Indian cricket captain Rohit Sharma welcomes new-born son but set to miss Perth Test
Indian cricket captain Rohit Sharma welcomes new-born son but set to miss Perth Test
Indian captain Rohit Sharma has reportedly been set to miss the first Test against Australia as the visitor’s top order continues to remain a mystery.
Reports out of India say that Sharma, 37, will remain in Mumbai after he and his wife welcomed their second child on Friday night.
The destructive top-order batter is likely to be available for the second Test in Adelaide which starts on December 6.
Sharma’s absence is a big ***** for the touring side, who are also set to be without young star Shubman Gill after he reportedly broke his thumb at a training session on Saturday in Perth.
Fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah will almost certainly captain the Indian side in Sharma’s absence.
Meanwhile, veteran KL Rahul is also in doubt after he took a ***** to the elbow, but he was seen training on Sunday just days out from the series opener.
Rahul will likely open the batting alongside exciting youngster Yashasvi Jaiswal, while wicketkeeper Rishabh Pant could be pulled up the order after a solid series in the loss to New Zealand last month.
It could open the door for Abhimanyu Easwaran to make his Test debut, with the 29-year-old one of only nine specialty batters named in the squad.
The 29-year-old averages nearly 48.87 from 101 first-class games, including 27 centuries, but he struggled in two games for India A, scoring 36 runs from four innings.
Sharma is yet to dominate Australia in the longest format, scoring only one century from 12 Tests, while he averages only 31.38 in the country from just 14 innings with three half-centuries.
Gill averages more than 50 in Australia after making his debut at the MCG in the 2020 Boxing Day Test, scoring two half-centuries in six innings.
Their absence puts significant pressure on superstar Virat Kohli, who scored a Test century in his only match at Perth Stadium.
Kohli has scored an incredible six Test centuries in 13 matches in Australia with the last of them an incredible 123 in the first innings of a 146-run loss back in December 2018.
Camera IconIndian cricket player Rohit Sharma Credit: @rohitsharma45/Instagram
The former skipper’s decline has been publicly debated, with Kohli scoring only two Test centuries in the past five years and has passed 50 only twice in his last 12 innings.
In the shock three-Test series loss to New Zealand, Kohli averaged only 15.50 with one half century and five scores 17 or lower.
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What a Super Micro Computer delisting would mean for shareholders
What a Super Micro Computer delisting would mean for shareholders
Super Micro Computer (SMCI) is facing a potential delisting from the Nasdaq. The company has until November 16th to file its 10-K and 10-Q reports or submit a plan to the Nasdaq to regain compliance.
Yahoo Finance’s Rachelle Akuffo explains what this means for holders of the stock.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Wealth!
This post was written by Cheyenne Reid
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Adrian Barich: Why do cyclists on the road have the capacity to inflame some driver’s emotions?
Adrian Barich: Why do cyclists on the road have the capacity to inflame some driver’s emotions?
I was driving down Perry Lakes Drive the other weekend. It was a beautiful Perth morning, and I was heading to City Beach for a swim.
It was pretty early, about 7am, and the weird thing was that despite the fact I wasn’t in a hurry and it was a Sunday, when I came upon a peloton of about 15-20 cyclists I still had to ****** the urge to get a bit ******.
You see, for at least part of the trip — I’d estimate about a kilometre — I had to sit behind the men in lycra and drop my speed by at least 20km an hour. And to really rub salt into the wound, some of the cyclists were riding two abreast and a few of the cheeky buggers were even three bikes across.
And guess what? Even when we turned left into Oceanic Drive, they did not immediately revert to single file; they had the temerity to take up almost a whole lane. Fortunately, there was a second one and I was able to move past them and arrive probably only two minutes later than I could have had they not been on the road.
Of course, being at least a partially evolved human being, I checked my emotions during this entire ordeal, taking a deep breath and pondering why the whole situation had me feeling so unfavourably towards my fellow man.
Why do cyclists on the road have the capacity to inflame some people’s emotions? Why is there a seemingly unending battle between motorists and cyclists, as one-sided a contest as the old Cowboys and Indians in a Western movie?
Drivers tend to think they own the road and if cyclists do not pay them enough respect, they can often get very ******.
I’d also say riding through Welshpool early in the morning, for example, is fraught with danger and generally not recommended as the trucks and heavy vehicles fill the roads.
This is all leading me to some of the theories being floated in certain circles as to why there is this perpetual conflict . . . and apparently it’s because cyclists are seen as a ********* that gets a free ride (so to speak).
According to one researcher, separating cars and bicycles into their own lanes perpetuates a form of historical domination that means drivers feel more entitled to the road even when there isn’t a bike lane. Some cycling activists have even likened the segregation to being a form of “infrastructural apartheid”.
Studies revealed that motorists and cyclists have distinct identities, involving both their sense of themselves and of the other group of road users. Even among cyclists, there was a widespread sense that cars are the “natural” vehicles of the road.
It all gets pretty complicated, so my suggestion is to just be kind to each other and keep some perspective. A shared code of conduct could even be worth a look.
I’ve also read about the “Idaho stop”, which permits cyclists in that US state to treat stop signs as give-way signs and roll through when the way is clear. Safety is the first concern, of course, but research has shown this small measure actually increases safety on the roads for both car drivers and cyclists.
But spare a thought for a cyclist I know who takes it upon himself to police the roads armed only with a camera on his helmet. He records any drivers who he considers to be breaking the law and sends the vision to ****** Stoppers (or so he reckons).
Maybe he’s exaggerating but the way he tells it, if he rides past you at a red light and you are in the driver’s seat checking your phone while you wait for the light to change, he’ll dob you in. He says he’s also caught people shaving, putting on make-up and even brushing their teeth while driving.
As my mum always says “no one likes snitches” but apparently this bloke has made a hobby out of it. Who knows, maybe he doesn’t really send his pictures to the police; perhaps he’s just trying to shame car drivers into obeying the road rules.
Clearly he’s brave, as I’m sure some car drivers wouldn’t take kindly to being filmed. But he says he’s saving lives and helping his fellow cyclists get justice on the road.
I don’t know what you think but I imagine some of you might consider him a bit misguided. Nice chap but that’s going a bit far etc.
But we need to also consider that he has apparently also provided plenty of evidence of people hooning or causing accidents.
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Penn State, football player sued after 6-year-old was injured by electric scooter on campus
Penn State, football player sued after 6-year-old was injured by electric scooter on campus
The father of a young boy who was injured in an electric scooter ****** at University Park filed a negligence lawsuit Tuesday against Penn State and the football player who hit him.
Shane Richard, of Union County, said in the lawsuit his son was seriously injured when hit about 6:10 p.m. Feb. 18 by an e-scooter operated by Penn State football freshman defensive tackle De’Andre Cook.
The child was walking in the crosswalk near 223 N. Burrowes Road when he was hit at what the filing described as a high rate of speed. Attorney Rich Godshall told the Centre Daily Times on Friday the child was walking with his parents when he was hit.
Cook is listed as 6 feet, 4 inches tall and 282 pounds. The child, who was 6 years old at the time, weighed 55 pounds, the filing said.
He was treated for two pelvic fractures, a broken foot and received four staples in his head, Godshall wrote in the filing. Godshall declined Friday to share an update on the child’s condition.
Cook pleaded guilty in March to two summary citations; he paid $238 in fines.
Penn State was accused in the lawsuit of violating its policy that bans e-scooters on campus by providing them only to student-athletes, something the lawsuit cast as “special favoritism.”
A Penn State spokesman declined comment Friday, citing the university’s policy against generally speaking publicly about ongoing litigation.
Electric scooters are considered motor-driven devices, which are banned from campus paths and roadways in most circumstances.
“Motor-driven devices that do not meet the PA Vehicle Code requirements for operation on a public highway are prohibited from use on university property,” Penn State’s official policy reads.
The lawsuit seeks more than $100,000. Cook has not appeared in a game this season for the Nittany Lions.
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Economists look to RBA minutes for clue on future rates
Economists look to RBA minutes for clue on future rates
Attention will turn to the Reserve Bank of Australia with the minutes from its last board meeting due as well as speeches by senior officials.
The central bank’s opinion of Thursday’s job figures will be of particular interest, with the October numbers a mixed bag.
While job creation underwhelmed, it was the first weaker figure after a long run of surprisingly strong employment growth.
That lower number was accompanied by a step down in the participation rate – the percentage of people either employed or on the job hunt – which kept the unemployment rate steady at 4.1 per cent, for the third month in a row.
The undercurrent of labour market resilience was enough to prompt National Australia Bank to push back its prediction for interest rate cuts from February to May.
The bank’s economists said there was little urgency for the RBA to pull the trigger on easing while the unemployment rate was so low and progress on inflation so gradual.
The first RBA communications will come on Monday from assistant governor Christopher Kent, who is due to deliver the Sir Leslie Melville Lecture in Canberra.
On Tuesday, the minutes from the last meeting will be released.
On Thursday, RBA governor Michele Bullock will deliver a speech to the Women in Payments Conference in Sydney.
The monthly employee earnings indicator and ****** state product numbers are the main releases of interest from the *********** Bureau of Statistics, both due on Wednesday.
Local investors will digest losses on Wall Street as the US markets reacted to cabinet picks by president-elect Donald Trump.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average on Friday fell 305.87 points, or 0.70 per cent, to 43,444.99, the S&P 500 lost 78.55 points, or 1.32 per cent, to 5,870.62 and the Nasdaq Composite dropped 427.53 points, or 2.24 per cent, to 18,680.12.
*********** futures fell 26 points, or 0.31 per cent, to 8296.
The benchmark S&P/ASX200 index finished Friday at the highs of the day, rising 61.2 points, or 0.74 per cent, to 8,285.2, while the broader All Ordinaries gained 59.1 points, or 0.7 per cent, to 8,539.0.
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The Fish You Might Want To Avoid Ordering If You See It On The Menu
The Fish You Might Want To Avoid Ordering If You See It On The Menu
Whether for the thrill or out of desperation, humans love taking the risk of eating venomous animals. Some will drink snake venom for recreational purposes, while people in Northern Mexico may add denatured venom to their alcohol. ********* cuisine includes fugu (pufferfish), which can be deadly if prepared wrong, while Americans have found their toxic love in the terrible yet delectable lionfish.
Eating lionfish requires the complete and precise removal of the venomous parts, and ******** to follow proper toxin-removal protocol can result in severe food poisoning. There’s always a risk in consumption even when the best seafood restaurants are cleaning and filleting them. The National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science found that overall, only 0.7% of lionfish contained dangerous toxins above FDA approval, but in “hot spots,” up to 53% had notable traces.
The reason you may want to avoid lionfish is because their toxins can cause ciguatera, a type of poisoning from reef fish that comes with a host of ****** symptoms. According to the Cleveland Clinic, ciguatera is incredibly hard to detect in humans, and the only way to know for sure is if the fish you consumed can be tested by a lab. There’s no antidote either. Ciguatera is not fatal, only unpleasant, but doctors can help patients manage their symptoms. In other words, it can be tricky for professionals to diagnose.
Read more: A Guide To Buying Salmon At The Grocery Store
Why People Eat Lionfish Despite The Risk
Lionfish in ocean – Ayman Shalaby / 500px
Lionfish are an invasive menace to U.S. waters. They’re indigenous to the Indo-Pacific region but reached America through the aquarium trade, where they were somehow released into the ocean. Unfortunately, they flourished through swift reproduction and wrecked native wildlife through their hunting habits. Few predators can consume lionfish — and humans are one of them.
Just as you would avoid eating fish with high mercury levels, lionfish pose a significant risk, so why do people still consume them? The NOAA encourages people to eat lionfish as a conservation effort. If the demand for them increased, then more lionfish would be fished and taken out of the reefs, which is more resourceful than just ******** them off. The downside is that fishermen are unable to meet demand to drastically lower lionfish populations because harvesting them is not economically feasible.
In order to get the funding to make lionfish catching a profitable venture, there has to be enough people who want to consume this food at a higher price. Research has suggested that some people are willing to pay more for lionfish if it means they’re helping the environment — especially when the food has a sweet buttery flavor. Sadly, the lionfish can be unsafe for us, and there are plenty of other tasty, low-mercury fish in the sea that people prefer.
Read the original article on Chowhound.
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Kim Heptinstall family ****** on against bid for half her estate by man who raided her superannuation
Kim Heptinstall family ****** on against bid for half her estate by man who raided her superannuation
Lawyers for the family of Kim Heptinstall have aired suspicions her partner Travis Barnard may have faked a Facebook page in an attempt to claim on her deceased estate.
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Taiwan, democracy, development are China’s ‘red lines’, Xi tells Biden
Taiwan, democracy, development are China’s ‘red lines’, Xi tells Biden
BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s President Xi Jinping told his U.S. counterpart Joe Biden that the issues of Taiwan, democracy, human rights and rights to development are “red lines” for China and not to be challenged, the official state media Xinhua said on Sunday.
Xi warned the ******* States not to get involved in bilateral disputes over islands and reefs in the South China Sea or “aid or abet the impulsion to make provocations” in that region, it said.
China and ******* States would roil or even see relations take a setback in rivalry with each other, but could make considerable progress by treating each other as partners and friends, Xi told Biden on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic forum summit in Peru, according to Xinhua.
(Reporting by Liz Lee and Beijing newsroom; Editing by William Mallard)
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RFK Jr., Hegseth and Gaetz Cabinet picks draw concern from lawmakers
RFK Jr., Hegseth and Gaetz Cabinet picks draw concern from lawmakers
RFK Jr., Hegseth and Gaetz Cabinet picks draw concern from lawmakers – CBS News
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President-elect Donald Trump on Saturday chose Denver-based fracking company CEO Chris Wright to be his Energy secretary. Ali Bauman reports on congressional reaction to some of his other picks, including Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Pete Hegseth and former Rep. Matt Gaetz.
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#RFK #Hegseth #Gaetz #Cabinet #picks #draw #concern #lawmakers
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Luxury lighthouse stays
Luxury lighthouse stays
Sandy Guy sheds some light on luxury getaways with a difference
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6 Indiana bands move on to semifinals at BOA Grand Nationals in Indianapolis
6 Indiana bands move on to semifinals at BOA Grand Nationals in Indianapolis
High school marching bands from throughout the country have spent the last two days performing in the Bands of America Grand National Championships prelims at Lucas Oil Stadium.
Six Indiana bands have advanced to the semifinals Saturday, each vying for a spot in the evening’s finals.
2024 BOA Grand Nationals: Here’s who made finals in Indianapolis
Which Indiana bands are in the semifinals at BOA Grand Nationals?What other marching bands made BOA Grand Nationals semifinals?
********* Fork High School, Utah
Archbishop Alter High School, Ohio
Argyle High School, Texas
Bartlett High School, Tennessee
Bourbon County High School, Kentucky
Bridgeland High School, Texas
Broken Arrow High School, Oklahoma
Cass High School, Georgia
Catawba Ridge High School, South Carolina
Cedar Park High School, Texas
Deer Creek High School, Oklahoma
Dobyns-Bennett High School, Tennessee
Franklin High School, Tennessee
Friendswood High School, Texas
Jenison High School, Michigan
Jenks High School, Oklahoma
Leander High School, Texas
Lincoln-Way Community High School, Illinois
Marian ********* High School, Illinois
Murray High School, Kentucky
Norwin High School, Pennsylvania
O’Fallon Township High School, Illinois
Prosper High School, Texas
Rockford High School, Michigan
Rosemount High School, Minnesota
Tarpon Springs High School, Florida
Union High School, Oklahoma
Walled Lake High School, Michigan
William Mason High School, Ohio
When is 2024 Bands of America Grand Nationals semifinals?
Semifinals take place Saturday starting at 7 a.m. Find out when your group performs on the organization’s website.
When is 2024 Bands of America Grand Nationals finals?
Finals are Saturday evening beginning at 7 p.m. Gates open at 6:30 p.m.
How to buy tickets to BOA Grand Nationals
Tickets may be purchased on-site at the Southeast Ticket Office of Lucas Oil Stadium. The ticket booth is cashless.
Tickets are also available for purchase through Ticketmaster at the links below:
Semi-finals on Saturday, Nov. 16
Finals on Saturday, Nov. 16.
Is Lucas Oil Stadium cashless?
Yes. Lucas Oil Stadium is a cashless venue, so if you want to purchase anything at concessions or buy your tickets at the gate, you will need to have a credit or debit card.
What type of bags are allowed at Lucas Oil Stadium?
Per Lucas Oil Stadium policy, only clear bags sized no larger than 12″ x 6″ x 12″ are permitted. Small clutch bags no larger than 4.5″ x 6.5″ are also permitted.
No regular purses, backpacks or other bags are permitted.
To view the Clear Bag Policy at Lucas Oil Stadium visit its website.
Where to park near Lucas Oil Stadium
A limited amount of spectator parking is available in Lot A north of the stadium and the South Lot of Lucas Oil Stadium. The cost for each of these lots is $20 per vehicle with no in/out privileges, according to the event website.
According to the event website, accessible parking spaces are in the South Lot of the stadium via the Missouri Street Gate 3 parking lot entrance. The cost for this lot is also $20 per vehicle with no in/out privileges. Parking spaces are available on a first-come, first-served basis.
A drop-off/pick-up location is available along Capitol Avenue outside of the Colts Team Store.
BOA recommends arriving early to allow for time to park, purchase tickets and enter the stadium ahead of the performances.
You can also visit downtownindy.org/explore/parking to view parking that is available downtown based on date, time, location and price. You can also pre-purchase parking ahead of the competition.
2024 BOA Grand Nationals full schedule
Here’s the full schedule for Thursday through Saturday. Click here to find performance times for all bands. Note that start times for Saturday events are subject to change, with times determined Friday evening after semifinals awards.
Thursday, Nov. 14: Prelims
6 a.m.: Ticket office opens
6:30 a.m.: East gate opens; expo opens
2023 BOA Grand Nationals results: Avon wins
Friday, Nov. 15: Prelims
6 a.m.: Ticket office opens
6:30 a.m.: East gate opens; expo opens
8:45 p.m. Preliminary competition concludes; exhibition performance by Missouri State University Pride Marching Band
9 p.m.: Special presentations and prelims awards
Saturday, Nov. 16: Semi-finals & Finals
6:30 a.m.: Ticket office opens
7 a.m.: Semi-finals performances begin
3 p.m.: Exhibition performance by The Ohio State University Marching Band
4:30 p.m.: Semi-finals competition ends; Exhibition performance by University of Michigan Marching Band
4:45 p.m.: Semi-finals awards ceremony; announcement of finalist bands
6:30 p.m.: North and East gates open
7 p.m.: Finals opening ceremony
8 p.m.: First finals performance
11:30 p.m.: Grand finale and awards
Can I livestream Bands of America Grand Nationals?
Music for All/Bands of America offers a livestream through Box5TV, with pricing options for all events or individual shows.
This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: BOA Grand Nationals 2024: Which Indiana bands made semifinals?
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AFLW 2024: Fremantle defender Ash Brazill admits Adelaide’s intensity caught them on the hop
AFLW 2024: Fremantle defender Ash Brazill admits Adelaide’s intensity caught them on the hop
Fremantle defender Ash Brazill says their 37-point, season-ending loss to Adelaide will serve as reminder of the level her side needs to play at in order to challenge for a premiership.
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Be careful what you wish for. Transgender athlete lawsuit a Pandora’s box | Opinion
Be careful what you wish for. Transgender athlete lawsuit a Pandora’s box | Opinion
The federal lawsuit sparked by San Jose State possibly having a transgender woman on its volleyball team ought to terrify everyone.
Not for any of the trumped-up “reasons” cited by the attorneys for Spartans co-captain Brooke Slusser and her co-plaintiffs. Regardless of what she, transphobic activist Riley Gaines and all these other “Save women’s sports!” grifters would have you believe, transgender women are not a threat to women’s sports or the athletes who play them.
What is a threat? The witch hunts this lawsuit, as well as the state bans on transgender women in sports, are inciting.
******* among the meanness and the misinformation and the petulance in the lawsuit, filed earlier this week against San Jose State, the Mountain West Conference and several administrators, is a section demanding the right to declare open season on anyone suspected of being transgender.
“It has now become a rule violation for a team or school to even ask the MWC or NCAA to investigate the eligibility of a transgender student-athlete or to report concerns about the eligibility of the athlete,” according to the lawsuit.
Well, yes. Because the alternative is to open the door to questioning — loudly and publicly, no doubt — the gender of any woman athlete who doesn’t conform to a white, hetero, cisgender norm. It won’t just be those women who jump higher or run faster, either. It’ll be any woman with short hair or small breasts. Women with more muscular physiques. Women with deeper or huskier voices. Who don’t look “feminine” enough, whatever that means.
Don’t believe it? It’s already happened. Algerian boxer Imane Khelif was terrorized at the Paris Olympics. After South Carolina coach Dawn Staley said at the Final Four that she has no problem with transgender female athletes, the cesspool that is the right-wing internet combed through the Gamecocks roster and theorized about who might be transgender.
“There is no rational basis for a rule that prevents a school from reporting eligibility concerns regarding a student-athlete,” according to the lawsuit.
Oh, really. Being able to scream “Trans!” without consequence gives license to bad actors, the folks who simply can’t accept they’re not that good or, knowing they can’t compete, will try to remove their competition, instead.
Alyssa Sugai, one of the plaintiffs in the new lawsuit, played in 16 of San Jose State’s 29 matches as a walk-on in 2021. Yet she thinks it’s someone else’s fault she didn’t get a scholarship or more playing time the following season. In Utah, some parents were so furious their kids were getting beat that school officials combed through a young girl’s enrollment records to placate them.
Worse than these modern-day inquisitions are the resolution of them. Little ****** and young women pulled off the field or court and taken into a locker room to be subjected to a ******** check by a doctor of someone else’s choosing. Because there’s no risk of ****** happening there! Parents carrying their kids’ birth certificates to games and practices, just in case they have to be whipped out to satisfy the gender police.
Is this really what we want for our ****** and young women? To allow their very being to be questioned by anyone they encounter? To be subjected by some undefinable purity test for femininity?
I doubt Slusser, Sugai, Gaines and all the other women who’ve decided transphobic hysteria is the quickest way to get themselves on Fox News or become a right-wing influencer have imagined this happening to them. Because they look like what a woman is “supposed” to look like — again, whatever that means — they would never be subjected to this kind of humiliation and degradation.
Ditto for the parents who have been gaslit into believing transgender women athletes are lurking on every sideline, big, manly brutes who will injure their daughters and keep them from playing sports. They can’t imagine their daughters ever being seen as suspect.
That’s the thing about opening the door to hate and ignorance, though. Eventually it comes for everyone. If this lawsuit is successful, no one’s daughter will be safe.
Follow USA TODAY Sports columnist Nancy Armour on social media @nrarmour.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: San Jose State volleyball lawsuit shows danger to transphobia
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Rebecca Maddern to broaden role at 7NEWS Melbourne and replace Tim Watson as chief sports presenter
Rebecca Maddern to broaden role at 7NEWS Melbourne and replace Tim Watson as chief sports presenter
Channel 7 has confirmed that much-loved news presenter Rebecca Maddern will take on an expanded broadcasting role in 2025 with a new title of chief sports presenter.
The passionate AFL fan and respected journalist will replace Essendon great Tim Watson and host the nightly sport news alongside Peter Mitchell and Jane Bunn at 6pm, Mondays to Fridays.
As part of the seven-day-a-week AFL programming slate across Seven and 7plus for 2025 (announced last week), Maddern will also join the 7SPORT team in a pivotal role across Seven’s AFL coverage, as well as other sport portfolios and projects.
“Our sports team is stacked with news breakers who are all terrific sports journos in their own right,” Maddern said.
“The 7NEWS sports department is fired up to bring viewers the very best in 2025.”
“I’m thrilled to be offered this opportunity. It brings my years of journalistic experience, broadcasting skills and love of sport all together. To work across 7NEWS and 7SPORT is quite the dream job.
“Sport is the fabric of Melbourne, it’s the unifying thread of the city. Coffee and sport make this town tick and luckily, I’m addicted to both.”
Seven Melbourne news director said: “There’s no-one more qualified than Rebecca to take on this key role at Seven. It’s the perfect person for the perfect role.”
And Seven’s head of sport Chris Jones said: “Bec is an incredibly talented broadcaster and will play a key role across many sport portfolios. She’s also a whole heap of fun and a superb teammate both on and off camera.
Camera IconRebecca Maddern is a regular host of the AFL’s ‘night of the night’, the Brownlow Medal. Credit: AFL Photos via Getty Images
“We’re thrilled to give Bec a platform across 7SPORT to showcase what she does so well, and to be there to guide viewers through some of the magic sporting moments.”
With over two decades’ experience in television news and sport, the highly respected journalist and presenter has hosted some of Australia’s biggest sporting occasions, including the AFL’s Brownlow Medal, the *********** Open and Cricket World Cup.
Maddern will begin her new role in the New Year.
In the interim, she will continue to present Seven Melbourne’s afternoon news at 4pm, as well as co-anchor weekend editions of Melbourne’s 7NEWS alongside Mike Amor.
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Porsche 993 Owner Wins Big In Lawsuit Against Mechanic
Porsche 993 Owner Wins Big In Lawsuit Against Mechanic
Read the full story on The Auto Wire
Porsche 993 Owner Wins Big In Lawsuit Against Mechanic
A Porsche 993 owner has the last laugh after winning a huge wad of cash after successfully suing the mechanic who kept her car for 11 years. Far too many enthusiasts know what it’s like to get jerked around by a mechanic who takes money and doesn’t finish the work, which is what this case allegedly involves.
Government red tape and incompetence kept a woman from getting her car back for 13 years.
The Porsche owner, a researcher at Oxford University, damaged it back in 2010 while trying to avoid a massive pothole on the road while it was raining, reports Daily Mail. She took it to a mechanic who said he would get the 993 all fixed up.
Later, he billed the woman for £9,000. However, she later couldn’t get any updates from the guy about her car other than he was supposedly working on it but couldn’t supply a date it was going to be finished. Finally, in 2014 she just bought an Audi after she was unable to get a status update on her 993.
When she finally sued the mechanic in 2021 the guy dropped the Porsche, which was stripped down to the body, on the street by her house. The engine, which is the last of the air-cooled 911s, transaxle, interior components, and so on were just gone.
In other words, the mechanic was a royal *****. And it seems he might have just stripped and sold the parts like what they do in chop shops. Well, that move has cost him big time with a court ordering the guy to pay £114,000 in compensation to the Porsche owner.
We think he got off a little light, to be honest. A public flogging would’ve been appropriate. After all, what kind of mechanic strips someone’s car and drops off the husk 11 years later? That feels personal.
Image via Shawn Desilva/Facebook Marketplace
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Man accused of murdering his neighbour in front of kids
Man accused of murdering his neighbour in front of kids
Three teenagers witnessed the fatal stabbing of a 51-year-old woman in her home but police say it wasn’t family ********* but a ‘tragic set of circumstances’.
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#Man #accused #murdering #neighbour #front #kids
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China reacts to Trump’s tough talk on tariffs and Taiwan
China reacts to Trump’s tough talk on tariffs and Taiwan
China reacts to Trump’s tough talk on tariffs and Taiwan – CBS News
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Beijing is bracing for President-elect Donald Trump’s tough stance on tariffs and Taiwan. Ramy Inocencio has more on Trump’s possible plans and the reaction they are eliciting abroad.
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#China #reacts #Trumps #tough #talk #tariffs #Taiwan
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Nearly 30 arrests, *****, ******** guns seized during ****** blitz
Nearly 30 arrests, *****, ******** guns seized during ****** blitz
Deputies removed drugs and guns from the streets this week.
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The Franklin Sheriff’s Office posted on social media that deputies led “Operation Unity,” on Thursday to ****** down on thefts and *****-related *******.
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Deputies arrested someone in more than 40 percent of their 62 traffic stops.
This includes a 17-year-old for possession of an AR-15-style *******.
A driver was also arrested for OVI while transporting two children. Two ******** guns were also recovered from that vehicle.
In total, deputies seized 15 grams of methamphetamine, eight illegally possessed guns, and three grams of ********.
They also made 15 felony arrests and 11 misdemeanor arrests.
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#arrests #***** #******** #guns #seized #****** #blitz
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Xi says he will work with Trump in last meeting with Biden
Xi says he will work with Trump in last meeting with Biden
******** leader Xi Jinping has pledged to work with incoming President Donald Trump in his final meeting with current US leader Joe Biden.
The two met on Saturday on the sidelines of the annual Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (Apec) summit in Peru where they acknowledged “ups and downs” in relations over Biden’s four years in office.
But both highlighted progress in lowering tensions on issues such as trade and Taiwan.
Analysts say US-China relations could become more volatile when Trump returns to office in two months, driven by factors including a promise to raise tariffs on ******** imports.
The president-elect has pledged 60% tariffs on all imports from China. He has also appointed prominent China hawks to top foreign and defence positions.
During his first term, Trump labelled China a “strategic competitor”. Relations worsened when the former president labelled Covid a “******** virus” during the pandemic.
Speaking on Saturday at the meeting held at his hotel in Lima, the ******** president said Beijing’s goal of a stable relationship with Washington would remain unchanged.
“China is ready to work with the new US administration to maintain communication, expand cooperation and manage differences,” Xi said.
Biden said strategic competition between the two global powers should not escalate into war.
“Our two countries cannot let any of this competition veer into conflict. That is our responsibility and over the last four years I think we’ve proven it’s possible to have this relationship,” he said.
Biden’s time in office did see flare-ups in relations with China, including a spy balloon saga and displays of ******** military firepower around Taiwan triggered by the visit of a senior US official.
China says its claim to the self-ruling island is a red line.
However, the Biden administration aimed to “responsibly manage” rivalry with Beijing after Trump’s first term.
Beijing is likely to be most concerned about the president-elect’s unpredictability, analysts say.
“The ******** are ready to negotiate and deal, and probably hope for early engagement with the Trump team to discuss potential transactions,” said Bonnie Glaser, managing director of the ******* Marshall Fund’s Indo-Pacific Program.
“At the same time, however, they are ready to retaliate if Trump insists on imposing higher tariffs on China.”
She added that China may also be “likely worried that that they lack reliable back channels to influence Trump’s policy”.
Biden on Saturday acknowledged there had always been disagreements with Xi but added that discussions between him and the ******** leader had been “frank” and “candid”.
The pair held three face-to-face meetings during Biden’s time in the White House, including a key summit last year in San Francisco where both sides came to agreements on combatting narcotics and climate change.
But Biden’s White House also continued Trump-era tariffs. His government imposed duties in May targeting China’s electric cars, solar panels and steels.
He also strengthened defence alliances across Asia and the Pacific to counter China’s increasing assertiveness in the region. The outgoing president has also said the US would defend Taiwan if it were invaded by China.
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#work #Trump #meeting #Biden
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Horror find in search for missing fisherman who tried to retrieve rod from water at Mulgoa
Horror find in search for missing fisherman who tried to retrieve rod from water at Mulgoa
The body of a man in his 60s has been found after the fisherman went into a river in Sydney on Saturday.
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#Horror #find #search #missing #fisherman #retrieve #rod #water #Mulgoa
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Civil rights attorney announces $100 million lawsuit against FBI, CIA and the NYPD over ************** of Malcolm X
Civil rights attorney announces $100 million lawsuit against FBI, CIA and the NYPD over ************** of Malcolm X
Attorney Ben Crump announced the filing of a $100 million lawsuit against the FBI, CIA and the New York Police Department for the ************** of Malcolm X. Crump said the suit, filed by family members and the estate of Malcolm X, alleges that the agencies conspired in the 1965 ******** of the civil rights leader.
Video Transcript
As we come up on the eve of the 60 year anniversary into the ************** of Malcolm X, we here today, officially announced the filing of our $100 million lawsuit against the ******* States government, the FBI, the CIA and the NYPD who we believe all conspired to ************ Malcolm X.
It is not lost on us that justice has been delayed in this matter.
And on this momentous occasion, we stand ready to lay out our complaint very soundly.
We believe there is solid ground to go forward with this lawsuit at this time.
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#Civil #rights #attorney #announces #million #lawsuit #FBI #CIA #NYPD #************** #Malcolm
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Denzel Washington hates watching himself on screen
Denzel Washington hates watching himself on screen
Denzel Washington doesn’t watch any of his old films from start to finish because he’s too critical of himself.
The 69-year-old actor has enjoyed a hugely successful career in Hollywood, starring in movies such as Training Day and Malcolm X, but admits he doesn’t enjoy seeing himself on the big screen.
“I watch it so I know what I’m talking about. But I haven’t watched any film from my past from start to finish, not even Malcolm X,” he told The Times newspaper.
“All you see is what you did wrong. Also why would you do it anyway?”
Malcolm X came out in 1992, but Washington confessed to making “some real clunkers” in the subsequent years.
“In life, you learn, earn and then you return – as in give back. So if your life is 90 years long, up until 30 you learn and from 30 to 60 you earn,” he said.
“So in that era I was earning. With a great agent, my career built into making money and so the earning kicked in and then life also kicked in, with bills, four kids and a house … After Malcolm X I made some real clunkers. Look them up – I won’t say their names.”
Asked if he’s ever made a bad movie, Denzel replied: “They are all in the 1990s. But I was earning. I had responsibilities.”
Despite this, the veteran star believes his real-life personality shines through in some of his on-screen performances.
“You bring yourself to the part. And, look, I think I’m a good guy. I try to do the right thing,” he explained.
“I’m a simple guy and I got a great job and so, maybe, coming into my movies, you go, ‘Denzel? He’s a good guy – we’ve seen him in other things where he has that good in him.’
“You bring yourself to your work, no matter what. And I try to help people.”
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#Denzel #Washington #hates #watching #screen
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‘A matter of life and ******’
‘A matter of life and ******’
It could be the kiss of ******.
Mistletoe is beloved by millions of Americans during the holiday season, with lovers locking lips beneath the festive and flirtatious flora.
But before you deck your halls, consider the threat the decoration poses to your pets.
“Mistletoe berries are super toxic — they can cause a heart ******* and even ******,” Dr. Carol Osborne, of the Ohio-based Chagrin Falls **** Clinic, told Chewy.
She says it’s paramount that the plants are placed in areas out of reach to cats and dogs, claiming it “can be a matter of life and ******.”
Experts advise seeking medical attention for pets if they become ***** for seemingly no reason or owners suspect the animals came into contact with a toxic household plant. New ******* – stock.adobe.com
Poinsettias are another popular plant placed around houses and offices at Christmastime — but that decoration is less dangerous, according to Dr. Osborne.
“We see all these warnings on the internet about poinsettias,” the vet stated. “The truth of the matter is, most plants might make the animal drool or get a tummy ache or get a little diarrhea, but most plants are not fatal.”
She says their dangers are “overrated,” citing the plant’s low level of toxicity.
However, that hasn’t stopped the ********* Kennel Club from saying that the festive florals pose a threat to dogs if they ingest the plant’s white sap, which “contains chemicals similar to those in household detergents.”
If a large amount of the sap is consumed, it can result in vomiting, drooling, diarrhea and skin irritation.
Poinsettias are a popular Christmastime decoration. Dr. Osborne says pets can become ***** if they ingest the plant, but says the floral is unlikely to be fatal. Pixel-Shot – stock.adobe.com
Meanwhile, Christmas cacti, Christmas roses and even Christmas trees can cause adverse reactions if ingested by pets.
Experts told Chewy that lilies, too, are extremely poisonous for pets and any kind of exposure can result in gastrointestinal symptoms, lethargy, loss of appetite or changes in urination and requires medical attention.
“It’s important to note that all parts of most types of lilies are very toxic to cats. Homes with cats should never have lilies in them,” the ********* Kennel Club’s Chief Veterinary Officer Dr. Jerry Klein said in a blog post, noting that the flowers are often overlooked in floral arrangements.
“Amaryllis, balsam, pine, cedar, and holly are among the common holiday plants that can be dangerous and, in some cases, even poisonous to pets who eat them,” he added.
While ingesting the plants may not be fatal, experts warn that poinsettias could cause stomach upset and skin irritation in pups and felines. Mary Lynn Strand – stock.adobe.com
If **** owners suspect their fur baby has been exposed to a potentially toxic plant, it’s vital to seek veterinarian attention. Dr. Osborne recommends taking a photo of the plant to show a doctor.
“If you think your **** ingested a toxic plant, don’t wait!” Dr. Gary Weitzman, the president and CEO of the San Diego Humane Society, told Chewy. “Plan on visiting your veterinarian or an emergency clinic right away. Call first because your vet might ask you to induce vomiting in your ****.”
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#matter #life #******
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Venezuela frees dozens of political prisoners after election unrest
Venezuela frees dozens of political prisoners after election unrest
Venezuelan authorities have released more than 100 people arrested following July’s contested presidential election, according to a local rights group.
“Up to now, we have verified 107 political prisoners, due to the post-electoral situation, released in Venezuela,” said Alfredo Romero of NGO Foro Penal.
The group said more than 1,800 people were arrested for their role in mass protests after the July election.
Electoral authorities loyal to President Nicolás Maduro announced him the victor, but the claim has been widely rejected by the international community.
After Maduro claimed victory, anti-government protests erupted.
Hundreds have been charged with ******* including terrorism, incitement to hatred and resistance to authority, according to Human Rights Watch.
Foro Penal said prisoners had been released at four different prisons. Videos published on social media showed prisoners being released to cheers from onlookers.
Maduro is set to begin his third six-year term in January. Official results for July’s election published by the National Electoral Council (CNE) claimed Maduro, 61, won 52% of the vote to opposition candidate Edmundo González’s 43%.
The opposition, however, said it had evidence González had won by a comfortable margin, and uploaded detailed voting tallies to the internet which suggest González beat Maduro convincingly.
The CNE said it could not publish the voting records because the data had been corrupted by hackers.
González was granted political asylum in Spain in September.
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#Venezuela #frees #dozens #political #prisoners #election #unrest
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More police on the beat, for longer: ******** party makes election pitch on ******
More police on the beat, for longer: ******** party makes election pitch on ******
More police overtime and a superannuation bonus are the centrepiece of the WA ******** party’s $500 million election promise to crackdown on ******.
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#police #beat #longer #******** #party #election #pitch #******
Pelican News
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