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France coach Didier Deschamps has warned his team to be wary of a Sweden side with ‘nothing to lose’ when the nations meet in the last 32 of the World Cup on Tuesday.’Sweden not are playing for their survival. Obviously they will do everything to win the game, but they have nothing to lose,’ Deschamps told reporters at the MetLife Stadium outside New York City, where the tie will be played.’We need to stay humble, maintain our determination and concentration. In the group stage winning the first game gave us some margin for error, but now we have no second chances.’Deschamps returned to the France team's base in Boston on Saturday after missing the 4-1 win against Norway to fly home to attend his mother's funeral. France came into the World Cup as one of the leading contenders to win the trophy, following their triumph in 2018 and defeat on penalties to Argentina in the 2022 final.They were impressive in the group stage, at least after a shaky first half in their opening game against Senegal. After winning that match 3-1 in New Jersey, they eased to a 3-0 victory over Iraq in a storm-interrupted contest in Philadelphia, and then hammered a second-string Norway in Boston.Les Bleus were one of only three teams to take the maximum nine points in the group stage, along with reigning champions Argentina and co-hosts Mexico. Their tally of 10 goals scored was also the joint-highest in the first round along with Germany and the Netherlands.’We just need to stay confident, but now we wipe the slate clean,’ said Deschamps about the start of the knockout phase. ‘We are confident but we know that the quality of the opposition will go up as well.’Sweden made it to the World Cup via the backdoor, finishing bottom of their qualifying group but parachuting into the play-offs thanks to their performances in the UEFA Nations League. A comprehensive 5-1 win over Tunisia and a draw with Japan, either side of a 5-1 loss to the Dutch, took them through to this stage as one of the best third-placed teams in the group phase.’They are a good team, very athletic, but also with (Viktor) Gyokeres, (Alexander) Isak and (Anthony) Elanga, they have lots of quality in attack,’ said Deschamps.The only previous meeting of the teams at a major tournament came at Euro 2012, just before Deschamps took charge of France. Sweden won that group-stage encounter 2-0 in Ukraine with Zlatan Ibrahimovic among the scorers. He is now working as a World Cup pundit.Deschamps revealed that Marcus Thuram is unlikely to be an option in attack for the game due to a minor muscle injury, while veteran midfielder N'Golo Kante is a doubt.William Saliba is expected to return in central defence after resting against Norway due to back pain. Meanwhile, France midfielder Adrien Rabiot said the squad were relieved to have Deschamps back again after his quick return trip home.’It was quite difficult when he announced to us the death of his Mum and said he had to leave. It was a shock,’ admitted Rabiot. ‘We are pleased to have him back. It is not easy to be mourning someone in these circumstances, but I think he has come back with a real desire to do well and go as far as possible in the competition.’The winners will advance to a last-16 showdown in Philadelphia on Saturday against the winners of match between Germany and Paraguay. Source link
New Zealand overwhelmed England by 160 runs in the third Test at Trent Bridge on Monday as Ben Stokes’s last match in international cricket ended with a thumping defeat.Victory meant New Zealand won a three-match campaign 2-1 – just their fourth series success in England in 20 attempts and only the second time they had triumphed after being 1-0 down after their 1999 success in England.This was also England’s first series defeat at home in three or more Tests since 2012.The Test was upstaged by England captain Stokes dramatically announcing his retirement from international duty on Sunday.The 35-year-old all-rounder said he felt “burnt out” after four years as England skipper, although Stokes added he would continue to play for county side Durham.His decision came after he had returned to England duty after being omitted from a crushing 253-run defeat in the second Test, having broken a midnight curfew following the hosts’ win in the series opener.Spectators in Nottingham gave Stokes a standing ovation when the news was made public on Sunday afternoon and the talismanic skipper promptly took a wicket with his next delivery.Stokes later promoted himself to open England’s innings even though he is normally a middle-order batsman, with the hosts set a stiff target of 373 to win following Daryl Mitchell’s courageous unbeaten century, which secured the player-of-the-match award.Stokes blazed his way to 30 off 20 balls, including two sixes, before he holed out, with his exit meaning he would have no on-field role on Monday, his last day in international cricket. No ‘Bazball’ repeat England had dramatically chased down a target of 299 to beat New Zealand at Trent Bridge four years ago, right at the start of the team’s aggressive ‘Bazball’ era under Stokes and coach Brendon McCullum with Jonny Bairstow scoring a blistering century.Bairstow, however, was helped on his way by Tim Southee – now England’s fast-bowling coach in a backroom set-up led by former New Zealand captain McCullum – with the seamer repeatedly bowling short as Bairstow hooked several sixes high over a short boundary.But the current New Zealand attack held their nerve, with England losing three more wickets before Sunday’s close to be in dire straits at 103-4.And they were in even worse trouble at 116-6 after losing two wickets in five balls early in Monday’s play.Nathan Smith had Emilio Gay caught behind for 10 and then Joe Root, one of England’s greatest batsmen, was superbly run out for 18 by Henry Nicholls’s brilliant direct hit from backward point.Gus Atkinson, also back after breaking curfew alongside Stokes, and Jamie Smith kept New Zealand at bay with a stand of 75 before Atkinson was lbw for 19 to left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner.Jofra Archer, in a dismissal that summed up much of England’s performance, was then caught behind off Nathan Smith trying to leave the ball as the hosts slumped to 198-8 shortly after lunch.Jamie Smith went to a fifty when he punched Santner for four.But another excellent direct hit run-out did for tailender Josh Tongue, with Santner on target this time, before Jamie Smith (60) was caught in the deep by Nathan Smith to seal a well-deserved success for the Black Caps.This match was a personal triumph for several New Zealand players, with captain Tom Latham (151) and Devon Conway (157) sharing an opening stand of 317 in the Black Caps’ first-innings 438.New Zealand came into this match without injured paceman Matt Henry, their 11-wicket hero at the Oval, and in-form towering quick Kyle Jamieson, rested as a fitness precaution.And in Nottingham, Blair Tickner could only manage three overs before pulling out with concussion suffered when the tailender was hit flush on the helmet by an Archer bouncer.But fellow paceman Zak Foulkes, New Zealand’s first concussion substitute, performed superbly to take six wickets in the match. BRIEF SCORES: New Zealand 438 and 288 for 9 dec (Mitchell 100*, Ravindra 94) beat England 354 and 212 (Smith 60, Foulkes 3-52) by 160 runs. Related Story Source link
US President Donald Trump said yesterday he will call Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to urge him not to retaliate against Iranian missile strikes on Israel, news outlet Axios reported.“I am going to call Bibi right now and tell him not to retaliate,” Trump was quoted as saying by Axios journalist Barak Ravid in a phone interview, using the Israeli leader’s nickname. “Each of them had their fun. Israel had its strike and Iran had its strike. We don’t need another one,” Trump said, according to excerpts of which Ravid posted on X.Israeli military chief Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir however vowed that the military would strike Iran “with force” upon receiving orders, after the Islamic republic fired missiles at Israel. Yesterday’s missile barrage was Iran’s first against Israel since an April ceasefire took hold in the Middle East war, and Trump voiced concern it could set back negotiations.“The Iranian strikes didn’t hurt anybody. Hopefully Israel is not going to retaliate. If Bibi strikes them back it’s just gonna keep going like the last 47 years, or the last 3,000 years,” the US president said. “We are very close to a final deal with Iran. It is going to be a good deal. I don’t want it to blow up because of what is happening now,” he added.Iran’s powerful Revolutionary Guards called yesterday’s attack a “warning” after Israel struck Beirut’s southern suburbs earlier in the day, threatening wider strikes in the event of repeated aggression. An April 8 ceasefire had halted major hostilities between Iran, Israel and the United States.But efforts to turn the truce into a settlement have repeatedly stalled, and yesterday’s launches were sure to further dampen hopes for a lasting peace as the war reached its 100th day. In a separate interview with Fox News, Trump said the Iranian strikes were not going to help negotiations, which were “very close” to reaching an agreement.“We’re very close. I would say an agreement would be signed on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday of this coming week. And now this takes place.” He urged Iran to “get back to the table and make a deal.”Trump also criticised Israel’s strikes on Beirut yesterday, saying he was “not happy about it.” The White House did not immediately respond to an AFP request for comment.Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) says it launched ballistic missiles at Ramat David Air Base, about 20km from the city of Haifa in northern Israel. It said the Israeli air base was the “source of aggressions” launched against southern Lebanon and the southern suburbs of Beirut.Iran has closed the western part of the country’s airspace until further notice, the semi-official news agency Tasnim has reported. To Page 11 Iraq also has temporarily closed its airspace and suspended air navigation, civil aviation officials are saying. Iran also suspended flights at Imam Khomeini Airport until further notice.The Syrian Civil Aviation Authority announced a temporary closure of the southern air corridors and the suspension of operations at Damascus International Airport for 12 hours as well. The IRGC says it accepted a ceasefire with the US on condition that it was “a ceasefire on all fronts”.But it said the US and Israel have failed to meet their commitment by launching attacks in Lebanon and “violating the ceasefire by repeatedly attacking Iranian shores and vessels in the Strait of Hormuz, the Sea of Oman and the Indian Ocean”. “Tonight’s operation was a warning,” the IRGC said in its statement, adding that, “if aggressions are repeated, the responses will be broader”.The Iranian foreign minister said he had spoken with officials from the UK, Turkiye and Pakistan “following Iran’s response to the repeated violations of the ceasefire in Lebanon” by Israel.Araghchi posted on Telegram that he spoke with British Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper and Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan.He also said he spoke with Pakistan’s army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, who has played a key role in US-Iran mediation efforts. Source link
Israeli settlers could face further sanctions in coming days in protest at the escalation of illegal settlements in the West Bank and a surge in violence by settlers against Palestinians, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot said yesterday. The European Union imposed sanctions on Israeli settlers and organisations that support them late last month.Speaking to Public Senat television and RTL radio, Barrot did not name the European countries he said could impose further measures. But in a reference to the previous EU sanctions, he said: “We could go further, and in the coming days, further sanctions could be imposed.” His remarks follow escalating violence by Israeli settlers in the occupied West Bank and underscore anger in many Western countries toward Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which has expanded settlements. Diplomats say that expansion is aimed at undermining prospects for a Palestinian state. Reuters reported on Saturday, citing European diplomats, that France is working with several countries to step up pressure on Israel by pressing ahead with co-ordinated national sanctions targeting individuals linked to violence in the West Bank. “I am extremely concerned about the escalation of illegal settlement activity in the West Bank and the surge in violence by Israeli settlers against Palestinians,” Barrot said. “This is why I have pushed for sanctions to be imposed not only on those responsible for this violence, but also on the entities, companies and organisations in Israel that are providing these extremist settlers with the means to drive Palestinians from their land, burn their crops and destroy their public buildings,” he said. Source link
England’s Gus Atkinson (centre) celebrates after bowling New Zealand’s Matt Henry as England win the Test on the…
A handout image from Ukraine’s Energoatom shows damage to a spent nuclear fuel storage facility, following what the…
