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Emma Aicher pips Breezy Johnson at Val di Fassa to close on Vonn and Shiffrin

about 15 hours ago
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With neither injured Lindsey Vonn nor Mikaela Shiffrin starting a World Cup downhill on Friday, Emma Aicher seized her chance to cut the American superstars’ leads in the season-long standings.Aicher, the Olympic downhill silver medalist, placed second – just 0.01 behind first-time winner Laura Pirovano, pushing Olympic champion Breezy Johnson down to third – and reduced Vonn’s lead in the downhill points race to just 14 with two races left.Vonn’s hugely successful World Cup season at age 41 was ended by a nasty crash one month ago at the Milan Cortina Olympics that wrecked her left leg.Aicher’s 80 World Cup points Friday also reduced Shiffrin’s lead in the overall standings to 139 ahead of another downhill scheduled Saturday.

The tightening race for the giant crystal globe trophy with eight races left could see Shiffrin make a rare start in a super-G Sunday.Chasing a sixth career World Cup overall title.Shiffrin has so far accrued all her points in slalom and giant slalom.“Obviously at the end of the season, everybody wants a little bit more,” Johnson said afterwards.“But I’m happy with how I skied.

I felt like I left it all out there.Another chance tomorrow to go and clean up some things.I’m really for [Laura to get] a first win, it’s so well-deserved and I think everybody on tour was really excited to see that happen.”Friday’s race was a replacement for the downhill five weeks ago at Swiss resort Crans-Montana, abandoned after Vonn crashed and tore the ACL in her left knee.Pirovano was a popular winner on home snow getting a first win, also a first podium finish, in her 125th World Cup start.

The 28-year-old Italian has been a model of consistency reeling off top-10 results this season and sixth place in the Olympic downhill at nearby Cortina d’Ampezzo.An elusive first victory lifted Pirovano to third in the downhill standings, trailing 64 behind Vonn and 50 back of Aicher.Pirovano was among the few racers to top 130kph (81mph) on a sunny, still and freezing day that was ideal for the marquee speed discipline.Two former Olympic champions dropped out of contention after losing time on the bottom half of the 2.3km (1.

4 mile) course.Corinne Suter, the 2022 Olympics gold medalist, looked set to match her win last weekend at Soldeu, Andorra, but placed eighth, 0.49 behind Pirovano.Sofia Goggia, the 2018 champion and bronze medalist at Cortina last month, was 0.90 back in 17th.

A second downhill is scheduled for Saturday on the Volata in Val di Fassa, followed by the super-G on Sunday.The final downhill will take place at the World Cup finals in Kvitfjell, Norway, on 21 March.
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Crypto billionaire Christopher Harborne no longer interested in Reform-Tory pact

Christopher Harborne, the ultra-wealthy political donor who has given £12m to Reform UK, has told the Guardian he is “no longer” interested in a Reform-Conservative pact before the next general election.A possible collaboration between Reform and the Conservative party had been an important aspect of discussions about donations between Harborne and senior figures including Nigel Farage, sources familiar with the conversations said.The Thailand-based cryptocurrency investor had previously wanted Farage to keep an open mind about a pact between the two parties, the same sources added.This position has changed, however. Harborne said in an emailed statement: “In the past this was possibly the case, but it is no longer the case

about 12 hours ago
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Nigel Farage to discuss Chagos Islands deal at Mar-a-Lago dinner with Donald Trump tonight – as it happened

Downing Street has denied there has been a U-turn on UK government policy on Iran after Britain’s deputy prime minister suggested this morning that the UK could take part on strikes on Iranian targets. Royal Air Force jets could legally strike Iranian missile sites being used to attack British interests in the Middle East, David Lammy said in a BBC interview earlier today.David Lammy has said it is an “absolute travesty” that details were leaked from a top secret national security meeting on the US-Israel attacks on Iran and has called for an investigation. There were reports last weekend of cabinet splits at a national security council meeting, which is protected by the Official Secrets Act, over allowing the US to use British bases for the strikes against Iran.Royal Air Force jets could legally strike Iranian missile sites being used to attack British interests in the Middle East, Lammy also said this morning

about 12 hours ago
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Starmer is facing a cocktail of dissent that is growing ever more potent

But for the Iran crisis, Labour’s first major policy announcement since the party’s calamitous defeat in the Gorton and Denton byelection would have been arguably the biggest political story of the week.Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, pressed ahead with what is intended to be the party’s full-throated answer to the competition it faces from Reform UK as she declared an end to permanent refugee status and the removal of state support from some asylum seekers.It immediately put her on a collision course with many Labour backbenchers, but it also left the party’s soft-left majority, who had been pushing for a more progressive offering in recent weeks, asking: “Is that it?”The victory speech in Gorton and Denton by Hannah Spencer, the newly minted Green party MP, contained the sort of lines that many on Labour’s backbenches yearn to hear their leader utter, or even nod towards. Hard-working people had become “sick of making other people rich” and now wondered what their toil would yield, said the young plumber.Yet while Keir Starmer’s troops expected at least some red meat this week from their party’s leadership to counter the Green challenge for economically squeezed traditional Labour voters, his instinctive response was to send a letter to MPs in which he repeated an attack line that sought to paint Zack Polanski’s party as extremist

1 day ago
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Defence secretary accuses Tory and Reform MPs of ‘unpatriotic’ behaviour

The defence secretary, John Healey, has accused opposition politicians of deliberately undermining the UK’s relationship with Donald Trump, saying it was “unpatriotic” for MPs to seek to turn the US against Keir Starmer.Healey, speaking to the Guardian at RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus, which was hit by a drone strike over the weekend, said he had been shocked at the way politicians like Nigel Farage had sought to “undermine” the UK’s relationship with the US.The Conservatives and Reform UK have criticised the British decision not to allow the US to use UK bases for offensive strikes against Iranian targets, though they will be used to help defend UK interests and allies in the region from Iranian retaliatory attacks.But Healey said he had been shocked by the extent to which senior MPs had sought to curry favour with the US president by undermining the position of the UK government – not just on the Iran attacks but also over the Chagos Islands deal.Kemi Badenoch, the Tory leader, and Farage, have both praised Trump for his opposition – albeit fluctuating – to the government’s Chagos plan, which the US president criticised when apparently frustrated with the UK over other issues

1 day ago
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Kemi is wrong about everything. Which is almost an achievement in itself | John Crace

Cast your mind forward 10 years or so. Long after Kemi Badenoch has been sacked as Tory party leader without even getting to contest an election. Long after she has been fired from a sinecure in an HR firm for falling out with all her colleagues. Long after she was dismissed from a Tory thinktank for being unable to think. Long after she was forced to take early retirement

1 day ago
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Best way forward for Iran would be negotiated settlement, says Starmer

Keir Starmer has said the conflict engulfing the Middle East could continue “for some time” as he insisted the best way forward in the longer term was a negotiated settlement with Iran.The prime minister said the UK was doing “everything we can” to de-escalate the situation, a clear contrast to the US president, who is focused on regime change and has said it was “too late” for Tehran to negotiate.He defended his decision to block initial offensive strikes by the US and Israel at the weekend, saying he stood by his judgment and denying it had damaged the special relationship.Starmer has faced some criticism from Gulf states and Cyprus for not doing enough to protect regional allies and British citizens there from Iranian strikes. He has also been subject to personal attacks from Trump, including that he was “not Winston Churchill”

1 day ago
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Ian Arnot obituary

about 9 hours ago
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Iran war pushes oil price above $90 threatening rise in global inflation

about 11 hours ago
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The Guardian view on AI in war: the Iran conflict shows that the paradigm shift has already begun

about 10 hours ago
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Ben Affleck sells his AI postproduction startup to Netflix

about 13 hours ago
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Ireland v Wales: Six Nations rugby union – live

about 8 hours ago
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‘I believe I can do it’: George Russell favourite for F1 title as new era begins

about 10 hours ago