
-
Fleetwood triumphs at Tour Championship for elusive first PGA Tour title
-
Mbappe fires Madrid to victory at Real Oviedo
-
Giroud strikes late to lift Lille past Monaco, Rennes implode early at Lorient
-
Israeli bulldozers uproot hundreds of trees in West Bank village
-
David strikes on Serie A debut as Juve ease past Parma
-
Sabalenka into US Open second round as Fritz, Shelton advance
-
Israeli strikes in Yemen's capital kill four, Huthis say
-
England's Botterman aiming to be world's 'best loosehead prop'
-
Kneecap defy critics with 'Free Palestine' chant at Paris gig
-
New Zealand start Women's Rugby World Cup defence by downing battling Spain
-
Winless Man Utd need to 'grow up', says Amorim
-
Shelton romps into US Open second round
-
Kneecap defy objectors with 'Free Palestine' chant at Paris gig
-
US envoy criticises France's lack of action over antisemitism
-
Trump clashes with Democrats as he expands National Guard plans
-
Raducanu cruises to first US Open win since 2021 triumph
-
Man Utd still winless after Fulham draw, Everton win to open new stadium
-
Hamburg draws blank on Bundesliga return
-
Spain heatwave was 'most intense on record'
-
Chaotic Rennes set Ligue 1 red card record and lose 4-0 at Lorient
-
Russia and Ukraine exchange POWs, civilians
-
Moyes sees big step forward after Everton win stadium opener
-
Vingegaard wins on Vuelta mountain to take overall lead
-
Vingegaard wins on Vuelta mountain
-
Zelensky calls for Putin talks as peace efforts stall
-
Everton beat Brighton in new stadium opener
-
Higgins strikes as Ireland see off Japan in Women's Rugby World Cup
-
Fires ravage an ageing rural Spain
-
Marc Marquez coasts to seventh successive victory in Hungary
-
Arteta backs Eze to create 'magic moments' at Arsenal
-
US envoy visits Ukraine on independence day as peace efforts stall
-
Bangladesh and Pakistan bolster ties but war apology 'unresolved'
-
Rowe signs for Bologna after Marseille bust-up
-
Three tons as record-breaking Australia crush South Africa
-
France's regulator says unable to block dead streamer's channel
-
UK vows to speed up asylum claims as hotel protests spread
-
Head, Marsh, Green hit centuries as Australia make 431-2 in 3rd South Africa ODI
-
Pujara announces retirement from Indian cricket
-
Bird call contest boosts conservation awareness in Hong Kong's concrete jungle
-
Kneecap to play Paris concert in defiance of objections
-
Indonesian child's viral fame draws tourists to boat race
-
Australian quick Morris out for 12 months with back injury
-
Son scores first MLS goal as LAFC draw 1-1 with Dallas
-
India's Modi dangles tax cuts as US tariffs loom
-
Indonesia turns down ear-splitting 'haram' street parties
-
North Korea test-fires two new air defence missiles: KCNA
-
Sinner, Sabalenka chasing rare repeats as US Open gets underway
-
Venezuela rallies militia volunteers in response to US 'threat'
-
Musk's megarocket faces crucial new test after failures
-
UK's mass facial-recognition roll-out alarms rights groups

No more shared medals, say Olympic heroes Tamberi and Barshim
Gianmarco Tamberi and Mutaz Essa Barshim, who provided one of the emotional peaks of the Tokyo Olympics by sharing the high jump gold medal, will not repeat the gesture if they are tied again.
"We already talked about it, it is not going to happen again," Italian Tamberi said ahead of his first clash with his Qatari friend since the Olympics at the Doha Diamond League meeting on Friday.
Barshim, 30, who holds the world title as well as joint Olympic gold, was sat alongside Tamberi as he made the statement on the extraordinary events of August 1 last year.
Both cleared 2.37 metres and with neither able to make 2.39m, track officials offered a jump-off but Barshim famously asked: "Can we have two golds?"
It was the latest episode in their unlikely rivalry-friendship that he has seen them console each other when each had a career-threatening ankle ligament injury.
But with a world championships looming this year, both know that sentiment has to be put to one side.
If they were tied again, "we will look at each other, we will say OK let's go" to the jump off, declared Tamberi at a press conference Thursday.
"For myself, I will never go back in the past and change what we have done. We will forever remember as brothers ... friends.
"We both won because we both deserved that gold medal. When they ask us will you share again we say 'no' because we have done it once.
"But it does not mean we are not proud of it. I will never change the past even if you paid me or guaranteed me that I will be the one who wins that gold medal, I will share with him because I know he deserves, I know I deserve."
- Triple target -
Tamberi wants to add a world title to his Olympic gold. Barshim wants to establish his name among athletics greats by becoming the first to win three straight high jump titles at the world championships in Eugene in July.
The Qatari hero said it had already been "amazing" to be the first to defend the world title in Doha in 2019.
"Now I am trying to find some goal, some target to motivate myself and maybe it is even better to be the only one that did it three times so that keeps me going. It is not easy to find motivation after such a big year, such a big success."
Their competition will be a highlight of the opening Diamond League meeting of the year.
Swedish pole vaulter Armand Duplantis will be aiming for a new world record having set his latest best of 6.20m at the world indoor championships in Belgrade in March. No-one has cleared 6.0 metres at Doha's outdoor track.
But he is also aiming for a first world title to add to his Olympic gold and so has lined up a five meetings before Eugene.
"It comes down to these really tiny margins so I’m just trying to get everything in the right place for when it comes to competing in the world championships to make sure that, when the bar is at that gold medal height, I’m on the right pole, right grip, right run."
In the men's 200 metres, Olympic champion Andre De Grasse of Canada will compete against American world title holder Noah Lyles.
P.Anderson--BTB