Fremantle are easy targets but deserve respect for hitting back | Jonathan Horn
Elisa Longo Borghini retains Giro d’Italia Women title as Lippert wins final stage
Elisa Longo Borghini has retained her Giro d’Italia Women title, holding on to the pink jersey she claimed on Saturday’s queen stage as the race concluded at Imola.Longo Borghini (Team UAE ADQ) sealed her second victory at her home Grand Tour, after losing just four bonus seconds to Switzerland’s Marlen Reusser (Movistar) on the final stage, winning the title by 18 seconds overall.Germany’s Liane Lippert, also Movistar, won the race’s eighth and final stage with a late break alongside Anna van der Breggen (Team SD-Worx). The pair broke away in the final kilometres inside the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, with Lippert crossing the finish line first.Reusser and Longo Borghini came home in the chasing group, eight seconds behind, with the Swiss rider claiming a four-second bonus for finishing third
Coach reset helped Swiatek turn ban nightmare into a Wimbledon dream
After Iga Swiatek’s demolition of Amanda Anisimova in the Wimbledon final on Saturday, the first person she thanked in her victory speech was her coach, Wim Fissette. The Belgian joined Swiatek’s team at the end of last year, just before it was revealed that the Pole had tested positive for a banned drug. She finished a one-month ban in December, having proved that the failed test was the result of a contaminated sleeping pill.The timing was far from ideal and shocked Swiatek, as well as the tennis world. Fissette, one of the sport’s leading coaches who won six grand slam titles with Kim Clijsters, Angelique Kerber and Naomi Osaka, had some ideas he wanted to add to Swiatek’s game but, as often happens, it took time to learn how best to get his message across
How the rightwing sports bro conquered America
This February, Pat McAfee was broadcasting live on ESPN, the most watched sports network in the US, when he aired a salacious rumor about the sex life of a teenage college student. Once a workaday punter with the Indianapolis Colts, McAfee is now the most influential pundit in American sports with an eponymous ESPN show, who has more than 11m followers across YouTube, X, Instagram and TikTok.To howls of merriment from his panel, McAfee spelled out the rumor centered on a 19-year-old female student at Ole Miss, a public university in Mississippi, as it was “being reported by everybody on the internet”: that the student had sex with her boyfriend’s father. “Ole Miss dads are slinging meat right now!” roared “Boston” Connor Campbell, one of McAfee’s sidekicks.McAfee did not directly name Mary Kate Cornett, the college freshman at the center of the rumor, but she has since described how McAfee’s amplification of this “completely false” story encouraged others in the sports talk world to do likewise, resulting in her receiving a deluge of threats and harassment
Andy Farrell is warned not to count Australia out as Lions focus on first Test
Andy Farrell has been warned against underestimating his opposite number, Joe Schmidt, as the buildup to the British & Irish Lions series intensifies. Farrell is about to sit down with his assistants to finalise his selection plans for Saturday’s first Test against Australia, but those familiar with the wily Schmidt insist the Lions could yet be unexpectedly outflanked.While Farrell and Schmidt know each other extremely well from their time working together with Ireland, the former All Blacks coach Ian Foster believes the forthcoming series is not a foregone conclusion. Foster says the Lions’ first Test selection will need to be spot-on if the touring team are to see off the Wallabies in Brisbane.“They’re a quality team with good depth, but that brings complications sometimes in selection,” suggested Foster, having seen his combined AU & NZ team flattened 48-0 by the Lions in Adelaide on Saturday
When women fight: Taylor v Serrano and the meaning of choice in the ring
There are two salient pictures of the Katie Taylor–Amanda Serrano trilogy: Taylor walking to the ring on Friday night under the green, orange and white bars of light, her neck like a tree trunk, eyes fixed ahead with stoic grandeur as Even Though I Walk played overhead – and the image, hours earlier, of Yulihan Luna bloodied and bruised, standing beside a ring girl whose hoisted breasts had been shellacked in oil, smiling rigidly at a camera that wasn’t looking at the fighter.That’s boxing. That’s also being a woman.At Madison Square Garden – half cathedral, half Thunderdome – Katie Taylor approached the ring like a martyr. Her arms stayed low and still, her expression stony, the moment at once subdued and transcendent
Britain’s Hamzah Sheeraz crushes Edgar Berlanga to announce 168lb arrival
Rising British star Hamzah Sheeraz made an explosive arrival to boxing’s super middleweight division on Saturday night, stopping Edgar Berlanga in the fifth round of their bout at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center in Queens. The destructive performance marked a resounding debut at 168lb for the 26-year-old from Ilford and dramatically altered the landscape of a weight class ruled by Saul ‘Canelo’ Álvarez.Fighting in the main event of a Ring Magazine card staged on the No 2 show court of the US Open tennis tournament, Sheeraz dropped Berlanga twice in the fourth round before closing the show 17 seconds into the fifth. It was the kind of showcase that not only silences critics but instantly propels a fighter from prospect to contender – and in this case, into potential lucrative matchups with the likes of Álvarez or David Benavidez.The setting for Sheeraz’s career-best win was just as striking as the action
Reform wants to cut council diversity roles. The problem is there are already barely any
Unite attacks Angela Rayner over ‘abhorrent’ handling of Birmingham bin strikes
Starmer and Reeves promised honesty about public finances. Can they stay the course?
Zarah Sultana launches fundraising drive for new leftwing party
Nearly 60 Labour MPs call for UK to immediately recognise Palestinian state
MPs and political candidates face ‘industrial’ levels of abuse, minister says