Thursday, 31 October 2024

ALI-FOREMAN AT 50: RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE STILL ABOUT 'WHAT IT DID FOR THE PEOPLE '

In 1974, the heavyweight boxing match in Zaire combined music, sports and culture to create a world event



 “You think the world was shocked when Nixon resigned? Wait until I whup George Foreman’s behind.” — Muhammad Ali


Many events throughout history have captivated sports, but none garnered such worldwide attention as the heavyweight boxing championship bout between Muhammad Ali and George Foreman 50 years ago in Kinshasa, Zaire.

The spectacle on Oct. 30, 1974, oozed with symbolism and Black Power never seen before in sports. Not only were the combatants Black — and would make the biggest purse in boxing history at that time — but the face of the promotion was an ex-con named Don King, who would become one of the premier boxing promoters of the 20th century. The bout was also the first heavyweight championship fight in Africa, with a concert festival with musical legends in the lineup leading up to the fight.

While not the official title, the bout became known as The Rumble in the Jungle, created by Ali while he was training in front of reporters. The conclusion of the fight was the beginning of the end of Foreman’s first run as a fighter, and the victory helped cement Ali’s legacy as one of the greatest boxers of all time.

But staging the heavyweight title had its challenges, including a few glitches to overcome leading up to the fight.

In 1974, the same year President Richard Nixon resigned from office ahead of certain impeachment, Ali was seven years removed from the stripping of the world heavyweight title and the suspension of his boxing license after he refused to be inducted into the Vietnam War. In 1971, he had lost “The Fight of the Century” in a unanimous decision against Joe Frazier. Ali avenged his loss to Frazier and a loss to Ken Norton, leading up to his fight with Foreman.

Foreman won the heavyweight gold medal in the Olympics in 1968. He was 40-0 with 37 knockouts in 1974. Two fighters who defeated Ali were destroyed by Foreman – Frazier in January 1973 and Norton several months later in March.

Shortly before Foreman’s second-round TKO of Norton in Caracas, Venezuela, King convinced Foreman and Ali to sign contacts for a fight in the fall. King, hired by Hank Schwartz, owner of Video Techniques, a closed-circuit broadcast company, promised each fighter $5 million, double the amount Ali and Frazier each were paid in their fight in 1971.


A fight ticket for Ali vs. Foreman, originally scheduled for Sept. 25, 1974.CHRISTIE’S IMAGES


Despite the promise, King and Schwartz didn’t initially have the money or a fight location. That changed when an introduction led them to dictator Mobutu Sese Seko, Zaire’s president, who fronted the money. He allowed the fight to take place in his country because he wanted to spread his and Zaire’s name around the world. This was the same Mobutu who, once backed by Belgium and the United States, ordered the arrest of Patrice Lumumba, the first prime minister of Democratic Republic of the Congo, then known as the Republic of the Congo, and handed him over to Belgian and secessionist forces. Lumumba was murdered by those forces in 1961.

“Mobutu Sese Seko used money that he robbed from his country,” Bill Caplan, Foreman’s publicist, said. “The country was mineral-rich, and Mobutu had millions of dollars in a Swiss bank account.”

With contracts signed, the fight was scheduled for Sept. 25 at 3 a.m. (10 p.m. ET) to accommodate closed-circuit audiences in the United States. And it was announced that a three-day music festival, Zaire 74, would take place leading up to the fight. Conceived by record producer Stewart Levine and South African trumpeter Hugh Masekela, the concert featured 31 acts from Africa and the United States, such as James Brown, The Spinners, Sister Sledge, B.B. King, Bill Withers and The Crusaders.

“Stewart and Masekela partnered together and spent a lot of time understanding and recording African music,” Gary Stromberg, who was responsible for public relations for the festival, said. “When the fight was announced, it just felt like a natural thing to put on a music event to really make it a world event.”

Ali and Foreman arrived in Africa several weeks before their scheduled fight to train and to get acclimated to the climate. When Foreman arrived, he was greeted by a crowd yelling, “Welcome home, brother!” Ali received a similar reception. The crowd also sparked an idea. Jerry Izenberg, who covered the fight for the Newark Star-Ledger, said Ali had a question for his group.

“Ali wanted to know who the [Congolese] disliked, and he was told the Belgians because they had once colonized the country,” said Izenberg, author of Once There Were Giants: The Golden Age of Heavyweight Boxing. “So, Ali holds up his hands like the pope and everything gets quiet, and he says, ‘George Foreman is Belgian.’ The crowd immediately starts yelling, ‘Ali, bomaye’ [Ali, kill him].”

Unlike Foreman, the 4-1 underdog Ali embraced the culture and the moment. While Foreman stayed in seclusion, Ali attended news conferences and mingled with fans. Foreman struggled with the conditions of the country. Many residents were poor under Mobutu’s reign. People would overload public transportation vehicles by hanging on rooftops and outside of the vehicles.

“People would sit outside at night in a lit area where the light would attract these giant moths, and they’d snatch those moths out of the air and eat them,” Caplan said. “That was quite a sight.”

But there were times when Foreman was encouraged to make public appearances, especially when it came to dinner offered to both fight camps by Mobutu. Foreman probably wished he had stayed back at his hotel.

“We were served this strange dish,” Caplan said. “They called [the dish] the cousins. ‘You ate cousins tonight.’ They were monkeys. It was monkey meat. It reminded you of beef, but stringy.”

Since I ran, trained, and sparred with Ali, I was confident he’d win. George was big and strong, but I knew Ali would wait for him and counterpunch him. No matter what, I believed Ali would figure him out.”

— Larry Holmes

And if matters couldn’t get worse, Foreman suffered a cut above his right eye while sparring nine days before the fight, which forced a postponement. At the time, no one knew for how long. Until that was determined, Mobutu wouldn’t allow either fighter to leave the country because he feared no one would return. The bout was rescheduled for 4 a.m. on Oct. 30.

The concert dates, however, weren’t moved because many of the artists could not afford to stay for the additional weeks due to commitments back in the States. But the first day of the festival had a few second-guessing because of the sparse turnout.

“We were very disappointed, and we couldn’t understand why nobody came,” Stromberg said. “We learned that people lived in dire fear of Mobutu, and they weren’t aware if he had given his blessing to our concert. Without that, they wouldn’t dare show up. Once one of our representatives talked to him, he gave his blessings, and the stadium was packed for the next two days.”

And the packed stadium and music became an even bigger blessing for the musicians, especially for Nesbert “Stix” Hooper of The Crusaders. 

“It was very emotional being in Africa for the first time and sharing the stage with so many great legendary artists,” Hooper said. “It was also special to meet Ali, an iconic figure, who appreciated the music and who represented the Black community with such respectability around the world.”


Defending world champion George Foreman (left) hits Muhammad Ali (right) with a left jab during the WBA/WBC championship bout in Kinshasa, Zaire, on Oct. 30, 1974. BETTMANN/GETTY IMAGES


Despite Foreman’s cut, Ali remained a decided underdog at 4-1. Many considered Ali an aging fighter at 32. Foreman, 25, destroyed two opponents who defeated Ali, and Foreman had one of the greatest knockout percentages in history. Broadcaster Howard Cosell, along with many of the reporters who attended the fight, picked Foreman to win convincingly. There were even doubts in Ali’s camp.

But Ali’s sparring partner Larry Holmes, who would become world heavyweight champion four years later in 1978, thought otherwise.

“Since I ran, trained, and sparred with Ali, I was confident he’d win,” Holmes said. “George was big and strong, but I knew Ali would wait for him and counterpunch him. No matter what, I believed Ali would figure him out.”

The fight was the world’s most-watched live television broadcast at the time, with a reported 1 billion viewers worldwide. NFL great Jim Brown, boxing legend Joe Frazier, and English journalist David Frost were commentators for the closed-circuit broadcast.

Shortly after Ali and Foreman entered the ring, and while the referee explained the rules (as Ali taunted Foreman), the bell rang for Round 1. And, surprisingly, after bragging about how he would dance against Foreman, Ali met him flat-footed in the center of the ring and connected with consecutive right leads, which is an insult to an opponent. It takes longer for a right-hand lead to reach its target, which should give a fighter time to move out of the way, but not Foreman. Thirty seconds into the round, Ali moved to the corner in a defensive posture. He blocked shots and avoided punches by leaning against the ropes. Ali fought like this for the next two rounds, flat-footed, and fighting off the ropes, despite cries from his corner to move.

It was much of the same in the third and fourth rounds, but this time Ali grabbed Foreman around the neck and pulled him down to tire him out, similar to what he did to Frazier in their first fight. The pattern was clear by the sixth round. Foreman started to tire himself out after consistently throwing wild punches. Ali conserved his energy until he picked his spots to pour it on. Ali’s “rope-a-dope” strategy was born.

Ali started to pour it on in the sixth round with three crisp jabs to Foreman’s head. He rested on the ropes in the middle of the round. He went back to the ropes in the seventh round and attacked Foreman in the later part of the round, ending with a right cross that knocked the sweat off Foreman’s head.

In the eighth round, a desperate Foreman came out swinging wild punches that mostly missed. With less than 30 seconds left in the round, Ali went to work. A left, right and a left knocked Foreman off balance. Ali stepped in with a shot to the head that sent Foreman spinning before he tumbled to the canvas. He was counted out, and Ali became the second fighter to regain the heavyweight title for the second time.

Shortly after the fight, Foreman talked about his water being drugged; the ropes being too loose, which helped Ali lean away from his punches; and a quick count by the referee. He changed his tune in the 1989 documentary Champions Forever.

“Everybody needs an excuse,” Foreman said in the documentary. “I couldn’t live with myself without an excuse. I blamed it on the ropes, I blamed it on everything. That [loss] devastated me.”


Challenger Muhammad Ali (right) raises his arms in victory after George Foreman (left) is counted out by referee Zack Clayton, ending the WBA/WBC championship bout in Kinshasa, Zaire, on Oct. 30, 1974. AP PHOTO, FILE


It took some time, but Foreman recovered from the defeat. He fought four more years, until 1978, before retiring. After a 10-year layoff, he returned in 1988 and became the oldest heavyweight champion at 45, 20 years after losing the title to Ali.

The victory was a monumental lift for Ali and his legend. It happened 10 years after he won the title over Sonny Liston in 1964. Ali was a champion once again. And, 50 years later, his moment in history remains inspiring.

“Boxing had a lot of exciting moments, but this fight is what it did for the people,” Izenberg said. “It’s what Ali’s victory did for the guy who was supposed to get promoted to foreman at the shop, got appendicitis, missed out, but he recovered and came back. It’s what Ali’s victory did for the kid struggling in college, but he sticks it out, finishes and gets his degree. It was a fight for underdogs, and that’s when Ali was at his best.”

Several events will take place this week in Kinshasa to celebrate the Rumble in the Jungle. One includes Fight for Peace (Arts Envoy), a cultural project initiated by the U.S. Embassy, and a Rumble in the Jungle 8K Peace Run.

“Celebrating this event not only honors the memory of this iconic sporting and cultural moment, but it also reminds us of the city’s importance in global history, particularly in the context of the fight against racial segregation and the emancipation of Black people,” said David Midesso Scheby, a cultural operator and U.S. Embassy grantee. “It also serves to pass on these values to the new generations and strengthen national pride.”

- Branson Wright

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Branson Wright is a filmmaker and freelance multimedia sports reporter.

MCKENNIE, WEAH SCORE AS JUVENTUS DRAW WITH PARMA


United States internationals Weston McKennie and Tim Weah salvaged Juventus' unbeaten start to the season.

The duo scored on Wednesday to help Juventus draw 2-2 at Parma. Enrico Delprato and Simon Sohm had twice given Parma the lead.

Juventus are on 18 points, seven adrift of leaders Napoli, and slipped to fourth as Atalanta moved a point ahead after their 2-0 win over Monza. Parma are 14th on nine points.

It was the second successive game Juventus had to come from behind to salvage a point after a 4-4 draw at Inter Milan on Sunday.

"I think today we conceded too many restarts. At their goal kicks we were trying to bring the defender out to then be able to press and cause an error, but we didn't succeed," Juventus head coach Thiago Motta told broadcaster DAZN.

"In the defensive phase we made a lot of mistakes."

Parma started fast and after working the ball across the pitch from a corner kick, Adrián Bernabé's cross into the box was nodded back across goal by Botond Balogh and Delprato headed into the roof of the net.

Juventus should have drawn level 10 minutes later after Zion Suzuki saved a header from McKennie, but when the rebound fell to Dusan Vlahovic he somehow sent his shot over the bar.

McKennie, however, made no mistake when his USMNT teammate Weah whipped a ball into the area, steering his header past the dive of Suzuki but Parma were soon back in front as Juventus struggled to deal with the pace of the visitors.

Dennis Man collected a long ball in the area and pulled back the perfect pass for Sohm to drill past Di Gregorio and they held their lead until the break.

Juventus's unbeaten record was on the line but they pulled level again shortly after the interval. Khephren Thuram powered through from midfield before passing to Francisco Conceição out wide and his cross was volleyed home by Weah from close range.

In the draw at Inter, Kenan Yildiz came off the bench to score the two goals which levelled the match, but the Turkish forward was among the substitutes against Parma, replacing Weah and almost scoring an added-time winner.

"Weah played well at San Siro and again today, scoring," Motta told Sky Sports.

"Kenan coming on later, with the game more open, is an ideal player to create situations. He has freedom in the final metres, it was normal today to want to open things up against such a closed team."

Information from The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

Game Information

Allianz Stadium

10:45 PM, October 30, 2024

Torino, Italy

Line: JUV -1.5

Over/Under: 2.5

Referees: Luca Zufferli

- ESPN News Services



LIAM LAWSON 'LEARNED LESSON' AFTER MEXICO INCIDENT WITH SERGIO PEREZ

Liam Lawson of RB and Sergio Perez of Red Bull battle for position during the Mexico Grand Prix. Jared C. Tilton/Getty Images


SAO PAULO, Brazil -- RB driver Liam Lawson says he learned lessons from his collision with Red Bull's Sergio Perez at the Mexico Grand Prix, but will not change his overall approach to racing.

Lawson and Perez collided at Turn 5 while racing for position in Mexico, with Lawson gesturing with his middle finger at the Mexican when he passed him later in the race.

Perez told media after the chequered flag that Lawson, who replaced Daniel Ricciardo at RB two races ago, had the wrong "attitude" for F1, claiming the New Zealander was "out of control".

Lawson, who drives for the Red Bull-owned RB team, said he spoke with Red Bull team principal Christian Horner and motorsport advisor Helmut Marko following the Mexico Grand Prix.

"I don't think they want me to race differently," he said. "But obviously the target is not to make contact with another Red Bull car.

"And as I said at the time, it wasn't my intention in the moment. Looking back, maybe I could have avoided it. And clearly that would have been the right thing to do at the time."

Asked if he would maintain the same level of aggression in his racing, Lawson added: "That won't change, yeah. That attitude towards racing and how I approach races in Formula 1 won't change.

"That's how I'll always be, but at the same time there's things in there if I make mistakes I'll always learn from them. And clearly in Mexico I made a mistake and I'll learn from it."

Perez was attempting to pass Lawson for position when the pair collided. The Red Bull driver was squeezed to the inside of Turn 4 and then both ran deep into the corner, with Lawson ending up off the circuit.

Lawson rejoined ahead of Turn 5, which is where the two cars collided, and admitted he could have skipped the inside of the corner to avoid contact.

"Looking back, maybe there were things I could have done differently, I could have cut the chicane and avoided it completely," he said. "But in the moment I'm racing as well, you have a split second to make this decision.

"So it's something I've spoken to the team about afterwards and I've reflected on and I'll learn from going into this weekend."

Lawson said he spoke with Perez after the race and apologised for gesturing at the Red Bull driver with his middle finger.

"Briefly we spoke after the race but at the same time we left the track very early immediately afterwards anyway. So I think it was an on-track fight and I apologised for what I did after the incident.

"But in terms of the fight we had on track, it was deemed as a racing incident and something that was an in the moment battle."

- Laurence Edmondson, F1 Editor

12 ARRESTED, L.A. BUS SET ON FIRE FOLLOWING WORLD SERIES WIN

A Los Angeles Metro bus was set on fire during celebrations following the Dodgers' World Series victory. Mario Tama/Getty Images


A dozen arrests were reported by Los Angeles police early Thursday after crowds took to the streets following the Dodgers' World Series win.

Video showed some people throwing objects at police in Los Angeles as sirens blared and officers told them to leave the area after the Dodgers defeated the Yankees in Game 5 in New York. A bus was set on fire, and some in the crowd were seen breaking into stores.

There were some "unruly, and at times violent and hostile celebrations," with several acts of vandalism, including the burning of a Metropolitan Transit Authority bus, Los Angeles police spokesperson Officer Drake Madison said in an email.

"Metro is disappointed and angered by the senseless act of vandalism on one of our buses following the Dodgers World Series Win earlier this evening," the transportation agency said in a statement to the Los Angeles Times.

Arrests were on charges such as failure to disperse, receiving stolen property and commercial burglary, Madison said.

There were also several instances of street takeovers downtown and police used less-lethal munitions to control several hostile and violent crowds, Madison said. In the coming days, detectives will attempt to identify those responsible for crimes, he said.

Other video showed revelers standing on top of a bus waving a Dodgers banner and people leaving a boarded-up store with sneakers. It wasn't known if anyone was hurt.

The Dodgers plan to commemorate their World Series championship Friday with a downtown parade followed by a celebration at Dodger Stadium. The team said Wednesday that, because of logistics, traffic and timing, fans won't be able to attend both events.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

- ESPN News Services

JÜRGEN KLOPP QUESTIONS IF SERGIO RAMOS IS A 'GOOD GUY'

Sergio Ramos injured Mohamed Salah in the 2018 Champions League final. GENYA SAVILOV/AFP via Getty Images


Former Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp has taken a swipe at Sergio Ramos when discussing the ex-Real Madrid star on a podcast with Toni Kroos.

Klopp questioned if Ramos was really a "good guy" while reflecting on his challenge on Mohamed Salah during the 2018 Champion League final.

Salah left the field in tears with a shoulder injury early in the first half after a collision with Ramos. He was also involved in a clash with goalkeeper Loris Karius that left the Liverpool goalkeeper concussed and saw him make two fatal errors as Madrid won the final 3-1.

Speaking on Kroos' Einfach mal Lupen podcast, Klopp said: "Is Mr Sergio Ramos really a good guy? He's not my favourite player. The action was brutal. Of course, he can't know that it's bothering his shoulder, but we all know that he accepted it very happily.

"I could never understand that mentality, I never had players like that and, when I did, I made sure they left."

Kroos defended Ramos, saying he was a "very good teammate," before Klopp added: "He may not be my favourite player, but it doesn't matter.

"I always thought that my centre-backs were good enough not to be involved in actions like that."

Klopp, who won the Champions League with Liverpool in 2019, left the club last season, before taking up a position as head of global soccer at Red Bull in October.

- ESPN 

WORLD SERIES:: FAT JOE PERFORMS 'ALL THE WAY UP' AT THE DODGERS VS. YANKEES GAME


 

RÚBEN AMORIM TO BE HIRED AS MAN UNITED HEAD COACH - SOURCES

Getty 


Rúben Amorim is set to take charge of Manchester United during the November international break, sources confirmed to ESPN.

United and the Portuguese champions Sporting CP have made significant progress on an agreement for the departure of their head coach to the Premier League club.

Amorim is set to succeed Erik ten Hag, who was sacked on Monday, as head coach at Old Trafford and would be the sixth permanent appointment in the role since the retirement of Sir Alex Ferguson in 2013.

Sources told ESPN that United have triggered the former Braga coach's €10 million ($10.87m) release clause at Sporting, and the English club will also pay compensation to enable a number of Amorim's backroom staff to join him at Old Trafford.

But with the terms of Amorim's contract at Sporting including a 30-day notice period, sources have told ESPN that United will be forced to wait until mid-November for Amorim to formally take charge of the team following Sporting's league game away to Braga on Nov. 10.

As a consequence, Amorim will also take charge of Sporting's home game against Estrela on Friday and next Tuesday's Champions League clash against Manchester City, which will be his final home game at Estadio Jose Alvalade.

ESPN sources said that Ruud van Nistelrooy, who guided United to a 5-2 Carabao Cup fourth round win against Leicester City in his first game as interim head coach on Wednesday, will take charge of the team's next three games -- all at Old Trafford -- against Chelsea, PAOK Thessaloniki and Leicester again before handing over the reins to Amorim.

Amorim's first game in charge will be the Premier League fixture against Ipswich Town at Portman Road on Nov 24, sources told ESPN.

United are 14th in the Premier League having won just three of their opening nine games.

Meanwhile, Amorim has said he will address his future after Sporting's game against Estrela Amadora on Friday.

"I know you [journalists] made the journey to talk about this and it's normal. At the end of [Friday's] game I will talk about this and everything will become clearer," he told a news conference on Thursday.

"I want the players' and my focus to be on the game. The focus is on tomorrow's game and then I will talk."

When asked why negotiations are taking longer, Amorim said: "It's a negotiation between two clubs, which is not easy. We will have clarification after the game. Then, the decision will be known."

The 39-year-old has spent his entire coaching career in Portugal and hinted at his desire to step out of his comfort zone.

"All coaches need it [to leave their comfort zone], I don't want to go into too much detail, but here we have very good conditions, six years ago we were at Casa Pia and we paid to work, so it doesn't involve any of that, it's not monetary reasons," he said.

"When I talk about the staff, it's not just my assistants, I'm talking about everyone, physiotherapists, kit men, it's difficult to find these environments, it was one of the reasons I always wanted to stay.

"Regarding about stability, we'll talk tomorrow, but in everyone's life there are also phases in which we are doing well in life but something is missing, or we want to prove something and we have to take a step forward in things that will destabilize us, we don't know whether it will work or not, whether we are ruining what is so good we have. Everyone feels this and coaches go through the same thing."

Information from ESPN's Adriana Garcia contributed to this report.

- Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FC

CARABAO CUP QUARTERFINAL DRAW: MAN UNITED TO VISIT SPURS


Tottenham will host Manchester United in the quarterfinals of the Carabao Cup, while holders Liverpool will travel to Southampton.

In the competition's first all-Premier League quarterfinal lineup in 14 years, Arsenal will also host Crystal Palace and Newcastle are at home to Brentford.

Man United responded to the firing of Erik ten Hag by scoring four goals in the first 38 minutes on the way to a 5-2 thrashing of Leicester in on Wednesday, while Tottenham eliminated Manchester City.

Two days after Ten Hag's exit, United displayed the cutting edge so often lacking under the Dutchman with Brazil midfielder Casemiro scoring two of the team's first-half goals -- one a curling strike into the top corner from 30 meters.

Alejandro Garnacho and Bruno Fernandes also netted in that early flurry of goals, while Fernandes added a fifth in the 59th.

Ruud van Nistelrooy, United's former star striker, took charge of United having been Ten Hag's assistant.

It was a night to forget for Premier League leaders Man City, who not only lost the match to Tottenham 2-1 but also lost Savinho and Manuel Akanji to injuries to further deplete Pep Guardiola's ravaged squad.

Goals by Timo Werner and Pape Matar Sarr in the opening 25 minutes put Tottenham two goals clear before Matheus Nunes reduced the deficit in first-half stoppage time for City.

Akanji was injured in the warmup and didn't start the game, while Savinho hurt his ankle and was in tears as he was carried off the field on a stretcher in the 63rd minute. City are already without Rodri, Kevin De Bruyne, Kyle Walker, Jérémy Doku and Jack Grealish because of injuries.

Tottenham also sustained injuries to Micky van de Ven and Werner.

Liverpool continued their title defence with a 3-2 win over Brighton that was sparked by a double from Cody Gakpo.

The Netherlands international scored in the 46th and 63rd minutes at Amex Stadium, while Luis Díaz added a third in the 85th after Brighton had pulled a goal back through Simon Adingra.

Liverpool held on after Tariq Lamptey scored Brighton's second goal in the 90th and will need to make another trip to the south coast in the last eight to play Southampton.

Liverpool have won the League Cup a record 10 times, most recently last season with a victory over Chelsea in the final.

Newcastle beat Chelsea 2-0 thanks to Alexander Isak's close-range strike and an own-goal by Axel Disasi, while Palace defeated Aston Villa 2-1 in another all-Premier League match thanks to goals by Eberechi Eze and Daichi Kamada. Jhon Durán netted for Villa.

Palace's reward is a last-eight match against Arsenal, who were a 3-0 winner at second-tier Preston after goals by Gabriel Jesus, Ethan Nwaneri and Kai Havertz.

Quarterfinal draw

Tottenham vs. Manchester United

Arsenal vs. Crystal Palace

Newcastle vs. Brentford

Southampton vs. Liverpool

Information from The Associated Press contributed to this report.

- ESPN News Services

LAKERS ' BRONNY JAMES NETS 1ST BUCKET, CALLS IT 'DREAM COME TRUE'

Getty 


CLEVELAND -- With the game all but decided early in the second half, the Cavaliers cruising toward a 134-110 win and their first 5-0 start since 2016, the Cleveland crowd started rooting for the other team Wednesday night.

Specifically for Los Angeles Lakers rookie Bronny James, son of LeBron, the greatest player in Cavaliers history.

A "We Want Bronny!" chant started midway through the third quarter and was picked back up midway through the fourth when Lakers coach JJ Redick acquiesced, subbing him in for only the second regular-season game action of his early career.

And this time, he got his first NBA bucket.

Bronny scored on a 14-foot step-back jumper from the left wing over Jaylon Tyson with 2:03 remaining in the fourth quarter, causing the wave of fans that stuck around to see the moment to stand up and show appreciation for the hometown product.

"It was insane," Bronny said of the reception after finishing with 2 points, 2 assists and 1 steal in five minutes. "Much more than I anticipated for sure. But it's all love. It was insane. It was a nice moment. The chants really got me. I was straight-faced, but I felt it and it felt really good, especially coming from here.

"Yeah, it was a special moment for me for sure."

LeBron said that type of moment might have swallowed him up when he was a rookie with the Cavs in 2003.

"He's better than I would have been in that situation -- 20,000 fans screaming my name to get in the game and wanting me to be in the game, and if the role's reversed, I don't know if I would have been able to handle it," said LeBron, who scored 26 points but had six turnovers as he lost in Cleveland as an opponent for only the third time in 12 games. "To see him get his first NBA basket in this arena where he grew up not too far away from here, it's an unbelievable moment.

"An unbelievable moment for him, first of all. For our family. It's just pretty cool to be a part of it."

Bronny last played on opening night, subbing in against the Timberwolves in the second quarter along with LeBron, and shooting 0-for-2 from the field in three minutes. This time, he took the court with his dad watching from the sideline and his grandmother, Gloria, sitting in the stands with a Lakers hat on as she watched another generation compete in the family business.

"I've been just taught to play the right way my whole life," Bronny said as he sat next to LeBron during their postgame news conference. "So, just me going in there and playing my game is always something that I'm going to do."

The crowd clamored for Bronny to shoot the ball from the moment he checked in with 5:16 left in the fourth quarter. His teammates accounted for seven shot attempts in the next three minutes before he finally hoisted one.

The game came 10 years to the day when LeBron played his first game in his second stint with the Cavs -- a four-year span when he led the team to four straight NBA Finals appearances and delivered the only championship in franchise history in 2016, breaking a 53-year title drought for the city.

Though the Akron, Ohio, native was initially vilified by Cleveland sports fans when he signed with the Miami Heat as a free agent in 2010, his return healed old wounds, and the region rallied around LeBron and his family. That was abundantly clear Wednesday, with the Cavs greeting LeBron and Bronny with welcome images of them celebrating the title over the Golden State Warriors on a video screen by the visitors locker room and then using a first-quarter timeout to play a tribute video for the father-son pair.

"We spent a lot of years here," LeBron said afterward. "We're part of this community, obviously. ... We were born not too far from here, 35 miles south of here, [our] hometown of Akron. And I spent 11 years of my NBA career -- half of my career -- here.

"We have so many great moments. We have so many great moments not only on the floor at this arena, no matter what the name is, if it was the Gund Arena or the Q, and now it's Rocket Mortgage. ... A lot of great memories on the court, but a lot of great memories off the floor as well in this community. To have the mutual respect and love for what we was able to accomplish in the years that we were here, it's definitely very humbling."

For Bronny, who said he used to play pickup games on a practice court tucked away on the top floor of the arena while his dad was playing NBA games, he got to experience his time on center stage.

"Pretty much since I picked the ball up," Bronny said when asked how long he has envisioned scoring his first basket in the pros. "I've been watching [my dad] for a minute playing in the league. Just dreaming of me being in those players' steps, not only [LeBron's] but players he used to play against and with.

"So yeah, it was just a dream come true for me."

- Dave McMenamin, ESPN Staff Writer

VAN NISTELROOY WOULD STAY AT MANCHESTER UNITED 'IN ANY CAPACITY '

Ruud van Nistelrooy said he is ready to stay at Manchester United "in any capacity" whenever a new manager is appointed after overseeing a 5-2 Carabao Cup win against Leicester City at Old Trafford in his first game as interim head coach following Monday's dismissal of manager Erik ten Hag.

United are continuing to negotiate with Sporting CP for the release of head coach Ruben Amorim after agreeing to pay the 39-year-old's €10 million ($10.8 million) clause to replace Ten Hag.

However, sources have told ESPN that although United are "getting there" in their efforts to seal a deal for Amorim, the terms of his contract with the Portuguese champions could see his arrival at Old Trafford delayed until the start of the next international break on Nov 11.

Such a delay to Amorim's arrival at United would likely see Van Nistelrooy remain in interim charge for the Premier League games against Chelsea (Nov. 3) and Leicester City (Nov. 10) as well as the Europa League tie against PAOK Thessaloniki at Old Trafford on Nov. 7.

Having been hired by United as assistant manager to Ten Hag in the summer, Van Nistelrooy's time at the club where he spent five years as a player could yet be short, but he said after the Leicester game that he will stay as long as he is wanted.

"Of course," Van Nistelrooy told Sky Sports. "I came here as an assistant to help the club. Now in this role, I'm helping as long as needed.


Man United interim coach Ruud Van Nistelrooy celebrates after his team scoring a goal against Leicester City in the Carabao Cup. Getty Images


"In the future in any capacity, I'm here to help the club further to build towards the future that's what I'm here for.

"To go back to yesterday [Tuesday], of course receiving the players and getting together for the first day after Erik [ten Hag] had to leave was a sad day to share. Mixed emotions.

"He was the one that asked me to work back here again, and in the first conversation we had I felt such a passion and care for this football club. That is why I was so sad to see him go.

"Having said that, football and life continues, and we knew that 75,000 people would be waiting for us here today, with millions more watching at home behind their screens and radios and you have to switch then as players.

"We tried to switch that button for the players, try to get the mindset going and go out tonight and give everything for the fans."

United sealed a Carabao Cup quarterfinal tie away to Tottenham Hotspur with the win against Leicester, but they remain in 14th position in the Premier League table. Results and performances must improve quickly for United to salvage their season, and Van Nistelrooy said that his only job now is to ensure that the team continues on an upwards curve.

"It is clear that this is going to be short term, so for me today was the most important day after what happened," he said. "In such short notice we had to have things getting going and get into the quarterfinals.

"Credit to the players, they were fantastic today.

"For now, the focus is on Chelsea on Sunday, and I do not really look any further."

- Mark Ogden, Senior Writer, ESPN FC

LOS ANGELES DODGERS, ALL OF THEM, ARE WORLD CHAMPS



NEW YORK -- The 2024 World Series is over: Shohei Ohtani and the Los Angeles Dodgers are champions in five games, the first title for him and, for the team, the eighth in franchise history.

There were heroes and goats, as there are in every Fall Classic, but no storybook showdown of Ohtani versus Aaron Judge. There were dramatic grand slams, stunning comebacks and horrible defensive miscues. The New York Yankees' title drought reached 15 years, and their captain, Judge, faced struggles that sometimes reached nightmarish levels.

In the end, what we got was a pure baseball matchup decided by baseball factors, and mostly by the fact the Dodgers had more good players than their opponent. They earned it -- as a group.

"They were the better team in this series," Yankees manager Aaron Boone said, while praising his own heartbroken club.

This championship, and the way Los Angeles achieved it, is less about the names on the marquee and more because of the ensemble. It belongs to them all, as much to the supporting cast of Teoscar Hernandez, Gavin Lux and Max Muncy as to Ohtani and fellow stars Freddie Freeman and Mookie Betts. To anonymous relievers as much as more heralded starters such as Yoshinobu Yamamoto and Jack Flaherty. None of this is by accident. The Dodgers won this way because they were built to win this way.

Every season, the Dodgers rank near the top of the majors in categories such as rookie WAR and in total appearances on the transaction wire. Think about that: With all of the resources poured into the L.A. payroll -- the Dodgers spent more than $1 billion this past offseason -- the Andrew Friedman-led front office never stops tweaking the roster mix, addressing needs both immediate and imagined. The Dodgers excel at turning other teams' excesses into gold, with journeymen such as Ryan Brasier, Brent Honeywell and Anthony Banda becoming crucial contributors to the bullpen. Every bit as much attention is paid to the bottom 10 slots on the 40-man roster as it is to the top three.

"It's about getting the right players, the right people," Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. "Talent is a lot, but it's not everything. You still have to be cohesive. I just think we do a great job of getting the right players in our clubhouse."

The Dodgers have as much star power as any team we've seen in recent years, but they could never be accused of taking a stars-and-scrubs approach, or constructing a top-heavy roster. Depth or stars? We'll have both, thank you.

"We have a culture here at the big league level," Roberts said. "But the scouting and player development is second to none."

After a second title in five years, the Dodgers, from top to bottom, are what Roberts says -- second to none.

THIS WAS SUPPOSED to be the Ohtani-Judge World Series.

Just look at the cover of the official program. On the left is Ohtani, his face exuding focus and exertion, his arms pointing behind him in the act of the backswing that completes the arc of one of his mighty hacks.


Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge grace the cover of the official 2024 World Series program. 


Judge is on the right, his mouth open in the midst of a shout, his head turned as he presumably looks at the bedlam in the dugout in the aftermath of one of his missile-like blasts into the farthest expanses of Yankee Stadium.

It would be Ohtani vs. Judge, in the ultimate version of a baseball hero's journey, one with no antagonists but two protagonists on a parallel odyssey in pursuit to slay the same dragon: a career-first championship.

Thus was the hook for the resumption of baseball's most prolific Fall Classic matchup, Yankees-Dodgers, the dream showdown between two of baseball's most storied franchises.

The hype wasn't without justification. This truly was an unprecedented clash between perhaps the best-right-now players in the sport, starring for marquee franchises in the glitziest of markets and biggest of stages. Together during the regular season, Judge and Ohtani hit .315/.423/.672 with 112 homers, 274 RBIs, 256 runs and 69 stolen bases. That's from two players.

This pairing of the game's two best players just hasn't happened very often in World Series history. It's easy to lose yourself in a debate about just who was considered the best in the game at any point, but the clear precedents are few: Ty Cobb vs. Honus Wagner in 1909. Ted Williams vs. Stan Musial in 1946. George Brett vs. Mike Schmidt in 1980.

Let's imagine the Platonic ideal as the climactic scene of "The Natural," when Roy Hobbs -- "the best there ever was" -- homers into the stratosphere, turning another Knights disappointment into an instant pennant. We've never had that payoff -- a championship-winning, come-from-behind home run blasted by the game's best player.

None of the superstar matchups we highlighted had the type of payoff we might dream of, and most of them disappointed altogether. In the just-completed 2024 showdown, while Ohtani played well as a stalwart at the top of the lineup, his series was most noteworthy because he popped his shoulder on a slide, bringing the term "subluxation" into the mainstream. And Judge, homerless until the clinching game, was astonishing to watch for much of the series, after a season in which he recorded one of the best offensive showings in history.

"He's a great player," a sympathetic Roberts said after Game 4. "I have so much respect for Aaron. There's probably a little bit of maybe trying too hard right now."

That's baseball, though, isn't it? When we zero in on a star matchup like Ohtani against Judge, that's the possibility we're teasing, even as we know the nature of the sport itself makes the realization of the dream scenario so unlikely.

In fact, the most cinematic moment of the series was not produced by Ohtani, Judge -- or even each team's next best player, Betts or Juan Soto. That belonged to yet another star, Freeman, in a postseason when his injuries threatened to keep him out of the lineup. His two-out, Game 1-ending grand slam evoked immediate images of 1988 Kirk Gibson and inspired Joe Davis' epic, instantaneous Vin Scully homage.

There's a lesson in there, both about baseball and about the Dodgers. No matter who we zero in on, it's never about only one person. Anybody might be the one to realize a boyhood dream.

"Those are the kind of things, when you're 5 years old with your two older brothers and you're playing whiffle ball in the backyard," Freeman said, "those are the scenarios you dream about. Two outs, bases loaded in a World Series game."

As for Ohtani, he went 0-for-4 in the clincher and struck out with the bases loaded in the sixth. It didn't make his night any less sweet.

"The success of the postseason is very similar to how we were able to pull it off during the regular season," Ohtani said, via interpreter Will Ireton. "Again: The strength of the organization. Extremely honored to be a part of this."

CONSIDER THAT 29 different Dodgers played this October. Nearly everyone had meaningful roles along the way, including a bright-eyed rookie named Ben Casparius, who began October with all of three big league appearances under his belt. He ended up making a start in Game 4 as an opener.

This is every bit as much a characteristic of this era of Dodgers baseball as the presence of household names Ohtani, Betts, Freeman and Clayton Kershaw.

"It takes a lot to get here," Kershaw said. "Regardless of the talent level, everybody just assumes that we're going to show up, win 100 games and win the World Series. It takes every last guy."

Since the start of the 2021 season, the Dodgers have had 68 instances of a player recording at least one bWAR. Only the Brewers and Rays (69 each) have more. But the Dodgers have also had 17 instances of a player reaching an All-Star level of four BWAR, second only to the Astros (18). L.A.'s success is built on stars plus depth.

During the 12 full seasons since the Guggenheim Baseball Management group assumed control of the Dodgers, they've won 99.2 of every 162 regular-season games they've played. During the wild-card era, no team has done better over such a span, one that has included 11 first-place finishes, a 12-for-12 presence in the postseason bracket, four pennants and, now, two World Series titles. And there is no question the Dodgers' economics might play a role in the team's staying power. According to Cot's Contracts, the Dodgers have sported a top-five payroll in all of those seasons. Yet other teams make huge payroll splurges -- including the past two teams they beat, the Yankees in the World Series and the Mets in the National League Championship Series -- and the Dodgers are sometimes outspent by one or two competitors.

A level of investment measuring in the billions sets a clear expectation for everyone who dons Dodger blue: to do what they did Wednesday -- win it all. That expectation isn't just carried by Ohtani, Betts and Freeman, but everyone who steps into the clubhouse. They would have it no other way.

"You've got a lot of good people that care about winning and that want to win," second baseman Gavin Lux said. "None of them have egos."

The Dodgers' stars, including Ohtani, outperformed their New York counterparts, especially Judge, in the Series, but that was mainly because of Freeman's massive output as World Series MVP. That certainly played a part in L.A.'s triumph.

But in terms of the headliner matchup, at no point did this feel like an Ohtani-versus-Judge World Series. If anything, it was the Freeman series, but of course he isn't going to claim that title.

"Sitting here now, I've just been blessed to be able to play this game a long time and be in certain situations because of the group of guys, the organization," Freeman said. "Just from top to bottom, to be put into a situation. ... I mean, I got asked about the RBIs, and the RBIs are because there were guys on base. That's my teammates."

NO TEAM LOST more player games to injury in 2024 than the Dodgers. Even as they sprayed champagne and whooped it up in the clubhouse at Yankee Stadium on Wednesday, the Dodgers had more than an entire upper-tier starting rotation on the injured list.

That's why Roberts -- whose postseason decisions have been maligned by Dodgers fans and detractors alike over the years -- deserves so much credit for this run. It's not just that Roberts, along with pitching coach Mark Prior, was able to navigate around the losses in the pitching staff. It's also that the skipper, as usual, folded in rookies such as outfielder Andy Pages, Landon Knack, Casparius and even Yamamoto, not a traditional rookie but a rookie nonetheless. It's also that when the Dodgers splurged at the trade deadline, adding Flaherty, Tommy Edman and Michael Kopech, they all fit so seamlessly on and off the field that it's easy to forget they didn't join the team until the end of July.

No game showed it more acutely than the Dodgers' Game 5 win against San Diego in the NL Division Series, when the big three went a combined 1-for-10 but four relievers backed Yamamoto on a two-hit shutout and Teoscar Hernandez and Enrique Hernandez hit solo homers for the game's only runs.

"He lets you be the player that you'll always be," Teoscar said of Roberts. "He lets you have fun. His communication with his players is one of the best that I've had in my career. I think that's why he's so special for this team and the players."

Roberts' masterpiece was Game 5, when he had to work around Flaherty's too-brief outing and a bullpen with perhaps too few adequately rested arms. So Roberts rode relief ace Blake Treinen for 42 pitches -- seven more than he got from Flaherty. And then he turned to Walker Buehler, his Game 3 starter only two days before, to slam the door in the ninth.

"That's one of the best games I've ever seen managed," Freeman said. "That was special."

Through it all, Roberts spreads the credit steadily away from himself, even as he joins the short list of managers who have won more than one World Series, a list made up almost entirely of current and future Hall of Famers, including Dodgers legends Walter Alston and Tommy Lasorda.

"Humbling," Roberts said. "Never thought I would be in that same conversation. I'm a part of a great organization, a lot of great people around me supporting me, and we've won a lot of ballgames. This is something I really wanted. I wanted this one."

If Roberts required validation that perhaps the team's shortened-season 2020 title did not supply -- he has it. He might just be another high-profile cog in the Dodgers' immense apparatus, but he's a vital one. He's also the manager of a dynasty.

This championship -- after a grueling marathon of 162 games plus a month of playoffs, cannot be diminished. It took all of the Dodgers to make it happen, right to the end.

When the Dodgers spilled out of the third-base dugout after the final out, Ohtani, Betts and Freeman were in the middle of the pile. So too were Casparius and Knack. Baseball's latest championship doesn't belong to any one of them, but all of them, under a banner dyed a rich Dodger blue, just how it was drawn up all along.

- Bradford Doolittle, ESPN Staff Writer

RUNE VS. BUBLIK | ROUND 2 HIGHLIGHTS | ROLEX PARIS MASTERS


 

PARIS HIGHLIGHTS | DAY 3


 

PARIS HIGHLIGHTS | DAY 2


 

NWANERI WITH A WOLDIE! | PRESTON END 0-3 ARSENAL | CARABAO CUP


 

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NEWCASTLE UNITED 2-0 CHELSEA | HIGHLIGHTS | CARABAO CUP

BRILLIANT GAKPO & DIAZ AS LIVERPOOL BEAT BRIGHTON 2-3 | CARABAO CUPas Liverpool beat Brighton 2-3.


 

GEORGE FOREMAN ON 'RUMBLE IN YHE JUNGLE ' | 60 MINUTES ARCHIVE

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RUMBLE IN THE JUNGLE TURNS 50 | MUHAMMAD ALI VS. GEORGE FOREMAN


 

JAY-Z & ALICIA KEYS | EMPIRE STATE OF MIND | HD

DODGERS VS. YANKEES | WORLD SERIES INNING 5 | HIGHLIGHTS

THE FINAL OUT! | DODGERS WIN THE 2024 WORLD SERIES


FULL INNING: DODGERS SCORE FIVE RUNS AND 2 OUTS TO TIE GAME 5 🔥


 

MAN UNITED THRASH LEICESTER IN 1ST GAME SINCE TEN HAG EXIT

Casemiro and Bruno Fernandes scored two goals apiece as Manchester United eased into the Carabao Cup quarterfinals with a breathless 5-2 victory over Leicester City on Wednesday, their first game since the sacking of manager Erik ten Hag.

United's interim manager Ruud van Nistelrooy had promised excitement and goals in his first match in charge, and his players did not disappoint.

Casemiro opened the scoring in the 15th minute when he lashed a strike from 20 yards into the top corner and Alejandro Garnacho doubled the lead when he rifled a shot into the roof of the net from Diogo Dalot's cross.

Leicester's Bilal El Khannouss pulled a goal back, but Fernandes restored United's two-goal lead when his free kick struck a player in the wall and went into the net.

Casemiro completed his brace in the 39th minute when he headed the ball against the post before smashing in the rebound.

Conor Coady pulled one back for Leicester in first-half stoppage time, but the visitors' hopes were short-lived as Fernandes latched on to a back pass, dribbled around the keeper and scored his second in the 59th minute.


Casemiro's double propelled Man United to victory over Leicester City.


Leicester's Bilal El Khannouss pulled a goal back, but Fernandes restored United's two-goal lead when his free kick struck a player in the wall and went into the net.

Casemiro completed his brace in the 39th minute when he headed the ball against the post before smashing in the rebound.

Conor Coady pulled one back for Leicester in first-half stoppage time, but the visitors' hopes were short-lived as Fernandes latched on to a back pass, dribbled around the keeper and scored his second in the 59th minute.


Game Information

Old Trafford

10:45 PM, October 30, 2024

Manchester, England

Line: MAN -1.5

Over/Under: 3.5

Attendance: 73,470

Referees: Andy Madley

- Reuters 

LIVERPOOL BEATS BRIGHTON | EFL CUP 2024


 

SINGIDA BIG STARS 0-1 YOUNG AFRICANS (YANGA) | HIGHLIGHTS


 

Wednesday, 30 October 2024

NATIONAL SCIENCE & MATHS QUIZ CHAMPIONS | MFANTSIPIM SCHOOL


 

UEFA PLEDGES $1.08 BILLION TO DEVELOP WOMEN'S SOCCER ⚽

NYON, Switzerland -- UEFA pledged Wednesday to steer €1 billion ($1.08 billion) toward all levels of women's soccer over the next six years as part of a comprehensive strategy to grow the game in Europe.

UEFA's goal is to make "football the most-played team sport for women and girls in every European country," as well as doubling the number of fully professional national leagues to six and raising the number of professional players from 3,000 to 5,000.

"It is our promise to keep investing and collectively lead the game forward, with all European national associations, leagues, clubs, players, fans and partners part of our journey," UEFA's director of women's soccer Nadine Kessler said in a statement.

The UEFA plan, dubbed "Unstoppable," includes developing paths for women and girls to play, coach and referee from the grassroots level.

Still, Kessler acknowledged in the 31-page document that there are "persistent challenges and obstacles to overcome" in getting more girls and women into the game.

The previous UEFA women's soccer strategy in 2019 aimed for 2.5 million registered players across its 55 member federations and the latest document reported 1.6 million last season.

The total prize money for clubs this season in the Women's Champions League is €24 million ($26 million), most of which is a €22 million ($23.9 million) subsidy from the men's competition, where the 32 clubs will share at least €2.5 billion ($2.71 billion).


England won the last UEFA women's European Championship in 2022. Getty


Many players "still struggle to make a viable living from the game," Kessler said.

UEFA's marquee women's soccer asset is the European Championship and the 2022 final drew 50 million viewers who watched England beat Germany in London. The 2025 edition of the 16-team tournament will be hosted by Switzerland.

By 2030, UEFA will have organized two more Women's Euros, and for the 2022 edition it spent €57.1 million ($62 million) on competition costs, according to its annual accounts. More than €20 million ($21.7 million) was paid in combined prize money to teams and to clubs for releasing players who were selected.

The 2023 Women's Champions League final, the UEFA report said, had 5.1 million viewers watching Barcelona beat Wolfsburg 3-2.

UEFA budgeted for spending of more than €53 million ($57.5 million) on women's competitions in its 2023-24 financial year, with the majority on the Champions League.

Europe provided the standout teams at the 2023 Women's World Cup, though Spain's 1-0 win over England in the final was overshadowed by the conduct of Luis Rubiales at the game in Sydney, Australia.

Rubiales, who eventually resigned as Spanish federation president and as a UEFA vice president, is set to have his appeal heard next week at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland, against a three-year ban by FIFA.

Some of UEFA's billion-dollar investment is in already announced payments to the 55 members as part of its Hat Trick program, funded by the men's European Championship. That will send a total of €66 million ($71.6 million) to members from 2024-28 for women's soccer, the report said.

- Associated Press

WREXHAM OWNERS REYNOLDS, MCELHANEY BUY LOCAL BREWERY

Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have bought another piece of Wrexham -- its brewery.

Four years after their out-of-the-blue purchase of Wrexham's struggling football team, the Hollywood celebrities have further invested in the city in north Wales by becoming co-owners of Wrexham Lager.

Wrexham Lager, which is one of the team's sponsors, was founded in 1882 and says it is the oldest British lager brewery still in existence.

The presence of Reynolds and McElhenney will boost Wrexham Lager's efforts to expand its international production and distribution.

"As co-chairmen of Wrexham AFC, we have learned a lot," Reynolds and McElhenney said in a statement obtained by The Associated Press. "The connection between club and community, the intricacies of the offside rule and the occasional need for beer - especially after finance meetings.

"Wrexham Lager has a 140-year-old recipe and a storied history and we're excited to help write its next chapter."

The brewery didn't disclose financial details but said Reynolds and McElhenney have a majority stake.

Wrexham Lager said the acquisition was made by Red Dragon Ventures, a joint venture formed by Reynolds and McElhenney and the New York-based Allyn family -- which on Wednesday became a minority investor in Wrexham's team.

Since taking charge of the club following a $2.5 million purchase in late 2020, Reynolds and McElhenney have overseen Wrexham's rise up English football. Wrexham has achieved back-to-back promotions and now plays in third-tier League One, where the team is in third place after 13 games.


Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney joined the team for an open-top bus parade after their first promotion in 2023. Nick Potts/PA Images via Getty Images


Wrexham has been further thrust into the global consciousness by Reynolds and McElhenney launching a fly-on-the-wall TV series, "Welcome to Wrexham." It has helped to boost tourism and trade in the city, with Wrexham Lager among the businesses gaining visibility through the show.

Reynolds previously owned a stake in Aviation Gin, which was sold to Diageo in 2020 for a reported $610 million. Diageo said Reynolds retained an "ongoing ownership interest" in the gin.

The Roberts family, which revived Wrexham Lager in 2011 after production stopped in 2000, will remain a co-owner of the brewery alongside Reynolds and McElhenney.

YOUNG AFRICANS (YABGA) STARTING XI VS. SINGIDA BIG STARS


 

FERNANDO ALONSO TO ARRIVE LATE IN BRAZIL AFTER TREATMENT FOR INFECTION


Fernando Alonso will arrive late to this weekend’s Brazilian Grand Prix following treatment for an intestinal infection.

Alonso’s Aston Martin team revealed the 43-year-old suffered the illness prior to the previous round in Mexico.

The Spaniard headed to Europe to see a specialist following the race in Mexico City and he will be absent from Thursday’s media activities to preview Sunday’s Grand Prix in Interlagos.

He is expected to be in his cockpit for practice on Friday.

A statement from the British team read: “Aston Martin confirms that Fernando Alonso will miss his media day activities in Brazil.

“Fernando had suffered with an intestinal infection in the lead up to the Mexico City Grand Prix. He returned to Europe to receive further treatment from a specialist.

“The extra day of treatment has delayed his travel plans to Brazil but ensures he will be ready for this weekend’s racing.”

Alonso became the first driver to reach 400 Grands Prix last Sunday but, after he qualified 13th, the two-time world champion was forced to retire following just 15 laps with a brake failure.

- Philip Duncan, Pa F1 Correspondent

DODGERS: FREDDIE FREEMAN DECIMATED UNPRECEDENTED WORLD SERIES RECORD IN GAME 4

Los Angeles Dodgers superstar first baseman Freddie Freeman is on a historic tear in the 2024 World Series.


Credit: Brad Penner-Imagn Images


Freeman broke the record for most consecutive World Series games with a home run after he sent a 343-foot bomb into the right field stands at Yankee Stadium during the first inning of Game 4 on Tuesday night. The home run made it six straigh,,t games that the former 2020 National League MVP has connected on a long ball in the Fall Classic dating back to Game 5 of the 2021 World Series when he was a member of the Atlanta Braves.


Credit: Vincent Carchietta-Imagn Images


According to MLB.com’s AJ Cassavell, Freeman felt that the achievement was “pretty cool” to notch and he wants to keep up his hot bat, but the standout infielder is focused on closing out the New York Yankees in Game 5 more than anything else. Though he’s appropriately laser-focused on winning the Commissioner’s Trophy without delay, his achievement is worthy of recognition. Cassavell unveiled this tidbit that accentuates just how special the feat is:

“Only Houston’s George Springer had homered in four straight games within a single World Series, having done so in Games 4-7 in 2017, but Freeman is the first to do it in the first four games of the Fall Classic,” Cassavell wrote.


Freeman could make more MLB history en route to potential World Series MVP

If Freeman hits another home run in the Dodgers’ potential World Series clincher on Wednesday night, he can also become the first player to homer in five straight games of the same World Series, and would put a definitive stamp on his case to be named World Series MVP.

The California native has a whopping 10 RBIs along with an otherworldly .313/.353/1.188 slash line and a 1.540 OPS added to the four home runs he has to his name against the Yankees so far. He’s been the Dodgers’ most impactful player through four contests and, barring an explosion from reigning NLCS MVP Tommy Edman or starting pitcher Walker Buehler (should the series reach a Game 7), Freeman should have the top individual World Series honor in the bag, along with an unreal MLB record to go along with it.

- Matthew Legros

ARYNA SABALENKA APOLOGIES TO PHOTOGRAPHER AS ONS JABEUR INTERVIEWS BEFORE WTA FINALS

Aryna Sablaneka and Ons Jabeur react to the drama in Riyadh. (Image: @Ons_Jabeur


World No.1 Aryna Sabalenka might be better off sticking to tennis.

Aryna Sablaneka might currently be rated as the world’s best female tennis player but it seems a career switch to football is off the cards. The Belarusian is currently out in Riyadh for the WTA Finals, where she’ll be looking to cap a superb season.

The 26-year-old successfully defended her Australian Open title in January, and then backed that up with a first US Open win in September.

Her victory at Flushing Meadows elevated her to world No.1 above Iga Swiatek for the first time.

However for all her current prowess with a racket in her hand, it seems Sabalenka isn’t too reliable with a ball at her feet. The star took part in a promotional event in Saudi, where she had the task of taking a penalty with a number of ‘points targets’ on the goal in front of her.

Also participating was Ons Jabeur, despite not having qualified for the finals this year. And before her rival stepped up, the Tunisian star declared “she wants to try the other one,” with Sabalenka seemingly aiming at a gap near the top corner.

However, the three-time Slam winner contrived to shank her effort off to the right and comfortably wide of the goal. To make matters worse, the ball hit a photographer who had positioned herself to the side of the post, ready to get the money shot.

A mortified Sabalenka immediately rushed over to the female, who was fortunate the ball bounced off her head and didn’t make contact with her expensive camera. “I am so sorry,” she said, holding up her hands in embarrassment.

The photographer signalled that she was ok, but that didn’t stop Jabeur from getting in on the act. “Tell her you don’t have insurance,” she said, only for the woman involved to reply “No no it’s fine.”

The world No.31 wasn’t about to let Sabalenka get away scot-free though, and posted video footage of the incident on her X account. Along with two laughter emojis, she captioned it “Our world number one is doing serious damage in Riyadh,” and tagged her fellow professional for good measure.

Sabalenka gets her WTA Finals campaign underway on Saturday with a match against Qinwen Zheng. She’ll complete the group stages with further matches against Jasmine Paolini and Elena Ryabinka.

The pre-tournament favourite is out to capture the title for the first time. She’s only once made the final, surprisingly beaten by French player Caroline Garcia in straight sets in 2022.

- FRASER WATSON



TOM ASPINALL SENDS MESSAGE TO JON JONES AFTER SENSATIONAL 60-SECOND KO AT UFC 304

Aspinall scored another blistering stoppage winCredit: Getty

Tom Aspinall has predicted his winner for Jon Jones vs Stipe Miocic and revealed remarkable plans for his post-UFC endeavours.

Aspinall is the UFC’s interim heavyweight champion, which he claimed by overcoming Sergei Pavlovich at UFC 295 in November 2023.

Many felt Aspinall should have been squaring off with full heavyweight champion Jon Jones next.

But instead 'Bones' is expected to duke it out with Stipe Miocic at the back end of this year.

Taking to the mic in the immediate aftermath of his statement victory, Aspinall sent a message to his rival.

"Hello Jon, I have nothing against you personally," he said.

"But I just think I'm better than you. I just know I can beat you fight in a fight, so I'm coming for you."

In beating Blaydes, Aspinall avenged the only loss of his UFC career.

The Brit blew out his knee in the opening 15 seconds of their inaugural encounter back in July 2022, resulting in an inconclusive TKO loss.

He will now wait for his opportunity to fight the winner of Jones vs Miocic, which is reportedly taking place in November.

Aspinall has been campaigning relentlessly for a fight with Jones since winning the interim crown against Sergei Pavlovich last November.

Growing frustrated by a relative newcomer repeatedly calling him out, Jones took to social media in January to rip into Aspinall’s record.

“Only four recognisable opponents, and already the king of England, must be nice," he tweeted.

"There will be legendary tales told about you and your infamous call outs.

“I was a champion when I was 23 years old, you can’t show up at age 30 pretending like you’ve been chasing me your whole life.

"I have no clue who 90 per cent of his résumé is, meanwhile, I’ve been highlighting UFC events my entire career.

“It’s a wild world we live in! People can be so quick to try to replace you, throw you away, discredit your work.

"That’s the best thing about them stats or just being able to see the fruits of your labor.

“Be an absolute savage at what you do, at whatever capacity that may be.

"Let the work speak for itself, be undeniable in this world ladies and gentlemen. Be absolutely undeniable.”

Provided Jones comes out unscathed against Miocic, we could finally see him take on Aspinall in 2025.

- George Glinski

MEDVEDEV LOOSES TO AUSTRALIAN POPYRIN AT PARIS MASTERS

Australia's Alexei Popyrin beat Daniil Medvedev for the first time in his career (JULIEN DE ROSA


Daniil Medvedev is still searching for his first ATP tournament victory this year after the world number five lost to Australia's Alexei Popyrin for the first time in his career at the Paris Masters on Wednesday.

Medvedev won the Paris title in 2020 but has not found the indoor tournament to his liking in recent years -- the defeat to Popyrin is the third successive time he has gone out in his opening round.

Popyrin, who has been in a rich vein of form this year winning his first Masters tournament in Montreal in August and beating Novak Djokovic in the US Open, edged Medvedev 6-4, 2-6, 7-6 (7/4) in a gripping second round match.

For Popyrin, ranked 24 in the world, it was only his third win over a player in the top five.

"It is the first time I have beaten him (in four meetings)," said Popyrin, who will play the winner of the match between France's Giovanni Mpetshi Perricard and Karen Khachanov of Russia.

"We have had some right old battles in the past and it is a real pleasure to have performed like this this time round."

Medvedev, who has already qualified for the season-ending Masters, fought back twice in the deciding set.

He came back from 4-1 down to force a tie-break and then trailing 4-1 in that he levelled at 4-4.

However, with Popyrin leading 5-4, Medvedev double-faulted giving the 25-year-old Australian two match points and he wasted no time in sealing the victory on the first one.

Medvedev is not the first high profile seed to fall at the first hurdle as his compatriot Andrey Rublev and Norway's Casper Ruud have already lost.

Carlos Alcaraz remains in the mix having won his first match on Tuesday and is favoured to take the title after Italian world number one Jannik Sinner withdrew from the tournament due to an intestinal virus.


Alcaraz will play France's Ugo Humbert in the third round, the French number one breezed past America's Marcos Giron 6-3, 6-2 on Wednesday.


A potential dark horse for the title is Bulgarian eighth seed Grigor Dimitrov who beat Tomas Martin Etcheverry 6-7 (9/11), 6-3, 7-5.

Dimitrov still has a chance of qualifying for the Masters, if he won the Paris title he would move past Djokovic (sixth), Ruud (seventh) and Rublev (eighth).

Just the top eight qualify for the climax to the ATP season in Turin.

"I would give a lot to be in (Turin)," said Dimitrov, who reached the Paris final last year.

"I'm in a place where I am still a contender, I'm still fighting against the best players in the world, and still beating the younger guys.

"This gives me confidence and makes me happy."

Germany's world number three Alexander Zverev is already booked into Turin and begins his Paris campaign later on Wednesday against the Netherlands' Tallon Griekspoor.

- AFP

MIKE TYSON REVEALS SINISTER NICKNAME HE'S GIVEN JAKE PAUL FIGHT

Tyson will get his hands on Paul next month (Picture: Axelle/Bauer-Griffin/FilmMagic)


Mike Tyson has nicknamed his boxing showdown against Jake Paul ‘Jake’s wake’ as they prepare to go to war next month.

Ring legend Tyson and YouTuber-turned-boxer Paul collide at the AT&T Stadium in Texas on 15 November with their fight to be streamed globally on Netflix.

31 years in age separate the pair with ‘Iron Mike’ long retired from professional boxing. The former heavyweight champion hung up his gloves in 2005 having lost three of his last four fights with Paul currently on a run of 10 wins in 11.

Tyson did return to the ring for an exhibition bout with fellow boxing great Roy Jones Jr in November 2020.

While there were fears over his health heading into this latest fight with their original July date postponed, the 58-year-old retuned to training a month later and has been stepping things up in the gym ever since.

Tyson has shared snippets of brutal training footage, including one clip him flooring a sparring partner with a vicious left hook.

In a latest clip shared this week, Tyson captioned it: ‘Jake’s wake in 20 days.’ In the clip, he is joined by another great of the sport in Gene Kilroy, Muhammad Ali’s former manager who was left stunned by the former champion’s preparations.

‘This is the strongest I’ve ever seen you,’ Kilroy said, watching Tyson being put through his paces.

‘And I’ve known you since you were 13. This impresses the s**t out of me. Nothing impresses me.

‘I’m going to tell you the truth. I don’t lie. I was worried about him travelling here, travelling there. I can sleep now at night. This is great.

‘I’m proud of you, Mike. I’m proud of you. It’s a new generation. You done more workouts than what I’ve seen you do the whole time you fought Lennox Lewis. Am I right or wrong?’

‘Tyson replied: ‘Different era brother. It’s a whole new ball game.’

- Tony Mogan