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Chicago Sky trade Angel Reese to Atlanta Dream in first major move of WNBA offseason

The Chicago Sky have traded star forward Angel Reese to the Atlanta Dream, the teams announced Monday.The trade is the first blockbuster move of the WNBA offseason, which is operating on a condensed timeline after months of negotiations between the league and its players over a new collective bargaining agreement finished last month.Reese, 23, was a two-time All-Star with the Sky, who selected her with the No 7 pick in the 2024 draft after a standout college career at Maryland and LSU. Reese’s rivalry with fellow rookie Caitlin Clark became one of the major storylines of that season, which set records in viewership and attendance.“I’m beyond grateful for the opportunity to join the Atlanta Dream organization,” Reese said in a statement Monday

about 13 hours ago
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Horse welfare debate helps highlight Grand National’s unrivalled status

There will never be a year when horse welfare is not an issue in the run-up to the Grand National, and that is, in a sense, a positive for the sport. It is a sign that the National retains its status as the biggest race of the year – in terms of audience, betting turnover, name recognition and pretty much any other measure you care to choose. Nearly two centuries after the first running in 1839, it still has deep roots in British culture as an annual sporting rite of spring.Within the racing bubble too there are few subjects that raise hackles and generate debate quite like the National, not least because for many racegoers and punters it is the race that first stoked their interest in the sport. Significant changes to the fences and other conditions in recent years, with the aim of minimising the risk of serious or fatal injuries, have left some fans, at least, feeling it is no longer the same race that they fell in love with several decades ago

about 13 hours ago
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Sharper Hawks claim thriller over Cats with one mad minute of the utmost drama | Jonathan Horn

The Easter Monday fixture between Hawthorn and Geelong, especially the four years from 2010 to 2013, saw some of the best home and away football of the century. Monday’s game may have surpassed them all. Chris Scott did his best to talk it down. But it was a game of the highest quality, and a finish of the utmost drama. It ran the full gamut between sumptuous skill and high farce

about 15 hours ago
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Courtney Lawes to return to Prem from Brive and would be again eligible for England

The former England captain Courtney Lawes is returning to the Prem at the end of the season after two years at French club Brive.The 37-year-old retired from international rugby after the 2023 Rugby World Cup and made the move to France after winning the 2023-24 Premiership title with Northampton Saints.It has not yet been confirmed which English club he will sign for, but his return would make him eligible again for international duty. Brive have said the club wished the flanker would finish his career with them but “understands Lawes’ desire to seize a new challenge”.Brive’s president, Thierry Blandinières, said: “We are very proud to say that Courtney Lawes will have been a Brive player for two seasons

about 15 hours ago
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Retirement gnome? Masters miniatures rumoured to have short future at Augusta

Everyone says goodbye to the Masters eventually. Sandy Lyle, Ben Crenshaw, Ian Woosnam and Bernhard Langer used recent years to wave goodbye. Will 2026 be the end for a renowned Augusta National element of more recent times … the Masters gnome?Speculation is rising that this Masters will be the final time gnomes will be on sale inside Augusta’s merchandise outlets. On face value, this hardly feels dramatic. The quirk, though, is that the household essential for any golf lover has become a victim of its own success

about 17 hours ago
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The Joy of Six: moments of unbridled joy in sport

From Wozniacki’s sweet relief to Tardelli’s intense scream via Garrincha’s mesmeric dribbling and moreThe pain of failure, both professional and personal, is one we all know well. We have ambitions and plans, backed by evidence and rationale, which prove why our life should work out … then it doesn’t.Often, there are mitigating factors that make it not our fault – skill, endeavour and kindness do not distinguish those who succeed from those who don’t. But at the same time, when we’re alone at night we can’t help but direct blame inwards, ruminating on the toll of our imperfections.So we reason with ourselves, explaining that validation comes from within; bargain with ourselves, debating what we’d give up to get what we want; and torture ourselves, replaying the near-misses while grousing about the glory of those less deserving, imagining what it’d feel like if we got there while planning for how we’ll handle it when we don’t

about 21 hours ago
technologySee all
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Court dismisses former WhatsApp security chief’s lawsuit against Meta

5 days ago
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Goodbye mrbrightside416: Google allows users to alter quirky Gmail addresses

5 days ago
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Pupils in England are losing their thinking skills because of AI, survey suggests

5 days ago
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Claude’s code: Anthropic leaks source code for AI software engineering tool

5 days ago
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SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say

6 days ago
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‘System malfunction’ causes robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China

6 days ago

‘We don’t want pity’: Ukrainian war veterans face off in amputee boxing championship

1 day ago
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Footwork decides a boxing match, they say,In Ukraine, the tired cliche took on a new meaning,On Saturday, two Ukrainian war veterans faced off on prosthetic legs in what organisers called the world’s first competitive bout between double-amputee fighters,Over three two-minute rounds at a venue in Brovary, outside Kyiv, the fight found its own rhythm,There was less of the usual circling.

Movement was measured, each step carefully placed as the boxers found their balance.Once the heavyweight fighters settled, the exchanges were familiar to any boxing fan.Jabs flicked out, short combinations came in bursts.The crowd had earlier been forced to evacuate the arena after an air raid alert, as Russia attacked Ukraine throughout the day.They returned to something they had never seen before, and at first did not quite know how to react.

But soon they were roaring – not so much for the punches, but for the fighters who kept getting up.Top: Artem Khrebet (left) and Mykhailo Drobotenko (right), both war veterans, during the weigh-in ceremony“I am boxing to remind people that, whatever happens, Ukraine and its people will get through this,” said Artem Khrebet at the weigh-in the day before the fight, standing topless, his arms thick with muscle.Khrebet, who went by the military call sign Grizzly, lost both legs in Ukraine’s eastern Luhansk region when he came under artillery fire in the early months of Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.“We don’t want pity.Even after serious injuries like mine, life goes on.

Give us the opportunity and the resources, and we’ll do the rest,” he said,Ukraine faces a daunting task in rehabilitating the wounded after years of fighting in trenches and minefields,The toll is vast, with each amputation marking the beginning of a long and complicated process of adaptation,Estimates vary, but Ukrainian officials and international organisations say more than 100,000 people have lost limbs since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion,Speaking from ringside, Scott Welch, a former British heavyweight champion, said boxing – long a source of national pride shaped by champions including the Klitschko brothers and Oleksandr Usyk – could play a role in helping Ukraine’s veterans.

Drobotenko and Khrebet in the ring.For more than a decade, Welch has advocated boxing for amputees, often referred to as adaptive boxing, typically practised from a seated position in wheelchairs.“Ukraine has so many veterans starting a new life, a new chapter,” he said.“Boxing builds their confidence and helps their minds.It lets them feel invincible and put on a great show.

”On Saturday, two other Ukrainian veterans also competed in a wheelchair bout, for which Welch and his team brought specialised wheelchairs from the UK,For Khrebet and his opponent, Mykhailo Drobotenko, it was important to go further and fight on prosthetics,“I wanted to test myself and show other guys, my fellow veterans, that despite serious injuries, you can keep living and improving,” said Drobotenko, a former member of Ukraine’s special forces who lost his legs after stepping on a mine,Khrebet is announced as the champion,He described months of preparation for the fight as gruelling.

“On prosthetics, when you don’t have a knee, your functionality and balance are obviously not the same,In boxing, a lot of power comes from the legs, so you have to adapt,You rely more on your core, pushing from the body instead,”Both men said the sport had become a form of psychological release, restoring a sense of purpose,“Training helped quiet everything else.

It offers focus, structure, and some sort of sense of normality,” said Khrebet, who has been open about his struggles with mental health after his injury,“There are moments when you even forget that you don’t have legs any more,It’s therapy for me,”The camaraderie between the fighters was evident,At the weigh-in, there was none of the usual bravado or trash talk.

But once the fight began, the men made clear they were there to win.Khrebet after his win.“Adaptive boxing doesn’t usually involve winning or losing,” said Igor Faniian, the fighters’ coach who helped organise the bout.“But the lads made it clear they were in it to win.They kept asking why it should be a technical draw, they wanted that extra motivation,” he said.

“Both are champions in life.Only one will take the belt.”In the third round, Drobotenko began to lose his footing more often under Khrebet’s punches.Drobotenko had lost his legs higher up than his opponent, leaving him with a less stable centre of gravity – an inevitable reality of boxing on prosthetics, where each injury affects balance differently.When the final bell rang, Khrebet was declared the winner, claiming the Ukrainian veterans’ championship belt.

In the changing room, Drobotenko said he had little time for excuses.His focus had shifted to the next fight.“I’m asking for a rematch,” he said.“I’m not done with him yet.”