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Real Madrid overturn Mallorca as Atletico held
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Sinner tested at US Open as Gauff cruises into last 16
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Joao Neves bags stunning hat-trick as PSG put six past Toulouse
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Real Madrid make Mallorca comeback to maintain perfect start
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Wong's US Open dream over after Rublev thriller
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Last-gasp Anguissa fires Napoli past Cagliari, Roma keep pace
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Sinner repels Shapovalov to reach US Open last 16
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Shi sets up badminton world final with Kunlavut, women's champion An falls
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Igamane hits debut double for seven-goal Lille
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Del Toro delivers his monster, 'Frankenstein', at Venice
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Osaka sinks Kasatkina to reach US Open last 16
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Bayern survive late Augsburg scare, Ten Hag's tough start continues
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Lamlioui double fires Morocco to record third CHAN title
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Chelsea sign Garnacho from Man Utd
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Gauff cruises at US Open as Sinner targets last 16
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Simeone's stuttering Atletico draw at Alaves
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Smiling Gauff romps into US Open last 16
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Philipsen claims Vuelta stage eight with sprint finish
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Fernandes lifts Man Utd gloom, Frank suffers first league loss with Spurs
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Philipsen claims Vuelta stage nine with sprint finish
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Ten Hag's Leverkusen collapse to draw at 10-man Bremen
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Fans pour into S.Africa Comic Con despite few celebrity headliners
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France probes online platform for possible 'paedophile content'
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McLaren's Oscar Piastri takes pole for Dutch Grand Prix
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Canada surge into Women's Rugby World Cup quarter-finals after routing Wales
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Chelsea benefit from VAR controversy to beat Fulham
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Italy striker Kean renews Fiorentina contract until 2029
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Seymour Hersh makes reluctant subject of new documentary
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Red Cross warns against evacuation of Gaza City as Israel tightens siege
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Flick hopeful Barca's Lopez will stay amid Chelsea links
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Isak edges closer to Liverpool move after Newcastle sign Woltemade
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Russia strikes across Ukraine as peace prospects flounder
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Five things to know about Indonesia's deadly protests
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McLaren dominate final practice at Dutch GP
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Pakistan evacuates half a million people stranded by floods
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China's Xi welcomes leaders in Tianjin ahead of summit
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Thailand power vacuum will 'not affect' border security: defence ministry
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Indonesia protest blaze kills three as anger erupts over driver death

Five things to watch for at the Oscars
The 95th Academy Awards take place Sunday, with wacky multiverse movie "Everything Everywhere All at Once" leading the nominations with 11.
Late night funnyman Jimmy Kimmel returns to host the Oscars for a third time. His first stint ended with the infamous mix-up that saw "La La Land" accidentally named best picture in 2017.
Assuming the correct envelopes are handed out this year, here are five other things to watch out for on Hollywood's biggest night:
- Rihanna and 'RRR' but no Gaga -
All five best song nominees are invited to perform live at the Oscars.
That means pop superstar Rihanna will grace the stage, just weeks after her long-awaited Super Bowl halftime show, at which she revealed she is pregnant.
She will sing "Lift Me Up" from "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever," while Talking Heads frontman David Byrne and "Everything Everywhere" star Stephanie Hsu will perform "This Is A Life."
Perhaps the biggest spectacle will be "Naatu Naatu," the infectious showstopper from India's "RRR," which has recently had audiences dancing in their seats in Hollywood movie theaters.
Sadly, there will be no Lady Gaga. Nominated for "Hold My Hand" from "Top Gun: Maverick," she is unavailable as she is "in the middle of shooting a movie," Oscars producers say.
Lenny Kravitz will bring further stardust to the gala, performing music to accompany the annual "In Memoriam" tribute.
- Best actress history? -
This closely fought category is likely to buck tradition and break records.
If Michelle Yeoh ("Everything Everywhere") beats Cate Blanchett ("Tar"), she will become the first Asian woman to claim the best actress prize.
Should Blanchett win, she will become just the eighth actor in history to win three Oscars.
Meanwhile, Andrea Riseborough would surely be the most unlikely ever winner, having earned her nomination for obscure indie film "To Leslie" thanks to a controversial campaign by celebrity pals of the film's cast and crew.
Finally, there is the question of who presents the award.
Traditionally, it is the previous year's best actor winner.
Given Will Smith is serving a decade-long Oscar ban (see below), that doesn't seem very likely.
- Slap chat -
Just as it is impossible to write an Oscars preview this year without mentioning "The Slap," expect the ceremony to address the incident.
For those living under a rock, Will Smith assaulted Chris Rock on stage during last year's Oscars for cracking a joke about his wife.
Rock himself got the ball rolling last weekend, joking in a live Netflix special that he recently rooted for the slave master who beats Smith's character in his latest movie "Emancipation."
Oscars organizers say the plan is to "acknowledge it" -- presumably in Kimmel's opening monologue -- and then swiftly "move on."
But will the various presenters and winners be able to keep Smith's name out of their mouths?
- Marvel-ous Bassett -
Will Angela Bassett "do the thing?"
Before she became the subject of a viral meme -- courtesy of Ariana DeBose's cringeworthy rap lyrics at the BAFTAs -- Bassett was best known for her enviable acting CV.
With acclaimed films like "What's Love Got to Do with It" and "Boyz n the Hood," to name a few, it is surprising she has never won an Oscar.
It would be even more surprising if her first win came for a superhero movie.
But that appears a likely outcome, after her role as Queen Ramonda in "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever" earned the first-ever Oscar acting nomination for a Marvel film.
She will have to see off Jamie Lee Curtis ("Everything Everywhere") and Kerry Condon ("The Banshees of Inisherin") to pull off the win.
- 'All Quiet' makes noise -
Karl Marx said history repeats itself -- the first time as tragedy, the second as farce.
He probably wasn't talking about the Oscars, but if "All Quiet on the Western Front" wins best picture, it will be the first film to essentially win Hollywood's biggest prize twice.
The original, English-language screen adaptation of Erich Maria Remarque's anti-war novel won top honors way back in 1930, at just the third-ever Oscars.
Should this year's German-language version win, it will be Netflix's first best picture win -- just a year after Apple pipped it to become the first streamer to collect Hollywood's biggest prize.
If there is any film that can stop the "Everything Everywhere" juggernaut on Sunday, it's probably this one.
T.Bondarenko--BTB