Minggu, 30 Juni 2024

Bellingham's divine intervention saves Southgate to reveal England truth - The Independent

The sort of moment that makes it all worth it, and maybe helps England find their true worth as a team.

If Gareth Southgate’s side had to put everyone through one of the worst displays of his entire tenure, that looked set to also end it, that at least produced one of the great tournament moments. Jude Bellingham's divine intervention also keeps them in Euro 2024, after a scarcely credible 2-1 extra-time win over Slovakia. “Who else?” the 21-year-old said in celebrating his spectacular 95th-minute winner. How else? Can there be a better way to offer a moment of salvation than a spectacular overhead kick with almost the final touch of the game?

To say it was something out of nothing would be extreme understatement, given that this was maybe the entire Southgate era saved, and that out of a poor personal and collective performance.

This was why the manager kept Bellingham on. He is capable of doing that. England should still be doing much more of it. Maybe this is the turning point for both the Real Madrid forward and the team. That is the potential effect of moments like this, and how they can spark a team. The power could certainly be felt in the stadium, as well as the relief.

The impact could similarly be witnessed on both sides. Slovakia immediately went from lifting themselves off their knees in disappointment to having to stop a set-piece. They failed, as an English side with a new energy saw substitute Ivan Toney tee up Harry Kane for the match-winner. The captain needed that as much as anyone else, in what is maybe another influential moment. Maybe he will now find more goals, and life. There's new hope for what's next, rather than gloom.

On an evening when there was so much history swirling around, and Southgate came so close to being consigned to the national team’s football past, that afforded obvious precedents to draw on. One was from a tournament that has already been discussed in how England can grow late into a campaign, which was David Platt’s extra-time match-winner against Belgium at the same stage of the 1990 World Cup. That goal was even as spectacular as this, too. Can this be similar?

The very fact all this is being said amid such a stirring victory illustrates how much still has to change.

The goal won’t magically solve everything. England’s quarter-final opponents, Switzerland, will be looking at this and seeing potential flaws to exploit all over the pitch.

This win might still be just putting off the inevitable rather than a moment of fate. It could be just the set-up for worse rather than salvation.

That is entirely dependent on Southgate’s decisions from here on in. He must now surely accept this system just doesn’t work.

Ivan Schranz of Slovakia celebrates scoring his team's first goal (Getty Images)

The potential loss of the game came when this was how the players were set up, and that was when they looked their worst.

There were huge gaps all over the pitch, and especially in front of an exposed defence. That isn’t to blame any individual player, but merely to state its a product of what was wrong. Almost nothing in it works. Declan Rice found himself 15 yards in front of where he should have been for the Slovakian goal, which had already been repeatedly warned.

The move that worked for the goal had been tried minutes before, too. For this, Ondrej Duda easily won a duel against a listless-looking Foden. The ball was played up to Juraj Kucka and his physicality, with David Strelec’s finesse caused problems. After exposing Kyle Walker with one pass, England’s entire defence was undone. Schranz was played in and, even though he could have had a penalty from a panicked and desperate challenge, but he stayed on his feet to put the ball beyond Jordan Pickford.

England's Harry Kane reacts after missing a chance (Adam Davy/PA Wire)

It was coming, and no less than Slovakia deserved.

This is what Switzerland will be focusing on. Southgate instead needs to focus on what works, although that remains unclear.

What was successful in desperately chasing a 1-0 deficit against a weaker side in a last 16 game isn’t necessarily what is required for a hugely testing quarter-final against a surging Swiss team.

The balance of the attack clearly needs to be altered. As to whether that is bringing in Cole Palmer or Anthony Gordon or both remains to be seen. Although England had improved when the former came on, it wasn’t like that was where the goals or even really the pressure had come from. Slovakia had been relatively comfortable in the final moments of normal play, although tiring.

Rice hit the post with a long shot. Milan Skriniar was having to stretch that bit more to meet headers.

England eventually won a throw, which Walker launched. It was as rudimentary as you could get for a moment of salvation that was as spectacular as you can get.

Bellingham has represented a tactical issue in himself and where he goes, but he more than solved it here.

The next goal did seem inevitable. Within minutes of extra-time restarting, Kane had plundered a header.

(The FA via Getty Images)

England were really through from that moment, even though there was still 25 minutes of needless retreat. Some things don’t change. Slovakia had given all they can, mind. England need to find much more.

At the least, nothing about their tournament now seems predictable, right down to Southgate’s line-up. He has to change, and it might well change Euro 2024.

Bellingham, fittingly, might already have turned everything on its head.

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2024-07-01 01:44:56Z
CBMibGh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmluZGVwZW5kZW50LmNvLnVrL3Nwb3J0L2Zvb3RiYWxsL2VuZ2xhbmQtc2xvdmFraWEtZXVyby0yMDI0LXJlc3VsdC1qdWRlLWJlbGxpbmdoYW0tYjI1NzE0NzQuaHRtbNIBAA

French election live: thousands protest in Paris as exit polls say Le Pen’s far-right is ahead in first round - The Guardian

With polls now closed, first estimates have been published.

Note that these numbers should be treated with caution: while these figures show broad election dynamics, they do not necessarily reflect the final outcome given that there are 577 constituency votes – and a second round next weekend.

Here are the estimates from IFOP:

Far right National Rally: 34.2%

Leftwing New Popular Front: 29.1%

Emmanuel Macron’s allies Together: 21.5%

Here are the estimates conducted for BFMTV:

Far right National Rally: 33%

Leftwing New Popular Front: 28.5%

Emmanuel Macron’s allies Together: 22%

This blog is closing soon but we’ll back in a few hours with all the latest updates. In the meantime, here’s a roundup of the key developments:

  • Marine Le Pen’s far-right National Rally won about 34% of the vote in the first round of legislative election, exit polls showed, putting it in reach of becoming the biggest political force in the French parliament.

  • The New Popular Front (NFP), a hastily assembled left-wing coalition, was projected to win around 29% of the vote, the exit polls showed, while President Emmanuel Macron’s Together alliance was on about 20.5%-23%.

  • Nevertheless, national estimates for the first round may not reflect the final breakdown of seats in the national assembly, which depends on races in constituencies.

  • Turnout was very high, with pollster Ipsos estimating that 65.8% of eligible voters cast ballots.

  • Speaking after polls closed, Le Pen said French people had shown “in an unambiguous vote … their wish to turn the page on seven years of the disdainful and corrosive [presidency]” of Macron.

  • Far-right figures from across Europe congratulated the National Rally.

  • Sixty-five MPs were elected in the first round – a high number. These included 38 MPs for the far-right National Rally and its alliance with Eric Ciotti of Les Républicains. That figure is more than double the number Le Pen had said she expected.

  • Pressure was mounting during the evening from left and centrist figures for tactical voting in the second round next Sunday.

  • Thousands took part in street demonstrations against the far right, including at the Place de la Republique in Paris, where barricades were set on fire and Jean-Luc Mélenchon, leader of the hard left France Unbowed party, addressed the crowd.

  • Gabriel Attal, the prime minister and a Macron ally, said “not one single vote” should go to the National Rally. “The stakes are clear: to prevent the National Rally from having an absolute majority,” he said.

  • Mélenchon said the left alliance would withdraw all its candidates who came third in the first round, saying: “Our guideline is simple and clear: not a single more vote for the National Rally.”

  • However it is not so clear that Macron’s centrist alliance will do the same. In a written statement, Macron called on voters to rally behind candidates who are “clearly republican and democratic”, which, based on his recent declarations, would include the NFP’s more moderate leftwing parties but exclude candidates from France Unbowed.

  • Attal had been due to sign a decree on Monday morning introducing new limits on unemployment benefits – a policy that had been attacked by the far right and the left – but decided to suspend the decree.

Market reaction to Sunday’s result was muted, Reuters reports, with the euro gaining around 0.23% in early Asia-Pacific trading.

Fiona Cincotta, senior markets analyst at London’s City Index, described relief that the result yielded “no surprises.” She said:

Le Pen had a slightly smaller margin than some of the polls had pointed to, which may have helped the euro a little bit higher on the open. Attention now is on July 7 to see whether the second round supports an absolute majority or not. So it does feel like we’re a little bit in limbo.

President Emmanuel Macron, whose centrist alliance is trailing in third place in exit polls, was seen out and about on the streets of Touquet in northern France earlier, rocking something of an aviator look:

A bit more analysis from professor of political science Fréderic Sawicki at the Sorbonne. His tweet reads,

For their own benefit, the dominant parties have been refusing to introduce proportional representation since 1988. The two-rounds majority vote has now turned against them; with a third of the votes the RN [National Rally] can in its turn win 50% of the seats. It’s up to these parties to prevent if by forming a republican front.

Some more images have come through to us via the wires of the Place de la Republique in Paris, where thousands of people have gathered to protest the first round election results that put National Rally in the lead:

People gather at Place de la Republique in Paris to protest against the far-right National Rally.
A barricade burns at the Place de la Republique.
Protesters against the National Rally at Place de la Republique.
Firefighters douse a fire as protesters demonstrate at the Place de la Republique.

A bit of snap analysis from one of our regular commentators, Cas Mudde:

  • French voters went to the polls for the first round of a snap legislative election.

  • An estimate by pollster Ipsos put the far right National Rally and its allies in the lead with 33.2% of the vote.

  • The estimate put the left wing New Popular Front at 28.1% and Emmanuel Macron’s allies, Together, at 21%.

  • Nevertheless, national estimates for the first round may not reflect the final breakdown of seats in the national assembly, which depends on races in constituencies.

  • Turnout was very high, with Ipsos estimating that 65.8% of eligible voters cast ballots.

  • Speaking after polls closed, the National Rally’s Marine Le Pen said French people had shown “in an unambiguous vote … their wish to turn the page on seven years of the disdainful and corrosive [presidency]” of Macron.

  • Far-right figures from across Europe congratulated the National Rally.

  • 65 MPs were elected in the first round – a high number. These included 38 MPs for the far-right National Rally and its alliance with Eric Ciotti of Les Républicains. That figure is more than double the number Le Pen had said she expected.

  • Pressure was mounting during the evening from left and centrist figures for tactical voting in the second round next Sunday.

  • Thousands took part in street demonstrations against the far right.

  • In a written statement, Macron called on voters to rally behind candidates who are “clearly republican and democratic”.

  • Gabriel Attal, the prime minister and a Macron ally, said not a single vote should go to the National Rally.

  • Attal had been due to sign a decree on Monday morning introducing new limits on unemployment benefits – a policy that had been attacked by the far right and the left – but decided to suspend the decree.

Here are more images from protests in Paris

Masked protesters demonstrate against the French far-right National Rally at the Place de la Republique in Paris.
Demonstrators take part in a rally against far-right.

With the results of final counts still coming in from constituencies, 65 MPs have been elected in the first round – a high number.

These included 38 MPs for the far-right National Rally and its alliance with Eric Ciotti of Les Républicains. That figure is more than double the number Marine Le Pen had said she expected.

Twenty-one MPs from the left alliance were elected in the first round, with two for Emmanuel Macron’s centrist grouping.

A majority of constituencies will face a second-round run-off.

The hard left France Unbowed’s Jean-Luc Mélenchon is now addressing a crowd at Place de la République in Paris.

Demonstrators at Place de la Republique in Paris, June 30.

In a sign of the far-right National Rally’s historic surge, at least 20 of its candidates were elected to parliament in the first round on Sunday night – a higher number than the party had expected.

Far-right candidates were elected in northern areas including l’Aisne, the Somme and the Pas-de-Calais as well as in Burgundy. Marine Le Pen was re-elected in the former coal-mining town of Hénin Beaumont in the north.

Marie-Caroline Le Pen, Marine Le Pen’s older sister, is in a strong position for the second round run-off in the Sarthe, historically a stronghold of the traditional right.

The French Union of Jewish Students has said “danger is imminent” and called on candidates to withdraw from three-way races to help defeat the far-right – with the exception of races involving France Unbowed (LFI).

Here’s where the estimates stand, according to Ipsos.

Estimates are indicators of the national political dynamics, but not necessarily of the final outcome of the election, which depends on races in individual constituencies.

National estimate, Sunday evening, for the first round of the French election

The prime minister, Gabriel Attal, had been due to sign a decree on Monday morning introducing new limits on unemployment benefits – a policy that had been attacked by the far right and the left.

Attal announced on Sunday he had suspended that decree.

To win one of the 577 seats in the national assembly in the first round, a candidate must get more than 50% of ballots cast, representing at least 25% of registered voters.

This usually happens only rarely, although the 2024 election’s high turnout has seen the number rise sharply to perhaps as many as 80.

If no candidate in a constituency achieves that, the two highest scorers plus anyone else who collected at least 12.5% of total registered voters advance to a second round. In that round, the candidate who obtains the most votes is elected.

The combination of the highest turnout since the 1980s and fewer candidates – 4,011 against 6,290 in 2022 – from just three main camps (left, centre and far right) – means the second round of the 2024 ballot will feature a record number of “triangular” contests.

The situation is highly uncertain and will remain fluid until the actual candidates running in the second round become clear. With up to half the seats in the assembly potentially becoming three-way contests, the scope for an anti-National Rally “Republican front” is clearly there – but the extent of inter-party cooperation will be critical, as will be voters’ willingness to vote tactically.

Read the full story here.

The prime minister, Gabriel Attal, has suspended the publication of a government decree on unemployment insurance reform.

Several thousand people gathered at Place de la République in Paris where leading figures in the left alliance were due to speak out against the far right.

Some people carried cardboard signs saying: “Bardella out”. Some young people were photographed in tears.

Street demonstrations also took place in cities including Strasbourg, Lyon, Nantes and Lille.

Demonstrators wave flags in support of the New Popular Front as they gather to protest against the French far-right at the Place de la Republique.

“This evening, in the serious moment in which France finds itself, it is essential that, in each constituency, the Republicans block both LFI [France Unbowed] and the RN [National Rally],” said Michel Barnier.

Congratulations are coming in from Europe’s far right.

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2024-06-30 23:46:00Z
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Europe weather: Four dead in storms in Swizterland and Italy as wildfires burn in Greece and Turkey - Sky News

Extreme weather across Europe has left four people dead in storms in Switzerland and northern Italy, while wildfires force people from their homes in Greece and Turkey.

The bodies of three people were recovered following a landslide in the Fontana area of the Maggia valley in the Italian-speaking Ticino state on the southern side of the Swiss Alps.

The body of a man whose partner had reported him missing was found at a hotel in the Alpine resort of Saas-Grund early on Sunday. It is believed floodwater caught him by surprise.

Police said another man had been missing since Saturday evening in the Binn area in the upper Rhone valley close to the Italian border.

Meanwhile, searing temperatures and strong winds have sparked wildfires near Athens and in the Turkish district of Izmir, with residents and holidaymakers evacuated from their homes.

Hotels and houses in Izmir have been evacuated.
Pic: Getty
Image: A wildfire has raged in Izmir in Turkey. Pic: Getty
Fires engulf a house in Keratea, near Athens on Sunday. Pic: Reuters
Image: Fires engulf a house in Keratea, near Athens on Sunday. Pic: Reuters

Both southern and western parts of Switzerland have been affected by heavy rain. Campsites along the River Maggia have been evacuated, while part of the Visletto road bridge collapsed.

One person has been reported missing in the nearby Lavizzara valley.

Further north, the River Rhone burst its banks in several areas of Valais state, flooding a road and railway line.

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Farage speech interrupted by Putin banner

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80 rescue missions in northern Italy

Floods, thunderstorms, and landslides have also hit various regions in northern Italy.

Italian firefighters in the northern Piedmont region said they carried out about 80 rescue operations, evacuating dozens of people.

Two adults and a three-month-old girl were rescued after rising waters left them stuck in their car between Montanaro and San Benigno Canavese, firefighters said.

In the Valle D'Aosta region, several villages were isolated because of overflowing streams.

The Rhone River overflowing the A9 motorway following the storms that caused major flooding, in Sierre, Switzerland.
Pic: Keystone/AP
Image: The River Rhone overflowing the A9 motorway in Sierre, Switzerland. Pic: Keystone/AP
The River Rhone, right, and River Navizence overflowing in Chippis, Switzerland. Pic: Keystone via AP
Image: The River Rhone, right, and River Navizence overflowing in Chippis, Switzerland. Pic: Keystone via AP

Temperatures set to rise further in Greece and Turkey

Temperatures are expected to rise further on Monday and Tuesday, creating further risk of wildfires.

In Greece, dozens of firefighters were battling blazes south of Athens on Sunday.

Supported by 17 water-carrying aircraft, they tackled the flames in a sparsely populated area near the town of Keratea, 22 miles south of the Greek capital. At least four houses were in flames, television footage showed.

Authorities ordered some residents to evacuate and others to stay at home and close their windows to protect themselves from smoke.

In Turkey, meanwhile, holidaymakers have reportedly been warned they may have to move because of a wildfire. Helicopters are said to be in use in the Selcuk district of Izmir.

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2024-06-30 17:37:30Z
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French election: centrists and left urge tactical voting as exit polls say Le Pen’s far-right is ahead in first round - The Guardian

With polls now closed, first estimates have been published.

Note that these numbers should be treated with caution: while these figures show broad election dynamics, they do not necessarily reflect the final outcome given that there are 577 constituency votes – and a second round next weekend.

Here are the estimates from IFOP:

Far right National Rally: 34.2%

Leftwing New Popular Front: 29.1%

Emmanuel Macron’s allies Together: 21.5%

Here are the estimates conducted for BFMTV:

Far right National Rally: 33%

Leftwing New Popular Front: 28.5%

Emmanuel Macron’s allies Together: 22%

Here are more images from protests in Paris

Masked protesters demonstrate against the French far-right National Rally at the Place de la Republique in Paris.
Demonstrators take part in a rally against far-right.

With the results of final counts still coming in from constituencies, 65 MPs have been elected in the first round – a high number.

These included 38 MPs for the far-right National Rally and its alliance with Eric Ciotti of Les Républicains. That figure is more than double the number Marine Le Pen had said she expected.

Twenty-one MPs from the left alliance were elected in the first round, with two for Emmanuel Macron’s centrist grouping.

A majority of constituencies will face a second-round run-off.

The hard left France Unbowed’s Jean-Luc Mélenchon is now addressing a crowd at Place de la République in Paris.

Demonstrators at Place de la Republique in Paris, June 30.

In a sign of the far-right National Rally’s historic surge, at least 20 of its candidates were elected to parliament in the first round on Sunday night – a higher number than the party had expected.

Far-right candidates were elected in northern areas including l’Aisne, the Somme and the Pas-de-Calais as well as in Burgundy. Marine Le Pen was re-elected in the former coal-mining town of Hénin Beaumont in the north.

Marie-Caroline Le Pen, Marine Le Pen’s older sister, is in a strong position for the second round run-off in the Sarthe, historically a stronghold of the traditional right.

The French Union of Jewish Students has said “danger is imminent” and called on candidates to withdraw from three-way races to help defeat the far-right – with the exception of races involving France Unbowed (LFI).

Here’s where the estimates stand, according to Ipsos.

Estimates are indicators of the national political dynamics, but not necessarily of the final outcome of the election, which depends on races in individual constituencies.

National estimate, Sunday evening, for the first round of the French election

The prime minister, Gabriel Attal, had been due to sign a decree on Monday morning introducing new limits on unemployment benefits – a policy that had been attacked by the far right and the left.

Attal announced on Sunday he had suspended that decree.

To win one of the 577 seats in the national assembly in the first round, a candidate must get more than 50% of ballots cast, representing at least 25% of registered voters.

This usually happens only rarely, although the 2024 election’s high turnout has seen the number rise sharply to perhaps as many as 80.

If no candidate in a constituency achieves that, the two highest scorers plus anyone else who collected at least 12.5% of total registered voters advance to a second round. In that round, the candidate who obtains the most votes is elected.

The combination of the highest turnout since the 1980s and fewer candidates – 4,011 against 6,290 in 2022 – from just three main camps (left, centre and far right) – means the second round of the 2024 ballot will feature a record number of “triangular” contests.

The situation is highly uncertain and will remain fluid until the actual candidates running in the second round become clear. With up to half the seats in the assembly potentially becoming three-way contests, the scope for an anti-National Rally “Republican front” is clearly there – but the extent of inter-party cooperation will be critical, as will be voters’ willingness to vote tactically.

Read the full story here.

The prime minister, Gabriel Attal, has suspended the publication of a government decree on unemployment insurance reform.

Several thousand people gathered at Place de la République in Paris where leading figures in the left alliance were due to speak out against the far right.

Some people carried cardboard signs saying: “Bardella out”. Some young people were photographed in tears.

Street demonstrations also took place in cities including Strasbourg, Lyon, Nantes and Lille.

Demonstrators wave flags in support of the New Popular Front as they gather to protest against the French far-right at the Place de la Republique.

“This evening, in the serious moment in which France finds itself, it is essential that, in each constituency, the Republicans block both LFI [France Unbowed] and the RN [National Rally],” said Michel Barnier.

Congratulations are coming in from Europe’s far right.

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2024-06-30 21:33:00Z
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France votes in snap election that could make history - Sky News

Voters in France are heading to the polls today for a parliamentary election that could usher in the country's first far-right government since the Second World War.

French President Emmanuel Macron called a surprise vote after his centrist alliance was soundly beaten in the European elections by Marine Le Pen's far-right National Rally earlier this month.

Voting began at 8am (7am UK time), closing at 4pm in smaller towns and 6pm in bigger cities. A winner may be apparent on Sunday night.

France has a semi-presidential system, which means it has both a president and a prime minister.

The voting taking place today will determine who is prime minister but not president, with Mr Macron already set on remaining in his role until the end of his term in 2027.

If Ms Le Pen's party wins an absolute majority, France would have a government and president from opposing political camps for only the fourth time in post-war history.

Her protege 28-year-old Jordan Bardella would be prime minister if the party wins outright.

As of midday (11am UK time) the turnout stood at 25.9%, which is a higher participation rate than any of the five previous parliamentary elections this century at this stage.

How does the election work?

There are 577 constituency contests, one for each seat in the National Assembly, which is the lower house of parliament.

Jordan Bardella votes in the first round of the 2024 snap legislative elections.
Pic: Reuters
Image: National Rally leader Jordan Bardella votes. Pic: Reuters
Gabriel Attal casts his vote.
Pic: Reuters
Image: Current prime minister Gabriel Attal casts his vote. Pic: Reuters

Candidates with an absolute majority of votes in their constituency are elected in the first round.

In most cases, no candidate meets this criteria and a second round is held, which will be next Sunday - 7 July - when the final outcome will be confirmed.

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Royal Family retreat to open doors to public for first time
Coldplay joined by Hollywood legend at Glastonbury

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To qualify for the run-off, candidates need first-round votes amounting to at least 12.5% of registered voters.

The top scorer wins the second round.

When will we have a result?

Voting ends at 8pm (7pm UK time), when pollsters publish nationwide projections based on a partial vote count.

Official results start trickling in, with counting usually fast and efficient and the winners of almost all seats likely to be known by the end of the evening.

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2024-06-30 06:28:52Z
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Joe Biden tells donors he won more voters than Trump during disastrous debate - The Telegraph

Joe Biden has told donors that his debate performance converted more undecided voters than Donald Trump. 

The US president admitted Saturday that he “didn’t have a great night” during the first round of presidential debates, which he was roundly seen to have lost.

However, he claimed he had won over more voters than his Republican rival because people remembered the “bad things” which happened during Mr Trump’s presidency. 

“Research during the debate shows us converting more undecided voters than Trump did, in large part because of his conduct on Jan 6,” Mr Biden said Saturday at a fundraiser at New Jersey governor Phil Murphy’s home. 

“I didn’t have a great night, but I’m going to be fighting harder,” Mr Biden added.

Mr Biden also claimed his polling numbers had gone up with Democrats following the debate.

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2024-06-30 09:12:00Z
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Sabtu, 29 Juni 2024

T20 World Cup final: India's thrilling win gives tournament its Hollywood ending - BBC

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Cricket’s attempt to crack the United States got its Hollywood ending.

South Africa looked to have the T20 World Cup won before India surged back to take the title in one final twist.

Throughout the finale the plots of tournaments gone by flashed before our eyes.

For India it was the pain of defeat in the 50-over World Cup final eight months ago. That day a crowd of 90,000 arrived in Ahmedabad but Australia had read the wrong script.

Before that there had been the thrashing by England in Adelaide in 2022, defeat by New Zealand in the Manchester rain in 2019 and the loss to West Indies in 2016, again in front of an expectant home crowd, since their last World Cup win.

India had at least won one before. For South Africa the past was nothing but pain.

The rain in Sydney, Allan Donald’s run-out in 1999, getting the maths wrong in 2003 and Grant Elliott at Eden Park in 2015. It all resurfaced as part of the narrative.

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Either way this was going to be an emotional finale, with inner demons to overcome.

As it was Virat Kohli charged in to embrace Hardik Pandya, while Rohit Sharma dropped to the floor in celebration.

This was Rohit’s redemption, captain of India here as he was during the disappointment last year.

Having had a leading role in The Agony of Ahmedabad, he has completed the sequel - The Kensington Coronation.

Kohli won the 50-over World Cup in 2011 as part the supporting cast. The then 22-year-old lifted the great Sachin Tendulkar onto his shoulders in the victory lap.

This time he was the leading man.

He struggled throughout this tournament, floundering as India progressed unbeaten through both group stages and the semi-finals, but was always lurking - like the baddie that has never been killed off.

Kohli hit three fours in his first four balls. After that he stood casually leaning against his bat, one arm on his hip. He was back.

His nonchalant flick onto the roof of the Sir Garfield Sobers pavilion will be a moment played over and over – as will the Suryakumar Yadav catch at the death and Jasprit Bumrah’s ferocious dismissal of Reeza Hendricks that was enough to send batters around the world hiding behind the sofa.

In the celebrations, Rohit and Kohli stood arm in arm, before announcing they will depart this stage, with this their last T20 international.

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South Africa’s players, in contrast, became the characters your heart breaks for.

As the trophy presentation began, David Miller dropped to his haunches and stared at the ground, while tears flowed from the eyes of Heinrich Klaasen.

This was so nearly a story about Klaasen, who took the Proteas to the brink with 52 from 27 balls. Afterwards he was consoled on the outfield by his wife and young daughter.

Some will say the South Africa of previous years returned. Others can rightly argue India were just too good.

In Bumrah they have the world’s best bowler – a man who conceded only 18 runs from his 24 balls and will go down as one of the greats.

Kuldeep Yadav had a rare off day in the final, but the last two weeks have shown he is the game’s premier spinner, while Rohit’s 92 against Australia was one of the best knocks of the past four weeks.

When it came to the crunch, Rohit turned to his all-rounder Hardik, who delivered, while his Proteas opposite number Marco Jansen faltered.

The win was celebrated wildly in the stands by India fans who had flown into Barbados over the previous days.

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Elsewhere others will roll their eyes.

The Rocky theme played at the Kensington Oval when England met USA last week but this was not an underdog story.

India, already the dominant force in the world game, progressed having been the only team to know in advance where their semi-final would be played.

It mattered not, England would have been resoundingly beaten at Lord’s as well as Guyana, but preventing such a scenario again is one of the minor tweaks that could improve the T20 World Cup.

Fixing the draws so India meet Pakistan and England face Australia may boost the coffers but it cheapens the product.

A week could have been taken off this tournament had it progressed straight from the first stage to quarter-finals when also moving solely to the Caribbean. Two group stages are never necessary.

The International Cricket Council should also thank Josh Hazlewood, because had Australia not been spooked by the reaction to his ill-judged words about manipulating their result against Scotland, a farcical situation may have occurred on the field.

But overall this has been the best of the three men’s World Cups, two T20 and one 50-over, that have been squeezed into the past 21 months.

Its biggest success was that it was the first to go truly global - upped to 20 teams.

There may have been one-sided fixtures in the group stage but the presence of Uganda, Papua New Guinea, the USA, Nepal and other smaller nations brought freshness and excitement.

Uganda’s 39 all out or Oman being beaten inside 17 overs by England were negatives but those were resoundingly outweighed by USA’s iconic victory over Pakistan, Papua New Guinea coming close to beating hosts West Indies and Brandon McMullen’s superb performances for Scotland.

It is for those moments as much as the finale that this tournament will be remembered.

In the end, though, it is India’s name that goes up in lights.

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Joe Biden tries to calm nerves of wealthy backers after debate debacle - Financial Times

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