Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League finalNew Foto - Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final

Chelsea will look to become the first team to have all four of UEFA's club competitions in its trophy collection by beating Real Betis in the Conference League final in Wroclaw, Poland, on Wednesday. Chelsea has twice been king of Europe after winning the Champions League in 2012 and2021. It also claimed the Europa League title — the successor to the UEFA Cup — in 2013 and 2019, and won the now-defunct Cup Winners' Cup in 1971 and 1998. The Conference League — Europe's third-tier competition — was only founded in 2021 and has had three winners so far: Roma (2022), West Ham (2023) and Olympiacos (2024). Chelsea would be the most high-profile winner of a competition created, in theory, to give teams from smaller nations more matches in Europe and a better chance of winning a UEFA trophy. Chelsea, one of the top English clubs, only dropped into the Conference League because of its disappointing sixth-place finish in the Premier League last season. Easily the biggest team in the competition, it has had a comfortable passage to the final — winning all six of its matches in the league phase and then getting past FC Copenhagen, Legia Warsaw andDjurgardenin the knockout stage. Betis eyes first European trophy Betis represents Chelsea's toughest opponent yet, a team which finished in sixth place in the Spanish league and has some well-known faces in its lineup — such as former Real Madrid playmaker Isco, Argentina midfielder Giovani Lo Celso and on-loan Manchester United winger Antony — as well as in the dugout in former Manchester City and Madrid coach Manuel Pellegrini. The Seville club won the Spanish league in the 1930s, three Copas del Rey — most recently in 2022 — but it is looking for a first trophy at continental level. This is Betis' first European final. The match is a bonus for Chelsea at the end of a season when it achieved its primary objective:Qualifying for the Champions Leaguecourtesy of a fourth-place finish in the Premier League. Since the start of the 2001/02 season, all 23 finals in the Champions League, Europa League or Conference League featuring Spanish clubs have been won by a Spanish team, UEFA said. That includes four all-Spanish match-ups. This season's European finals More than 40,000 will be at Stadion Wroclaw for the second European final of the season, after last week's Europa League title match whereTottenham beat Manchester United 1-0. The Champions League final between Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan takes place on Saturday. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final

Chelsea looks to complete UEFA trophy collection by beating Betis in Conference League final Chelsea will look to become the first team to h...
Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of SydneyNew Foto - Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney

BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — There was no better day to urge the people of Brisbane to do better than the benchmarks Sydney set for the Paralympics. International Paralympic Committee President Andrew Parsons' visit to the2032 Olympic and Paralympic host cityWednesday coincided with the start of the traditionalrugby leaguegrudge match that is the Origin series, one of the biggest annual fixtures on Australia's sports calendar. "Without doubt, the year 2000 was a gamechanger and provided the foundations from which we could advance the Paralympic Games and wider Paralympic movement," Parsons told a gathering at a Brisbane riverside restaurant, hyping Sydney's overwhelming success in staging the Olympics and Paralympics almost 25 years ago. "After the tremendous success of Barcelona 1992, and the troublesome experiences of Atlanta 1996, the Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games got the Paralympic movement back on track with a sensational showcase of sport." Challenge set Sydney is the capital of New South Wales state. Brisbane, capital of Queensland state, has another seven years to prepare and improve on that Games legacy. The sporting rivalry between the neighboring eastern Australian states is intense, and there's no better illustration than the Origin series. Brisbane wasawarded the 2032 Gamesin 2021 but it took more than 1,340 days before a new state governmentfinalized the venue plansthat center around a new main stadium and aquatics venue built in a downtown parkland precinct. What Sydney did to raise the profile of athletes, ticket sales and broadcast audiences for the Paralympics, Brisbane organizers aim to do in terms of setting new benchmarks for accessibility in the design of venues, buildings and transport. "You've got to get to a point as a global look at accessibility, in other words people with disabilities, as being standard in the design. As First Nations, and including their culture, as standard in what we do. Environment, and certification of buildings and treating the environment well, as standard," Andrew Liveris,president of the Brisbane 2032 organizing committee, said. "We're not there (yet), but we can set that standard. We will be, as an Olympic and Paralympic Games, the standard bearer." With the start of venue construction and thefinalizing of the sports programnot expected until late next year, Liveris said there's time to ensure the end results are accounted for in the planning. A big-ticket item Parsons said Sydney was the first Paralympics to sell tickets — 1.2 million were sold and Australia topped the medal standings. It launched a new era for the Games. There were 2.5 million tickets sold for the 2024 Paralympics in Paris, where 4,400 Para athletes competed and 168 national Paralympic Committees sent teams. "In terms of ticket sales, the Paralympic Games are now the world's third biggest sport event with only the Olympic Games and men's FIFA World Cup selling more," Parsons said, adding that Paralympic-related internet searches "broke the 1 billion barrier." "The main driver for the increasing global appeal of the Paralympic Games is the constantly improving quality of sport, level and depth of competition, and the performances of Para athletes," Parsons said. "Progress in the last 25 years has been emphatic." Based on his past visits and his knowledge of planning already, Parsons said Brisbane is "starting from a position of strength definitely in terms of accessibility." "But you can always improve," he added. "We cannot be satisfied until we have 100% of everything accessible, and I'm absolutely sure that this is the objective here." ___ AP Olympics athttps://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games

Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney

Paralympic chief challenges Brisbane 2032 organizers to top the success of Sydney BRISBANE, Australia (AP) — There was no better day to urge...
Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'New Foto - Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'

INDIANAPOLIS — Rick Carlisle walked into his press conference after Game 4 understanding that he was going to be asked about the masterpiece that his virtuoso point guard had just unleashed upon the Knicks: a 32-point, 12-rebound, 15-assist,zero-turnovertriple-double topropel his Pacers to a 130-121 win, and to within one win of the franchise's first NBA Finals appearance in 25 years. But that didn't mean Indiana's head coach had to like it. "I know Ty did some historic stat stuff tonight, and that's great," Carlisle said after Game 4. "But it's tough talking stats when it's such a team thing right now." Heard, Coach. So, here are some stats you might like better: In the course of an 11-plus minute podium session with reporters — an interview that spanned nearly 2,000 words, the primary topic of which was playing the game of his life to get his team within one win of a chance to play for an NBA championship — Haliburton used the word "we" 28 times, the word "our" five times, the phrase "as a group" six times, and the phrase "play the right way" five times. He said "It's about winning" twice, "I just want to impact winning" once, and "How can I impact winning?" once, bringing us to four discrete instances of emphasizing how much he wants to win. He gave a 52-second, 189-word answer in praise of Bennedict Mathurin, who bounced back from a rough start to the series by exploding for 20 points in 13 minutes off the bench, helping Indiana expand its lead with his physical drives to the basket and the free throws they generated. Healmostsaid that it was more exciting to see Triple H in Gainbridge Fieldhouse than it wasto see his dad back in the building— but he stopped short. Chalk up another possession successfully concluded without an unforced error. "Look, Tyrese is a great player, and people realize that," Carlisle said. "He happens to do some very impressive statistical things. But he's well aware that all of this far transcends statistics." Haliburton left Game 3 with a bad taste in his mouth, frustrated by Indiana scoring just 42 points in the second half and leaving the door open for New York to pull off a daring comeback — unhappy with a finish where he felt the team he's responsible for leading was on the back foot rather than pressing the action. "They've got some guys who just make some hellacious shots, you know, and [Karl-Anthony Towns and Jalen Brunson] did that last game, and I felt like those were kind of like taking the air out of us," Haliburton said. "We were kind of sighing after every one, walking the ball up. Today, we were just trying to keep focused on, 'Who cares?' You know, let's get [the ball] in and let's run, go right back at them. They're gonna make shots. Let's just keep going." Haliburton hit the gas off the jump, repeatedly attacking Towns andBrunsonin the pick-and-roll and generating great looks. He rebounded misses and mashed the pedal to the floor, creating three open 3-point attempts in the first three minutes of the game before stepping into his first — an almost unfathomably openstepbackafter the Knicks miscommunicated assignments on a switch in transition — and drilling it to put Indiana up 16-9, a sterling start that put Game 3's ugly finish behind them. The Pacers scored 42 points in the second half on Sunday; they scored 43 points in the first quarter on Tuesday. They were off to the races, with Haliburton, as always, setting the pace. "I felt like I'd let the team down in Game 3 — felt like I could have been so much better," he said. "So I felt like I responded the right way today." Yeah, you could say that. "I just thought he was free out there," said Pacers forward Pascal Siakam, who scored 30 points on 11-for-21 shooting with five rebounds. "Just playing with pace, just not slowing down whatsoever, just being in attack mode the whole game. And for him, what makes him special is attack mode is not just scoring — it's getting us in position, bringing the pace, playing the way that we want to play, and then also him just being in control of the game." "He was the leader tonight," Carlisle said. It's a role that Haliburton has steadily grown into since landing in Indianapolis back in February of 2022 in a blockbuster trade that — with all due respect to Domantas Sabonis, an excellent player — looked like a steal at the time and now feels like outright larceny. Step by step, brick by brick, Haliburton has been the foreman overseeing the construction project in Indiana: an overhaul in overarching approach, a revolution in RPMs. "Unbelievable," said Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith, who gutted through asprained right ankleto play 33 minutes of physical defense on Brunson while also chipping in 16 points on 5-for-9 shooting. "He's a special player. He does what we ask of him, what we need him to do every night, and I think he almost had a triple-double at halftime. This guy is unbelievable." The most unbelievable part, really, is the turnovers — or, rather, their absence. Haliburton now has a 44-to-6 assist-to-turnover ratio in 153 minutes in these Eastern Conference finals — almost all of which has been spent with him fending off physical defenders in his face, playing as fast as he possibly can, and slinging the ball all the hell over the court. "He was really throwing the ball ahead tonight, too, which was really important for us," Carlisle said. "And to not have any turnovers in any of those situations, too, is pretty remarkable. But this is — this has become his thing. And you know, there will be a new statistical category, perhaps named after him, somewhere down the line. "You know, him and Chris Paul, these guys … there aren't a lot of guys. I know [John] Stockton didn't turn it over much, back when he played. There are others. LeBron James doesn't turn it over very much. And you can go right down the line. Some of the all-time greats. I know he takes great pride in it, and that's a motivating factor." (Haliburton confirmed that: "I'd rather do really anything else on the basketball court than turn the ball over.") Go back a second, though, and look at those names: Paul, Stockton, James. These are some of the absolute greatest playmakers in the history of the sport. Maybe it feels a little early for all that. With one more win and a Finals berth, though — and, let's face it, likely an Eastern Conference final MVP trophy — Haliburton would take a big step toward earning a spot in such august company … even if the way he gets there looks a little bit different from those all-time table-setters. "I think my game is a little unorthodox," Haliburton said. "I jump to pass probably more than anybody in the NBA. But I work on that stuff. That's how I've worked my whole life to play the game. So I take pride in taking care of the ball. I feel like the more we take care of the ball as a team, the more opportunities we get to shoot the ball. The more shots we get in the game, the better opportunity we have to win." Just so long as he doesn't forget to look for his own shot sometimes, too. "He's amazing — like, when he's playing that way, and just the pace and getting us in position, and then also being aggressive, just finding that balance of doing both, like … yeah, we know he's a pass-first kind of guy, but he also was able to give us big buckets when we really needed them," Siakam said. "I just loved the way he played tonight, his energy on both ends of the floor. And also you don't turn the ball over? That's amazing." Combine that with stepped-up effort on the defensive end — 12 defensive boards, four steals — and you've got a performance for the ages. After one of those steals, when he pounced on Brunson to force a turnover in the third quarter, Haliburton popped up and high-fived Pacer alum and former teammate George Hill, who was seated in the front row: How about this steal from Tyrese Haliburton 😮‍💨🙌Haliburton wasn't giving in against Jalen Brunson and look how much it means. Class defence 👏Don't miss the#NBAPlayoffsLIVE on ESPN on#disneyplusau/#disneyplusnz! 📺pic.twitter.com/CbNOym9FTZ — ESPN Australia & NZ (@ESPNAusNZ)May 28, 2025 That moment meant a lot to Haliburton. "I see G-Hill as kind of like one of my vets," Haliburton said after the game. "He was here with me for a little bit, and we do have constant conversation to this day. But you see Lance [Stephenson] in the building, you know, Stephen Jackson was here the other day, Al Harrington, Roy Hibbert, [Danny Granger], Reggie [Miller] — I mean, all these guys are guys I've grown up watching." "Yeah, and he's doing this within the system — you know, there isn't a lot of freelance stuff, where they're just outside-the-box gambles," Carlisle said. "He's doing it within the system, and that's real growth." Everywhere you look in Indiana, there's growth: Nesmith's evolution as a shooter, Mathurin's bounce-back maturity, Andrew Nembhard's developing two-way work, and on, and on. These Pacers aresmack in the middle of the pack in terms of average roster ageamong NBA teams; there's plenty of young guys still with a ton of runway to get better, Haliburton included. The deeper the play, the bigger the games get, and the more they learn. One thing they're learning: When you get an opportunity as good as the one that's in front of them right now, you have to seize it with both hands. And when you do, it's awful nice to have a point guard who'd rather do anything than cough it up. "He runs our team," Siakam said. "When he brings the ball up, the pace he brings it with, just the way he plays … yeah, it makes our team go. For me, I just enjoy being a part of it — playing with him, just knowing that he cares about putting us all into the position to be successful. That's what makes him special." "Look, he's had a lot of things happen this year," Carlisle said. "You know, the year's been filled with ups and downs. He's remained remarkably resilient and steadfast in his belief in what we're doing and who he is. We just need him to continue to lead us." That mantle of leadership, passed down from those Pacer greats in the building for Game 4, rests with Haliburton. He knows the franchise will go as far as he can take it; he also understands, like all the great point guards do, that you can go a hell of a lot farther together than you can alone. "When I got traded to the Pacers, or just being a basketball fan, you think of all the guys that come before you," Haliburton said. "And they've tried to help put this organization in a better place than they found it. And that's what I'm trying to do, as well."

Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable'

Knicks vs. Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton's flawless Game 4 showed exactly how much he means to Indiana — 'This guy is unbelievable' ...
China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker saysNew Foto - China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says

By Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee TAIPEI (Reuters) -China is being provocative with an "extreme pressure" campaign against Taiwan and is intentionally ignoring the island's olive branches and goodwill, its top China policy maker told Reuters, as Beijing ratchets up its tactics against Taipei. China, which views Taiwan as its own territory despite the rejection of that position by the democratic and separately governed island, has stepped up military and political pressure on it, calling President Lai Ching-te a dangerous "separatist". Since Lai took office in May last year, China has held at least three rounds of major war games around Taiwan, while also threatening the death penalty for "diehard" supporters of its independence, and setting up hotlines to report such activity. Mainland Affairs Council minister Chiu Chui-cheng said Beijing should own up to its responsibility for stoking tension by exerting "extreme pressure" which includes almost daily military incursions near Taiwan and public influence campaigns. "It's true that we don't see any sincerity from mainland China," Chiu said this week, speaking in his office in central Taipei. He repeated the government's offer for talks with China based on equality and respect, but without Beijing's political preconditions. "We have made a lot of effort and offered many olive branches," Chiu added. "We are a democratic country and it is impossible for us to accept your political premise of eliminating the Republic of China, belittling Taiwan or treating Taiwan as part of the People's Republic of China." The defeated Republic of China government fled to Taiwan in 1949 after losing a civil war with Mao Zedong's communists, and that remains the island's formal name. No peace treaty has ever been signed, and neither government recognises the other. Asked on Wednesday about Taiwan saying it was showing goodwill towards China, a spokesperson for China's Taiwan Affairs Office said it was an "objective fact" the island was part of China. "Scheming for Taiwan's independence and secession means there is no way to talk about cross-Strait dialogue and consultations," spokesperson Chen Binhua told reporters in Beijing. "It will only undermine peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait." CHINA A "HOSTILE FORCE" In March, Lai called China a "foreign hostile force", saying it had deepened its influence campaigns and infiltration tactics against the island, while pledging measures to tackle Beijing's efforts to "absorb" Taiwan. An angry China responded with a new round of war games. "We were just explaining the facts to everyone," Chiu said of Lai's description of China. "The serious threat level to Taiwan from mainland China, the Beijing authorities, can be described as extreme pressure pressing ever closer." Chiu said China's hotlines to report supposed separatist activity, which Beijing says generated 6,000 reports, had only served to sow fear amongst Taiwan's sizeable business community in China, spurring some to leave. He compared such "indiscriminate reporting" to actions during the Cultural Revolution of 1966-1976 in China, referring to the decade of chaos and violence unleashed after Mao declared class war, turning neighbours and families against each other. "I myself have heard many of our Taiwanese business people say, 'We have been in mainland China for 30 to 40 years, and we are willing to stay here even if the economy is bad, but living in an environment where we are on edge and worried about being reported day and night, that's why I decided to leave.'" (Reporting by Yimou Lee and Ben Blanchard; Additional reporting by Beijing newsroom; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says

China being provocative, ignoring olive branches, top Taiwan policymaker says By Ben Blanchard and Yimou Lee TAIPEI (Reuters) -China is bei...
European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slowsNew Foto - European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows

BEIJING (AP) — European companies are cutting costs and scaling back investment plans in China as itseconomy slowsand fierce competitiondrives down prices, according to an annual survey released Wednesday. Their challenges reflect broader ones faced by a Chinese economy hobbled by a prolonged real estate crisis that has hurt consumer spending. Beijing also faces growing pushback from Europe and the United States oversurging exports. "The picture has deteriorated across many key metrics," the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China said in the introduction to its Business Confidence Survey 2025. The same forces that are driving up Chinese exports are depressing the business outlook in the Chinese market. Chinese companies, often enticed by government subsidies, have invested so much in targeted industries such aselectric vehiclesthat factory capacity far outpaces demand. The overcapacity has resulted in fierce price wars that cut into profits and a parallel push by companiesinto overseas markets. In Europe, that has created fears that growing imports from China could undermine its own factories and the workers they employ. The EU slapped tariffs on Chinese EVs last year, saying China had unfairly subsidized electric vehicle production. "I think there's a clear perception that the benefits of the bilateral trade and investment relationship are not being distributed in an equitable manner," Jens Eskelund, the president of the EU Chamber in China, told reporters earlier this week. He applaudedefforts by Chinato boost consumer spending but said the government must also take steps to ensure that supply growth doesn't outpace that in demand. The survey results show that the downward pressure on profits increased over the past year and that a fall in business confidence has yet to bottom out, Eskelund said. About 500 member companies responded to the survey between mid-January to mid-February. "It is just very difficult for everyone right now in an environment of declining margins," he said.

European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows

European companies cut costs, scale back investments in China as its economy slows BEIJING (AP) — European companies are cutting costs and s...

 

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