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Manchester City stop the rot with victory at Leicester

Manchester City’s Erling Haaland, right, celebrates with Savinho after scoring his side’s second goal during the English Premier League match between Leicester City and Manchester City at King Power stadium in Leicester. (AP)
Manchester City’s Erling Haaland, right, celebrates with Savinho after scoring his side’s second goal during the English Premier League match between Leicester City and Manchester City at King Power stadium in Leicester. (AP)
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Updated 29 December 2024

Manchester City stop the rot with victory at Leicester

Manchester City stop the rot with victory at Leicester
  • Savinho and Erling Haaland struck either side of half-time
  • City ended a run of eight away games without a win

LEICESTER: Manchester City provided Pep Guardiola some relief with a 2-0 victory at Leicester to secure just a second win in 14 games for the crisis-hit English champions on Sunday.
Savinho and Erling Haaland struck either side of half-time as City ended a run of eight away games without a win.
The performance was still far from the standards that Guardiola’s side have set in winning an unprecedented four consecutive English top-flight titles.
But the effusive celebrations of Haaland’s header 16 minutes from time showed that three points was all that mattered for the visitors to at least temporarily halt their remarkable slump.
Victory lifts City up to fifth but they are still 11 points behind leaders Liverpool, who have two games in hand.
Defeat leaves Leicester still rooted in the bottom three.
Guardiola made just one change from the 1-1 Boxing Day draw against Everton as Kevin De Bruyne replaced his Belgian international colleague Jeremy Doku.
De Bruyne’s fitness struggles have played a part in City’s slump and he immediately showed what Guardiola’s men have been missing for most of the season.
Rico Lewis picked out De Bruyne, who cushioned a cross into the path of Haaland but his low effort was well saved by Leicester’s stand-in goalkeeper Jakub Stolarczyk.
Leicester have now lost their last four games after a bright start to Ruud van Nistelrooy’s reign.
The Foxes were left to rue not taking their chances to inflict more misery on a City side still showing a clear lack of confidence.
Any time the home side crossed into City territory in the first half they appeared a major threat.
Jamie Vardy would surely have won a penalty had he not strayed offside before being brought down by Stefan Ortega, while James Justin’s header hit the post after a goalmouth scramble.
City, though, got the crucial opening goal on 21 minutes.
Stolarczyk should have done better than to parry Phil Foden’s long-range effort into the path of Savinho, who swept the rebound into the roof of the net for his first City goal.
Chances continued to come and go for Leicester early in the second half.
Justin should have levelled but his mishit finish from close range allowed Manuel Akanji to clear off the line.
Vardy then had the biggest chance to level when he prodded over Stephy Mavididi’s brilliant in-swinging cross.
However, they were hit by a City sucker punch to end the defending champions’ miserable run on the road.
Savinho was the creator this time as his cross perfectly picked out Haaland, who powered home his 19th of the season ending his four-game goal drought.


Manny Pacquiao hints at possible rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Manny Pacquiao hints at possible rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr.
Updated 15 sec ago

Manny Pacquiao hints at possible rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr.

Manny Pacquiao hints at possible rematch with Floyd Mayweather Jr.
  • Pacquiao lost to Mayweather in 2015 in a bout that had been billed as the “fight of century,” but he later disclosed he’d been hampered by a shoulder injury
  • Pacquiao initially retired in 2021 with a record of 62-8-2 with 39 KOs, fighting in some of the biggest blockbusters of the 2000s

MANILA: Manny Pacquiao has hinted a rematch of his 2015 blockbuster with Floyd Mayweather Jr. could be on the cards next year.
“Right now we have a lot of negotiations about my next fight — there’s a possible rematch with Floyd Mayweather,” Pacquiao told a news conference Wednesday. “There’s a lot of ongoing negotiations right now, so it’s hard to plan what fight I’m going to post. I’m waiting for the final negotiation.”
A world champion in eight divisions from flyweight to super welterweight, Pacquiao was enshrined in the International Boxing Hall of Fame in June.
A month later, he emerged from retirement and fell just short of regaining a title at the age of 46, with Mario Barrios retaining the WBC welterweight championship after a majority draw.
Pacquiao initially retired in 2021 with a record of 62-8-2 with 39 KOs, fighting in some of the biggest blockbusters of the 2000s. He said he’d always sought the toughest opponents so he could continue 
testing himself.
He also served his country as a senator from 2016-22.
Pacquiao lost to Mayweather in 2015 in a bout that had been billed as the “fight of century,” but he later disclosed he’d been hampered by a shoulder injury.
“I’d love to have another fight, a rematch with Floyd Mayweather,” Pacquiao said. “So I hope that in the negotiations, we can understand each other and we can negotiate well.”
Mayweather, 48, could be in for a busy 2026.
CSI Sports, the live boxing production company, last month announced an exhibition between unbeaten Mayweather and Mike Tyson next year. No date or site was provided in the announcement.
In the meantime, Pacquiao will be focusing on the next generation.
His son, Jimuel Pacquiao, will make his pro debut against American Brendan Lally on Nov. 29 in California.
“I’m excited, but I’m worried about my son,” the former senator said. “He started late ... but that is his passion, so I will support him. I’m praying for him for a safe fight.”
 


Drange, Reiterer, Hawair earn Moto2 victories in Qatar

Drange, Reiterer, Hawair earn Moto2 victories in Qatar
Updated 8 min 41 sec ago

Drange, Reiterer, Hawair earn Moto2 victories in Qatar

Drange, Reiterer, Hawair earn Moto2 victories in Qatar
  • A flying Benedicte Drange stormed through the Ski Ladies GP1 field to snatch a vital victory 

The second of the Ski Ladies GP1, Ski Division GP1 and Runabout GP2 Asian Continental Championship Motos and the first of the Runabout GP1 Motos for the Old Doha Port Grand Prix of Qatar were held in punishing heat on Friday afternoon.

A flying Benedicte Drange stormed through the Ski Ladies GP1 field to snatch a vital victory in the second of the Motos. But second-placed Estelle Poret heads into the final heat on Saturday with a 15-point lead in the World Championship over defending champion Jasmiin Ypraus. 
Drange said: “In Moto 1, I had the lead and then my fuel pump broke. I was full speed on the stretch and it broke. I did not finish and it was a heartbreak because I was going for a title. I thought to myself, I will start as nine or 10 in Moto 2 and the championship is not on the line anymore. I needed to bring back my joy of racing. When I had a championship, it was too much pressure. I don’t enjoy it. I went out had fun, did the best I could and had a brilliant start. I swept past half the field and passed Jasmiin on the first lap. Then I took Estelle and Jessica (Chavanne). It was probably the best race I have done in my career. I am super happy and dedicate this victory to my team and my mechanics.”
Veteran Kevin Reiterer stormed through to earn Moto 2 success in Ski GP1 after pole-sitter and Moto 1 winner Quinten Bossche shut down on the opening lap and was later disqualified for a course infringement. Third place for Denmark’s Oliver Koch Hansen gave him an 18-point lead over Jéremy Poret to take into the final Moto on Saturday. 
Reiterer said: “This morning I thought it was going to be easier than yesterday but it was up and down like crazy. We had rollers coming in from boats that we weren’t expecting on the straights. We were just taking off. It was really rough, one of the roughest and hardest Motos I have ever done. I got off to an okay start and then Quinten’s boat shut off and he fell back. I tried to pace myself, save some energy and put in some good laps if there was a fight later. Five to seven seconds was a good gap so that you don’t have to worry in the splits.”
François Medori headed into the opening Runabout GP1 Moto with a 16-point World Championship advantage over Jéremy Perez but engine issues sidelined the Corsican after he had passed Yousef Al-Abdulrazzaq to take the Moto lead. The Kuwaiti regained the advantage to win the Moto only to lose out to Perez near the finish. The Frenchman now takes a nine-point lead over Medori into the final Moto. 
The triumphant Perez said: “I feel really good. It was a really difficult race. I push and push and György passed me and I passed him again om the last corner. I am happy to win. François was faster than me but we will see. The strategy now will be to get a good start in Moto 2 and try to push and not to lose places. I know that I need to finish four or five so I will manage my race.”
Emirati Amer Hawair clinched a lights-to-flag second victory in the Runabout GP2 category to put him in a strong position to seal the title at the final race on Saturday.

Drange flies to Ski Ladies GP1 Moto 2 success 
Moto 1 winner Estelle Poret knew that a top finish would put her in a superb position to claim the world title on Saturday. She lined up on pole ahead of Naomi Benini, Jasmiin Ypraus, Jessica Chavanne, River Varner and Virginie Morlaes. The cruel engine problem in Moto 1 had pushed title contender Benedicte Drange to the rear of the 10-boat field. 
Chavanne stormed through to get the hole shot and took the outside split ahead of Poret, Varner, Drange, Ypraus, Benini, Morlaes, Sofie Borgström, Emy Garcia and Janina Johansson. Chavanne maintained her lead through the opening lap but Drange managed to pass Poret and take second position, although, as long as Poret finished the two remaining Motos, Drange was helpless in her quest for the title. 
Drange held on to nail the Moto win by 2.398 seconds and picked up 25 invaluable championship points.
Poret passed Chavanne to finish second and a resurgent Ypraus snatched third from Chavanne to finish ahead of Benini, Garcia, Varner, Morlaes and Borgström. 
Varner then incurred a two-lap penalty for course cutting and Benini was docked 40 seconds for lane indiscipline. Benini finished fifth ahead of Morlaes, Borgström and Varner.


Five storylines to follow at the 2025 WTA Finals in Riyadh

Five storylines to follow at the 2025 WTA Finals in Riyadh
Updated 21 min 33 sec ago

Five storylines to follow at the 2025 WTA Finals in Riyadh

Five storylines to follow at the 2025 WTA Finals in Riyadh
  • Aryna Sabalenka is the top seed and headlines the Stephanie Graf Group
  • The closest Sabalenka came to winning the WTA Finals title in any of her previous four appearances was in 2022

RIYADH: The WTA Finals are back in Riyadh for a second straight year, with the top eight women of the tour ready to do battle one last time this season.
Taking place at King Saud University Indoor Arena from November 1 to 8, the world’s best players are split into two groups of four. They will go through a round-robin stage, with the top two in each group advancing to Friday’s semifinals.
Aryna Sabalenka is the top seed and headlines the Stephanie Graf Group alongside defending champion Coco Gauff, Jessica Pegula, and Jasmine Paolini, while second-seeded Iga Swiatek is in the Serena Williams Group with Madison Keys, Elena Rybakina and Amanda Anismova.
Seven of the eight players spoke to the press on Friday, with Paolini forced to skip her media duties citing illness. The Italian has qualified for the Finals in singles and doubles for a second consecutive season.
Here are the main talking points surrounding this year’s season finale.
Sabalenka chasing maiden Finals crown
The closest Sabalenka came to winning the WTA Finals title in any of her previous four appearances was in 2022, when she was the runner-up to Caroline Garcia in Fort Worth, Texas.
This year, she arrives in Riyadh on the back of an impressive campaign that saw her scoop four titles from eight finals reached.
She added a fourth Grand Slam trophy to her cabinet at the US Open and spent the last two weeks practicing in Dubai in preparation for her last tournament of the year in Riyadh.
Sabalenka has spoken at length about the lessons learned from her two final losses at this year’s Australian Open and Roland Garros, in which she succumbed to her emotions and frustrations.
She vindicated herself at the US Open and says she has started adopting a calmer approach when it comes to those big matches.
“When you just lose control completely, it’s not going to help you. I think that was my main lesson, no matter what, stay in control,” she told reporters in Riyadh on Friday ahead of her Sunday opener against Jasmine Paolini.
“Having those finals, having that experience, definitely helped me to stay in control at the US Open. Every time I would remember those two matches, I was like, ‘Okay, there is no chance I’m going to lose control over my emotions this time’. That experience really helped me in that final at the US Open.”
Sabalenka has secured the year-end No.1 ranking for a second consecutive year and is hoping she can finally unlock the WTA Finals puzzle.
“I think before I was thinking too much about the round-robin matches,” she explained.
“I would win a couple matches, then it was really tricky for me to play full in the third one knowing I was most likely going to qualify to the semis. That was tricky.
“I think the goal is just to completely forget about round-robin and just play like a tournament, like every match matters and you have to go and fight and not waste your energy of, like, thinking, counting, doing this math situation.”
Swiatek back on solid ground
It has also been a season of learnings for Swiatek, who had to deal with the emotional aftermath of her positive anti-doping test that resulted from ingesting a contaminated sleeping aid.
The Polish world No.2 was cleared of wrongdoing and merely served a one-month suspension but the whole ordeal took its toll on her and it affected her mindset and results.
With the help of her coach Wim Fissette, whom she hired toward the end of last season, Swiatek made significant improvements to her serve and her game on faster surfaces which finally paid off during the summer.
On her least favorite surface, Swiatek captured a sixth Grand Slam at Wimbledon and she added silverware to her resume on the hard courts of Cincinnati and Seoul.
“I had some challenges this year that really were kind of new and I needed to adjust to them a little bit more,” said the 24-year-old.
“Also I think it was the first year when I didn’t feel like I’m still young. That was also a different feeling. Overall I think winning Wimbledon made this season already super special and amazing. I would just put it over anything else, I would say.
“It was a tricky season, but at the end I can say a good one.”
Swiatek is making a fifth consecutive WTA Finals appearance and will commence her campaign on Saturday against Australian Open champion Keys.
Gauff eyeing repeat
No player has successfully defended her WTA Finals title since Serena Williams completed a threepeat in 2014.
Gauff will be looking to change that this week in Riyadh.
The reigning Roland Garros champion beat the world’s top two, Sabalenka and Swiatek, en route to the trophy in the Kingdom last year and will face stiff competition in her attempt to retain her crown.
The 21-year-old built some much-needed momentum by making the semifinals in Beijing and winning the WTA 1000 tournament in Wuhan in within the last few weeks and can rely on her experience of playing well in Riyadh’s altitude from 12 months ago.
Asked why she thinks this tournament has seen no repeat champions within the last decade, Gauff said: “I think, a) it’s one of those tournaments you’re not guaranteed a spot in every year. Some people win and aren’t able to even qualify. B) It’s the top eight in the world, it’s very hard to I think win this tournament in general, let alone replicate it back-to-back years.
“But yeah, I’m not thinking about that. I really just want to focus on my first match ahead and take it one match at a time. I think that’s what I did last year. Going to try to keep that mindset.”
Americans form half the field
Of the eight singles players competing in this year’s season finale, four of them are American – a first occurrence since 2002.
Anisimova is the only WTA Finals debutante in the field, which includes her compatriots Gauff, Keys and Pegula.
“That’s crazy that half of us are Americans,” said Anisimova, who reached the Wimbledon and US Open finals this season.
“It’s super exciting for US tennis. I mean, we’ve done really well this year. I’m just really proud of myself and the other girls. Yeah, hopefully we can keep going. Definitely makes us represent our country well. I think we’re doing a great job.”
Rybakina ready for ‘one last push’
In a season that saw her play without her coach Stefano Vukov as he served a suspension for breaking the WTA Code of Conduct, Rybakina punched her ticket to the WTA Finals at the very last possible moment by winning the title in Ningbo and reaching the semifinals in Tokyo within the last two weeks.
“Of course, it’s a great result because when I came to Asia, I knew of course there is still a lot of players who can qualify,” said Rybakina, who will face Anisimova in her opener on Saturday.
“Then when just last few tournaments left, of course I knew that I need to win a lot of matches in a row. You never know what’s going to happen each day. I tried to do my best. I played against tough opponents, the ones I lost before. I’m pretty glad that last few weeks went successful for me.
“Happy to be here. Ready to make last push this week.”
The former Wimbledon champion has made a change to her management set-up, forming her own company to represent herself, and says she feels more in control of her career and has more transparency working with her inner circle.
“It’s always not easy to find good people to set up the team. I had experiences with agencies. Since I’m on tour for quite a while, I understand what I need for myself in the future. This is what I’m trying to do,” she added.


Mahindra Racing dominate preseason Formula E testing in Valencia

Mahindra Racing dominate preseason Formula E testing in Valencia
Updated 42 min 20 sec ago

Mahindra Racing dominate preseason Formula E testing in Valencia

Mahindra Racing dominate preseason Formula E testing in Valencia
  • Edoardo Mortara tops 2 of 6 sessions and logs fastest lap on the 2-mile circuit in a time of 1:21.493, while teammate Nyck de Vries is 5th-fastest, less than 0.1 second behind
  • In the women’s test on Friday, Mahindra fielded F1 Academy star Chloe Chambers, who topped all three test sessions, and the overall test with a time of 1:22.767

LONDON: Mahindra Racing set the pace during preseason testing for the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship, and the annual women’s test, at Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia this week, sending a strong signal ahead of season 12.

The annual fall outing in Spain marked the final chance for the 10 teams to validate their off-season development and fine-tune their cars for the start of the new campaign on Dec. 6 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

For Mahindra it was another statement of intent, after a breakthrough season last year under CEO and Team Principal Frederic Bertrand in which the team finished fourth out of 11, while Nyck de Vries and Edoardo Mortara took eighth and ninth spots respectively in the drivers’ championship.

The team’s new Mahindra M12Electro, an evolution of the car that last season scored five podiums for de Vries and Mortara, immediately proved competitive.

Mortara topped two of the six individual sessions, finishing the week fastest overall with a time of 1 minute 21.493 seconds around the 2-mile circuit, while de Vries was fifth, less than a tenth of a second off his teammate’s benchmark. Mortara also won Tuesday’s race simulation, with de Vries third.

“I’m happy with how the test has gone,” Mortara said. “It’s given us the opportunity to run through different testing programs, and plenty of data to take away and analyze. The car feels competitive; we have definitely made some improvements.

“It’s difficult to know what everybody else has done but we are happy and encouraged with the work that we’ve done and now we look forward to starting the season in Sao Paulo.”

De Vries said: “Overall, we can be pleased with this week in Valencia. We were able to get through our program, validate the package we will start the season with, and collect plenty of data to review in the coming weeks to keep our development cycle going.”

Noting that it was important not to get too carried away with testing, he added: “Everybody knows there are a lot of different variables at play, but the performance we’ve had this week is encouraging and we’re going to Sao Paulo with the aim of continuing to build on last season.

“In a championship as close as Formula E, executing a strong weekend makes all the difference, and this test has given us the perfect opportunity, with a consistent core team, to go through our final preparations and make sure we arrive in the best possible shape.”

On Friday, the spotlight shifted to the next generation of female drivers in the women’s test. Mahindra fielded F1 Academy star Chloe Chambers, who topped all three sessions, and the overall test with a time of 1 minute 22.767 seconds, just 1.3 seconds off Mortara’s fastest lap. She shaved eight-tenths of a second off her time between sessions, showing rapid on-track progress.

“Overall, it was a very positive day,” Chambers said. “I think I made a lot of improvements from last year’s women’s test, in terms of my driving and driving to what is needed for this car to make it go fast.

“We worked a lot on one-lap pace, and I was happy to improve my driving every time I got in the car. It was definitely a good test overall and I’ve really enjoyed this experience, working with Mahindra Racing.”

With 618 laps under the team’s belt over the course of the week, Mahindra now returns to its base in Banbury, England, to analyze the data they generated and conclude their preparations for the season opener in a little over a month.

For Bertrand it will be his fourth season at the helm, and he said: “Of course, it’s always nice to be at the top of the timesheets, but the main accomplishment from testing this week is that we’ve been able to ratify and validate our development work over the summer, and confirm the steps forward we feel we have taken with the new Mahindra M12Electro.

“A huge thanks to Nyck, Edo, Chloe and the whole team for their efforts; I’m excited for the season to get underway.”


Marcos Leonardo strike sees Al-Hilal edge Al-Shabab in SPL

Marcos Leonardo strike sees Al-Hilal edge Al-Shabab in SPL
Updated 31 October 2025

Marcos Leonardo strike sees Al-Hilal edge Al-Shabab in SPL

Marcos Leonardo strike sees Al-Hilal edge Al-Shabab in SPL
  • The win extends Al-Hilal’s unbeaten October run to 10 league games, with clean sheets in their last five

RIYADH: Marcos Leonardo’s first-half goal secured a narrow 1-0 win for Al-Hilal over Al-Shabab, lifting them to second in the Saudi Pro League table.

Al-Hilal dominated early, with Ruben Neves firing wide in the opening minutes and seeing a free-kick hit the roof of the net, before Leonardo finished a slick team move in the 36th minute to give the visitors the lead.

The second half saw few clear chances, with Moteb Al-Harbi curling a long-range effort over and both sides struggling to break through.

Late drama came when Kalidou Koulibaly was sent off after a VAR review for a studs-up challenge on Marcelo Grohe, leaving Al-Hilal to defend the final 12 minutes with 10 men.

Al-Hilal goalkeeper Yassine Bounou kept a clean sheet with a crucial stoppage-time save from Wesley Hoedt, completing a match in which only five shots on target were recorded.

The win extends Al-Hilal’s unbeaten October run to 10 league games, with clean sheets in their last five.

Elsewhere on Friday, Al-Ettifaq and Al-Hazem played out a 2-2 draw in Dammam, while Al-Akhdoud beat Al-Najma Saudi 2-1.