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Canada cruise into Women’s Rugby World Cup quarter-finals while Fiji stun Wales

about 12 hours ago
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Avoiding England was the objective on a beautifully bright and breezy day in Devon.But if they keep performing like this, avoiding Canada will become an equally pressing concern.They top Pool B after an assured display in attack and defence and will face Australia in the quarter-finals after England’s victory against the Wallaroos.Emily Tuttosi, the Canada hooker, scored two of their six tries to earn the player of the match award.Scotland, also through to the last eight after wins against Wales and Fiji, battled until the end but were overpowered by well-drilled and cohesive opponents.

Scotland have lost seven out of eight matches against Canada, the solitary success coming at the 1994 Rugby World Cup.You have to go back to 1998 for the last time they defeated England, who they are now poised to play in the last eight.History is against them, but they lack neither ability nor fighting spirit.“They’ve shown real improvement,” Bryan Easson said of his side.“That was the second-best team in the world.

I think the last time they conceded that many points was against the Black Ferns.”Tyson Beukeboom of Canada had emerged into the sunshine first, an 81st cap making her the country’s record appearance-maker, male or female.The Canada replacements Brittany Kassil and Courtney Holtkamp followed together to mark their 50th caps, a milestone also achieved by the Scotland lock Sarah Bonar.Canada: Schell; Farries, Symonds (Seumanutafa 65), Tessier (capt.), Hogan-Rochester; Perry, Pelletier; Hunt (Kassil 46), Tuttosi (Boag 62), Menin (De Goede 42, Crossley 72) , De Goede (O'Donnell 41), Beukeboom (Royer 62), Forteza, Paquin, Senft (O'Donnell 46).

Replacements: Boag, Kassil, DeMerchant, Royer, O'Donnell, Crossley, Apps, Seumanutafa,Tries: Hunt, penalty try, Tuttosi 2, Kassil, DeMerchant Cons: De Goede 3, TessierScotland: Rollie (Martin 53); Lloyd, Orr, Thomson, McGhie; Nelson (Wills 19 HIA), Brebner-Holden (Mattinson 58); Bartlett (Young 64), Skeldon, Cockburn (Poolman 24 HIA), Wassell (Donaldson 67), Bonar (Konkel 58), Malcolm (capt,), McLachlan (Stewart 58), Gallagher,Replacements: Martin, Young, Poolman, Konkel, Donaldson, Stewart, Mattinson, Wills,Tries: Lloyd, Gallagher, McGhie Cons: Nelson 2Referee: Aimee Barrett-Theron (SA) Att: 14,003After a nip-and-tuck opening Scotland were pushed back and the front-rower McKinley Hunt smashed over after an ominous show of strength from Canada’s pack.

Julia Schell’s fierce tackle-and-jackal on Rhona Lloyd showed Canada’s defensive excellence before, somewhat confusingly, Helen Nelson was taken off after a clash of heads with her teammate Lisa Cockburn, who appeared to have come off worse, and was replaced several minutes later,Scotland rallied and Rachel McLachlan’s astute pass sent Lloyd roaring over on the right,It was just the second try Canada’s high-energy defence had conceded all tournament,Evie Gallagher was shown a yellow card for a bit of breakdown cynicism before a penalty try came Canada’s way after more muscular phase play,Six minutes before half-time, a stunning score for Tuttosi showcased Canada’s skills in the loose, with Sophie de Goede displaying power and finesse to send her hooker charging to the line.

It was a 14-point game at the break.A stunning line run by Gallagher sent her over 11 minutes after half-time, narrowing the gap to seven, but poor defence from Scotland allowed Tuttosi to power over again from a lineout drive.Nelson surged onto a long lineout throw at the other end moments later, but the try was disallowed via a TMO check.When Kassil applied a superb close-range finish between the sticks and De Goede converted, it was a 21-point gap.Faint hope provided by Fran McGhie’s score for Scotland was swiftly extinguished when Olivia DeMerchant scored Canada’s sixth, converted by Alex Tessier.

Both teams live to fight another day, but no one will relish playing Canada.“Nothing was perfect, but happy with the win,” said Canada’s head coach Kévin Rouet.“We were too nice with them, we let them play multiple phases of rugby.“You never know in rugby.Anything could happen.

If it’s USA, if it’s England [in the quarter-final] – you have to face England to win the World Cup, whether it’s quarter-final or final.”Having marked her 50th cap, Bonar said: “We showed we can compete against the best in the world.The difference was any mistake we made, they punished us, but there are plenty of learnings to take ahead of a big week next week … if it is England we probably had good preparation today.“It will be about how best can we look after the ball, discipline, changes in momentum … it’s about managing those situations.”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionAshton Gate in Bristol will host Canada v Australia next Saturday before England v Scotland on Sunday, and the Scots will not lack motivation.

“Growing up in Scotland pretty much the only battle you learn about is the Battle of Bannockburn,” Bonar said,“It’s not impossible: it will be fun,Let’s just go and throw the kitchen sink at it,”Can Scotland capitalise on the pressure felt by England, the tournament favourites? “We’ll concentrate on ourselves,” Easson said,“If they feel the pressure of a Rugby World Cup, as they have done previously, that’s up to them.

We’ll concentrate on ourselves and prepare accordingly like we did this week … Looking forward to it – it’s exciting.”Nothing like a bit of inside knowledge.Ioan Cunningham, the former Wales women’s head coach, orchestrated Fiji’s dramatic 28-25 victory over his former charges at Sandy Park to ensure the Pacific Islanders signed off from the tournament on a life-affirming high.Wales are consigned to last place in Pool B after three defeats from three.Both sides were already eliminated, so it was not on the same scale as the defeat suffered by the men’s side in 2007.

But still it will hurt.With a quarter of the match remaining, both sides had crossed four times but Fiji led by eight, on course for a historic second win at the tournament.Litiana Vueti, the full-back, had converted all of the tries.Wales appeared to have narrowed the gap when Carys Cox burst over the try-line on 54 minutes but after a TMO check, the outside-centre was adjudged to have knocked on.Cox’s searching run on 70 minutes had the Fiji defence scrambling, before Seren Lockwood made more metres and Lisa Neumann touched down in the corner – but Lleucu George’s missed conversion meant there was still three points in it.

Several times Wales threatened the try-line in the dying seconds, choosing against a kick for the draw and running the ball instead.But a breakdown penalty and then a final scrum for Fiji stopped them in their tracks.William, Prince of Wales, appeared to take the defeat with good grace as he shook hands with the Fiji great Waisale Serevi up in the stands, but Welsh rugby is in an uncomfortable place.
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Shein UK accused of moving ‘vast bulk of income’ to Singapore to cut British tax

Shein’s UK arm has been accused of transferring the “vast bulk of income” to its Singaporean parent in order to cut its British tax bill.The company, which had been considering a £50bn float on the London Stock Exchange but is expected to list in Hong Kong, paid just £9.6m in corporation tax despite taking £2bn in sales last year.The payment is equivalent to 25% of the £38.2m in pre-tax profits it made in the UK in 2024, according to accounts filed at Companies House, in line with the UK corporation tax rate

about 17 hours ago
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UK phone retailers lock shop doors while trading to tackle rising thefts

Mobile phone retailers are locking their doors during trading hours and considering using “kill switches” to disable stolen devices, as incidents of theft increase more than ninefold in some high streets due to organised crime.VodafoneThree, which operates the largest retail network with 650 stores across the UK, has experienced a 967% increase in theft incidents in the first half of this year compared with the same period in 2024.“In recent months, the telecoms sector has seen an alarming surge in aggressive robberies and attempted robberies in stores, particularly across London and the south-east of England,” said a spokesperson for the company. “VodafoneThree has seen a nine-times increase in these types of incidents.”In response, the company has introduced measures including a locked door policy in some stores, which requires security guards to open the store’s doors to customers during trading hours, rather than them remaining open at all times

about 20 hours ago
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Tesla offers Elon Musk a trillion-dollar pay package

Elon Musk could become the world’s first trillionaire if he hits targets set by Tesla, under a scheme disclosed by the electric car company he runs and in which he is the largest shareholder.Tesla outlined the terms of the incentive package, unprecedented in corporate history, in a section of its latest stock market update that began: “Yes, you read that correctly.”Musk, the company said, will have to increase the value of Tesla from just over $1tn now to $8.5tn over 10 years.If he presides over growth on that scale, the 54-year-old will receive new shares that would push his stake in the company from nearly 16% to well beyond 25%, increasing the fortunes of the world’s richest man to more than $2tn

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Trump hosts US tech leaders at White House dinner – minus Elon Musk

As Donald Trump hosted leaders from the biggest US tech companies at a lavish White House state dining room dinner on Thursday night, there was one notable absence. Elon Musk, once inseparable from Trump and a constant, contentious presence in the White House, was not in attendance.The dinner, which included Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg, Microsoft’s Bill Gates, Apple’s Tim Cook and OpenAI’s Sam Altman, was exactly the type of event where Musk would have sat at Trump’s right hand only a few months ago. Instead, the Tesla CEO stated on his social media platform X that he had been invited but could not make it. He said he planned to send a representative and spent the day on X posting a familiar stream of attacks on immigration and trans people

2 days ago
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US Open tennis 2025: Aryna Sabalenka beats Amanda Anisimova in women’s singles final – as it happened

Right, it’s time for me to take my leave, but we’ll have Tumaini’s match report on the site shortly. And then Daniel will be here for Alcaraz v Sinner tomorrow, the lucky chap. Many thanks as always for joining us. Bye!Sabalenka seems unsure whether to go for the cheque or the trophy. I think I’d dive for the cheque, given it’s for $5m, but she opts for the trophy

about 2 hours ago
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Aryna Sabalenka sweeps aside Amanda Anisimova to retain US Open title

After such a bittersweet season filled with near-misses and heartbreak at the final hurdle, Aryna Sabalenka returned to the US Open final with one final chance to win the grand slam title she felt she was owed.Such an occasion could have been the source of more anxiety and stress, another reason for her to fall apart, but Sabalenka’s increasingly legendary career has been driven by her ability to learn from her losses, no matter how painful they are. This time, the No 1’s nerves perfectly held up under pressure as she maintained her composure during a late surge from Amanda Anisimova before closing her US Open title defence with a 6-3, 7-6 (3) win.As the best player in the world at the peak of her powers, Sabalenka continues to establish herself as one of the greatest players of the 21st century. She has now won four grand slam titles, drawing level with Kim Clijsters, Arantxa Sánchez Vicario, Naomi Osaka and Hana Mandlikova

about 2 hours ago
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US labor market ‘has headed off a cliff-edge’ with just 22,000 jobs added in August – as it happened

1 day ago
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Jaguar Land Rover staff told to stay home after cyber-attack

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Average UK house price rises to record £299,331, says Halifax

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Fast fashion’s quick decline: Asos and Boohoo have that post-Covid feeling

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Retail sales rise but ONS apologises as statistics crisis deepens

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US justice department opens criminal inquiry into Fed governor Lisa Cook

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