
Ledecky wins 800m freestyle world title over Pallister and McIntosh in thriller
Ledecky touched the wall in a championship-record 8min 05.62sec, ahead of Australia's Lani Pallister (8:05.98) and Canada's McIntosh (8:07.29).
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Daily Mail
27 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
See why footy fans are accusing NRL trainer of the lowest act of the season: 'Ban him for a year!'
Penrith Panthers trainer Corey Bocking has been accused of robbing the Gold Coast Titans of a win over his team with an act of 'pathetic sportsmanship' on Saturday. The Titans had scored five tries in 25 minutes to take a 26-24 lead late in regular time when Bocking ran in front of Gold Coast kicker Jayden Campbell as he attempted a conversion. Campbell missed the kick after having to re-set himself. Had he converted, the score would have been 28-24 with just four minutes to play. Instead, Penrith star Nathan Cleary was able to boot a two-point conversion in the last minute of regular time to take the match to golden point, with his teammate Blaze Talagi scoring a try in extra time to seal the 30-26 win. To add insult to injury, footage from Fox Sports' coverage of the match showed Bocking appearing to smile as he ran past Campbell after ruining his preparation for the shot at goal. Afterwards, Titans coach Des Hasler said he didn't know whether the incident cost his team the game - but fans had no such doubts. Furious fans like this one vented their fury on social media after the Panthers won the match in extra time, with many saying the trainer robbed the Titans of a win 'Titans robbed. Panthers trainer running right in front of Jayden Campbell as he's about to kick is disgusting. Panthers should be DQ'd from that result for clear blatant interference,' one wrote on X. 'Ban the trainer for 12 months, fine Penrith, and dock them the two competition points. Absolutely pathetic sportsmanship and it's not the first time they've done it. Send a clear message that it won't be tolerated,' another added. 'Whatever happens here, the Titans have been absolutely dudded. Fox will wax lyrical about Cleary, but Campbell should have had a conversion attempt from in front,' a third said. 'Great kick by Cleary but Penrith trainer running across the conversion line like he did negates anything from this game. He knew what he was doing, no excuses,' added another. Asked about the incident after the match, Hasler said, 'Did it cost us the game? I don't know. 'He will get breached. That's the only thing that's going to come out of it.' Penrith coach Ivan Cleary insisted that Bocking's actions were not deliberate. 'He was in the wrong place at the wrong time. We had a sub and I changed it at the last minute,' he said. 'He was trying to communicate with the bench for a late change. It was an honest mistake. He apologised straight away.' Another Penrith trainer was caught in an underhanded act earlier this year. Shane Elford was busted wetting the football in Penrith's 30-all draw with North Queensland in May, in an attempt to make the ball harder to handle for the opposition just before the Panthers kicked off. A video taken by a fan showed Elford pouring water from a bottle onto the Steeden seconds before Dylan Edwards put boot to ball. Cowboys coach Todd Payten said his coaching staff had spotted the trainer doing the same thing throughout the contest. 'He did it before every kick-off,' Payten said. The win over the Titans gave the Panthers an eighth consecutive victory to leave the four-time defending premiers on 29 competition points, just one behind the fourth-placed Warriors. In an ominous omen, Penrith have made the grand final on all five occasions (2003 and 2020-2024) they have previously won eight in a row. They were cruising at halftime but Gold Coast had other ideas. Brimson sent centre Brian Kelly in before Campbell intercepted a Cleary pass to race 90m and get the 16th-placed Titans on the board. Campbell was at it again to step and weave his way through and hooker Sam Verrills dived over from dummy-half. Minutes later Phil Sami finished off a Brimson bust and the lead had been cut to two. Sami was in again after Penrith muffed a Kieran Foran bomb and Gold Coast led with six minutes to play. 'I thought they showed a lot of character,' Hasler said.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Alexei Popyrin rallies to stun Holger Rune and keep Canadian title defence alive
Defending champion Alexei Popyrin beat fifth-seeded Holger Rune of Denmark 4-6, 6-2, 6-3 on Saturday night to reach the National Bank Open quarter-finals. The Australian extended his winning streak at the Canadian ATP Masters 1000 to nine matches after a breakthrough title at the event last year. Popyrin, seeded 18th, will face the winner of the late match between top-seeded Alexander Zverev of Germany and No 14 Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina. Zverev, ranked third in the world, ended up the top seed with top-ranked Jannik Sinner – the 2023 winner – and No 2 Carlos Alcaraz skipping the hard-court event that ends Thursday. World No 5 Jack Draper and No 6 Novak Djokovic also sat out. Alex Michelsen reached the quarter-finals in the afternoon, topping fellow American Learner Tien 6-3, 6-3. Michelsen will face 11th-seeded Karen Khachanov of Russia, a 6-4, 7-5 winner over eighth-seeded Casper Ruud of Norway. Sign up to Australia Sport Get a daily roundup of the latest sports news, features and comment from our Australian sports desk after newsletter promotion More to follow …


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Footy coach Andy Farrell erupts as his British and Irish Lions players are busted in a shocking act in the dressing room on live TV
British and Irish Lions coach Andy Farrell has slammed any suggestions of player complacency as 'completely, utter rubbish' in the aftermath of a 'bittersweet' third-Test loss to the Wallabies. While Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt had been alert to the possibility of a lightning break and said they had a 'plan' to deal with it as wild weather struck, the television broadcast showed Lions players on their phones in the change rooms during a 38-minute delay of the eventual 22-12 defeat in Sydney. Players had been ordered off the field due to lightning striking near Accor Stadium early in the second half, when the Lions were trailing 8-0. Both sides were given 10 minutes to warm up, with the Wallabies shooting out to a 15-0 lead shortly after play resumed. Grilled by the critical British press to clarify the procedures surrounding the lightning delay, Farrell disputed any suggestions his players had failed to use the time productively. 'That's completely utter rubbish. Utter rubbish,' Farrell said. 'You don't know until you know, and when you do know, then you have to agree that the warm-up time allocated is going to be acceptable to both teams. 'We agreed on 10 minutes for the warm-up, and through our advice from our experts in that field, we only made the call to come out five minutes before and stay there so that we'd be ready to go.' Farrell's Wallabies counterpart Schmidt said he had wanted his players to remain connected during the delay. 'We had been warned that there might be lightning, so we had a little bit of a plan,' Schmidt said. 'We wanted to make sure that players kept moving, so we had different guys rotating on the bikes. 'We had four balls in the change room that we were just throwing around, just so they could stay connected.' The Wallabies emerged the better side following the delay, with Farrell labelling winger Max Jorgensen's stunning 50-metre runaway try in the 55th minute as 'the try that broke the camel's back'. 'I suppose what came off the back of that is that Australia hit the ground running and thoroughly deserved their win,' Farrell said. 'Rigor mortis was setting in at one stage there for the lads. 'Anyway, I suppose that's what you come to expect with a schedule like a Lions schedule, so we've seen it all now, haven't we?' A serious head knock to Lions lock James Ryan had soured the opening minutes of the second half, just minutes before the lightning delay. Ryan had to be stretchered off after copping an accidental knee to the head from Will Skelton, but Farrell confirmed the 29-year-old was in 'good spirits'. 'He's up and talking. He was out there for a good few minutes,' Farrell said. 'But he's back up in good spirits, so hopefully he's going to be fine.' Lions lock Tadhg Beirne, named player of the series, could only describe the loss as a 'bittersweet moment'. 'We lost tonight, which is obviously a bit crap for us,' Beirne said. 'But as "Faz" says, we'll get over that because at the end of the day, we still won the series. 'It's the last time we'll be in that change room together as a group, and I suppose that's the bitter part, that we won't get that moment again.'