Categories
Sports

Carlton Blues, Patrick Cripps, court, appeal, suspension, ban, bump, Callum Ah Chee, West Coast Eagles, Willie Rioli, Matt Rowell, appeal

Carlton needed to use the Willie Rioli defense in a bid to free skipper Patrick Cripps to play in this weekend’s must-win clash with Melbourne, according to Jonathan Brown.

Like Cripps, Willie Rioli was banned for his mid-air collision with Sun Matt Rowell as the Eagle’s impact sent the midfielder crashing into the turf.

Rioli was given a one-match ban for the heavy bump, but was successful in overturning the suspension at the court by arguing his actions were not “unreasonable”.

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Cripps has been hit with a two-match ban for his similar action that left Lion Callum Ah Chee concussed on the Gabba turf.

Brown believes a “precedence” was set in Round 1 – with the difference being Cripps’ has been graded as high impact and not medium like Rioli’s.

“The end of the day, the precedence has been set for my belief when Willie Rioli was let off with Matty Rowell in Round 1. I don’t think there’s been a rule change,” Brown said On the Couch.

“To me, it looked like Willie Rioli was later (in making contact).

“Yes, you can argue that it was a marking contest however it was an aerial contest. One was in play, one was a marking contest.

Longmuir confident yet coy on Freo | 03:48

“They were both scenarios where the player’s had to leave the ground. I don’t think Patty Cripps could do much. I actually think that (Rioli’s) looks worse and was let off.”

Fellow panelist Nick Riewoldt agreed that the Blues needed to use Rioli’s appeal as the basis for their challenge, should they decide to make one by 11am AEST on Tuesday.

“Whether you are jumping in the air in a marking contest or to intercept the ball from a handball is irrelevant,” he said as Brown added: “It should be irrelevant.”

“So they walk in (to the court), you press play on the Willie Rioli tape and you walk out five minutes later – that’s how it should go down,” Riewoldt said.

Brown felt Rioli’s argument that his conduct was “not unreasonable” should apply to Cripps as well.

“The argument for Willie Rioli (was) he couldn’t reasonably expect contact in that situation and obviously had to brace – but so did Patty Cripps.”

Fans were shocked back in Round 1 when Rioli escaped sanction for the hit on Rowell, with some calling on the Eagle to “buy a Lotto ticket”.

Koch statement awkward for Hinkley? | 01:36

Gerard Whateley said the Blues were in the process of preparing for an appeal on Monday night, but didn’t think the Rioli comparison was as “cookie cutter” as some believed.

“First they have to show it’s not a bump. The second part is there an alternative?” he said.

AFL360 co-host Mark Robinson agreed with coach Michael Voss that it was a “split second decision” for Cripps.

“My flinch reaction was: ‘You’re gone Patrick Cripps’ … but I said the same with Willie Rioli,” he said.

“We were gobsmacked at the time they appealed and got off. I don’t think the court can suspend him if they put up the Rioli (vision).

“But my gut feels is you can’t have that in our sport anymore.

Feet rebound from cap scandal | 02:10

“He didn’t mean to do it – but what’s more important? He didn’t mean to do it or the health and safety of Ah Chee?”

On the Couch host Garry Lyon believes Cripps’ actions are worthy of suspension, claiming it was “not a great surprise” the Match Review handed down a two-game ban on Monday.

“It’s a hold your breath moment,” he said.

“I don’t think in this state that we are in and the game we’ve got, if that goes unpunished, then we are kidding ourselves.”

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Categories
Australia

What Australia must do next on Taiwan

Defense Minister Richard Marles pointed to China’s violation of the UN-sanctioned law of the sea and to Australia’s long-standing commitment to upholding freedom of navigation and commerce in the region.

Neither Wong nor Marles questioned China’s claim to the territories of Taiwan – the core claim underpinning Beijing’s determination to take the island by force.

This is because Australia recognized the Beijing government as the sole legitimate government of China in 1972, and as a condition of recognition declined to recognize Taiwan as a sovereign state.

Like all serious players, we keep our word. In mounting limited objections to China’s behaviour, Wong and Marles echoed the positions of the EU, US, and all members of the G7 that there has been no change in respective One China policies or basic positions on Taiwan, despite Beijing’s claims to the contrary. We are sticking to our side of the deal.

In the 1970s, those agreements focused on territory and said little about people. What do people in Taiwan want?

Surveys show a pragmatic preference for retaining the status quo over seeking formal independence, because under the status quo people enjoy civil liberties, rule of law, political rights, economic autonomy, and a way of life won through decades of strife and struggle on Taiwan.

Seeking formal independence would place those rights and liberties at risk, in face of Beijing’s threats of violent retaliation. But so would voluntary unification with the People’s Republic.

Beijing’s treatment of Hong Kong in 2020 shattered any remaining illusions about the fate of Taiwan under Beijing’s One Country Two Systems model of inclusion. On Xi’s new model, the people of Taiwan would be “re-educated” – China’s ambassador to France revealed this week – in the style of Mao Zedong’s gulags or Xi’s mass internment camps.

In acknowledging the One China position, Australia never conceded Beijing’s right to coerce, corral and ‘re-educate’ the people of Taiwan.

Here’s the rub. The CCP says it is prepared to pay any price to fulfill its historical mission of unification with Taiwan, but the one price it won’t consider is the one it would cost to incorporate the territory peacefully: allow people in China to enjoy the same rights and liberties that people have in Taiwan.

The upshot is that in place of reforming his own country, Xi is preparing to take the island by force against the wishes of the people of Taiwan.

The message conveyed by his ballistic missiles is that Beijing could fly right over the heads of people on Taiwan and lay claim to their lands without giving them a passing thought.

In effect, China now seeks “vacant possession” of the island, in the memorable phrase of journalist Rowan Callick, and Australia never signed on to that.

Australia did not sign on to a lot of things that China does as a matter of course in the new era of Xi.

We did not promise to remain silent on Tibet, where the Communist Party is working energetically to erase the languages, cultures, religion, and identities of local communities to retain a stranglehold on their ancestral territories.

Australia never agreed to Beijing perpetrating cultural genocide against Uyghurs and other minorities to maintain its grip on their historical territories in Xinjiang.

We did not sign on to the crackdown in Hong Kong that put an end to rule of law, civil society and freedom of speech and assembly once Beijing decided to extend direct control over that territory as well.

In acknowledging Beijing’s One China position, Australia never conceded Beijing’s right to coerce, corral and “re-educate” the people of Taiwan. In Beijing’s eyes, territory comes before people, and that was never part of the deal.

There is much that can be done to help the people of Taiwan without breaking our word.

Canberra can accelerate negotiations on bilateral economic agreements with Taipei and support its inclusion in multilateral economic agreements. We can actively support its participation in international organisations, including key agencies of the World Health Organisation.

Federal and state governments should give added encouragement to cultural and educational exchanges with Taiwan.

Groups of Australians can reach out to people in Taiwan through their church groups, and by way of community and business associations, trade unions and local governments, to reassure their counterparts in Taiwan that they are not alone in confronting intimidation and interference from China’s Communist Party .

Through travel and everyday communications, we can let the people of Taiwan know we have their backs.

Australians have as much reason to be wary of China’s communist government as people in Taiwan, because China’s communists have shown they do not care about people anywhere – not in China, not in Taiwan, not in Australia.

That much we knew before Pelosi visited Taiwan.

John Fitzgerald is emeritus professor at Swinburne University of Technology.

Categories
US

New Yorker: Milley was set to excoriate Trump in unreleased resignation letter drafted after Lafayette Square photo-op



CNN

In the wake of then-President Donald Trump’s infamous photo-op at the height of the George Floyd protests, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley penned a lengthy and vociferous critique of Trump in a resignation letter he ultimately never sent, The New Yorker reported on Monday.

On June 1, 2020, Milley accompanied Trump on a walk from the White House to St. John’s Church, where he was photographed wearing his combat uniform and moving with the President’s entourage through Lafayette Square. Protesters had been forcibly cleared out of the area minutes before.

The images provoked a swift wave of criticism from lawmakers and several senior former military officials who said they risked dragging the traditionally apolitical military into a contentious domestic political situation.

Milley’s letter was dated June 8, a week after the incident, according to The New Yorker. The article was based on “The Divider: Trump in the White House 2017-2021,” a forthcoming book by Peter Baker and Susan Glasser.

“The events of the last couple weeks have caused me to do deep soul-searching, and I can no longer faithfully support and execute your orders as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,” Milley wrote, according to The New Yorker. “It is my belief that you were doing great and irreparable harm to my country. I believe that you have made a concerted effort over time to politicize the United States military.”

In this June 1, 2020 file photo, President Donald Trump departs the White House to visit outside St. John's Church, in Washington.  Walking behind Trump from left are, Attorney General William Barr, Secretary of Defense Mark Esper and Gen. Mark Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

The report said Milley sought advice regarding the resignation letter, including from former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Gen. Joseph Dunford, retired Army Gen. James Dubik, an expert on military ethics, as well as members of Congress and former officials from the Bush and Obama administrations.

Milley ultimately decided not to quit.

“F*** that s***,” Milley told his staff, according to The New Yorker. “I’ll just fight him.”

“If they want to court-martial me, or put me in prison, have at it,” Milley added. “But I will fight from the inside.”

A spokesman for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs declined to comment to CNN about the report.

Milley would later publicly apologize for his involvement in the incident in a pre-recorded speech at the National Defense University.

“I should not have been there. My presence in that moment and in that environment created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics. As a commissioned uniformed officer, it was a mistake that I have learned from, and I sincerely hope we all can learn from it,” Milley said during the address.

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Categories
Business

ASX set to fall as US stocks have cautious session on fears of rate rise

The Australian share market is set to fall and US stocks have ended a mixed session, with chipmaker Nvidia warning of a fall in quarterly revenue.

US stocks retreated from their highs after official employment figures last week showed strong job creation, raising fears of more aggressive interest rate increases by the US Federal Reserve.

Investors are awaiting official US consumer inflation figures on Wednesday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.1 per cent to 32,833, the S&P 500 lost 0.12 per cent to 4,140, ​​and the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.1 per cent to 12,644.

Chipmaker Nvidia lost 6.3 per cent after saying that second-quarter revenue would decline 19 per cent from the previous quarter because of weakness in its gaming business.

Electric car maker Tesla rose after its signed contracts worth $US5 billion ($7.16b) to buy battery materials from nickel-processing companies in Indonesia.

Shares of US car makers jumped after the US Senate passed a $US430 million bill to fight climate change that created a $US4,000 tax credit for used electric vehicles and provides billions in funding for their production.

Insurer American International Group reported a 26 per cent fall in quarterly profit on lower investment income.

It blamed market volatility for a delay in the public float of its life and retirement unit.

The ASX SPI 200 index was down 0.2 per cent to 6,911 at 7:00am AEST, indicating a fall on the Australian share market today.

The Australian dollar jumped 1 per cent overnight to nearly 70 US cents.

At 7:10am AEST, it was buying about 69.78 US cents.

European stocks had a good session.

The FTSE 100 in London rose 0.6 per cent to 7,482, the CAC 40 in Paris rose 0.8 per cent to 6,524, while the DAX in Germany gained 0.8 per cent to 13,688.

Oil prices rose thanks to positive economic data from China and the US.

Brent crude gained 1.8 per cent to $US96.65 a barrel.

Spot gold also rose. It put on 0.8 per cent to $US1788.50 an ounce.

ABC/Reuters

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Categories
Sports

Former captain admits there are “concerns” for Melbourne

Nathan Jones admits there are some concerns for Melbourne on the back of the seven-point loss to Collingwood on the weekend.

The Demons dominated most of the key stat areas against the Magpies but were behind on the one that mattered most – the scoreboard.

It was their sixth defeat in their last 10 matches which has some onlookers questioning their form ahead of finals.

Former captain Jones agrees that things aren’t looking great, saying he is worried about some areas of their game, particularly that teams who move the ball courageously and quickly can score against them.

“It’s been bubbling away for the last 10 weeks because of the inconsistency that’s been highlighted,” Jones said on SEN’s Dwayne’s World.

“My concerns ultimately are around their ability to dominate a game like they did and not be able to convert into score.

“The way in which Collingwood exposed them, I think they’ve found some challenges against teams in particular that are willing to take them on and be courageous with their ball movement.

“Collingwood really got them on turnover and were able to transition the footy from end to end which is a concerning thing.

“They go inside 50 plus-20 more times but Collingwood were still able to kick a good enough score and were ultra efficient when they did go inside 50 themselves.”

While he acknowledges their shortcomings, Jones is confident that Simon Goodwin and his coaching staff have in place a game plan that should stack up in finals provided they iron out some other issues.

“There’s a bit of a worry there, but the foundations of their game are significant,” he added.

“You look at the stats and I still scratch my head at the fact they lost the game.

“That still provide hopes for me that they can resurrect some of those issues and really find themselves well in contention.

“They’ll be tinkering with some things here and there and also just trying to capitalize on their strengths.

“I’d be more concerned if their strengths around contest, stoppage and inside 50s were right down.

“There are still the building blocks and foundations there for them to play a really significant final brand of footy.

“Internally, they’d be all over the fact that they’ve still got areas they need to tidy up if they have every intention of playing in the Grand Final and wanting to go back-to-back.”

The Demons will look to bounce back from the loss to the Pies and cement themselves in the top four when they host Carlton at the MCG on Saturday night.





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Categories
Australia

NRL considering extending 2023 season to 27 rounds and starting a week earlier

But Origin’s return to three Wednesday night matches from next year means the representative round will be scrapped and NRL games will be played every weekend.

The Rugby League Players Association is already lobbying for NSW and Queensland players to be automatically stood down from club duties after Origin matches following one of the fastest – and most brutal – Origin matches ever played in the recent series decider.

The Panthers remained all seven of their Origin contingent the following weekend, but other stars such as James Tedesco and Daniel Tupou opted to back up less than 72 hours later with their team scrapping for a finals spot.

The NRL’s plan for three byes per team is designed to ease the workload on players, in particular Origin stars, but will have the regular season nudging closer to the hottest part of the year. The NRL will schedule a greater concentration of byes around the Origin period to alleviate the toll on clubs.

The proposal has been discussed about by several clubs, which are already contending with a crowded pre-season and the late return of players from the World Cup.

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The annual All-Stars fixture is usually played in the second week of February, and the NRL has considered shifting that a week earlier too. But the idea is expected to be met with resistance given the shortened summer training bloc for clubs to have all players available.

The World Cup final will be played in the United Kingdom on November 19 meaning players from both teams will not return to their clubs for pre-season training until mid to late January.

Stream the NRL Premiership 2022 live and free on 9Now.

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Categories
US

3 charged with helping Mall of America shooter; 2 suspects still at large

Three people have been charged with helping the person who fired shots at Mall of America last week.

Denesh Raghubir, 21; Selena Raghubir, 23; and Delyanie Kwen-Shawn Arnold, 23, are all charged with aiding an offender.

Officers responded to reports of multiple gunshots on the west side of Mall of America at around 4:17 pm Thursday. Officers were then directed to the Nike store, where three cartridge casings were found just inside the main entrance.

Surveillance video showed six people had been involved in a fight in front of the store’s checkout area, causing several customers to run away. Two people involved in the fight — identified in a criminal complaint as 21-year-old Shamar Alon Lark and 23-year-old Rashad Jamal May — left the store briefly and then returned. Upon returning, Lark allegedly fired a handgun several times toward others involved in the fight.

Shamar Alon Lark (left) and Rashad Jamal May, suspects in the shots fired incident at Mall of America on Aug. 4, 2022, are still at large. (Bloomington Police Department)

Security footage showed the two then ran out of the mall’s north doors, through the north lot and into the Ikea parking lot. Officers then determined they were picked up by a Best Western hotel shuttle and taken to the hotel just south of the mall.

According to the complaint, phone records showed that May called Arnold two minutes after the shots were fired in the mall. May then got five calls from Arnold between 4:20 pm and 4:23 pm

Arnold’s girlfriend is Selena Raghubir, an assistant manager at the Best Western and the cousin of Denesh Raghubir, who was identified as the driver of the shuttle that picked up May and Lark.

The complaint states that hotel management confirmed Denesh Raghubir isn’t the regular shuttle driver and the regular driver was working at that time but he allegedly told officers he dropped Lark and May off at the hotel and knew them as friends of his cousin, Selena.

Denesh Raghubir also told officers that Selena Raghubir left the hotel immediately after he dropped Lark and May off and he didn’t see her for 45 minutes, the complaint states.

Officers searched Arnold’s and Selena Raghubir’s home and vehicle the next day and found the orange shirt apparently worn by May and the white tank top worn by Lark at the time of the shooting.

As of Monday afternoon, Denesh and Selena Raghubir and Arnold were all in custody. If convicted, they could face up to three years in prison and a $5,000 fine.

Lark and May remain at large. 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS has learned that both Lark and May are on probation for past gun-related crimes.

BWH Hotel Group provided the following statement to 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS:

“We are deeply saddened by the violence that took place at the Mall of America last week and our thoughts are with the Minneapolis community. Noting this hotel is independently owned and operated, we support the hotel’s decision to immediately terminate the employees who were allegedly involved in this terrible event. The actions of these employees stand in stark contrast to our brand’s values ​​and the sense of community that is at the heart of our hotel family.”

Bloomington police provided an update on their investigation at 3 pm Monday. Click the video box below to watch that.

Categories
Business

Interest rates a king hit for borrowers as fixed interest loans roll off

Over the years, I’ve cut my cloth (and, on occasion, my own hair) to suit my increased desire for more leisure.

But even armed with this somewhat extreme budgeting discipline, I am beginning to feel a little nervous about impending interest rate rises. Goodness knows how the rest of you are coping.

Borrowers who ‘fudged’ their declared expenses when applying for loans – will soon be feeling the pinch.

Fortunately, my home loan is fixed until the middle of next year at 1.84 per cent. The downside, however, is that when my fixed interest rate expires and I roll onto a variable interest rate, I – like many other mortgage holders – am in for a fairly significant cash-flow shock.

Switching to even the lowest variable rate available today would mean I’d need to find an extra $600 per month. By Christmas, that’s likely to have risen to $900 a month.

The size of my budget surplus last month? $843. That is, without changes to my spending patterns, I’ll be in the red soon.

This isn’t a sob story – I have plenty of fat to cut. I can ditch my extra contributions to more than about $800 a month (although I will miss those sweet, sweet tax savings). Next on the chopping block could be my premium gym membership of $380 a month. I can also rein in my “eating out” budget, which blew out to $490 last month.

I can easily make sacrifices to afford my loan. That’s largely because I didn’t borrow the maximum I was offered, and I was stress-tested at slightly higher interest rates than more recent borrowers.

Many others – particularly borrowers who ‘fudged’ their declared expenses when applying for loans – will soon be feeling the pinch.

It is something I hope our central bank policymakers are keeping front of mind as they adjust rates.

Aussie borrowers who shackle themselves to large mortgages also submit themselves – often unwittingly – to becoming part of the central bank’s “transmission mechanism of monetary policy”.

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Changes in interest rates (also known as “monetary policy”) work in several ways to cool the economy, including through their impact on asset prices and the currency. But the “cash flow” channel is one of the strongest and what many borrowers are about to find themselves at the pointy end of – if they haven’t already.

Compared with other countries, a higher proportion of Aussies home buyers tend to borrow via variable interest rates loans. This has always delivered our policymakers a unique advantage, because their manipulations of borrowing rates flow quickly through to household activity – either boosting or sapping spending power.

However, during the pandemic an unusually high proportion of Aussie borrowers took out loans on ultra-low fixed interest rate terms, which are set to expire over the coming one to four years.

For variable borrowers, rate rises are already packing a punch. But for many, the pain is being delayed and today’s rapid rate rises risk landing like a king hit to their budgets in years to come.

Many financially literate households are already trimming spending plans now, in advance of what has been dubbed a looming “fixed-rate cliff”.

Many less financially literate households, however, will only truly feel the shock when they actually roll off their fixed rate loans. There is a greater than usual risk of even sharper reductions in spending when they do.

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For policymakers, it’s an added risk to the current economic outlook which needs to be given more weight.

For borrowers, there is little that can be done, other than to seek ways to either increase your income or cut spending.

We must all be economists now.

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Categories
Technology

Break Your Social Media Addiction With This iPhone App

Image for article titled This iPhone App Might Actually Help You Break Your Social Media Addiction

screenshot: Joel Cunningham

I am just full of advice about social media, most of which can be boiled down to “put down your phone” and “stop engaging.” Which is funny, because I am incredibly bad at doing both of those things, despite my best efforts (downloading a little app that grows trees while you don’t use your phone, setting a goal to read more books, having the same conversation with my therapist over and over). But I’ve finally found a trick—a clever iPhone app—that seems to be working. For now.

Ironically, I made this discovery while mindlessly scrolling Twitter on my iPhone, which is what I do during any given moment of inactivity, from taking the dog out to pee, to waiting for the elevator, to putting the kettle on the boil. In these moments, I don’t actually want anything Twitter has to offer; it’s simply a mindless habit, and that lack of purpose never stops that quick swipe from turning into 10 useless minutes.

But this Shortcut Automation app—called “one second” by its innovator, Frederik Riedel (@FrederikRiedel)—seeks to inject some mindfulness into that mindless habit. To use it, you set up an automation that will trigger one sec to run when you attempt to open whatever social media, gaming, or other app is eating into your day. It’s a simple, soothing bit of animation that will interrupt the process, encouraging you to take a deep breath before you tap a second time to confirm that you truly do want to open that app—or not.

You can see how it works in this Tweet from Riedel:

Image for article titled This iPhone App Might Actually Help You Break Your Social Media Addiction

screenshot: Joel Cunningham

I realize that there are many other tools that encourage you to limit social media use, from Apple’s own Focus Modes to screen time alerts, but one sec has worked best for me because it cuts me off at the right moment; it’s easier to force me to think with intention (“6 attempts to open Twitter within 24 hours”) than to scold me into stopping doing something that I’m already doing (any pop-up telling me my app usage for the day has elapsed is instantly ignored). You can block one app for free, and unlock additional features (use with multiple apps, more robust breathing exercises, time tracking, website blocking) with a premiumsubscription ($14.99/year).

Don’t get me wrong, I still have a fairly serious internet addiction. But I’ve also managed to stop myself from staring at my phone while waiting for the dog to poop for five days straight. That’s not nothing.

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Categories
Sports

From Oliver Hoare’s 1,500m win to the boisterous Birmingham crowds, here are our picks for the best moments from the 2022 Commonwealth Games

The Commonwealth Games closing ceremony gave us a bright, bold, and banging Brummie farewell, and an uplifting handover to Victoria 2026.

So with the Games now officially over, we’ve picked out some of our favorite moments from the 11 absorbing days of competition.

Oliver Hoare stuns hot field to win 1,500m

From an Australian perspective, when it comes to a pure sporting spectacle against a world-class field, Oliver Hoare’s win in the men’s 1,500 meters is at the top.

An Australian male 1,500 meter athlete crosses the line in first place as a Kenyan opponent stumbles.
Oliver Hoare won in breathtaking fashion.(Getty Images: David Ramos)

Hoare was racing against the current world champion as well as the reigning Olympic bronze and silver medalists.

It was perhaps the strongest field of any athletics event at the Games.

And not only did Hoare win it, he did it in the most breathtaking fashion.

Coming fourth around the bend, he started gaining ground in that final stretch, with those watching thinking, ‘He’s going to get bronze, he’s going to get silver … OH MY GOSH, HE’S WON IT!’

He lunged to the line as Kenya’s Abel Kipsang stumbled, and cemented his place in Australia’s middle-distance running folklore.

Packed crowds create brilliant atmosphere, especially for local athletes

When the members of the ABC Sport team turned up to Birmingham a few days before the Games began, we were a little worried.

The people we spoke to seemed almost oblivious that the Games were about to start, and there was an air of indifference around the town.

But once the opening ceremony rolled around, it was like a flick was switched, and Brummies turned out in force and in full voice.

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