Viliami Penisini 4. Tom Opacic 5. Waqa Blake 6. Dylan Brown 7. Jakob Arthur 8. Reagan Campbell-Gillard 9. Reed Mahoney 10. Junior Paulo 11. Shaun Lane 12. Isaiah Papali’i 13. Ryan Matterson 14. Ofahiki Ogden 15. Bryce Cartwright 16. Oregon Kaufusi 17. Marata Niukore 18. Makahesi Makatoa 19. Bailey Simonsson 20. Ky Rodwell 21. Sean Russell 22. Elie El Zakhem
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Eels tired of ’embarrassment’ by Souths | 01:22
SATURDAY
Sydney Roosters vs North Queensland Cowboys 3pm at SCG
roosters team: 1. James Tedesco 2. Daniel Tupou 3. Paul Momirovski 4. Joseph Manu 5. Joseph Suaalii 6. Luke Keary 7. Sam Walker 8. Jared Waerea-Hargreaves 9. Sam Verrills 10. Matthew Lodge 11. Angus Crichton 12. Nat Butcher 13. Victor Radley 14. Connor Watson 15. Egan Butcher 16. Drew Hutchison 17. Terrell May 18. Adam Keighran 19. Fletcher Baker 20. Kevin Naiqama 21. Ben Thomas 22. Siua Wong
cowboys team: 1. Scott Drinkwater 2. Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow 3. Valentine Holmes 4. Peta Hiku 5. Murray Taulagi 6. Tom Dearden 7. Chad Townsend 8. Coen Hess 9. Reece Robson 10. Reuben Cotter 11. Tom Gilbert 12. Jeremiah Nanai 13. Jason Taumalolo 14. Jordan McLean 15. Jamayne Taunoa-Brown 16. Luciano Leilua 17. Griffin Neame 18. Brendan Elliot 19. Ben Hampton 20. Jake Granville 21. Riley Price 22. Connelly Lemuelu
Wests Tigers vs Cronulla Sharks 5.30pm at Scully Park, Tamworth
tigers team: 1. Daine Laurie 2. Brent Naden 3. James Roberts 4. Asu Kepaoa 5. Starford To’a 6. Adam Doueihi 7. Jock Madden 8. James Tamou 9. Fa’amanu Brown 10. Zane Musgrove 11. Alex Seyfarth 12 Kelma Tuilagi 13. Joe Ofahengaue 14. Fonua Pole 15. Austin Dias 16. Thomas Freebairn 17. Tyrone Peachey 18. Luke Garner 19. Jake Simpkin 20. Brandon Tumeth 21. Junior Tupou 22. Justin Matamua
sharks team: 1. Kade Dykes 2. Lachlan Miller 3. Jesse Ramien 4. Siosifa Talakai 5. Ronaldo Mulitalo 6. Braydon Trindall 7. Nicho Hynes 8. Toby Rudolf 9. Blayke Brailey 10. Braden Hamlin-Uele 11. Briton Nikora 12. Wade Graham 13. Dale Finucane 14. Teig Wilton 15. Cameron McInnes 16. Aiden Tolman 17. Andrew Fifita 18. Kayal Iro 19. Royce Hunt 20. Luke Metcalf 21. Jesse Colquhoun 22. Matt Ikuvalu
Brisbane Broncos vs Newcastle Knights 7.35pm at Suncorp Stadium
broncos team: 1. Te Maire Martin 2. Corey Oates 3. Kotoni Staggs 4. Brenko Lee 5. Selwyn Cobbo 6. Ezra Mam 7. Adam Reynolds 8. Thomas Flegler 9. Billy Walters 10. Payne Haas 11. Kurt Capewell 12. Jordan Riki 13. Kobe Hetherington 14. Jake Turpin 15. Rhys Kennedy 16. Corey Jensen 17. Keenan Palasia 18. Cory Paix 19. Ryan James 20. Jordan Pereira 21. Delouise Hoeter 22. Zac Hosking
knights team: 1. Tex Hoy 2. Enari Tuala 3. Dane Gagai 4. Bradman Best 5. Dominic Young 6. Anthony Milford 7. Adam Clune 8. David Klemmer 9. Jayden Brailey 10. Daniel Saifiti 11. Tyson Frizell 12. Brodie Jones 13 Mathew Croker 14. Phoenix Crossland 15. Jacob Saifiti 16. Pasami Saulo 17. Simi Sasagi 18. Jack Johns 19. Sauaso Sue 20. Chris Randall 21. Edrick Lee 22. Hymel Hunt
Rudolf opens up on Pride support | 01:19
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SUNDAY
Canberra Raiders vs St George Illawarra Dragons 2pm at GIO Stadium
raiders team: 1. Xavier Savage 2. Albert Hopoate 3. Matthew Timoko 4. Sebastian Kris 5. Jordan Rapana 6. Jack Wighton 7. Jamal Fogarty 8. Josh Papali’i 9. Zac Woolford 10. Emre Guler 11. Hudson Young 12. Elliott Whitehead 13. Adam Elliott 14. Tom Starling 15. Ryan Sutton 16. Corey Horsburgh 17. Corey Harawira-Naera 18. James Schiller 19. Ata Mariota 20. Matt Frawley 21. Peter Hola 22. Charnze Nicoll-Klokstad
dragons team: 1. Moses Mbye 2. Mathew Feagai 3. Jack Bird 4. Zac Lomax 5. Tautau Moga 6. Talatau Amone 7. Ben Hunt 8. Jack de Belin 9. Andrew McCullough 10. Blake Lawrie 11. Josh Mcguire 12. Jaydn Su ‘A 13. Michael Molo 14. Tyrell Sloan 15. Aaron Woods 16. Tyrell Fuimaono 17. Billy Burns 18. Jayden Sullivan 19. Jackson Ford 20. Jaiyden Hunt 21. Cody Ramsey 22. Jack Gosiewski
Gold Coast Titans vs Manly Sea Eagles 4.05pm at Cbus Super Stadium
titans team: 1. Jayden Campbell 2. Sosefo Fifita 3. Phillip Sami 4. Brian Kelly 5. Patrick Herbert 6. AJ Brimson 7. Tanah Boyd 8. Moeaki Fotuaika 9. Erin Clark 10. Tino Fa’asuamaleaui 11. David Fifita 12. Beau Fermor 13. Isaac Liu 14. Greg Marzhew 15. Herman Ese’ese 16. Jaimin Jolliffe 17. Sam McIntyre 18. Corey Thompson 19. Toby Sexton 20. Paul Turner 21. Klese Haas 22. Jarrod Wallace
Sea Eagles team: 1. Reuben Garrick 2. Jason Saab 3. Morgan Harper 4. Tolutau Koula 5. Christian Tuipulotu 6. Kieran Foran 7. Daly Cherry-Evans 8. Toafofoa Sipley 9. Lachlan Croker 10. Martin Taupau 11. Haumole Olakau’atu 12 Andrew Davey 13. Jake Trbojevic 14. Dylan Walker 15. Ben Trbojevic 16. Ethan Bullemor 17. Josh Aloiai 18. Josh Schuster 19. Kurt De Luis 20. Brad Parker 21. Kaeo Weekes 22. Morgan Boyle
GLYNN COUNTY, Ga. — The three men who killed Ahmaud Arbery have now been sentenced on federal hate crime charges.
Both Greg and Travis McMichael received another life sentence. Their neighbor William “Roddie” Bryan was sentenced to 35 years.
Channel 2’s Audrey Washington was inside the courtroom Monday where two of the three men apologized to the family.
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In a stunning moment Greg McMichael and Bryan turned to Arbery’s family and apologized. When asked if he wanted to say anything, Travis McMichael simply said no.
It has taken years, but Wanda Cooper Jones, Arbery’s mother, and the rest of Arbery’s family said they feel a sense of peace.
“I’m thankful because It’s been a long fight but I’m thankful that God gave us the strength to continue to fight,” Cooper Jones said. “It was 74 days before we actually got an arrest, so think about today. We got convictions on a federal level.”
A US district judge sentenced all three men convicted of murdering Arbery on federal hate crime charges Monday.
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In February, a jury ruled that Greg McMichael, his son Travis and Bryan targeted Arbery because he was Black.
First to go before the judge Monday morning was Travis McMichael. The judge sentenced him to life plus 10 years on the hate crime charges.
Greg McMichael was sentenced next. I have received life plus seven years.
And finally, Bryan was sentenced Monday afternoon, with the judge giving him 420 months in prison.
Bryan never fired a shot, but the judge said he chased Arbery and then recorded the deadly shooting.
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In a surprising moment, inside court, Greg McMichael turned to the Arbery family and apologized. Bryan also told the family that he was sorry.
“Unfortunately, his apology doesn’t bring back my son. I do accept the apology,” Cooper Jones told Washington.
“When you caught up and it’s looking bad for you and you try to apologize, that’s the wrong time to make an apology. He should have done that, day one,” said Marcus Arbery, Ahmaud Arbery’s father.
As for the Arbery family, they said their focus now turns the former Glynn County district attorney who was indicted for misconduct in the Arbery case.
RELATED NEWS:
Lawyer: Arbery shooter fears he’ll be killed in state prison Travis McMichael, 36, faces sentencing Monday in US District Court after his conviction on federal hate crime charges in February
As the number of retirees grows and international travel becomes more problematic and expensive because of the pandemic, there is a surge in the number of gray nomads traveling Australia.
After all, what could be simpler than taking your caravan to drive around our country? No lost luggage, no fluctuating fares, and the freedom to do what you want.
An extended period as a gray nomad has the potential to affect the age pension.Credit:Shutterstock
However, there is a potential problem: the effect on your age pension.
A reader tells me that they use their son’s home as a base for mail and have rented out their house for three years, to gain some income as they travel.
However, they are concerned that their pension may be negatively affected because, once they move out, it would become assessable under the pension assets test. Their home is worth $900,000 which, together with their superannuation, would be enough to wipe out their pension eligibility.
This issue certainly needs thinking about if becoming a gray nomad is on your bucket list.
A Centrelink spokesman tells me that you can be absent from your home for up to 12 months and still be considered a homeowner, which means your principal place of residence is exempt from the pension assets test.
If you are overseas and unable to return because of circumstances beyond your control, this period may be extended. However, except for this circumstance, once the 12 months have expired, your house would be counted for the assets test. And this could be enough to make you lose the pension.
If you resume occupancy of your home within 12 months, and later leave the home again, a new 12-month exemption period begins.
The original Garmin Enduro lived up to its name by offering stupendous battery life, but unless you really did crave the joy of only charging your watch once a month, it was a hard sell compared with the best running watches like the Garmin Fenix 7.
That’s because, as I noted in my Garmin Enduro review, it was more expensive but lacked some key features like music storage and maps, compromises made presumably in order to free up room for a bigger battery.
With the Garmin Enduro 2 you no longer have to choose between features and battery life. It’s packed with all of Garmin’s best sports tracking features, and now has music and maps along with a monster battery life. It’s the new top dog in Garmin’s range and has a price to match, costing $1,099.99 in the US and £929.99 in the UK.
Garmin Enduro 2: Price And Availability
The Enduro 2 is available now and at $1,099.99/£929.99 is the most expensive sports watch in Garmin’s range (excluding the luxury Marq devices). It’s a big price hike on the original Enduro, which was $799.99/£699.99 for the steel version and $899.99/£799.99 for the titanium watch (and is now £549.99 or £619.99 in the UK), and the Enduro 2 is also more expensive than the Garmin Epix 2 (from £799.99/$899.99) and Fenix 7 (from £599.99/$699.99).
Buy from GarminUK (opens in new tab) | Garmin US (opens in new tab)
What’s New?
From left to right: Garmin Epix Gen 2, Garmin Enduro 2, Garmin Fenix 7X. (Image credit: Nick Harris-Fry/Future)
The design of the Enduro 2 is similar to the original Enduro and Fenix 7 range, but it keeps things simple by only having one model. This has a titanium bezel and rear cover, and it’s a little thicker than the original Enduro at 15.6mm vs 14.9mm. The case diameter is 51mm and it has a 1.4in transflective display which is now a touchscreen, with solar panels around the outside.
On the top of the case is an LED torch that’s twice as bright as the one on the Fenix 7X. The torch has four brightness settings, plus a red-light mode.
Battery life is the star feature of the Enduro range and the 2 is a monster on this front, lasting up to 34 days in smartwatch mode (46 days with solar) or 110 hours of GPS-only tracking (150 hours solar).
Those numbers come down if you use the new GPS modes which include multi-GNSS tracking (all-systems-on), multi-band, multi-GNSS tracking and a SatIQ mode that automatically switches you between GPS modes so you have the accuracy of multi-band tracking when you need it, but save battery in standard GPS mode when that’s good enough. This is a great idea for extending battery life without sacrificing GPS quality, and is available on the Epix 2, Fenix 7 (sapphire models) and Garmin Forerunner 955.
Even in the most accurate multi-band tracking mode, the Enduro 2 is listed as lasting up to 68 hours, or 81 hours with solar. That’s a big jump on even the Fenix 7X, which lasts 36 hours in multi-band mode (41 hours with solar).
Probably the feature that was most missed on the original Enduro was Garmin’s excellent maps and navigation aids, and those have been added to the Enduro 2. The 2 also offers music storage and the ability to link with streaming services like Spotify (if you’re a subscriber) to wirelessly transfer music to the watch. Streaming music from the Enduro 2 to wireless headphones will reduce battery significantly. Garmin quotes 20 hours of battery in all-systems-on GPS mode with music.
The Enduro 2 also debuts a training metric called grade adjusted pace (GAP), which gives you a current pace reading that takes into account the incline you’re on, so it will be slower than your pace on downhills and faster on uphills. It can help you pace yourself over hilly routes, which will naturally appeal to the adventurous ultramarathon crowd.
As you’d hope given the price, the Enduro 2 also picks up the other smart features and training analysis seen on Garmin’s other flagship watches, including Garmin Pay and training readiness. Not every feature was available on the watch before launch, but they are due to arrive in updates this year.
first impressions
I have had the Enduro 2 for five days ahead of its launch and have used it for four runs and a couple of yoga sessions, comparing it with the Garmin Epix 2 paired with a Garmin HRM-Pro Plus strap, which has proved a very accurate pairing for GPS and heart rate testing in my experience.
The Enduro 2 is a good-looking and surprisingly light watch – my titanium review sample weighs 2.5oz/70g with the nylon strap (2.25oz/64g without), exactly in line with Garmin’s specs, and sits on the wrist comfortably for a big watch.
The Garmin Enduro 2’s transflective touchscreen is readable in bright sunlight. (Image credit: Nick Harris-Fry/Future)
The screen is a little dull, as is the case with other Garmin watches with solar charging and sapphire screens, but it’s still clear and easy to read in direct sunlight, even if the Epix 2’s AMOLED screen is considerably better. As with the Epix 2 and Fenix 7 the touchscreen is handy at times when scrolling through widgets, but mostly I still use the buttons.
I have been testing the watch in the SatIQ GPS mode and the accuracy has been very good and comparable to the GPS tracks produced by the Epix 2 in multi-band mode. I would probably still err on the side of caution and select multi-band for important workouts and races, but it seems the SatIQ mode is a useful option to save a bit of battery life while still getting great GPS accuracy.
The heart rate tracking hasn’t been quite so good, and the results have been more or less in line with what I’ve experienced with all large sports watches. I tend to get a high reading at the start of workouts, and though this will usually settle down and track in line with a chest strap’s measurements, it can be enough to skew how the entire workout is rated. For example, on one long run with the Enduro 2 it read too high for the first couple of miles which meant my easy run was assessed as a tempo run in Garmin’s training analysis and extended my recovery time by 20 hours compared with what the Epix 2 (linked to a chest strap) gave me after the same run.
I will be pairing a chest strap with the Enduro 2 for my extended testing to get the most from the training analysis, and if you’re spending this much on a watch I’d shell out the extra for a strap to get better accuracy ( you’ll find plenty of options in our selection of the best heart rate monitors).
The GPS accuracy of the Garmin Enduro 2 has been very good. (Image credit: Nick Harris-Fry/Future)
The mapping features are in line with what you get on the Fenix 7, Forerunner 955 and Epix 2, and they are excellent. Along with turn-by-turn directions you get helpful details like the distance to your next fork, insights into the climbs and descents on your route through ClimbPro, plus the Up Ahead feature where you can mark the key points on your route, like aid stations in ultramarathons, and see the distance to them.
Grade adjusted pace (GAP) is a new feature arriving to Garmin’s range with the Enduro 2, though I have used it on Coros watches before and you can see it in Strava after a run. It’s a useful stat and one that I find can help make sure you don’t overdo uphills on easy runs or relax too much on downhills during hard runs. I think it would be more useful still if the watch showed average GAP for your run, or lap GAP, to help you keep your effort even over undulating terrain as current GAP, like all current pace stats, can be a bit jumpy.
It’s also limited because it can’t take terrain into account – a hard climb on muddy ground or a steep descent on technical, loose trails are both very different to running the same incline on a flat, good surface.
I didn’t really use the torch on the Fenix 7X much, but there were occasions when it came in handy, and the brighter torch on the Enduro 2 will be useful for camping and as an extra light when running at night. I don’t do too much camping or night running myself, but it’s been helpful when getting up in the night to see a distressed toddler without tripping over things.
Having only used the Enduro 2 for a short time it’s hard to say too much about the battery life, but it has dropped to 74% after five days. That period has included tracking around 5.5 hours of running using the SatIQ GPS setting and a couple of indoor workouts, and I increased the screen brightness for both general use and during activities, which knocked a couple of days off of my estimated battery life.
I’d expect the battery to last longer than the 20 days my early use suggests, since this five day period included two long runs, and the watch estimates I have 22 days of use left. However, it will be interesting to see how much the Enduro 2 outlasts the Fenix 7X, since I did find that watch would get through three weeks.
Early Verdict
(Image credit: Nick Harris-Fry/Future)
Garmin’s range of sports watches is big and confusing and the Enduro 2 brings some welcome clarity. It has, or is getting, all of the top-of-the-line features and has a better battery life, and so it costs the most.
The only thing it doesn’t have is the bright AMOLED screen on the Epix 2, which will make the Epix 2 more attractive to many runners and triathletes, though ultra-distance athletes will certainly be attracted to the extra juice on the Enduro 2.
It is so expensive, however, that it is tempting to lose a little battery life and opt for the otherwise equally full-featured Fenix 7 Sapphire Solar watches for less, or pick up the Epix 2 and enjoy that lovely screen even if you have to charge it more often.
The Enduro 2 is a big step up on the original Enduro though and having maps on your wrist is fantastic, especially with the useful extra features Garmin brings to navigation.
Garmin is pretty dominant at the top end of the sports watch market, and the Enduro 2 is another appealing option for those who want the best of everything and longer battery life. Key to me will be how much longer it does last than the Fenix 7X, but given how long it takes to run the Enduro 2 down, that will have to wait for the full review.
Leading AFL journalist Caroline Wilson has labeled the actions of Lance Franklin’s management team as “sloppy” as the champion forward navigates his options for 2023 and beyond.
Franklin released a statement on Saturday declaring he had put contract talks on hold until the end of the season.
The news, dropped by Franklin’s new manager Adam Finch, came after the 1000-goal superstar was linked to a move to the Lions as he nears the end of his nine-year, $10 million contract with the Swans.
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Lance Franklin (Getty)
Given the strong relationship between club and player and the constancy of finals appearances since Franklin joined in 2014, Wilson told Nine’s Footy Classified she was surprised to see one of the game’s biggest names at a “vague cross road” with Sydney.
“It feels sloppy from the Franklin camp – from his management,” she said.
“I think if Sydney had a wish, they would probably wish that Liam Pickering was still managing Lance Franklin.”
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Pickering was the man who brokered Franklin’s historic $10 million deal in 2014.
He spoke on radio over the weekend after reports of the potential Lions deal and Swans stalemate were leaked.
“”I certainly wouldn’t be doing this in the press… I have no doubt he’s playing at the Swans (next year) and they’ll get there. He’s not going to leave on $100,000 (difference),” Pickering told SEN.
“I think he’s worth $700,000, Sydney needs to work out whether they can fit him into the salary cap.”
Port Adelaide great Kane Cornes was also surprised the Franklin negotiations are being played out publicly.
Buddy weighing up retirement amid Lions links
“(The Swans) kept the biggest, most high profile contract ever so secret that no one knew about it, and all of a sudden this has played out through the media so it’s been handled poorly,” Cornes said.
In the statement, the 35-year-old said where, or if, he would pull on the boots in 2023 would be a “family decision”, with wife Jesinta reportedly motivated to relocate north to be closer to family on the Gold Coast.
“I think he’s genuinely anxious about whether he plays on or not and it’s stressing him out,” Wilson said.
“I don’t think this is about money. I don’t think they had agreed on the money, but I think – say it was half a million dollars – I think they could have come to terms on that.”
This prompted AFL great Matthew Lloyd to ask what Franklin could be concerned about.
“About what he does next year, about where he is going to live – he was always going to live in Sydney, now they’re going to live on the Gold Coast we hear, or somewhere in Queensland,” Wilson said.
“I don’t think it’s about money.”
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The backstories and controversies that have ignited feuds involving athletes
The landmark climate legislation passed by the Senate after months of wrangling and weakening by fossil-fuel friendly Democrats will lead to more harm than good, according to frontline community groups who are calling on Joe Biden to declare a climate emergency.
If signed into law, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 (IRA) would allocate $369bn to reduce America’s greenhouse gas emissions and invest in renewable energy sources – a historic amount that scientists estimate will lead to net reductions of 40% by 2030, compared with 2005 levels.
It would be the first significant climate legislation to be passed in the US, which is historically responsible for more greenhouse gas emissions than any other country.
But the bill makes a slew of concessions to the fossil fuel industry, including mandatory drilling and pipeline deals that will harm communities from Alaska to Appalachia and the Gulf coast and tie the US to planet-heating energy projects for decades to come.
“Once again, the only climate proposal on the table requires that the communities of the Gulf south bear the disproportionate cost of national interests bending a knee to dirty energy – furthering the debt this country owes to the South,” said Colette Pichon Battle from Taproot Earth Vision (formerly Gulf Coast Center for Law & Policy).
“Solving the climate crisis requires eliminating fossil fuels, and the Inflation Reduction Act simply does not do this,” said Steven Feit, senior attorney at the Center for International Environmental Law (Ciel).
Overall, many environmental and community groups agree that while the deal will bring some long-term global benefits by cutting greenhouse gas emissions, it’s not enough and consigns communities already threatened by sea level rise, floods and extreme heat to further misery.
The bill is a watered-down version of Biden’s ambitious Build Back Better bill which was blocked by every single Republican and also conservative Democratic senators Joe Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema, who have both received significant campaign support from fossil fuel industries. West Virginia’s Manchin, in particular, is known for his close personal ties to the coal sector.
“This was a backdoor take-it-or-leave-it deal between a coal baron and Democratic leaders in which any opposition from lawmakers or frontline communities was quashed. It was an inherently unjust process, a deal which sacrifices so many communities and doesn’t get us anywhere near where we need to go, yet is being presented as a savior legislation,” said Jean Su, energy justice program director at the Center for Biological Diversity.
The IRA, which includes new tax provisions to pay for the historic $739bn climate and healthcare spending package, has been touted as a huge victory for the Biden administration as the Democrats gear up for a tough ride in the midterm elections, when they face losing control of both houses of Congress.
The spending package will expedite expansion of the clean energy industry, and while it includes historic funds to tackle air pollution and help consumers go green through electric vehicle and household appliance subsidies, the vast majority of the funds will benefit corporations.
A cost-benefit analysis by the Climate Justice Alliance (CJA), which represents a wide range of urban and rural groups nationwide, concludes that the strengths of the IRA are outweighed by the bill’s weaknesses and threats posed by the expansion of fossil fuels and unproven technologies such as carbon capture and hydrogen generation – which the bill will incentivize with billions of dollars of tax credits that will mostly benefit oil and gas.
“Climate investments should not be handcuffed to corporate subsidies for fossil fuel development and unproven technologies that will poison our communities for decades,” said Juan Jhong-Chung from the Michigan Environmental Justice Coalition, a member of the CJA.
The IRA is a huge step towards creating a green capitalist industry that wrongly assumes the economic benefits will trickle down to low-income communities and households, added Su.
Many advocacy groups agree that the IRA should be the first step – not the final climate policy – for Biden, who promised to be the country’s first climate president.
People vs Fossil Fuels, a national coalition of more than 1,200 organizations from all 50 states, recently delivered a petition with more than 500,000 signatures to the White House calling on Biden to declare a climate emergency, which would unlock new funds for urgently needed climate adaptation in hard-hit communities, and use executive actions to stop the expansion of fossil fuels.
Siqiniq Maupin, executive director of Sovereign Iñupiat for a Living Arctic, said: “This new bill is genocide, there is no other way to put it. This is a life or death situation and the longer we act as though the world isn’t on fire around us, the worse our burns will be. Biden has the power to prevent this, to mitigate the damage.”
There is a stark difference in mood in the economy.
Key points:
Consumers are deeply pessimistic, but still spending
Business confidence has improved
However, economists think spending will start to drop as interest rate increases bite
Businesses are enjoying prosperous conditions with high profits and rising confidence, but consumer sentiment has fallen into deeply negative territory.
In fact, the gap between business confidence and the gloomy consumer sentiment is the largest on record.
Despite that, households are still spending money as though they’re optimistic about the future, and it’s complicating the economic outlook.
But economists say it’s likely that rising inflation and uncertainty will soon begin to weigh on spending, and when that tipping point occurs we may see a real slow-down in economic activity.
Many expect that slowdown to occur next year.
Business confidence rises, despite headwinds
The latest monthly surveys on business and consumer confidence were released on Tuesday.
The NAB monthly business survey showed Australian businesses reported very positive conditions last month.
Businesses said they were enjoying strong trading conditions, high levels of profitability, and more demand for staff.
It pushed business confidence back above its long-term average, and comes despite a steep increase in purchase costs and labor costs.
“How long this can persist before demand begins to fall is a key uncertainty for the economy,” Commonwealth Bank economist Belinda Allen said on Tuesday.
“The bounce in confidence and conditions was somewhat surprising to us given the combined headwinds of high inflation, rising interest rates and depressed consumer sentiment.
Business confidence is back above its long-term average(Source: NAB)
“It is our view that the multitude of headwinds are likely to weigh on economic activity throughout the second half of this year.
“As such, we expect business confidence and conditions to ease as consumers tighten their budgets in what is an increasingly complex and challenging economic environment,” she said.
Diana Mousina, a senior economist at AMP Capital, said businesses had been able to push some of their rising costs onto customers without hurting their profits in recent months, but that situation may not last for much longer.
AMP Capital senior economist Diana Mousina said the underpayment of workers was “clearly a problem.” (ABC News: Billy Cooper)
She said when that point occurred, it could show up in declining business confidence.
“While businesses have so far been able to pass on higher prices to consumers, this can’t last as consumer spending power has been hit from rate rises and high inflation,” she said.
“The monthly confidence surveys showed a divergence between unhappy consumers and upbeat businesses.
“Also, while selling prices have risen, purchase and labor costs are rising faster which indicates some potential margin pressure for firms.
“As consumer spending volumes decline, which is just starting now, business confidence and conditions should also fail.”
AMP Capital senior economist Diana Mousina says rising business costs could soon start to bite(Source: AMP Capital)
Consumer sentiment becomes deeply negative
The Westpac-Melbourne Institute survey of consumer confidence showed households had become deeply pessimistic.
Bill Evans, Westpac chief economist, said the rapid decline in sentiment last month pushed household confidence to levels similar to the lows of COVID and the global financial crisis.
However, he said they were still well above the lows reached in the recession of the early 1990s.
“Since the recent peak in November 2021 the Index has fallen every month for a cumulative decrease of 22.9 per cent,” Mr Evans said.
He said interest rate increases are now weighing noticeably on confidence after the Reserve Bank delivered yet another 0.5 per cent rate increase last week.
consumer feeling (Source: Westpac)
“Respondents holding a mortgage were particularly unnerved by the rate rise,” Mr Evans said.
“Their confidence fell by 8.9 per cent compared to modest moves from tenants (0.2 per cent) and those owners who do not have a mortgage (-2.1 per cent),” he said.
Curiously, economists say households are still spending as though they’re confident about the future and it’s complicating the economic outlook, but they didn’t expect that divergence to last.
“Consumers are feeling abnormally pessimistic at the moment,” said Ms Allen.
“The combination of higher inflation, aggressive interest rate hikes and falling home prices together have contributed to very low levels of sentiment.
“[It] raises the risk that spending growth will slow more materially from here,” she said.
Where to fromhere?
Stephen Wu, an economist from Commonwealth Bank, said consumer confidence and spending typically moved together, so the large gap that had developed between the two was puzzling.
“On one hand, we have seen consumer sentiment decline to very low levels that are consistent with major economic disruptions,” he said.
“But on the other hand, consumption growth was robust in the first quarter of 2022, and looks to have been fairly solid in the June quarter.
Why is spending so strong if confidence is so weak?(Source: CBA)
However, he said data suggested rising uncertainty and inflation were two key factors pushing sentiment lower, and internal CBA data show there’s a clear moderation in spending growth already underway, with spending declining noticeably for discretionary goods in recent months.
“That is consistent with households’ budgets feeling the pinch,” he said.
“We do expect the combination of materially higher mortgage rates, lower home prices, and rising cost of living pressures to put downward pressure on real consumer spending.
“We anticipate softer spending will drive below-trend economic growth over 2023,” he said.
Ms Mousina from AMP Capital agreed.
“The monthly confidence surveys showed a divergence between unhappy consumers and upbeat businesses,” she said.
“The strength in the business survey is unlikely to continue as consumer spending volumes start to weaken and margin pressure accelerates.”
With the upcoming release of Tower of Fantasy, many have found that the style has points of contact with fan-favorite Genshin Impact.
Published on Giuseppe Nelva
Home ” News » Check out Genshin Impact’s Characters Reproduced in Tower of Fantasy in New Video
With the upcoming release of Tower of Fantasy, many have found that the style has points of contact with fan-favorite Genshin Impact.
YouTube user On Game played with the character creator of Tower of Fantasy (you could say that the fact that it does have a character creation suite is one of the major differences) to reproduce some of the most popular characters of Genshin Impact.
In the video below you can check out what heroes like Kaeya, Chongyun, Xiao, Keqing, Childe, Bennet, Zhongli, Thoma, Eula, Hu Tao, Lumine, and Paimon, could look like in Tower of Fantasy.
Tower of Fantasy is coming on August 11, 2022 for PC, iOS, and Android.
If you’d like to see more of this brand new shared world RPG, you can enjoy a trailer focusing on the world, another on the story, one about mounts, another about combat, one about motorcycling, one about the characters, one about Form II, and one about customization.
More videos showcase traversal methods like running, motorcycling, and swimming, showing how you can explore the vast open world of planet Aida in different ways.
Genshin Impact us currently available for PS5, PS4, PC, iOS, and Android.
If you’d like to learn more about the game, you can read and see more about the update 2.8, on top of the characters and a story trailer for the upcoming update 3.0, a video on the new Dendro element, and another about more characters that will appear in the new Sumeru area.
Anne Heche has not regained consciousness since shortly after she crashed her car in Los Angeles on Friday.
Initial reports about the actor’s condition said she was “stable” and firefighters said she had spoken to rescuers as she was pulled from the wreckage.
However, on Monday a spokesperson for Heche, 53, said: “Despite previous reports that Heche was stable, shortly after the accident, [she] became unconscious, slipping into a coma and is in critical condition.”
Heche’s representatives added: “At this time Anne is in extreme critical condition. She has a significant pulmonary injury requiring mechanical ventilation and burns that require surgical intervention.
On Saturday Heche’s publicist had said that her condition was “stable” and her family asked for “thoughts and prayers”. The previous morning, reports suggested Heche had been driving at speed down a street before crashing into a house.
This caused what the Los Angeles Fire Department described as a “heavy fire”, which took a number of firefighters an hour to extinguish.
The occupant of the house escaped without injury but the building was deemed uninhabitable. A fundraising page has been set up to help the owner replace her belongings and her home.
The nextdoor neighbors told Fox News that the car had ploughed right through the house. “The windows were broken, so I opened the back door of the car. She [Heche] answered and said she was not OK, so that was tough. I know they didn’t get her out of the car until the fire was pretty much put out.”
Heche, who has one son, is best known for his roles in films such as Psycho, Donnie Brasco, Six Days Seven Nights and Cedar Rapids.