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  • Iran begins six-day state funeral for Ali Khamenei

    Iran begins six-day state funeral for Ali Khamenei

    On Saturday, the heart of Iran’s capital Tehran swelled with massive crowds of mourners, kicking off six days of national funeral ceremonies for former Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, who was killed more than four months prior on the opening day of the U.S.-Israel military campaign against Iran.

    Khamenei’s flag-draped coffin, with his iconic black turban resting atop it, was displayed at Tehran’s Grand Mosalla, the city’s central venue for large state religious and national gatherings. Thousands of mourners, many clad in traditional black mourning attire, began streaming into the site hours before the official ceremony commenced, arriving well before dawn to pay their final respects.

    Local state Iranian television officially marked the start of the national funeral proceedings just after 6 a.m. local time. Across the sprawling crowd, many participants carried bright red flags emblazoned with the Farsi word for “Martyr”, and resonant chants of “Death to America”, “Death to Israel”, and “Revenge, revenge” rang out across the capital venue.

    Iranian authorities project that between 15 and 20 million people will take part in the funeral events held in Tehran alone, making it one of the largest public gatherings in the nation’s modern history. The multi-day commemoration will include additional memorial events held in neighboring Iraq before Khamenei’s final burial in the northeastern Iranian holy city of Mashhad, a site of profound religious significance for Shia Muslims globally.

    High-ranking dignitaries from more than 100 countries around the world have confirmed their attendance to honor the former leader. Notable attendees include Pakistan’s Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Army Chief Field Marshal Asim Munir, both of whom played a central mediating role in facilitating talks between Iran and the United States during the recent conflict. Senior diplomatic and political delegations from Russia, China, India, and Afghanistan are also scheduled to participate in the official ceremonies.

    Global observers are directing particular attention to one unconfirmed appearance: that of Mojtaba Khamenei, Ali Khamenei’s son and successor as Iran’s current supreme leader. Mojtaba Khamenei was injured during the opening phase of the war, assumed the role of supreme leader in March following his father’s death, and has only communicated with the Iranian public through written statements since the conflict began, having made no public appearances to date.

    For the vast majority of Iranians alive today, Ali Khamenei was the only supreme leader they have ever known. He assumed the role of supreme leader in 1989 following the death of Iran’s revolutionary founder Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, after previously serving as Iran’s president throughout the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War. Over his nearly 40-year tenure as Iran’s highest authority, relations between Iran and the United States remained consistently hostile, a defining feature of his leadership. Iranian officials had publicly called for a massive national turnout to honor Khamenei, who was 86 at the time of his death.

  • Paris summer ritual returns with 3 supervised Seine swimming spots

    Paris summer ritual returns with 3 supervised Seine swimming spots

    PARIS — A century after public swimming was banned in the Seine due to unsafe water pollution, a new summer tradition is taking root in the heart of the French capital. For the second consecutive year, Paris city authorities launched three supervised, free public swimming sites along the iconic river on Saturday, opening the once-forbidden waterway to locals and tourists alike.

    The three swimming zones are strategically located across the city: one near the Paris City Hall, a second at the Grenelle site within sight of the Eiffel Tower, and a third in eastern Paris. They are scheduled to remain open throughout the warm summer months, with operations contingent on daily water quality assessments and prevailing weather conditions. To ensure visitor safety, all sites operate under constant supervision from certified lifeguards, and official testing of water purity is conducted every single morning before opening to the public.

    This milestone comes after the Seine hosted open-water swimming and triathlon events during the 2024 Paris Olympic Games. The high-profile international competition accelerated a massive, multibillion-euro river cleanup initiative launched by city authorities. The project included sweeping upgrades to Paris’s aging sewer network, construction of large-scale new rainwater storage facilities, and a series of other targeted interventions designed to cut polluted runoff into the river — work that finally reversed a century of declining water quality.

    Public swimming in the Seine was outlawed nearly 100 years ago because of rampant pollution from untreated urban waste. For decades, Parisians seeking open-water summer swimming have only had access to designated public sites along a canal in the city’s northeast. Even after the 2024 rule change, last summer’s launch faced setbacks: multiple swimming days had to be canceled after heavy rainfalls increased pollution levels in upstream sections of the river, triggering health safety protocols.

    This year, site managers have put new crowd control measures in place to handle the expected influx of visitors seeking relief from summer heat waves. At the popular Grenelle site near the Eiffel Tower, deputy site manager Clémence Donazzan explained that the zone has a maximum capacity of 200 swimmers at any given time. A queuing system operates at the entrance, with staff monitoring visitor numbers in real time to prevent overcrowding. “Everyone will eventually have access, even if there’s a short wait,” Donazzan noted.

    For the many visitors already trying out the new sites, the experience has exceeded expectations. Stewart Talbot, a tourist from Melbourne, Australia who is spending a week in Paris, called the opportunity to swim in the Seine against the backdrop of the Eiffel Tower unforgettable. “It’s amazing to be swimming in the Seine while looking at the Eiffel Tower,” Talbot said. “Maybe it’s not as good as the sea in Australia, but it’s better than our rivers.”

    The initiative has also proven popular with Parisians of all ages, who have embraced the new public amenity. Nineteen-year-old Hermine Jegou, a local resident, praised the inclusive, cross-generational atmosphere of the swimming sites. “It’s great because it’s such a mix of people,” she said. “I love that everyone can get into the water — grandmothers, children — it’s just really nice.” Her 21-year-old sister Joanne Jegou agreed, saying she already planned to return. “It’s such a cool experience, especially being out in the sun and cooling off,” she said.

  • Former chess champion Kramnik banned over cheating remarks

    Former chess champion Kramnik banned over cheating remarks

    The global chess governing body FIDE has issued a one-year active competition ban to former world chess champion Vladimir Kramnik, following a disciplinary ruling that found the Russian grandmaster repeatedly violated the organization’s code of ethics through aggressive verbal attacks on fellow competitors—accusations that included false cheating claims against the late American star Daniel Naroditsky.

    Per FIDE’s official announcement, the ruling concludes an investigation into Kramnik’s pattern of public behavior, confirming that he committed multiple violations of the federation’s ethics and disciplinary regulations. The 12-month active ban is paired with a suspended additional 12-month sanction that will only take effect if Kramnik commits further ethics breaches over a three-year probationary period. Crucially, the governing body emphasized that its ruling addresses the improper, public manner of Kramnik’s accusations, not the underlying validity of his claims about cheating in the sport. FIDE reiterated that rooting out chess cheating remains a top institutional priority, but stressed that all allegations must be pursued through the federation’s formal, confidential procedures rather than public harassment.

    The case carries heavy emotional weight for the global chess community, centered on Naroditsky—a beloved figure who built a massive audience of hundreds of thousands of followers across Twitch and YouTube as a player, commentator and educator, known affectionately to fans as “Danya.” Naroditsky earned his grandmaster title as a teenager shortly after winning the 2013 U.S. Junior Championship, and quickly became one of the most recognizable faces of modern online chess. He died suddenly in October 2025 at age 29, and a 2026 toxicology report confirmed his death was the result of an accidental overdose that triggered an irregular heartbeat. Before his death, Naroditsky publicly denied any wrongdoing in a final Twitch broadcast, acknowledging that the unsubstantiated cheating controversy had severely harmed his mental and emotional well-being.

    Shortly after FIDE’s ruling was announced, Kramnik confirmed via a post on X that he intends to appeal the ban. The former 2000–2007 world chess champion has long positioned himself as a public advocate for fair play in competitive chess. The ruling has already drawn broad support from leading figures across the chess world: top-ranked players including world number two Hikaru Nakamura, former world champion Magnus Carlsen, and Indian grandmaster Nihal Sarin previously publicly condemned Kramnik’s harassing conduct toward other players.

  • Injury ends Williams’ Wimbledon comeback

    Injury ends Williams’ Wimbledon comeback

    One of tennis’ most iconic comebacks has hit an unexpected hurdle: 23-time Grand Slam singles champion Serena Williams has been forced to pull out of her highly anticipated Wimbledon doubles partnership with her sister Venus Williams, sidelined by a lingering knee injury.

    The American sibling pair, who hold an unmatched six doubles titles at the All England Club, were set to make their first Grand Slam joint appearance since 2022 when their opening round match against Camila Osorio of Colombia and Solana Sierra of Argentina was scheduled for Saturday. The reunion had been one of the most talked-about storylines of the 2026 Wimbledon tournament, drawing excitement from fans around the globe eager to see the legendary pairing back on grass.

    The 44-year-old tennis legend sustained the knee injury during her hard-fought three-set singles defeat to 20-year-old Australian rising star Maya Joint earlier this week. Though Williams put on a gritty display that showcased the competitive fire that defined her decades-long career, the match left her knee swollen, and she has not recovered enough to take the court for doubles.

    In a candid Instagram post announcing her withdrawal, Williams opened up about her disappointment. “I’m heartbroken to have to withdraw from doubles,” she wrote. “Coming back to compete again has been a gift, and the opportunity to play alongside Venus once more meant the world to me. I did everything I could to be ready, but unfortunately my knee just isn’t ready to compete.”

    In the days leading up to the scheduled match, tournament organizers had held out hope that Williams would be fit to play. After adding the Williams pair’s match to Friday’s official order of play, organizers allocated them a dedicated court slot no earlier than 16:30 BST on Saturday. This flexible arrangement was designed specifically to give Williams as much time as possible to assess her fitness, while also allowing Wimbledon to avoid major scheduling disruptions in the event of a withdrawal.

    Williams extended gratitude to the tournament’s leadership for their flexibility, and to fans for their outpouring of support during her comeback run. “I’m especially grateful to tournament director Jamie Baker and the entire tournament team for giving me every opportunity to play here,” she said. “Thank you to the fans after your incredible support and for making this comeback so meaningful. All I can say is stay tuned to a city near you.”

    Her exit closes this chapter of her Wimbledon return, but hints at future appearances for the sporting legend, leaving fans to wait for further updates on what comes next for one of the greatest athletes in tennis history.

  • Eala upsets Wimbledon champion Swiatek in win for Philippines, No. 2 seed Rybakina also out

    Eala upsets Wimbledon champion Swiatek in win for Philippines, No. 2 seed Rybakina also out

    LONDON — The 2024 Wimbledon Championships delivered two stunning upsets on Saturday, as the women’s singles draw saw both the defending title holder and the 2022 champion crash out in the third round, headlined by a historic breakthrough from 21-year-old Alexandra Eala that makes tennis history for the Philippines.

    Eala’s career-best run at the All England Club reached a new high when she knocked out world No. 3 Iga Swiatek, ending the Pole’s 2023 title defense with a tight 7-6(9), 6-2 victory on Centre Court. The result is far more than a personal upset win: Eala is now the first player from the Philippines, regardless of gender, to advance to the fourth round of any Grand Slam singles tournament in the sport’s history.

    After sealing the win with a forehand winner on her third match point, the left-handed Eala dropped to her knees in disbelief before rolling onto the grass of Centre Court, overwhelmed by the moment. Speaking in an on-court interview surrounded by fans waving Philippine flags, she paid tribute to the support that has carried her to this point.

    “It’s incredible to have my countrymen cheering me on and knowing that we’re all in this together,” Eala said. “This goes out to them, this goes out to my family, this goes out to all the little girls with ruffled socks and chubby cheeks. It means the world.” The young rising star earned her upset after a tense first-set tiebreak, where she saved two set points to clinch the opening set before closing out the match in straight sets.

    Swiatek came into this year’s tournament as the red-hot defending champion, having claimed her first Wimbledon title last year with a dominant 6-0, 6-0 blowout of Amanda Anisimova in the 2023 final. This is not the first time Eala has gotten the better of the world No. 3: the 21-year-old, who trains at Rafael Nadal’s tennis academy in Mallorca, first announced her arrival on the global stage last year with a breakthrough run to the Miami Open semifinals that included an earlier upset win over Swiatek.

    Eala’s historic upset was not the only shocking result of the day. Just minutes before Swiatek exited the tournament, 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina suffered an equally lopsided third-round exit at the hands of Belgium’s Elise Mertens, falling 7-6(4), 6-1. As the No. 2 seed in the women’s draw, Rybakina is the highest-seeded player to be eliminated from this year’s women’s singles competition. Her early exit guarantees that Aryna Sabalenka will retain her world No. 1 ranking after the conclusion of the tournament.

    Mertens, the No. 25 seed at this year’s Wimbledon who already holds two Wimbledon doubles titles, will face off against four-time Grand Slam champion Naomi Osaka in the fourth round on Sunday.

    In other injury-related Wimbledon news on Saturday, 23-time Grand Slam singles champion Serena Williams announced her withdrawal from the women’s doubles draw, where she was set to compete alongside her sister Venus Williams. The 44-year-old Williams, who made her competitive singles comeback earlier this week, suffered a right knee injury during her singles match, forcing her to pull out of the doubles draw.

    “I’m heartbroken to have to withdraw from doubles,” Williams shared in an Instagram post, confirming the news that ends the Williams sisters’ latest doubles run at the tournament.

  • Egypt uncovers lost Byzantine-era city in the western desert

    Egypt uncovers lost Byzantine-era city in the western desert

    CAIRO – Egyptian authorities announced two groundbreaking, well-preserved archaeological discoveries on Saturday, a move that comes as the country pins renewed economic hopes on its heritage tourism industry, a key driver of foreign revenue for the cash-strapped nation.

    The first and most significant find is a largely intact Byzantine-era residential city uncovered in the Western Desert’s Dakhla Oasis, a site already on UNESCO’s Tentative List, just one step removed from formal World Heritage Site designation. According to Egypt’s Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, the settlement offers unprecedented insight into daily life, urban planning, and commercial activity in 4th-century Egypt, when the region fell under Byzantine imperial rule.

    Hisham el-Leithy, secretary general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, explained that the excavated settlement follows a grid layout: wide north-south main roads intersect with smaller east-west streets to create public plazas and open community spaces. At the northern head of the settlement, overlooking the city’s primary thoroughfares, sits a fully mapped basilica church dating to the mid-4th century, flanked by the stone remains of two watchtowers built to guard the settlement’s outer edges.

    Mahmoud Massoud, head of the archaeological mission leading the Dakhla Oasis excavation, noted the city was constructed with heavy defensive infrastructure, including thick fortified perimeter walls. Inside the walls, archaeologists have uncovered dozens of residential structures, many featuring large reception halls and distinctive vaulted roofing. One standout discovery is the home of Tisous, a documented church deacon whose dwelling dates to the second half of the 4th century. Researchers believe the home functioned as an informal house church before the larger central basilica was completed.

    Excavations have also yielded a range of everyday artifacts that paint a vivid picture of the city’s daily routines: well-preserved bread ovens, communal kitchens, and stone grinding tools used for food preparation have all been documented. The mission has also uncovered a large collection of bronze coins minted with portraits of Byzantine emperors, alongside Latin inscriptions and early Christian religious symbols. A separate cache of gold dates to the reign of Roman emperor Constantius II, who ruled from 337 to 361 CE.

    Diaa Zahran, head of the Ministry’s Islamic, Coptic and Jewish Antiquities department, added that roughly 200 inscribed pottery fragments known as ostraca have also been recovered. These fragments, commonly used as a cheap writing material in antiquity, bear inscriptions recording commercial transactions, personal correspondence, and other small details of daily life that are rarely preserved in the archaeological record.

    In a separate announcement, the ministry confirmed a second major discovery at the Marina el-Alamein archaeological site, located roughly 62 miles west of the Mediterranean coastal city of Alexandria. The site, first excavated in 1986, is believed to be the remains of Leukaspis, a thriving Greco-Roman port city founded in the 2nd century BCE that remained active through the 4th century CE. The new find adds 18 previously undocumented tombs to the site, bringing the total number of excavated burial sites there to 48.

    Of the newly found tombs, 11 are cut deep into bedrock, averaging 8 meters in depth, while seven are built above ground from cut limestone. Artifacts recovered from the tombs include ceramic vessels, transport amphorae, oil lamps, dining plates, ritual altars, and limestone washing basins. Eman Abdel-Khaliq, head of the Marina el-Alamein excavation, said the mission also uncovered a 2.5-meter-long granite sarcophagus holding human remains that are currently undergoing analysis. Near the sarcophagus, researchers found the partial remains of a plaster sphinx statue.

    A particularly notable funerary find was four small gold pieces placed inside the mouths of some deceased individuals, a tradition archaeologists refer to as the “golden tongue,” tied to widespread ancient Mediterranean funerary religious beliefs of the era.

    For Egypt, the announcement of these finds is about more than advancing historical knowledge: alongside the Suez Canal, tourism is one of the country’s largest sources of foreign currency, a critical economic pillar for a nation facing persistent foreign currency shortages. After decades of disruption from political instability following the 2011 uprising and widespread travel bans during the COVID-19 pandemic, Egypt’s tourism sector has been steadily rebounding. Official government data shows 2025 drew a record 19 million international visitors, a 21% increase from 2024, with 6.1 million tourists visiting in the first four months of 2026, up from 5.7 million in the same period the previous year. Antiquities tourism is a core draw for international visitors, and the government hopes high-profile new discoveries will accelerate this recovery.

  • Japan stifles Italy for the first time since 2018 in Nations Championship rugby

    Japan stifles Italy for the first time since 2018 in Nations Championship rugby

    TOKYO — In a standout display of defensive grit and clinical finishing at a packed, red-and-white clad Prince Chichibu Memorial Stadium on Saturday, Japan secured a landmark 27-10 victory over Italy in the Nations Championship, claiming their first win against the European side in six years.

    Italy got off to a promising start, drawing first blood when flyhalf Paolo Garbisi slotted a pass through a gap in Japan’s defense for midfielder Juan Ignacio Brex to score, before converting the try to put Italy up 7-0. But it took Japan less than 10 minutes to turn the tide and seize control of the scoreboard.

    Buoyed by quick, clean ruck ball from scrumhalf Naoto Saito, Japan captain Warner Dearns powered across the try line to level the scores. Fullback Takuro Matsunaga, who would go on to anchor Japan’s performance with 17 total points, finished a sharp break from winger Yuya Hirose to score, converted his own try, and added a penalty kick to push Japan to a 17-7 lead. Italy closed the first half with a strong push, but Japan’s defense held firm against Garbisi’s repeated grubber kicks into the in-goal area, forcing Italy to settle for just three points from a scrum penalty. That left the host with a 17-10 lead going into halftime.

    The second half belonged entirely to Japan. The Brave Blossoms’ defense locked down, holding Italy scoreless for the full 40 minutes while notching 12 dominant tackles that left the Italian offense with no space to generate attacking opportunities. Just minutes after the break, after 16 consecutive phases of sustained pressure, man of the match Ben Gunter broke through four Italian defenders to score Japan’s third try of the match, extending the lead to 24-10.

    As Japan rotated in five fresh substitutes including veteran flanker Michael Leitch, Italy’s error rate climbed sharply under unrelenting defensive pressure. Matsunaga, who finished a perfect five-for-five on kicking attempts, slotted his third penalty just after the 60-minute mark to cap the 17-point win.

    The upset win came as a surprise to many pre-match analysts, who had questioned how Japan would perform starting without star flyhalf Seungsin Lee. Lee, who started every test match for Japan last year, finished as the top point-scorer in global test rugby with an 88% goalkicking success rate, and was set to miss the match to undergo hand surgery. His replacement, 20-year-old Ryunosuke Ito called up directly from Meiji University, delivered a composed, error-free debut that included setting up Matsunaga’s first try, quieting all pre-game concerns.

    After the match, Italy head coach Gonzalo Quesada acknowledged his side’s struggles, saying: “We were tired and physically challenged, and when you lose 25 possessions it’s difficult to create opportunities.”

    Both teams will head to the Southern Hemisphere for their next matches next weekend. Japan will travel to Sydney to face Ireland, while Italy will take on the All Blacks in New Zealand.

  • Ukraine hits major oil terminal in Russia’s St Petersburg

    Ukraine hits major oil terminal in Russia’s St Petersburg

    In an escalation of long-range strikes targeting Russian war-related infrastructure, Ukrainian forces launched a major overnight drone attack that hit one of Russia’s largest oil terminals in St Petersburg, President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed Saturday. The attack also targeted a key Russian Baltic Fleet naval base in the nearby Kronstadt area, marking one of the deepest strikes into Russian territory from Ukraine in the ongoing conflict.

    Located roughly 850 kilometers (528 miles) from Ukraine’s border, the St Petersburg oil terminal identified by Ukraine’s military as a critical revenue source for Moscow’s full-scale invasion, which launched in February 2022. Ukrainian military officials describe the facility as one of Russia’s largest oil infrastructure hubs, with an annual output capacity of 12.5 million metric tons of refined petroleum products. Zelensky emphasized the terminal is core infrastructure that directly funds Russia’s military campaign, framing it as a legitimate military target under Ukraine’s rules of engagement.

    St Petersburg Governor Aleksandr Beglov acknowledged the oil terminal strike in an official statement, confirming the attack came as part of what he called a “massive” drone assault on the city and surrounding Leningrad region. Beglov claimed Russian air defenses shot down 72 inbound Ukrainian drones during the attack, and reported no fatalities or injuries from the terminal strike. He urged the city’s more than 5 million residents to remain indoors until all drone threats were neutralized, and issued a warning that temporary mobile internet disruptions could occur across affected areas. The BBC has independently verified that the St Petersburg oil terminal was indeed hit, and video published by Zelensky shows a drone approaching the target followed by a large plume of black smoke rising from the site. The full extent of damage to the facility remains unclear as of Saturday afternoon, and Russia has not yet issued any official comment on the reported strike on the Kronstadt naval base.

    This attack is part of a recent intensification of Ukrainian long-range drone operations targeting Russia’s critical energy infrastructure. Kyiv estimates that these strikes have disabled nearly 43 percent of Russia’s total oil refining capacity, a claim that has not been independently verified by third-party observers. Ukrainian officials have repeatedly stated that Russian fossil fuel facilities are valid military targets, as export revenue from oil and gas remains the largest source of funding for Moscow’s war effort.

    In a separate development Saturday, Ukraine’s military directly refuted Russian claims that the strategically important eastern town of Kostyantynivka in Donetsk Oblast has fallen under full Russian control. Andriy Kovalyov, a major and spokesperson for Ukraine’s military, told the BBC that Kostyantynivka remains firmly under the control of Ukrainian defense forces. Kovalyov acknowledged that small Russian infantry groups have carried out infiltration attempts into frontline Ukrainian combat formations, but added that these incursion teams are being rapidly identified and eliminated.

    Kovalyov’s statement came one day after Russian President Vladimir Putin claimed Russian forces established full control over Kostyantynivka back in June, a claim Putin made without providing any supporting evidence. Responding to Putin’s claim on his official Telegram channel Saturday, Zelensky issued a sharp rhetorical challenge. “If Kostyantynivka is now under Russian control, then Putin will probably have no problem meeting me there and finding diplomatic solutions to finally end the war,” Zelensky wrote. “But still, he will not cross the front line: the truth is very different from Putin’s words.”

    Kostyantynivka is a key fortified node in Ukraine’s so-called “fortress belt” of defensive positions in the Donetsk region, most of which is currently under Russian occupation.

  • Ireland scores late try to beat Australia 33-31 at Nations Championship match in Sydney

    Ireland scores late try to beat Australia 33-31 at Nations Championship match in Sydney

    SYDNEY, Australia — The first match of World Rugby’s groundbreaking new Nations Championship delivered a thriller for the packed crowd at the sold-out Sydney Football Stadium Saturday, as Ireland pulled off a late 33-31 victory over a valiant Australian Wallabies side thanks to a match-winning conversion from flyhalf Sam Prendergast.

    The momentum swung wildly from start to finish in the 10-try contest, with the lead changing hands seven times across 80 minutes. Australia got off to a blistering start, crossing the try line twice early through winger Dylan Pietsch and fullback Jock Campbell — who was making his first Wallabies appearance in four years — to hold a 24-19 advantage at halftime. Ireland stayed within striking distance, however, with first-half tries from Cian Prendergast, Josh van der Flier, and scrumhalf Jamison Gibson-Park, who dotted down just minutes before the break to keep the visitors in touching distance.

    The match’s decisive moment came with three minutes left on the clock. Replacement forward Thomas Clarkson crossed the line for Ireland to set up a conversion that would put the Irish one point ahead, and Sam Prendergast coolly slotted the kick to give Ireland the narrow lead. Australia still had a chance to steal the win in the final dying seconds: flyhalf Ben Donaldson was handed a long-range penalty attempt from more than 40 meters out, but his kick drifted wide of the posts, handing Ireland the opening match victory.

    Saturday’s result kicks off the Nations Championship, a new 12-team global tournament organized by World Rugby designed to crown an official men’s world number one. Competing sides are split into northern and southern conferences, with northern hemisphere teams traveling south for July matches and southern teams heading north for November fixtures. After six rounds of round-robin play, the top four teams will advance to a finals series hosted in London this November, where the world’s best team will be determined.

    The opening match also marked a key transition point for the Wallabies coaching setup. Current head coach Joe Schmidt is set to step down after the team’s next two Nations Championship matches: a clash with France in Brisbane next Saturday, and a match-up with Italy in Perth on July 18. Long-time rugby coach Les Kiss, currently wrapping up his duties with the Queensland Reds Super Rugby side, will officially take over the head coaching role on July 20, and will make his debut in charge for a two-test series against Japan in August. Schmidt’s tenure has been marked by recent poor form, with the Wallabies ending 2023 on a four-match losing streak, including a winless tour of the United Kingdom late last year.

    For Ireland, Saturday’s win comes off the back of a strong 2024 Six Nations campaign. Ireland finished as runners-up in the tournament behind France, with a 36-14 opening loss to the French followed by wins over Italy, Scotland, Wales and England. The wins over the home nations saw Ireland claim their 15th Triple Crown title, one of the most prestigious honors in northern hemisphere rugby.

    Two other opening-round Nations Championship matches were held Saturday. In Christchurch, New Zealand, the All Blacks pulled off a narrow 34-32 win over France, with uncapped flyhalf Ruben Love named in the starting lineup for the hosts. In Tokyo, Japan secured a comfortable 27-10 victory over Italy, with goal-kicking fullback Takuro Matsunaga scoring 17 total points for the home side. Notably, Japan head coach Eddie Jones was absent from the sideline for the match, serving the final game of a four-match suspension for verbally abusing match officials at an under-23 tournament in Australia back in April.

  • ‘America’s 250th birthday is our 50th  anniversary’

    ‘America’s 250th birthday is our 50th anniversary’

    Half a century ago, on a momentous national holiday that doubled as their most important personal celebration, Roger Lieb and Bonnie Taff said their wedding vows. Their choice of wedding date – July 4, 1976 – was no random selection: that year marked the United States’ 200th anniversary of independence, turning a small private ceremony into an event intertwined with a nationwide celebration. Now, as the nation prepares to mark its 250th birthday in 2026, the pair is gearing up to celebrate their own golden wedding anniversary, a rare coincidence that ties their lifelong relationship directly to America’s modern historical milestones. In an exclusive interview with the BBC, the couple opened up about the unique joys and unexpected quirks of sharing their biggest life moment with one of the country’s largest national parties. They shared stories of packed public venues, spontaneous celebrations from strangers who joined in to toast the newlyweds amid bicentennial parades, and how the overlapping milestone has shaped the way they reflect on their decades together. For 50 years, their anniversary has always come with double the festivities: every Fourth of July, as communities across the nation light fireworks and host barbecues to mark independence, the Lieb and Taff family adds their own anniversary cakes, toasts, and reunions to the celebration. The couple recalled that even on their original wedding day, the overlapping national celebration created a joyful, chaotic atmosphere that they have never forgotten. Many of their guests were already planning holiday gatherings, so the wedding fit seamlessly into long-awaited plans, and strangers on the street stopped to congratulate them after noticing their wedding attire amid the bicentennial crowds. Looking back, both agree that tying their love story to the nation’s history has given their relationship an extra layer of meaning, turning every anniversary into a reminder of both their shared journey and the passage of time across the country they call home.