Tuesday, 10 August 2021

Romelu Lukaku undergoing Chelsea medical ahead of club-record £97.5m transfer from Inter Milan - Sky Sports

  1. Romelu Lukaku undergoing Chelsea medical ahead of club-record £97.5m transfer from Inter Milan  Sky Sports
  2. Chelsea-bound Romelu Lukaku completes first part of medical ahead of £98m return  Daily Mail
  3. New twist in West Ham’s pursuit of Tammy Abraham as Roma enter the running but could flag up perfect alternative in Isak  Hammers News - West Ham United FC
  4. Lukaku cliches return sealed as Fabinho sends boring message to rivals  Football365
  5. Dzeko to Inter: medical tomorrow? - Football Italia  Football Italia
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Cystic fibrosis cure on horizon after scientists fix genetic mutation



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Sudesh Amman: Police operation to manage terrorist who stabbed two people was 'incredibly successful' - senior officer - Sky News

  1. Sudesh Amman: Police operation to manage terrorist who stabbed two people was 'incredibly successful' - senior officer  Sky News
  2. Streatham terror attack: Sudesh Amman operation 'an effective result'  BBC News
  3. Firearms chief commends undercover surveillance officers who shot dead Streatham terrorist  Daily Mail
  4. View Full coverage on Google News


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'Loving father' dies in hospital two weeks after alleged attack in Cardiff park - WalesOnline

  1. 'Loving father' dies in hospital two weeks after alleged attack in Cardiff park  WalesOnline
  2. 'Loving' doctor dad-of-two dies in hospital 16 days after 'serious' attack in park  Mirror.co.uk
  3. Bute Park attack: Gary Jenkins dies 16 days after incident  BBC News
  4. Dr Gary Jenkins dies after 'assault' in Cardiff's Bute Park  South Wales Argus
  5. Father-of-two psychiatrist, 54, dies two weeks after he was attacked in historic park in Cardiff  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Hargreaves Lansdown shares plunge as pandemic trading boom wanes - Telegraph.co.uk

  1. Hargreaves Lansdown shares plunge as pandemic trading boom wanes  Telegraph.co.uk
  2. Hargreaves Lansdown shares slide after warning pandemic trading boom will not last  Financial Times
  3. Hargreaves Lansdown's assets soar by £30bn but Reddit trading boom may have peaked  Yahoo Finance UK
  4. Hargreaves Lansdown shares tank as ‘meme stocks’ trend swells costs  City A.M.
  5. Young investors bolster books at Hargreaves Lansdown | Business  The Times
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Monday, 9 August 2021

Jason Kenny: Calls for knighthood for Olympic champion - BBC News

  1. Jason Kenny: Calls for knighthood for Olympic champion  BBC News
  2. Track cycling: Jason Kenny wins seventh gold with victory for Team GB in keirin | Tokyo Olympics  BBC Sport
  3. Laura Kenny’s Olympics ends with crash in Omnium but Briton heads home proud of Madison gold  Cyclingnews.com
  4. Tokyo Olympics: Jason Kenny wins seventh gold but Laura Kenny reign as omnium champion over  BBC Sport
  5. Cycling: Kenny finishes sixth in omnium after dramatic crash in opening race | Tokyo Olympics  BBC Sport
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Mum gunned down by female shooter in front of shocked witnesses - Metro.co.uk

  1. Mum gunned down by female shooter in front of shocked witnesses  Metro.co.uk
  2. Woman calmly walks up to mum and shoots her in 'execution-style' murder  Mirror.co.uk
  3. Moment woman calmly walks over and shoots dead mum-of-one in 'execution-style' murder  Daily Star
  4. NYC man gunned down inside Brooklyn housing project, NYPD says  New York Daily News
  5. Mom says she 'doesn't hate' the woman who gunned down daughter in an execution-style shooting in NYC  Daily Mail
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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Liverpool kick off delayed against Athletic Bilbao with huge queues outside Anfield - Liverpool Echo

  1. Liverpool kick off delayed against Athletic Bilbao with huge queues outside Anfield  Liverpool Echo
  2. Liverpool find door open for Watkins, beat Spurs to youngster, and face Karius decision  Daily Star
  3. Liverpool vs Athletic Bilbao LIVE - latest score, Jota goal, Robertson injury, commentary stream  Liverpool Echo
  4. Henderson and Thiago set to feature versus Osasuna  Liverpool FC
  5. Liverpool transfers: Nat Phillips, Xherdan Shaqiri could generate £27m  Rousing The Kop - Liverpool FC News
  6. View Full coverage on Google News


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GOP Senator Says He Disagrees with DeSantis’s Ban on School Mask Mandates



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A shadowy fight between Israel and Iran is at risk of becoming a bigger war. Here's how their militaries stack up.



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COVID-19 kills 17-year-old Georgia football player sent home by hospital twice, says mother



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Cuomo accuser Brittany Commisso speaks publicly for the first time



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Stonehenge disaster after archaeologist 'almost destroyed historic find': 'Cursing him!' - Daily Express

Stonehenge disaster after archaeologist 'almost destroyed historic find': 'Cursing him!'  Daily Express

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The U.S. edges China for the most gold medals.


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Video of Officer’s Collapse After Handling Powder Draws Skepticism


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Legendary Florida State Football Coach Bobby Bowden Dies at 91

Bobby Bowden, the folksy Hall of Fame coach who built Florida State into an unprecedented college football dynasty, has died. He was 91.

Bobby’s son, Terry, confirmed to The Associated Press that his father died at home in Tallahassee, Florida, surrounded by family early Sunday morning.

“It was truly peaceful,” Terry Bowden said in a text message to AP.

Bobby Bowden announced on July 21 he had a terminal illness that Terry Bowden later said was pancreatic cancer.

“I’ve always tried to serve God’s purpose for my life, on and off the field, and I am prepared for what is to come,” Bowden, a devout Christian, said at the time. “My wife, Ann, and our family have been life’s greatest blessing. I am at peace.”
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Bowden was beloved by Seminoles fans, respected by his peers and throughout his life one of the most accessible stars in college football. His home number was listed in the Tallahassee phone book for years.

With Southern charm and wit, Bowden piled up 377 wins during his 40 years as a major college coach, from tiny Samford — his alma mater, then known as Howard College — to West Virginia and finally at Florida State, where he went 315-98-4. The Seminoles were a force during his 34 seasons as coach, winning 12 Atlantic Coast Conference championships and national titles in 1993 and 1999.

Florida State had an unmatched run of 14 consecutive seasons (1987-2000) finishing ranked in the top five of The Associated Press college football poll under Bowden.

“Florida State University has lost a legend in the passing of Bobby Bowden,” university President John Thrasher said in a statement. “Coach Bowden built a football dynasty and raised the national profile of Florida State University, and he did it with class and a sense of humor.”

Bowden retired following the 2009 season with a Gator Bowl win over West Virginia in Florida State’s 28th straight postseason appearance, a victory that gave him his 33rd consecutive winning season. However, a month after he resigned, the NCAA stripped Florida State of victories in 10 sports because of an academic cheating scandal in 2006 and ’07 involving 61 athletes.

Still, only Penn State’s Joe Paterno is credited with winning more games (409) as a major college football coach. Bowden’s win total ranks fourth across all divisions in college football history.

Bowden was replaced in 2010 by his offensive coordinator, Jimbo Fisher, who had been Bowden’s replacement-in-waiting.

“He’s one of the great human beings that’s ever coached and one of the great coaches that’s ever coached,” Fisher said.

Bowden won the national championship in 1993 with Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Charlie Ward and again in 1999 with his second Heisman winner, quarterback Chris Weinke, and All-American receiver Peter Warrick.

The Seminoles were a contender to win the title every season for more than a decade. Florida State lost national championship games against Florida, Tennessee and Oklahoma and narrowly missed out on the playing for titles in several other seasons because of losses to archrival Miami.

Bowden once quipped that his headstone would read, “But he played Miami,” a one-liner that came the day after the Hurricanes escaped with a 17-16 win in 1991 when the Seminoles missed a field goal wide right in the final seconds. Miami also won in similar fashion in 2002 when a field-goal try went wide left, much to Bowden’s chagrin.

Both coaches who birthed college football powerhouses in Florida during the 1980s have died this year. Howard Schnellenberger, who led Miami to its first national championship in 1983, died in March at 87.

Florida State dominated the ACC under Bowden, winning championships in 12 of its first 14 seasons after joining the league in 1992.

“Bobby Bowden has meant everything to Florida State athletics and so much to college football in general,” Florida State athletic director David Coburn said. “He is a part of the heart and soul of FSU, but it goes beyond even that — he is a big part of the history of the game.”

Bowden was also the patriarch of college football’s most colorful coaching family. Son Tommy Bowden had a 90-49 record at Tulane and Clemson, and son Terry Bowden was 47-17-1 at Auburn. Another son, Jeff, served 13 years coaching wide receivers for his father at Florida State and six seasons as offensive coordinator before he resigned in 2006.

Jeff Bowden’s time at Florida State was rocky and emblematic of the program’s fall off in the early 2000s. Florida State’s offense had slumped to its lowest production in a quarter century and Jeff Bowden was paid $537,500 to resign by boosters.

Bobby Bowden left West Virginia to take over a Florida State program in 1976 that had produced just four wins the three previous seasons. The Seminoles went 5-6 in Bowden’s first year and never again experienced a losing season under a man who said he prepared for football games like World War II generals prepared for battles.

“You face similar tasks of motivation, preparation, teamwork, discipline,” Bowden said. “I probably get the most satisfaction out of putting in the strategies and watching them play out.”

By 1979, Bowden had Florida State positioned for one of the great runs in the annals of college football.

Led by All American nose guard Ron Simmons, the Seminoles enjoyed an 11-0 regular season but lost to Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. In 1993, despite a late slip at Notre Dame, Florida State won its first national title after nearly getting there in 1987, 1988, 1991 and 1992.

Bowden’s lone perfect season came in 1999 when the Seminoles became the first team to go wire-to-wire in The Associated Press rankings, No. 1 from the preseason to finish.

“The first championship was more of a relief,” Bowden said. “I think I was able to enjoy the second one a little more.”

Success also brought a glaring spotlight and Bowden’s program was touched by scandal on a few occasions. The school was put on NCAA probation for five years after several players in 1993 accepted free shoes and other sporting goods from a local store. The episode led former Florida coach Steve Spurrier to dub FSU “Free Shoes University.”

Bowden prided himself on adapting to the times and giving players a second chance, but critics said he was soft on discipline with an eye on winning games.

“If short hair and good manners won football games, Army and Navy would play for the national championship every year,” Bowden retorted.

Randy Moss, one of the most talented athletes to attend Florida State, never played a down for the Seminoles and was kicked out of school after a redshirt season for smoking marijuana. In 1999, Warrick was caught in a shopping scam that led to his suspension for two games and probably cost him the Heisman Trophy that year.

“There’s only about 6 inches that turns that halo into a noose,” Bowden was fond of saying during the good days, when he was often called “Saint Bobby” by the Florida State faithful.

The Seminoles won 10 or more games in 18 of Bowden’s 34 seasons at Florida State, but were a relatively mortal 74-42 on the field from 2001-09.

The cheating scandal that led to the loss of a dozen wins from Bowden’s final resume took place in an online music history course from the fall of 2006 through summer 2007. The NCAA said some athletes were provided with answers to exams and in some cases, had papers typed for them.

Despite those tough days near the end of his career, Bowden stayed in the public eye after retirement, writing a book, making speeches and going public with his treatment for prostate cancer in 2007. His fear of retiring from coaching resulted in part from the death of his longtime idol, former Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant, who died within weeks of leaving the sidelines.

“After you retire, there’s only one big event left,” Bowden frequently said.

Bowden stayed active into his 80s, finally slowing down over the last year or so. He was hospitalized in October 2020 after testing positive for COVID-19. The test came a few days after he returned home from a long hospital stay for a leg infection.

Born Nov. 8, 1929, in Birmingham, Alabama, Robert Cleckler Bowden overcame rheumatic fever as a child to quarterback Woodlawn High School in Birmingham, then attended Alabama for a semester before transferring back to his hometown Howard University, where he starred at quarterback.

He married child his childhood sweetheart, Ann, and they stayed together for 72 years.

Bowden built the Florida State program by scheduling the toughest opponents he could find, and he’d play them anywhere, usually at their stadium. He was dubbed “King of the Road” in 1981 after playing consecutive road games at Nebraska, Ohio State, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and LSU — and winning three of the five.

His daring play-calling also earned him the nickname Riverboat Gambler in some quarters. Bowden’s most famous trick play came in 1988 at Clemson. He sent his punt team onto the field with 1:33 left in a tie game with a fourth-and-4 and the ball at Florida State’s 21. Florida State’s punter leaped high into the air and acted as if he were chasing down a high snap while the upback took the ball and slipped it between his legs where LeRoy Butler grabbed it and raced 78 yards to the Clemson 1 to set up the winning field goal.

“We were determined somebody was going to win that game,” Bowden said after the “Puntrooskie.”

Through Bowden’s career, Florida State won games in many of the nation’s toughest stadiums, including at Michigan, Southern California and, of course, rivals Florida and Miami. In 1987, the Seminoles crushed Big Ten champion Michigan State 31-3 at East Lansing and whipped Southeastern Conference champion Auburn on its home field, 34-6.

Bowden also was considered one of the best handlers of great individual talents, recruiting and developing the likes of Simmons, Ward, Weinke, Warrick, Butler and Deion Sanders, who earned the nickname “Prime Time” during his days as a Seminole.

“God bless the Bowden Family, Friends & Loved ones,” Sanders posted on Twitter. “My Prayers are with u. I’ve lost 1 of the best coaches I’ve ever had.”

Florida State’s recruiting classes were nearly always among the top nationally. By the 1990s, the Seminoles poured star talent into the NFL on an annual basis, including four of the top 19 picks in the 2006 draft the same year Bowden was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame.

Florida state said funeral arrangements for Bowden were pending.

Bowden is survived by wife Ann; sons Terry, Tommy, Jeff and Steve; and daughters Robyn Hines and Ginger Madden.

___

AP Sports Writer John Zenor in Alabama, AP College Football Writer Ralph D. Russo in New York and former AP Sports Deputy Editor John Affleck contributed to this report.



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Sue Bird And Diana Taurasi Set a New Olympic Basketball Bar

After Team USA beat Japan, 90-75, in the women’s Olympic basketball final at the Saitama Super Arena north of Tokyo on Sunday afternoon, clinching a seventh straight Olympic gold medal for the U.S.—and a fifth gold medal for Sue Bird and Diana Taurasi, a new Olympic record for any basketball player—Bird ran over to the stands to kiss and hug her fiancée, U.S. soccer star Megan Rapinoe, who has one gold of her own (from the London Games). Rapinoe, who finagled a media credential to be in the seats, told Bird how proud she was. “That’s some GOAT sh-t right there,” Rapinoe said a few moments later, commenting on the history that Bird and Taurasi, former college teammates at the University of Connecticut, just wrote. (GOAT is an acronym for Greatest Of All-Time).
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“Those two,” says Rapinoe, “you can place above everyone.”

Bird, 40, told her fiancée she was very tired and very happy. After all, she and Tarasui, 39, have given the next of the world’s basketball players something to shoot for. “To get five Olympics golds is insane,” says America’s Breanna Stewart, who scored 14 points and grabbed 14 rebounds. “That’s the bar.” (Bird also told Rapinoe their close contact likely violated social distancing regulations in place throughout the Games, which wrapped up on Sunday. “I was like, it’s fine,” says Rapinoe. “I’m the rule breaker in the family.”)

Read more: ‘Unapologetic and Unafraid.’ Sue Bird Stares Down Olympic Glory in Tokyo and Equity Off the Court

Japan played a highly attractive style of basketball, passing, moving, challenging America’s bigger defenders, and occasionally floating in a tough layup, more than a few times getting their shot stuffed (the U.S. finished with 12 blocked shots. Japan had zero). A group of Olympics volunteers sat distanced in the first section behind one basket, a well-earned reward for all they’ve given to these Games. Still, their home-team cheers weren’t enough. Japan kept it relatively close at the half—the U.S. led by 11 at the break—but in the end, the U.S. just had too much size. Brittney Griner finished with 30 points, on 14-18 shooting. “30 piece!” a few teammates yelled as they passed her in a hallway.

United States v Japan Women's Basketball - Olympics: Day 16
Gregory Shamus—Getty ImagesSue Bird #6 and Diana Taurasi #12 of Team USA react in celebration from the bench during the second half of the women’s basketball final game between the U.S. and Japan at the Tokyo Olympic games at Saitama Super Arena on Aug. 08, 2021 in Saitama, Japan.

The afternoon, however, belonged to Bird and Taurasi, who periodically swigged champagne at her press conference. ”No water!” she said. The pair first met at UConn in the early 2000s: when Bird was a senior in 2002, Taurasi was a sophomore. “D was annoying because she had such a cocky confidence,” says Bird. “But on the court. we always vibed. Like, from day one.” Tarausi’s the all-time leading scorer in WNBA history; Bird’s the career leader in assists.

During their first Olympics, in Athens, Bird said they were there to learn. And have fun. That team stayed on a cruise ship, the Queen Mary 2; Bird and Taurasi were part of a group of younger players that frequented a nightclub on the ship, G32. “They partied every single night,” Dawn Staley, a leader of that team, told TIME before the Olympics; Staley just coached the U.S. women to gold at the Tokyo Games.

Now, Bird and Taurasi lead the way, Bird more so off the court too. She credits Rapinoe—whom she first at the 2016 Olympics in Rio—for helping her feel more comfortable using her voice. Bird’s family and friends, for example, have long known Bird is gay. But in 2017, Rapinoe convinced Bird to publicly reveal her sexuality. “What Megan helped me understand was that, yes, what I was already doing was great, living authentically,” Bird told TIME in a June interview. “But it was important to say it, because the more people that come out, that’s where you get to the point where nobody has to come out. Where you can just live. And it’s not a story.”

To a degree, Bird’s already helped make that happen. In May Stewart, MVP of last year’s WNBA Finals, announced on social media she was engaged to Marta Xargay, a Spanish basketball pro. “Just seeing the way that Sue has walked the path of life, both on, but more off, the court, it’s something that I aspire to,” Stewart, now a double gold medalist, told TIME. “I didn’t want to have a coming out story. I just wanted to be like, I’m engaged, and I’m happy, and that’s how it should be.”

Stewart’s a member of that next wave of American players who’ve looked up to Bird and Taurasi—and could match their medal haul. While Bird insists she’s played her last Olympics, Taurasi won’t rule out 2024. “I mean, I love Paris,” she says. “Beautiful buildings there, and great fashion. The weather sucks, but oh well.”

Says Taurasi: “Sue’s going to be my plus-one.”

Read more about the Tokyo Olympics:



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Home Office records 70 racist incidents by far right at asylum accommodation - The Guardian

  1. Home Office records 70 racist incidents by far right at asylum accommodation  The Guardian
  2. MPs ask Patel for ‘urgent correction’ over asylum evidence  Financial Times
  3. Fake Home Office website targeting asylum seekers probed by Information Commissioner  The Independent
  4. Migrant website set up by Home Office decried as ‘unethical’  The Guardian
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Covid-19: One more Covid-linked death and 1,129 new cases - BBC News

  1. Covid-19: One more Covid-linked death and 1,129 new cases  BBC News
  2. Family of unvaccinated Florida father organise Covid testing, vaccinations at his funeral  The Independent
  3. Six further deaths in NI related to Covid-19  ITV News
  4. Covid-19: NI has the highest infection rate in the UK  BBC News
  5. First under-18s get Covid vaccine with thousands of GP invites due  Metro.co.uk
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Employees are feeling burned over broken work-from-home promises and corporate culture ‘BS’ as employers try to bring them back to the office



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We studied what happens when guys add their cats to their dating app profiles



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Burgerville, a popular regional chain, says it's closed a Portland branch after finding human excrement, drug gear, and weapons on its premises



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Elon Musk reportedly lives in a $50,000 prefab tiny home that already has a 100,000-unit waitlist - see inside



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French marathon runner sparks sportsmanship row by knocking over water bottles - then running off with last one - The Telegraph

  1. French marathon runner sparks sportsmanship row by knocking over water bottles - then running off with last one  The Telegraph
  2. Kenya’s Eliud Kipchoge blitzes field for second straight Olympic marathon gold  The Guardian
  3. 'Biggest d*ckhead of the Olympics': Piers Morgan blasts French marathon runner Morhad Amdouni  Daily Mail
  4. Morhad Amdouni Slammed For 'Knocking Over' Water Bottles During Race  LADbible
  5. Greatest of all-time Eliud Kipchoge retains marathon title - AW  Athletics Weekly
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Morrisons partner McColl's in talks with investors about £30m cash call - Sky News

Morrisons partner McColl's in talks with investors about £30m cash call  Sky News

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Jeffrey Clark, Trump-appointed DOJ official, claimed Chinese thermostats changed votes in 2020 election, reports say



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HIGHLIGHTS | LEICESTER 1-0 MAN CITY | Community Shield 21/22 - Man City

  1. HIGHLIGHTS | LEICESTER 1-0 MAN CITY | Community Shield 21/22  Man City
  2. Leicester City 1-0 Manchester City: Are Pep Guardiola's side missing a striker?  BBC Sport
  3. Leicester beat slovenly Man City in typically tedious Community Shield  Football365
  4. Late Goal Wins It For The Foxes! | Leicester City 1-0 Manchester City | Community Shield 2021  The Emirates FA Cup
  5. Leicester 1-0 Manchester City: Kelechi Iheanacho wins and scores late penalty as Foxes spoil Jack Grealish's debut to lift Community Shield  Sky Sports
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Vaccinated Americans can enter Canada starting Monday. Here are 11 things to know before a trip.



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Sunday, 8 August 2021

Woman dies instantly after being mauled by tiger at safari park where she worked - The Mirror

  1. Woman dies instantly after being mauled by tiger at safari park where she worked  The Mirror
  2. Woman is mauled to death by tiger at safari park in Chile  Daily Mail
  3. Tiger kills woman working in safari park in Chile  The Guardian
  4. 'Death on the spot' Woman horrifically mauled by tiger after not realising cage was open  Daily Express
  5. Tiger kills woman working at Chilean safari park  CNN
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Some in U.S. Getting COVID-19 Boosters Without FDA Approval

DENVER — When the delta variant started spreading, Gina Welch decided not to take any chances: She got a third, booster dose of the COVID-19 vaccine by going to a clinic and telling them it was her first shot.

The U.S. government has not approved booster shots against the virus, saying it has yet to see evidence they are necessary. But Welch and an untold number of other Americans have managed to get them by taking advantage of the nation’s vaccine surplus and loose tracking of those who have been fully vaccinated.

Welch, a graduate student from Maine who is studying chemical engineering, said she has kept tabs on scientific studies about COVID-19 and follows several virologists and epidemiologists on social media who have advocated for boosters.
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“I’m going to follow these experts and I’m going to go protect myself,” said Welch, a 26-year-old with asthma and a liver condition. “I’m not going to wait another six months to a year for them to recommend a third dose.”

While Pfizer has said it plans to seek U.S. Food and Drug Administration approval for booster shots, health authorities say that for now, the fully vaccinated seem well protected.

Yet health care providers in the U.S. have reported more than 900 instances of people getting a third dose of COVID-19 vaccines in a database run by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, an Associated Press review of the system’s data found. Because reporting is voluntary, the full extent of people who have received third doses is unknown. It’s also unknown if all of those people were actively trying to get a third dose as a booster.

“I don’t think that anyone really has the tracking” in place to know how widespread it is, said Claire Hannan, executive director for the Association of Immunization Managers.

One entry in the CDC database shows a 52-year-old man got a third dose from a California pharmacy on July 14 by saying he had never received one and by providing his passport, rather than a driver’s license, as identification. But when the pharmacy contacted the patient’s insurance provider, it was told he had received two doses in March.

In Virginia, a 39-year-old man got a third shot from a military provider on April 27 after he showed a vaccine card indicating he had received only one dose. A review of records turned up his previous vaccines. The patient then told the provider that the time between his first and second doses was more than 21 days, “so they spoke to their provider, who ‘authorized’ them to get a third shot,” an entry states.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis said at a recent news briefing that he knew of residents who had received third dose by using fake names, but neither his office nor the state health department could provide any evidence.

Despite a lack of FDA approval, public health officials in San Francisco said Tuesday that they will provide an extra dose of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine for people who got the single-shot Johnson & Johnson variety — referring to it as a supplement, rather than a booster.

Several studies are looking at booster shots for certain at-risk groups — people with weakened immune systems, adults over 60 years old and health care workers. But the verdict is still out on whether the general population might need them, said Dr. Michelle Barron, senior medical director for infection prevention at UCHealth, a not-for-profit health care system based in Aurora, Colorado. She said the best data in favor of possible boosters is for people whose immune systems are compromised.

Israel is giving boosters to older adults and several countries, including Germany, Russia and the U.K. have approved them for some people. The head of the World Health Organization recently urged wealthier nations to stop administering boosters to ensure vaccine doses are available to other countries where few people have received their first shots.

Will Clart, a 67-year-old patient services employee at a Missouri hospital, got a third dose in May by going to a local pharmacy. Clart said he gave the pharmacist all of his information, but that the pharmacist didn’t realize until after administering the shot that Clart’s name was in the vaccine system.

“It sounded like there was a benefit to it. And there’s also been talk that eventually we’ll need a booster — mine was five or six months out and so I thought well I’ll go ahead, that’ll give me a booster,” Clart said.

Ted Rall, a political cartoonist, explained in a Wall Street Journal op-edthat he got a booster because of a history of lung problems, including asthma, swine flu, and repeated bouts of bronchitis and pneumonia.

“I made up my mind after reading a report that states were likely to toss 26.2 million unused doses due to low demand. My decision had no effect on policy, and I saved a vaccine dose from the garbage,” Rall said.

Welch, the graduate student from Maine, put the blame on people who have refused to get the vaccine for political reasons. About 60% of eligible people in the U.S. are fully vaccinated.

“Their absolute demand and screeches for freedom is trampling our public health and our communal health.”

___



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South Africa v British & Irish Lions: third and final Test – live! - The Guardian

  1. South Africa v British & Irish Lions: third and final Test – live!  The Guardian
  2. British and Irish Lions v South Africa has 'huge implications', says Ronan O'Gara  BBC Sport
  3. The most UNBELIEVABLE South Africa Tries! | Rugby World Cup  World Rugby
  4. Lions Tour 2021: Gregor Townsend on how the Lions can create more and why Finn Russell deserves his chance  The Scotsman
  5. Springboks take on the British and Irish Lions in the 3rd and deciding test match of the 2021 series  SABC News
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Romelu Lukaku: Chelsea close to sealing club-record £97.5m deal for Inter Milan striker - BBC Sport

  1. Romelu Lukaku: Chelsea close to sealing club-record £97.5m deal for Inter Milan striker  BBC Sport
  2. Romelu Lukaku's major Inter Milan request is revealed ahead of completing Chelsea transfer  Football.London
  3. Romelu Lukaku: Chelsea putting finishing touches to £98M deal to bring striker back  Daily Mail
  4. Romelu Lukaku set to return to Chelsea for £97m as Inter Milan agree to sell striker for second biggest...  talkSPORT.com
  5. Inter Linked Torino Captain Andrea Belotti Available For €30M, Italian Media Report  SempreInter
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Jessica Springsteen Earns Silver Medal With U.S. Equestrian Jumping Team

TOKYO (AP) — The Springsteen family has gone platinum many times over.

Time to make space for a little silver, too.

Jessica Springsteen and the U.S. equestrian jumping team came up just short of Olympic gold, falling to Sweden in a jump off Saturday night that still left the Americans with a record 10th medal in the event.

It’s the first for the 29-year-old Springsteen, the daughter of famed rockers Bruce Springsteen and Patti Scialfa, who made her Olympic debut in Tokyo. Riding powerful stallion Don Juan van de Donkhoeve, she clipped one rail in the primary round Saturday, as did McLain Ward, leaving the U.S in a tie with the Swedes for first with eight penalty points.
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Springsteen, Laura Kraut and Ward each moved cleanly through the shortened jump-off course and did so with a combined time of 124.2 seconds.

Peder Fredricson, the final Swedish rider, needed to circle the track in 40.30 seconds or better without error and cruised to a time of 39.01 for the country’s record fourth gold medal but first since 1924. The Americans also entered this week with three golds.

France had a clear line to a second straight gold when its final rider, Penelope Leprevost, took the course. Needing to finish with fewer than five points to win without a jump off, Leprevost’s horse refused twice, disqualifying her and the rest of the French team.

That left the Americans and Swedes tied for the lead and necessitated the jump off.

It’s the second straight silver for the U.S. team, which won its last gold in 2008 — also with Kraut and Ward on the team.

Springsteen said after Friday’s qualifying round that her parents have been watching from home, as athletes weren’t allowed to bring family into Japan for these Pandemic Games.

She said she was inspired to begin riding after watching her mother take lessons, and she began her training on the family’s farm in Colts Neck, New Jersey.

Swedish riders Henrik von Eckermann and Malin Baryard-Johnsson joined Fredricson in earning the gold medal.



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Japan Beats U.S. to Win First Olympic Baseball Gold Medal

YOKOHAMA, Japan — A Japanese team of All-Stars fulfilled a determined national mission to win the Olympic baseball gold medal for the first time, beating the United States 2-0 Saturday night behind Munetaka Murakami’s third-inning home run.

Masato Morishita and four relievers combined on a six-hitter, and the Japanese men (5-0) matched the accomplishment of the women’s softball team, which upended the Americans for their second straight gold medal.

Several hundred people who appeared to be Olympic volunteers cheered on Japan in a largely empty 34,000-capacity Yokohama Stadium, some wearing orange Japan jerseys and matching facemasks on the warm and humid night.
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America, the nation that introduced baseball to Japan in 1872, finished 4-2. Teams were denied access to all 40-man roster players and many eligible top prospects by Major League Baseball and its clubs, hindering the U.S. and other countries whose top players are in MLB.

Murakami, at 21 the youngest player in Japan’s starting lineup but already a two-time All-Star in four seasons with the Central League’s Yakult Swallows, reached out for an 85.2 mph offspeed pitch with a 2-2 count from Nick Martinez (1-1). He drove the ball to the opposite field, over the 16-foot wall in left-center, and Martinez winced as it landed in the fourth row of the empty blue seats.

Japan added an unearned run in the eighth when Masataka Yoshida singled off reliever Scott McGough and center fielder Jack Lopez heaved the ball past the plate for an error that allowed Tetsuto Yamada to score. The Japanese beat the U.S. for the second time in six days, also rallying in the ninth and winning 7-6 in 10 innings on Aug. 2.

Morishita (2-0), a 23-year-old right-hander on the Hiroshima Toyo Carp who is the reigning Central League Rookie of the Year, held the U.S. to three hits over five innings, struck out five and walked none.

Kodai Senga, a 28-year-old right-hander on the Pacific League’s Fukuoka SoftBank Hawks viewed as a possible future MLB pitcher, followed with 98 mph heat in the sixth.

Hiromi Itoh pitched the seventh and gave up a leadoff single to Tyler Austin in the eighth.

Suguru Iwazaki, a 30-year-old lefty with the Central League’s Hanshin Tigers, relieved and struck out Boston prospect Triston Casas, retired Todd Frazier on a popup and got Eric Filia to ground into a forceout.

Ryoji Kuribayashi, a 25-year-old first-time All-Star for Hiroshima, gave up a one-out single to Nick Allen, then retired Lopez on a forceout for his third save.

Japanese players streamed onto the mound, the relievers running in from the bullpen. Manager Atsunori Inaba was hoisted into the air by players and thrown up and down on the mound as if on a trampoline. Players lined up on the third base line and bowed to their supporters, then to the U.S. team. U.S. manager Mike Scioscia tipped his cap in reply.

Martinez, a 31-year-old former Texas right-hander in his fourth season pitching in Japan, allowed five hits in six innings with seven strikeouts and one walk.

Sciocia, the former Los Angeles Angels manager, was denied in his attempt to match the feat of his mentor, late Los Angeles Dodgers manager Tommy Lasorda, who led the U.S. to a baseball gold medal in 2000.

Frazier fell short in adding gold to the Little League World Series title he won with Toms River East American in New Jersey in 1998.

And while second baseman Eddy Alvarez became just the third American and sixth athlete overall to win medals at the Winter and Summer Games, he failed to gain gold and matched the silver he earned as a speedskater in 2014.

Baseball was contested in the Olympics for just the sixth time, the first since 2008, restored at the request of Japan as the host nation. It already has been dropped for the 2024 Paris Games but may return for 2028 in Los Angeles and 2032 in Brisbane, Australia.

Japan stopped its major league season on July 17 and allowed top players to assemble for the Olympics. MLB executives scoffed at the concept of sending top players to the Olympics, saying it was impractical and uneconomical to stop the season and many GMs rejecting out of hand the thought of risking players to injury for any game other than with the club that pays their salaries.

While the Japanese team lacked MLB stars Shohei Ohtani and Yu Darvish, they still had enough might to twice beat the resulting U.S. roster that was a dubious mix of prospects from Double-A considered not close to big league ready, released major league veterans and career minor leaguers.

The U.S. started a lineup that had a 2.9 career WAR with the exception of Frazier at 25.2. The only others with major league experience were Martinez (2.1), Austin (1.0) and Alvarez (-0.2).

Alvarez hit an inning-ending groundout with two on in the fifth, Jamie Westbrook flied out with two on in the sixth and grounded out, stranding a runner on second in the seventh.



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How Leicester result could affect Man City's Harry Kane transfer pursuit - Manchester Evening News

  1. How Leicester result could affect Man City's Harry Kane transfer pursuit  Manchester Evening News
  2. LEICESTER CITY V MANCHESTER CITY | COMMUNITY SHIELD | MATCHDAY LIVE  Man City
  3. Premier League: How Leicester City joined football's elite  BBC Sport
  4. PEP'S PRESS CONFERENCE | LEICESTER CITY V CITY | COMMUNITY SHIELD  Man City
  5. 3 Centre-Backs Leicester City Should Sign to Replace the Injured Wesley Fofana | Opinion  MAD ABOUT EPL
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U.S. Overwhelms Spain for Third Straight Water Polo Gold Medal

TOKYO — Maddie Musselman held her phone out, and the U.S. women’s water polo team gathered for a picture on the top step of the podium.

It was a familiar scene. The dynasty is alive and well.

Musselman scored three times, Ashleigh Johnson made 11 saves and the U.S. won its third consecutive gold medal on Saturday, routing Spain 14-5 in the final at the Tokyo Olympics.

“We’re having fun out there, and I think you could see that today,” Musselman said. “Everyone brought their best when their best was needed.”

Aria Fischer, Kaleigh Gilchrist and Alys Williams had two goals apiece as the U.S. improved to 134-4 since it won gold at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games. It broke its own records for most goals and biggest margin in the final.
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Maggie Steffens and Melissa Seidemann became the first women to win three gold medals in water polo. Musselman was named MVP, and Johnson was selected as the top goalkeeper of the tournament.

The day belonged to the U.S. — again.

“In the moments where you want to be at your best, it’s like it’s just magic when it happens,” Johnson said. “But … we’re putting in the work every day.”

After falling 10-9 to Hungary in group play in its first loss at the Olympics since the 2008 final, the U.S. ripped off four straight wins by a combined score of 63-26.

“I think this team loves competition, so we want the hardest games and the hardest moments,” Gilchrist said.

The U.S. joins the men’s teams from Britain (1908-1920) and Hungary (2000-2008) as the only countries to win at least three straight water polo titles at the Olympics. It is the only team to medal in each of the six women’s tournaments at the Games.

Maica Garcia had two goals for Spain, which has lost 13 in a row against the U.S., including the finals of the 2017 and 2019 world championships. The silver medal matches the country’s best finish in the women’s competition.

“We gave it all. That’s all we could do,” said Roser Tarrago, fighting back tears.

Garcia, Tarrago, Anni Espar, Laura Ester, Pili Pena and Marta Bach also were on Spain’s roster when it lost to the United States in the final at the 2012 Olympics, and they looked primed for revenge in Tokyo. The reigning European champions had won five of six, outlasting Hungary in the semifinals.

Instead, Spain was pushed aside by the U.S. once again.

“Destroyed. I really wanted this gold and I can only say congratulations to the USA,” Espar said. “They played an amazing game.”

Steffens and company saved their best for last — like they often do. The Americans were shaken by their loss to Hungary, but they regrouped with their depth and defense.

Six U.S. players scored on the way to a 7-4 halftime lead. Spain didn’t get its first goal until there was 2:15 left in the first quarter.

When the U.S. ripped off five straight goals in the third, it was all over. Johnson took a seat on the bench with 2:35 left, and the party was on.

“We’ve talked a lot about the fine line between confidence and complacency, but we’ve done just a fantastic job of just staying focused through this process,” coach Adam Krikorian said, “and it’s amazing.”

When it was over, Johnson and Krikorian embraced, and Krikorian eventually was dumped into the pool by Gilchrist for a quick swim.

“It wasn’t just one player. It wasn’t two players,” Steffens said. “You look up on there and we had different people getting blocks, different people getting huge goals here, different people guarding and to see such a full team at the end of this just makes me feel really proud to be a part of it.”

Hungary earned the country’s first medal in women’s water polo, beating the Russian team 11-9 for bronze.

Captain Rita Kesthelyi had two goals for Hungary, which finished fourth in each of the past three Games.

Kesthelyi’s father, Tibor, played water polo for Hungary in the 1988 Olympics, and she said her mother was among the first women to play the sport in her country. Rita Kesthelyi fought back tears when asked about the significance of the bronze medal.

“I’m sure everyone is very, very proud of us and happy that we achieve this,” she said. “It’s a huge step in our history.”

___

Jay Cohen can be reached at https://twitter.com/jcohenap

___

More AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2020-tokyo-olympics and https://twitter.com/AP_Sports



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A Florida radio host who railed against Dr. Fauci and vaccines has died from COVID-19



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This Was No Team USA Men’s Basketball Dream Team. But In Tokyo, It Demands Our Respect

It was no thing of overwhelming beauty, the Team USA men’s Olympic basketball team’s 87-82 win over France in the gold medal game on Saturday in Saitama, north of Tokyo. This was no Dream Team or Redeem Team or any other collection of superstars who will be wistfully remembered in books or documentaries three decades from now.

They didn’t have to be. At an Olympics that at times have felt like more of an obligation than a celebration, the U.S. men’s basketball team met the moment. They did what they had to do. They got it done.
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So they deserve our everlasting respect.

Kevin Durant, America’s all-time Olympic scorer, scored 29 points on 9-18 shooting, and Jrue Holiday of the Milwaukee Bucks, the newly-minted NBA champion who along with Bucks teammate Khris Middleton and fellow NBA Finals participant Devin Booker of the Phoenix Suns landed in Tokyo at 1 a.m. the morning their first Olympic game, set a defensive tone that was key to the U.S. victory over France, which beat the U.S in the Olympic opener for both teams. After that loss, and demoralizing pre-Games exhibition losses to Nigeria and Australia that caused some panic in basketball circles, the Americans defended their gold, again: following a bronze medal finish at the 2004 Athens Games that sparked a revamping of the U.S. Olympic team selection process, the U.S. men have now won the past four Olympic gold medals—and maintains its status as world’s most formidable hoops power.

After the loss to France, the U.S. held a players-only meeting. “Pop wasn’t there,” Durant said after the gold-medal win, his coach, Gregg Popovich of the San Antonio Spurs, sitting on a dais right next to him. “When you have a team meeting, you’re kind of at the bottom.” Thanks in large part to Durant, who unlike most of his superstar brethren chose not to bail on Tokyo, the U.S. rose from those ashes. “A lot of people back home doubted us,” said Durant. “A lot of people said that it was going to be tough for us to win. They really don’t matter. But you hear the noise so much.”

Basketball - Olympics: Day 15
Gregory Shamus—Getty ImagesKevin Durant #7 of Team USA celebrates following the United States’ victory over France in the Men’s Basketball Finals game of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games at Saitama Super Arena on Aug. 07, 2021 in Saitama, Japan.

Ultimately, the chirping served as motivation. From the outset, France had a clear strategy: toss the ball down-low to big-man Rudy Gobert, of the Utah Jazz, whenever the relatively slender Durant was guarding him, or when a smaller player switched to defend Gobert. The plan was far from aesthetically pleasing—there’s likely a reason that a pass into the post is often termed a “dump-down”—and flies in the face of in-vogue basketball tactics, which call for spacing and fast pace and lots of three-point shots.

But basketball’s no beauty competition. Gobert finished with 16 points and shot a perfect 5-5 from the field. But he also missed 7 of his 13 free throws: after the game, he admitted he’ll dwell on that failure a bit. And a few times, Holiday, who’s 10 inches shorter than the 7’1″ Gobert, bothered Gobert down low or poked it out of Gobert’s hands. His refusal to back down set a tone.

“Hey, it’s the gold medal game,” says Holiday. “No excuses.”

“This man is a super-champion,” said Jason Tatum of the Boston Celtics, Team USA’s second-leading scorer in the gold medal game with 19 points, putting a hand on Holiday’s shoulder. Holiday and Middleton are the fifth and sixth players ever to win an NBA title and gold medal in the same year; Michael Jordan (1992), Scottie Pippen (1992 and 1996), LeBron James (2012) and Kyrie Irving (2016) are the others.

But none of these players landed in the Olympic host city at 1 a.m. the day of a game. Between celebrating his ‘92 title with the Bulls and the start of the Barcelona Games, Jordan, Holiday pointed out, “had some time.”

Holiday, says teammate Draymond Green, “is probably the best on-ball defender the NBA has to offer. Him coming to this team, keeping his commitment, is one of the main reasons we’re sitting here as gold medalists.”

While Holiday set the defensive tone, Durant anchored the U.S. offense. Both teams did shoot—and miss—plenty of threes; the U.S. started a cool 0-8 before Durant ended that atrocious streak, and as a team finished 9-32 for the game; France went 10-31 from downtown, and bricked or air-balled three shots late that could have threatened Team USA’s lead even more (Holiday also helped hold France’s Evan Fournier, who scored 27 points in France’s pool-play victory over the U.S., to 5-15 shooting, and 2 for 9—including the late brick from Steph Curry range—from deep).

Durant did not enjoy his best long-range shooting game; he was 3-9 from three. But he delivered when needed. Durant scored 21 points in the first half alone; the U.S had a 44-39 lead at the half, and went up by as much as 14 points, 71-57, late in the third quarter, before France chipped away. France cut the deficit to three, 85-82, with 10 seconds left in the game; Durant was fouled and converted both free throws to clinch it.

All game long, Durant unleashed his usual array of drives to the hoops and silky pull-up jump shots. In the third quarter, he faced up against Gobert, and calmly drilled a three-pointer in his face, as if the reigning defensive player of the year wasn’t even there. Also in the third, he rose for a monster dunk on Gobert—and drew a foul. “We tried to make things really tough for him,” says Gobert. “We tried to make him work as hard as he can. But he’s Kevin Durant.”

At times, Durant’s own teammates can’t help but gawk. “It’s hard not to watch him,” says Damian Lillard. ”When you’re on the floor with him, Pop’s like don’t stand around, cut, move. But you see some of the stuff he’s doing out there, and it’s hard not to, literally, watch him.”

Durant has his haters: he can be insecure on social media, and some fans will never forgive him for jumping at the chance to sign with the Golden State Warriors after that team won a record 73-games in 2016; two titles followed the Warriors and Durant. But if these Olympics don’t win KD converts, nothing will.

USA Basketball managing director Jerry Colangelo, the architect of the last four gold-winning U.S. men’s Olympic teams, teared up after the game when discussing Durant’s sacrifices to play in three straight Olympics—especially these ones. “KD is not special because he’s so talented,” says Popovich, who’s won five NBA titles as long-time coach of the Spurs. “The way he works on his game is more impressive. The relationships he builds with his teammates, the respect he garners, the joy he has in playing, it’s like osmosis. It goes into all the other players, and allows you to develop camaraderie.

After it was over, Durant and Green, the multiple gold medalists, led the on-court celebrations, draping the U.S. flag on their shoulders, hugging and hopping around with their teammates. Don’t put it past Durant, who’s 32, to return to the Games in three years, in Paris. More of the bigger U.S. names might commit; France could be a more compelling locale than Tokyo, especially if COVID-19 is behind us.

But no matter, the Tokyo team has secured its place. These players, as a whole, may have lacked glitz. They were far from the perfect team. But, as Durant put it, “we came together to finish it off. It was the perfect ending.”

Read more about the Tokyo Olympics:



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There are 3 disturbances to track in the tropics, 2 with better odds of development



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Covid NI: Six further deaths and over 1,300 cases reported - Belfast Live

  1. Covid NI: Six further deaths and over 1,300 cases reported  Belfast Live
  2. Covid-19: NI has the highest infection rate in the UK  BBC News
  3. Covid infection level in England falls to one in 75 people  The Guardian
  4. Coronavirus Northern Ireland: Six further deaths and 1349 cases  Belfast Telegraph
  5. Covid-19: Six more Covid-linked deaths and 1,349 new cases  BBC News
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