
Winx Colt To Attract Attention From Around The World At Inglis Easter In 2026

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South China Morning Post
18 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Hong Kong vow to grab Rugby World Cup spot and avoid repechage roller-coaster
Having the opportunity to qualify for a Rugby World Cup is not a new scenario for Hong Kong's men – being this close to the promised land is. Saturday's equation is frighteningly simple: beat South Korea in the final round of the Asia Rugby Emirates Men's Championship and they will be part of the 2027 tournament in Australia. It would be the first time the city's men had ever reached such heights, after the women did so in 2017. Given Hong Kong's utter domination of the competition since 2018, and their two emphatic victories this time around against the United Arab Emirates and Sri Lanka, they go into the game in Incheon as clear favourites, sitting first in the standings. Their hosts, in contrast, have been less than convincing in narrowly beating Sri Lanka in Colombo and conspiring to lose at home to the UAE. Ben Axten-Burrett (with ball) and his Hong Kong teammates during training. Photo: Jonathan Wong Still, just three points separate them from the top of the table, and the Koreans could yet snatch a qualifying berth that has had Hong Kong's name on it almost from the moment World Rugby expanded the global tournament to 24 teams and assigned Asia an extra spot. Defeat would not be the end; it would just send Hong Kong down a familiar road, to a third repechage tournament in seven years. It is a journey Ben Axten-Burrett has been on before and would happily avoid.


The Standard
3 days ago
- The Standard
Winx Colt To Attract Attention From Around The World At Inglis Easter In 2026
The foal out of the champion mare Winx and by the former champion sire Snitzel will attract plenty of attention when he is offered at public auction in March (INGLIS)


South China Morning Post
3 days ago
- South China Morning Post
Australian rapper threatens trademark lawsuit against Allday Project, says K-pop ‘sucks'
Australian rapper Allday, whose real name is Tomas Henry Gaynor, has threatened legal action against K-pop band Allday Project, claiming trademark infringement and dismissing much of the genre as 's***'. Advertisement In a social media post on Tuesday, the rapper shared a screenshot of a news article about the group, defending his ownership of his name and taking a swipe at K-pop. 'People keep asking me about this,' he wrote. 'I have a trademark on the name Allday. Maybe I don't have 20 billion streams like that K-pop s*** which mostly sucks by the way. But I do exist and own the trademark to my name. Prepare for the greatest legal battle of all time.' According to The Music, an Australian music outlet, the rapper registered the trademark for his stage name in Australia in June 2021. The filing reportedly covers digital music, recordings, vinyl, merchandise, live entertainment and related content. He said that the trademark extends to the United States. Despite his sweeping insults, Gaynor followed up with a video offering a bizarre concession on Saturday, stating that he would drop the lawsuit if the label responded by adding him in the group line-up. Advertisement 'If I can be in the band, Allday Project, I will drop my lawsuit, which I'm definitely going to win, by the way,' he said in the video. 'And that guy called Tarzzan has to be kicked out of the band. I want to be the main guy,' he added.