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Sports May 29, 2026

Switzerland World Cup 2026 Team Guide and Expectations

Switzerland is set to compete in the 2026 World Cup with high expectations under coach Murat Yakin.…
The Plan Switzerland has qualified for the World Cup for the sixth time in a row and will head to the US west coast with high expectations. Coach Murat Yakin has set ambitious goals, stating, "We want to play the best World Cup seen from a Swiss team." Switzerland's World Cup History Switzerland has never advanced past the quarter-finals at the World Cup, with their last appearance at that stage being in 1954 on home soil. They have typically been eliminated in the last 16, as seen in their 2022 loss to Portugal. Group B Fixtures 13 June v Qatar, San Francisco (noon local, 8pm BST) 18 June v Bosnia and Herzegovina, Los Angeles (noon local, 8pm BST) 24 June v Canada, Vancouver (noon local, 8pm BST) The Coach: Murat Yakin Murat Yakin's appointment as coach in August 2021 was a surprise, given he was managing second-tier FC Schaffhausen at the time. Despite some challenges, he extended his contract to 2028 after a positive Euro 2024. Star Player: Granit Xhaka At 33, Granit Xhaka remains Switzerland's most important player, dictating the tempo of the game and ensuring a balance between defense and attack. This could be his last World Cup, but he may continue his international career afterward. One to Watch: Johan Manzambi Johan Manzambi, a Geneva-born midfielder, has impressed with his performances at Freiburg. Europe's top clubs are monitoring him, and he could become one of the most expensive Swiss transfers after the World Cup. Unsung Hero: Remo Freuler Remo Freuler, a midfielder from Zurich, has worked hard to reach the top. He complements Xhaka well in midfield, excelling in running capacity, one-on-one situations, and footballing intelligence.
#Switzerland #World Cup 2026 #Murat Yakin
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Sports May 29, 2026

Hodgkinson Targets Historic 800m World Record at London Diamond League

British Olympic champion Keely Hodgkinson hints at attempting to break Jarmila Kratochvilova's 42-y…
The Olympic Champion's Record Ambition Keely Hodgkinson has dangled the intriguing possibility that July's London Diamond League meeting could be the day where she takes down Jarmila Kratochvilova's 42-year-old 800m world record. The Olympic champion said she would wait until closer to the time before deciding whether to attempt to better the Czech's time of 1min 53.28sec, the oldest track and field world record still standing. A Potential Record-Breaking Showdown She joked that the meeting could turn into a "battle of the world records", with Josh Kerr, Britain's 1500m 2023 world gold medallist, aiming for a world mile record and the pole vaulter Armand Duplantis also competing. "I would love to have that happen on home soil," she said when asked about taking a crack at the 800m world record. "There's just the whole crowd and everything. As a British person it's just so much fun and it's definitely the main thing I'm looking forward to this year." Peak Physical Condition Hodgkinson confirmed she was in prime shape having kicked on in training after breaking the world indoor record in February and winning the world indoor championships in March. "So far, the preparation has gone very, very well," she said. "I'm very happy with where I'm at, I'm building on the indoor season that we've had. I've been healthy for a year now. I've not missed a training session, so I'm in a really, really good place." Outdoor Season Strategy The 24-year-old starts her outdoor season next week with a 400m in Rome before travelling to Stockholm on 7 June for her first 800m of the season. "The lineup in Rome is crazy," she said. "I've really thrown myself in the deep end. But it's quite good to put myself in a position where on paper, I think I'm going in slowest and against girls that have been doing this event and are world finalists and Olympic medallists." Long-Term Athletic Goals Hodgkinson said she has identified some major targets away from winning medals. "I was thinking about it the other day: 'Wouldn't it be really cool if I could do a sub-50, a sub-2 and a sub-4 in my career?" she said. "It's very difficult. But it's a nice little challenge to have in the background." These goals refer to sub-50 seconds in 400m, sub-2 minutes in 800m, and sub-4 minutes in 1500m.
#Keely Hodgkinson #Jarmila Kratochvilova #800m world record
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Sports May 29, 2026

PSG vs Arsenal Champions League Final: 10 Essential Insights

The UEFA Champions League final pits defending champions Paris Saint-Germain against first‑time fin…
Paris Saint-Germain and Arsenal will clash in the UEFA Champions League final on 27 May 2026 at Budapest’s Puskas Stadium, a showdown that pits the defending champions against a first‑time finalist. The Road to Budapest: How PSG and Arsenal Earned Their Spot Both clubs navigated a grueling campaign that began with group‑stage fixtures, progressed through two‑leg knockout rounds, and culminated in dramatic semifinals. Arsenal eliminated Atletico Madrid, while PSG overcame Bayern Munich to secure their places. Numbers That Define the Showdown Kick‑off: 6 pm (17:00 GMT) on Saturday Venue capacity: 67,215 spectators at Puskas Stadium PSG’s recent form: 5‑0 victory in last season’s final; 5 consecutive Ligue 1 titles, 12 crowns in 14 seasons Arsenal’s season highlights: first Premier League title since 2004, unbeaten league run, League Cup final appearance Key scorer stats: Kvaratskhelia (PSG) – 19 goals; Doue – 12; Viktor Gyokeres (Arsenal) – 19; Bukayo Saka – 10; Eberechi Eze – 7 Strategic Stakes for European Football The final represents more than a trophy. A PSG victory would cement French dominance and validate their rapid rise after a historic 5‑0 win over Inter Milan last season. An Arsenal triumph would break a 22‑year Premier League drought and signal a shift in power toward English clubs in Europe, potentially reshaping transfer market dynamics and broadcasting rights negotiations. Tactical Forecast and Key Player Outlook PSG enter as favourites, but injuries cloud their attack: Ousmane Dembele remains a doubt, and Achraf Hakimi has missed recent matches. Their defensive anchor, Marquinhos, will be crucial. Arsenal rely on the midfield engine Declan Rice and the striking partnership of Viktor Gyokeres and Bukayo Saka. The Brazilian centre‑back Gabriel Magalhaes offers parity at the back. Analysts predict a tightly contested match, with Arsenal’s high‑press potentially unsettling PSG’s rhythm. Expect a decisive moment in the second half, likely from a set‑piece or a breakthrough by PSG’s leading scorer Kvaratskhelia.
#Paris Saint-Germain #Arsenal #UEFA Champions League
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Sports May 29, 2026

Ibrahima Konaté Likely to Exit Liverpool on Free Transfer After Contract Talks Stall

France international centre‑back Ibrahima Konaté is poised to leave Liverpool on a free transfer af…
Ibrahima Konaté appears set to depart Liverpool FC after the club and his representatives failed to reach a new contract agreement, meaning the 27‑year‑old defender could leave on a free transfer at the end of his current deal.Contract Stalemate Sends Konaté Toward Free AgencyNegotiations over a fresh deal for Konaté, who has been at Anfield for five seasons, have broken down despite “extensive talks” between his camp and the club. The defender hinted in April that an agreement was close, but no formal offer materialised.Financial Implications of Losing a First‑Choice Centre‑BackAge: 27Contract length remaining: 0 (expires summer 2026)Potential fee: None – free transferRecent precedent: Trent Alexander‑Arnold left for £10 million after his contract ran downStrategic Blow to Liverpool’s Defensive RebuildingThe club’s sporting director Richard Hughes now faces a depleted back‑line, with new signing Jérémy Jacquet and Giovanni Leoni still recovering from injuries and uncertainty surrounding Joe Gomez. The loss compounds the departure of Mohamed Salah and Andy Robertson, marking a significant turnover from the Jürgen Klopp era.What Lies Ahead for Konaté and LiverpoolReports link the Paris‑born centre‑back with a possible move to Paris Saint‑Germain, while Chelsea are also mentioned as suitors. Liverpool will need to rely on emerging talents and the market to fill the void, and the free‑transfer exit could free up wage budget for new acquisitions.
#Ibrahima Konaté #Liverpool FC #Richard Hughes
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Politics May 28, 2026

Enfield Council Withdraws from Government's New Towns Program in Major Blow to Labour Housing Plans

Enfield Council's Conservative-led administration has withdrawn from the government's flagship new …
The Political Shift in Enfield's Housing PolicyEnfield council in north London has withdrawn from the government's new towns programme, in a significant blow to Labour's flagship housebuilding scheme. The move by the new minority Conservative-led administration could present one of the first tests of Rachel Reeves's planning reforms, designed to curb the use of judicial reviews against new infrastructure.The New Towns Project and Its SignificanceThe project to build 21,000 homes at Crews Hill and Chase Park on the northern fringes of London was selected in March for the new towns programme along with six other locations across England. The new towns scheme has been heralded by the housing and communities department as the most ambitious housebuilding project in England for half a century and is regarded as a significant step towards helping Labour achieve its goal of building 1.5m homes during this parliament.Local Opposition and Political ChangeThe withdrawal comes after significant local opposition to the Enfield plan to build homes, shops, schools and services such as doctors' surgeries on green belt land currently occupied by several garden centres and family-run businesses. Enfield council, which was previously run by Labour, had already devised a plan to build homes at Crews Hill and gave its backing to the new town proposal.However, Labour lost control of the council in the local elections earlier this month and on Wednesday evening Conservative councillor Alessandro Georgiou was elected leader of the authority's minority Tory administration. The Conservatives pledged during the election campaign to halt the new town development if they took control of the council.Economic and Environmental ConsiderationsOn Thursday, Georgiou sent a letter to the minister for housing and planning, Matthew Pennycook, informing him that the council no longer supported the proposals to develop land at Crews Hill and other parts of the borough's green belt. In his letter to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG), Georgiou said the council would work with the government to deliver new homes and jobs in the borough, but would focus on brownfield sites and town centre regeneration.Enfield council owns just under a third (30%) of the land in the borough, while other land earmarked for the development belongs to private landowners. The majority of private landowners did not want to sell, according to Nina Barnes, owner of the Culver garden centre site at Crews Hill, close to the centre of the proposed new town development.Future Implications for Housing PolicyThe withdrawal of Enfield from the new towns programme could have wider implications for the government's housing strategy. Other locations in the programme may face similar local opposition, particularly when development plans involve green belt land. The government may need to reconsider its approach to engaging with local authorities and communities on major housing projects.An MHCLG spokesperson said: "Our landmark national new towns programme will restore the dream of homeownership for people across the country. We recently consulted with local people on the proposals and will respond in due course." This suggests the government may continue to push the programme forward despite Enfield's withdrawal, potentially leading to further political conflicts between central and local government.
#Enfield Council #New Towns Programme #Labour Government
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Sports May 28, 2026

Pochettino's European Return: Milan Talks and the USMNT's Final Chapter

Mauricio Pochettino is reportedly in advanced discussions with AC Milan to become their next manage…
Mauricio Pochettino is on the verge of a significant career shift, with reports confirming he is in talks with AC Milan to take over as manager next season. This development casts a spotlight on the end of his tenure with the US men's national team as they prepare for the 2026 World Cup on home soil.The European Pivot and World Camp ContextThe Guardian confirmed the talks, initially reported by journalist Nicolò Schira. Pochettino's status became a hot topic during the team's opening training camp at the US Soccer Federation's new center in Fayetteville, Georgia. Most analysts view the World Cup as the final chapter for the Argentine manager before a return to European club football.USMNT's Tight Timeline and Contract DynamicsThe USMNT has a packed schedule leading into the tournament, creating a tight window for Pochettino to finalize his move:Final friendly vs Germany (upcoming)World Cup opener vs Paraguay on 12 June at Los Angeles StadiumRegarding Pochettino's contract, US Soccer CEO JT Batson confirmed that while the manager has been transparent about club interest for years, no specific extension has been confirmed. Batson noted that succession planning is a monthly process, implying the federation is prepared for his departure.Managing the Distraction FactorThe looming exit has raised concerns about team chemistry, but the players seem unfazed. Tyler Adams, the USMNT midfielder, compared the situation to standard contract negotiations, stating that Pochettino remains fully present and focused on training. This suggests the squad is professional enough to handle the transition without internal friction.The End of the USMNT EraGiven the confirmed talks with a major European club like Milan and the CEO's comments on succession planning, it is highly probable that Pochettino will depart immediately after the World Cup concludes. The focus now shifts to who will replace him and how the team will adapt to a new leadership style during the tournament.
#Mauricio Pochettino #AC Milan #USMNT
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Sports May 28, 2026

Canada's World Cup 2026 Strategy: High Hopes Despite Historical Winless Record

As co-hosts of the 2026 World Cup, Canada enters the tournament with high expectations despite neve…
The Plan for World Cup Glory As co-hosts, Canada enter the World Cup with high expectations, despite never winning a match at a previous tournament. Since a Concacaf Nations League semi-final defeat to Mexico in March 2025 the team have lost one of 15 matches at the time of writing, a run that has included some excellent opponents such as Colombia, Ecuador, Ukraine and the USA, whom they have defeated twice in the past two years, including their first win on US soil in 57 years. The coach, Jesse Marsch, has maintained a consistent 4-4-2 with the emphasis on pressing from the front and pace in wide positions. "Some teams press to win the ball back, we press to punish and think about scoring immediately when we recover the ball," said Marsch, who is American, but has captured the hearts of many Canadians since he took the job in May 2024 and guided the team to the semi-finals of the Copa América. Canada's World Cup Schedule 12 June v Bosnia and Herzegovina, Toronto (3pm local, 8pm BST) 18 June v Qatar, Vancouver (3pm local, 11pm BST) 24 June v Switzerland, Vancouver (noon local, 8pm BST) Success at that tournament, and subsequently in friendlies, is based on a defensive structure Marsch worked on immediately when taking the job and playing against the Netherlands and France in his first two matches in charge. Nine clean sheets in 13 matches before the pre-tournament friendlies is even more impressive considering Moïse Bombito, their star centre-back from Nice, and Bayern Munich's Alphonso Davies did not play in any of those matches because of injury. The Coach's Vision Jesse Marsch's first venture into international management has been a successful one, but not one he found easy to adjust to. "From the moment I worked with this group of players in the first camp, I knew I was going to fall in love with these guys," he says. "They are a unique group of really good people, who are very talented, and when I said goodbye to them it was different from what I was used to as a head coach in the club game." Marsch has enjoyed those gaps in his schedule, using time to visit Canadian players across the world and spending a lot of time in the country at the provincial level to help bring a more united approach to the way the game is developed and governed. Star Player's Return Questioned The captain, Alphonso Davies, has not played for Canada since tearing his ACL against USA in the Nations League third-place match last March. Whether to play him at left-back or on the wing has been one of the biggest questions for years, but under Marsch the Bayern Munich man has predominantly been used at the back and has been excellent. However, another injury setback, against Paris St-Germain in the Champions League semi-final second leg – his third in the past three months – has put his participation for the opening game against Bosnia and Herzegovina in doubt. He has started 12 of 29 internationals in the Marsch-era at the time of writing. One to Watch Few players have received more work and attention from his national coach than the midfielder Ismaël Koné, who was dropped during the Copa América as he struggled to make an impact. Since then he has been excellent for Sassuolo in Serie A and has turned into a dynamic box-to-box midfielder for Marsch, learning valuable lessons defensively in Italy, where his discipline and tactical concentration has improved significantly. Expected to start next to the excellent Stephen Eustáquio in a key double-pivot tandem for Canada. Unsung Hero Norwich's Ali Ahmed has become a favourite of Marsch's because of his selfless work on the pitch. Ahmed is asked to lead the press on the left wing, often cutting inside to increase the midfield numbers and bring intensity and energy off the ball. One of the reasons Marsch has not deployed Davies further forward is because he views his team without the ball more than with it and in that vision the former Vancouver Whitecaps man is crucial. Probable Starting XI Canada's likely formation for the World Cup matches will be based on the 4-4-2 system that Marsch has consistently employed, with specific attention to defensive structure and pressing from the front. Fan Expectations Canada is ready to host the world, but the attention is more on this team than other games happening in the country. Being the only side to start on the east coast and move directly to the west coast allows fans in Toronto and Vancouver to watch their team in the group stages. The supporters group The Voyageurs will lead the noise with their flags and chants of "Ooh, Ahh Canada". Canada is known for its cosmopolitan population and cultural diversity, with people from all over the world, and should benefit from playing three group opponents with relatively diverse fan bases.
#Canada #World Cup 2026 #Jesse Marsch
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World Wide May 28, 2026

US Strikes Bandar Abbas: Escalating Tensions in the Strait of Hormuz

The United States has carried out strikes near Bandar Abbas, Iran's strategically important port ci…
The US Strikes on Bandar Abbas The United States has carried out strikes near Bandar Abbas, the second attack in less than a week on Iran’s strategically important port city, escalating tensions around the Strait of Hormuz despite a fragile ceasefire that has been in place between Washington and Tehran since April 8. Details of the Attack Reuters and The Associated Press, quoting unnamed US officials, reported that US forces shot down four Iranian drones and struck a ground control station for drones on Wednesday in Bandar Abbas. The strikes followed explosions in Bandar Abbas on Tuesday. Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs accused Washington of violating the ceasefire through “aggressive acts” in Hormozgan province, where the port city is located. Significance of Bandar Abbas Bandar Abbas, home to key Iranian naval forces, occupies one of the most strategically sensitive positions in the Gulf. Its location on the Strait of Hormuz has made it central to both Iran’s military position and the wider confrontation with the US. Bandar Abbas lies on Iran’s southern coast, on the northern side of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow waterway linking the Gulf to the Gulf of Oman and Arabian Sea. The city had a population of more than 526,000 people at the time of Iran’s 2016 census. Military Significance Bandar Abbas is the headquarters of both Iran’s conventional navy and the naval arm of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). The conventional navy has used it as its base since 1977 when Iran moved much of its fleet from Khorramshahr at the western edge of Iran’s Gulf coastline, to Bandar Abbas, transforming the city into the country’s main southern naval command centre. According to the Middle East Institute, the IRGC navy later relocated its headquarters from Tehran to Bandar Abbas to improve operational control along the Strait of Hormuz. Economic Importance The Strait of Hormuz is not just a military chokepoint but also an economic lifeline. Analysts estimated that more than 90 percent of Iranian crude shipments transit through the strait. That makes Bandar Abbas and nearby Gulf infrastructure critical to government revenues, including the trade networks that help Iran circumvent sanctions, particularly by exporting oil to China. Impact on Peace Negotiations Diplomatic and military operations are unfolding simultaneously as Iran and the US have exchanged a volley of proposals and counterproposals for peace since the ceasefire began. “This is unfolding on parallel tracks. There is a military track and a negotiating track all unfolding at the same time,” said Samir Puri, a visiting lecturer in war studies at King’s College London. “The negotiators can only present the leverage they have from the field of battle.
#US #Iran #Bandar Abbas
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Tech May 28, 2026

The Shift in Enterprise AI: Why Operational Stability Matters

Enterprise organizations are not rejecting AI, but rather operational instability. Databricks' co-f…
The Lead Enterprise organizations are not rejecting AI. They are rejecting operational instability. This is the shift many founders still misunderstand — and it is becoming one of the defining realities separating enterprise AI companies that scale from the ones that stall after early momentum. The Event Details At TechCrunch Disrupt 2026, taking place October 13–15 at Moscone West in San Francisco, Arsalan Tavakoli-Shiraji, co-founder and SVP of field engineering at Databricks, will unpack that shift during his AI Stage session, “The Enterprise Isn’t Broken. Your Assumptions About It Are.” The Data Analysis The enterprise AI market is full of successful pilots that never became real deployments. Not because the technology failed. But because the organization could not absorb the operational consequences of adopting it. The Impact Analysis Now the reality founders need to face is that startup AI deals rarely die because the model underperformed. They die because the enterprise lost confidence in what the deployment would require. The AI startups gaining traction inside large organizations increasingly share one thing in common: They reduce uncertainty. The Prediction The startups that succeed in enterprise AI over the next several years may not necessarily be the ones with the most advanced models. They may be the ones that best understand how enterprises actually absorb change. That is the kind of operational pressure that Tavakoli-Shiraji and other speakers on the AI Stage at Disrupt will explore.
#Databricks #TechCrunch Disrupt 2026 #Enterprise AI
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