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Olympic tensions flare as US skeleton star alleges Canadian coach rigged qualifying event

about 20 hours ago
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Sporting tensions between the USA and Canada have erupted once again, this time in skeleton as next month’s Winter Olympics approach.The USA’s Katie Uhlaender, a five-time Winter Olympian in skeleton, has accused the Canadian team of depriving her of a place at the Milan-Cortina Games by manipulating a qualifying event over the weekend.Uhlaender says that Canada deliberately pulled four of its six athletes from the race in the North American Cup in Lake Placid, New York.That meant the field was reduced to under 21 athletes and fewer qualifying points were on offer due to the lack of competition.Uhlaender believes the Canadian team did so to prevent American athletes from catching them in the standings for Olympic qualifying.

Uhlaender claims Joe Cecchini, the head coach of Canada’s skeleton team, told her he had come up with the scheme.“I cried when I found out he went through with this plan,” Uhlaender told DW.“I didn’t know if it hurt more that my friend of 20 years just nailed my coffin, my Olympic dream is over.Or, that my best friend of 20 years is doing something so horrible that hurts so many people.”Uhlaender says that Cecchini told her on Friday that it was not his job to “uplift” athletes from other countries and that his aim was to “eliminate any possibilities” that Canada’s Jane Channell would miss this year’s Olympics.

Uhlaender won the event at Lake Placid but the reduced points on offer means the 41-year-old will miss the Olympics.Although she won gold at the 2012 skeleton world championships, the closest she has come to an Olympic medal was when she finished fourth at the 2014 Games in Sochi.Coaches from the US, Denmark, Israel and Malta, whose athletes were all affected by the Canadian withdrawals, have written to the IOC expressing “serious concerns” about the qualification process.In a statement, Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton defended the withdrawals, saying some of the athletes who were pulled from competition had already raced several times last week.It said the decision was “appropriate, transparent and aligned with both athlete welfare and the integrity of the sport.

”Uhlaender disagrees.“[Cecchini] did not have to do that.He did it because he could.And it wasn’t to protect his athletes; it was to manipulate the system,” she told DW.“He waited until after everyone was registered and gave the illusion that the Canadians were going to be competing.

He wanted to make sure that we could not get full points,”The flare-up comes after a number of heated sporting clashes between Canada and the US at a time when Donald Trump has threatened to make his neighbor a “51st state” and has raised tariffs on Canadian goods,During last year’s 4 Nations Face-off, Canadian ice hockey fans booed the US national anthem and former Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau tweeted: “You can’t take our country – and you can’t take our game,” Last season’s World Series saw the Los Angeles Dodgers beat the Toronto Blue Jays in a thrilling seven-game series, although most of the tension was due to the action on the field,
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US bond markets should be in revolt. Fed independence matters | Nils Pratley

Well said, Jerome Powell. The chair of the US Federal Reserve responded to news of a subpoena from the US Department of Justice with a statement that was extraordinary, necessary and stark.A criminal investigation into the Fed, and him personally, over the renovation of the central bank’s headquarters is an attempt to bully officials into setting policy according to the president’s whims, said Powell.“This is about whether the Fed will be able to continue to set interest rates based on evidence and economic conditions, or whether instead monetary policy will be directed by political pressure or intimidation,” he said.It definitely needed to be spelled out

about 16 hours ago
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Ex-Fed chairs condemn Trump’s bid to weaken central bank’s independence

Every living former head of the Federal Reserve condemned an “unprecedented” attempt by the Trump administration to weaken the US central bank’s independence, after the Department of Justice opened a criminal investigation into its chair, Jerome Powell.Ex-Fed chairs Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen warned similar prosecutorial attacks in other countries had led to “highly negative consequences” for the cost of living – and argued they had “no place” in the US.Late on Sunday, it emerged that the justice department had served the Fed with grand jury subpoenas on Friday, threatening a criminal indictment related to Powell’s testimony before the Senate banking committee in June last year, regarding renovations to the Fed’s historic office buildings in Washington DC.In response, Powell argued he had been threatened with criminal charges because the Fed had set interest rates “based on our best assessment of what will serve the public, rather than following the preferences of the president”.Jeanine Pirro, the US attorney in Washington and an ally of Donald Trump said in a statement on Monday night that the justice department took legal action because the Federal Reserve had ignored requests to discuss cost overruns in a project to renovate two historical buildings at its headquarters

about 16 hours ago
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Trump’s attempts to influence Fed risk 1970s-style inflation and global backlash’

Donald Trump’s attempts to influence the US Federal Reserve could risk plunging America into a period of 1970s-style inflation and trigger a global backlash in financial markets, economists have warned.After the US Department of Justice (DoJ) launched a criminal investigation into Jerome Powell, the current Fed chair, investors said efforts by the White House to pressure the US central bank to cut interest rates would put the world economy at risk.Analysts drew parallels with the 1970s when US inflation soared after the then president, Richard Nixon, pressured the then Fed chair, Arthur Burns, to ease monetary policy to help smooth his 1972 election campaign.Atakan Bakiskan, US economist at Berenberg bank, said: “If the Fed pursues an ultra-accommodative monetary policy despite higher inflation, the result could resemble the 1970s in a worst-case risk scenario.“Moreover, if the Fed acts on politics rather than data, foreign investors could pull back on financing the US debt and seek new safe havens

about 17 hours ago
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Criminal investigation into Fed chair Powell has ‘reinforced’ concerns over independence, Goldman Sachs warns, as dollar weakens – as it happened

Goldman Sachs’ chief economist Jan Hatzius has warned this morning that the criminal indictment threat facing Federal Reserve chairman Jerome Powell has reinforced worries that central bank independence is being undermined.Reuters reports that Hatzius told a 2026 Goldman Sachs Global Strategy Conference:“Obviously there are more concerns that Fed independence is going to be under the gun, with the latest news on the criminal investigation into Chair Powell really having reinforced those concerns.”Hatzius added, though, that he expected the Fed to continue to make decisions based on data:“I have no doubt that he (Powell) in his remaining term as chair is going to make decisions based on the economic data and not be influenced one way or the other, cutting more or refusing to cut on the back of data that could push in that direction.”Our US politics liveblog is taking up the coverage of the Federal Reserve, here:Here’s a wrap up….The worsening relations between the US Federal Reserve and the White House have triggered fears that the independence of America’s central bank is being threatened

about 17 hours ago
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Paramount to nominate directors to Warner Bros board to vote against Netflix deal

Paramount Skydance plans to nominate directors to Warner Bros Discovery’s (WBD) board to vote against the approval of its deal with Netflix, and filed a lawsuit seeking disclosure of financial information related to the $82.7bn (£61.4bn) agreement.In a letter sent to WBD investors on Monday, Paramount said it would nominate directors for election at the company’s annual meeting, which is usually held in June, to try to derail the deal with Netflix, which was agreed in December.To win what is known as a proxy fight, Paramount will have to convince enough WBD investors to cast their votes in favour of its nominees and replace existing, or new, directors proposed by WBD’s board

about 18 hours ago
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Major incident declared as 30,000 homes left without water in Kent and Sussex

A major incident has been declared after 30,000 homes in Kent and Sussex were left without water.People in areas including Tunbridge Wells, Canterbury and Maidstone have been without water for as long as five days.Schools and libraries across Kent and Sussex have closed for the day as they do not have running water. The Queen Victoria hospital in East Grinstead has been forced to carry out some appointments virtually.South East Water blamed the cold weather and Storm Goretti for the supply problems

about 21 hours ago
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Post your questions for R&B star Jill Scott

about 19 hours ago
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Mindy Meng Wang on the ‘disorienting’ experience of her father’s funeral – and the Chinese cyber-opera it inspired

about 20 hours ago
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Hawaii: A Kingdom Crossing Oceans review – a feather-filled thriller full of gods, gourds and ghosts

1 day ago
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Three board members and board chair resign from Adelaide festival as Randa Abdel-Fattah sends legal notice

1 day ago
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Adelaide festival did not dump Jewish columnist from 2024 program despite request from Randa Abdel-Fattah and others

2 days ago
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Eddie Izzard: ‘I once ran 90km in just under 12 hours. That was a tough day’

3 days ago