The Ryder Cup is 24 days away. The games already have startedNew Foto - The Ryder Cup is 24 days away. The games already have started

TheRyder Cupis still three weeks away and it feels as though it already has started. The opening shot was not from the first tee at Bethpage Black in a foursomes match. It was 1,600 miles (2,575 km) away in Frisco, Texas, where Keegan Bradley kept golf fans in suspense overwhether he would be the first playing captainin 62 years. Bradley knew all along he wasn't playing. He said after announcing his six picks last Wednesday — four of them are below him in the world ranking — the decision "was made a while ago that I wasn't playing." This was four days after he was asked at East Lake if he had clarity on his choices and replied, "No, because I think no matter what decision that I make here, I could have gone the other way." But he sent a clear message when he made his picks. It was about team first. The Americans, 1 up. And then it was Europe's turn on Monday, with no suspense at all. CaptainLuke Donald is bringing to Bethpage Black the same 12 faces— Rasmus Hojgaard replaces his identical twin, Nicolai — that conquered the Americans in Rome two years ago. The strongest image from the announcement at Sky Sports studio in London were the faces of the six captain's picks, all of them wearing smiles wider than Augusta National fairways, sheer joy at being part of Team Europe. It didn't take long fordual images to appear on social mediaof the team's picks. One showed beaming Europeans who had been brought in one at a time for brief interviews. The other had six American on a video call for the entire Q&A with Bradley, all of them looking like they were at a policy board meeting to discuss how to distribute FedEx Cup points. Europe no doubt picked up on this. No detail is too small when it comes to the Ryder Cup. "It's probably not that easy to have a smile on your face for a total of an hour's time," Donald said. "But yeah, very happy to obviously see our guys look very interested and excited about the challenges ahead for the Ryder Cup." Back to all square. The actual competition will get here soon enough. All the last six days did was fuel the anticipation over the Ryder Cup. Already one of the most high-charged golf events, this one has a little extra juice given the location — Bethpage Black, the public course on New York's Long Island with its notorious fans, regardless of ticket prices. "Quite unusual, I suppose, to have such continuity from two years ago, but I think it's hard to argue with these 12 guys," Donald said. The matches, of course, will be decided inside the ropes and judged after the fact whether the captains got the picks and the pairings right, and whether the crowd was over the top. This is New York. Depending on how it goes, Europe might not be the only team that hears from them. There will be second-guessing with Bradley only if the Americans lose. There is little argument the 39-year-old Bradley, who grew up in New England and played college golf nearby at St. John's, would have been playing if he had not been captain. Rory McIlroy had suggested the Americans might not be fielding their 12 best players if Bradley did not play (he also said the Ryder Cup had become too big for a captain to play). It's hard to find fault with Donald's picks because whether they earned a spot or were chosen, they represent the top 11 players from the Ryder Cup standings. The other is Jon Rahm, the two-time major champion and former world No. 1 who was unbeaten in four matches last time. But it's the first time a European team has brought back 11 players from the previous team. There is little risk of complacency because this is enemy territory, but the challenge now falls to Donald to make sure what feels like the same team gets a new experience without a change in the outcome. "You want to embrace what a Ryder Cup represents, and then part of that is embracing the crowd and embracing that atmosphere," Donald said. "And I think certainly these guys will be ready for that." Rookies, though, can be key. Sam Torrance famously said after his European team won in 2002, "Out of the shadows come heroes." That was the year two of the biggest points came from Ryder Cup rookies — Philip Price taking down Phil Mickelson and Paul McGinley delivering the clinching putt. Europe has a history of getting big performances from rookies, whether it was Philip Walton (1995), McGinley (2002), Jamie Donaldson (2014) or Tommy Fleetwood (2018). Gone are the days of determining which team is better on paper. It's too close. The Americans have six major champions. Europe has five. Team Europe has a collective 148-95 edge in worldwide victories on main tours. Europe could only be considered the underdog because of how difficult it has become to win on the road. It has only one victory on U.S. soil the last 20 years, and that one required the "Miracle at Medinah" in 2012. Even with (mostly) the same team, Donald said this wasn't a "rinse and repeat from Rome." "It's a different animal. It's a different challenge," he said. "Having the chance to do it again doesn't mean we're going to do the same things we did in Rome. I've really tried to look hard at exactly what this will require. I'm very aware that we have lost three of the last four away Ryder Cups by significant margins, and it's a tough challenge. It's a tough environment. But I've tried everything I can to give our team the best opportunity." The trick for the Europeans is to still be smiling when it's over. ___ On The Fringe analyzes the biggest topics in golf during the season. AP golf:https://apnews.com/hub/golf

The Ryder Cup is 24 days away. The games already have started

The Ryder Cup is 24 days away. The games already have started TheRyder Cupis still three weeks away and it feels as though it already has st...
MLB playoff picture: Wild card standings, bracket, 2025 division standingsNew Foto - MLB playoff picture: Wild card standings, bracket, 2025 division standings

Coming out of Labor Day weekend,Major League Baseball's playoff races look a lot more interesting than they did just a week ago. The American League wild card standings have tightened, with the Rangers' six-game winning streak vaulting Texas to fourth place, chasing down theSeattle Marinerswho cling to the third and final postseason spot. In the NL Central, theChicago Cubscarved a few games out of the Brewers' division lead over the past two weeks and while a comeback probably isn't the cards, they're in good position to make Milwaukee sweat a bit into September. Here's a look at the latest MLB standings: Top three reach playoffs New York Yankees(76-61):+3.5 games Boston Red Sox (77-62): +2.5 games Seattle Mariners (73-65) Texas Rangers(72-67): 1.5 games back Kansas City Royals(70-67): 2.5 GB Cleveland Guardians (68-68): 4 GB Tampa Bay Rays (68-69): 4.5 GB Top three reach playoffs Chicago Cubs (78-59): +5 games San Diego Padres(76-61): +3 games New York Mets(73–64) Cincinnati Reds(69-68): 4 games back San Francisco Giants (66-69): 5 GB Arizona Diamondbacks (68-70): 5.5 GB St. Louis Cardinals(68-70): 5.5 GB Toronto Blue Jays (79-59) New York Yankees (76-61): 2,5 games back Boston Red Sox (77-62): 3.5 GB Detroit Tigers(80-59) Kansas City Royals (70-67): 9 GB Houston Astros (75-62) Seattle Mariners (73-65): 3 GB Texas Rangers (72-67): 4.5 GB Philadelphia Phillies (80-58) New York Mets (74-64): 6 GB Milwaukee Brewers(85-54) Chicago Cubs (79-59): 5.5 GB Los Angeles Dodgers (78-59) San Diego Padres (76-62): 2.5 GB Byes to ALDS: Tigers, Blue Jays Wild Card Series Seattle Mariners at Houston Astros New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox(Boston wins tiebreaker) Byes to NLDS: Brewers, Phillies Wild Card Series New York Mets at Los Angeles Dodgers San Diego Padres at Chicago Cubs This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:MLB wild card standings, 2025 playoff bracket, AL and NL standings

MLB playoff picture: Wild card standings, bracket, 2025 division standings

MLB playoff picture: Wild card standings, bracket, 2025 division standings Coming out of Labor Day weekend,Major League Baseball's playo...
Fugees Rapper Pras Michel's Sentencing Is Delayed in Criminal Case After He Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Colon CancerNew Foto - Fugees Rapper Pras Michel's Sentencing Is Delayed in Criminal Case After He Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Colon Cancer

Johnny Nunez/WireImage Fugees rapper Pras Michel missed a scheduled sentencing hearing on Friday, Aug. 29 because he underwent "emergency surgery for colon cancer removal," his spokesperson said Michel was found guilty in 2023 of conspiracy, concealment of material facts, making false entries in records, witness tampering and serving as an unregistered agent of a foreign power, per the Department of Justice His next sentencing hearing date has been scheduled for Oct. 3 Fugees rapperPras Michelrecently underwent emergency surgery after experiencing a "medical concern," forcing him to miss a scheduled sentencing hearing. Michel, 52, was initially set to appear in court on Friday, Aug. 29 to discuss how much money he would need to forfeit after beingfound guiltyin 2023 of conspiring to defraud the U.S. government, according toBillboard. However, his lawyers said in an August filing, obtained by the outlet, that the rapper would be unable to appear at the hearing as he had "experienced a significant medical concern." "Pras missed Friday's sentencing hearing while undergoing emergency surgery for colon cancer removal," the rapper's spokesperson, Erica Dumas, said in a statement, perBillboard. "We stand with him and his family and wish him a full recovery as he addresses this serious health matter." Kevin Dietsch/Getty She added that Michel was "recovering right now until he is in the clear and focused on spending time with his family ahead of sentencing," and that he "remains hopeful for his future." Michel found stardom as a member of the Fugees, who are regarded as one of the most influential hip-hop groups of the 1990s. Their final albumThe Score, released in 1996, was certified seven times platinum sales by the RIAA. However, he hit some legal trouble after being convicted of attempting to influence President Donald Trump's administration officials to drop an investigation into Malaysian businessman Jho Low, an international fugitive accused of embezzling money from Malaysia'ssovereign wealth fund, according to theU.S. Department of Justice(DOJ). He also was found guilty during his trial — which heard testimony from actorLeonardo DiCaprioand former U.S. Attorney GeneralJeff Sessions— of "conspiring to make and conceal foreign and conduit campaign contributions during the 2012 U.S. presidential election." According to the DOJ, he faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for conspiracy, concealment of material facts, making false entries in records, witness tampering and serving as an unregistered agent of a foreign power. ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from juicy celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. However, Michel's attorneys have requested that the rapper only receive 36 months of prison time — something they described as a "just sentence in this case," perBillboard. In addition to serving time in prison, he is required to forfeit a sum of money to the federal government — a matter that was scheduled to be addressed at his sentencing hearing on Friday. According toBillboard, The federal government is seeking nearly $65 million from Michel. Michel's next sentencing hearing date has been scheduled for Oct. 3. Read the original article onPeople

Fugees Rapper Pras Michel’s Sentencing Is Delayed in Criminal Case After He Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Colon Cancer

Fugees Rapper Pras Michel's Sentencing Is Delayed in Criminal Case After He Undergoes Emergency Surgery for Colon Cancer Johnny Nunez/Wi...
Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones'New Foto - Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones'

Visitors toHouse of Kong, the current East London exhibition that takes fans on a magical mystery tour of 25 years ofGorillaz, will see and hear many things. But one thing is sadly missing from the multi-media extravaganza: the creamy, crushed-velvet, supper-club tones ofEngelbert Humperdinck. "I wrote this really big, epic string ballad," Gorillaz figurehead Damon Albarn told an Australian radio station as he promoted the 2010 albumPlastic Beach. "I thought Engelbert Humperdinck would be fantastic on it. Well, he got the tune, and we thought he was going to do it… In the end it just didn't work out, because he only comes to England once a year, and that's fair enough. He didn't want to be faffing around in the studio with somebody he wasn't entirely [sure of]." "Absolutely not true!" retorts Humperdinck, his indignation palpableall the way from Los Angeles, when I read this quote to him. "At that time, I had signed with another manager, and this manager knewnothingabout music. So when the Gorillaz approached him to do the duet with me, he turned it down without even speaking to me," the singer insists, eyebrows rising towards a cloud of chestnut brown hair, the outrage crinkling those still lustrous, Seventies-style mutton-chops. "Never even spoke to me about it. And when I heard about it, you know how long he lasted? Five minutes.Gone. I kicked him out. That prompted me to get rid of him." Well, I tell Humperdinck, when he couldn't land his first-choice singer, Albarn decided to abandon that song. But the Blur man has recently been talking up a new Gorillaz album, so maybe the collaboration could ride again? "Oh, please God, yeah. Could you talk to them?" Humperdinck laughs. Not that the 89-year-old is sitting around, waiting for offers. He's an old-fashioned, big-lunged crooner who came up at the same time asthe Beatles– he halted their run of number one singles when, in 1967's Summer of Love, his signature easy listening anthemRelease MeoutsoldStrawberry Fields Forever/Penny Lane. But he never took the easy option, with dozens of album releases and decades slogging through Las Vegas residencies and international tours. He even took a punt, in 2012, on the poisoned chalice that is representing the UK at theEurovision Song Contest. In Baku he came 25th out of 26th, scoringnul points. But with 150 million records sold in 60 years, who's counting? The Sixties sex bomb, born Arnold Dorsey in Empire-era India and raised in Leicester, is currently in the midst of yet another world tour. This one is named after his 1967 chart-topperThe Last Waltz, although he's now regretting calling it that. "I tell you what happened," begins the singer, a sprightly, summery vision in white-spotted pink shirt. "The first part of the year was a little quiet, and I was climbing the walls. I called my manager and said: 'This is definitely not going to be the last waltz for me. I'm capable of travelling. I'm still fit and well – I'm touching wood when I say that – and I'd like to continue doing the thing that I love to do. And that's sing around the world.'" Next month, he's performing in Birmingham, which is not too far away from his house in Leicester: "I'm excited about that. I can't wait to get home again, have a pint and a bag of crisps." Humperdinck is beaming in from a wood-panelled room in his Bel Air property. It's a smaller home than the one he lived in between 1975 and 2004. That LA house, known as the Pink Palace – the most conspicuous incarnation of a wealth, at one time estimated at $100m – once belonged to the actressJayne Mansfield. Humperdinck bought the 40-room mansion – previously owned by George Harrison and featuring a heart-shaped swimming pool – in 1976 and lived there for 28 years. "It was a beautiful house. Very Hollywood. My children grew up in that house, and they loved it." In fact, Humperdinck's association with the Hollywood starlet ran even longer than those 29 years. When he went to see her perform one night in the summer of 1967, the pair's eyes met across a crowded LA nightclub. "She even sat on my lap during the show. I thought: my God, I've got this amazing sex symbol sitting on my lap." They then had dinner after her show, with Mansfield inviting the Englishman to come visit her at home the next time he was in town. Two weeks later she was dead, killed in a car crash. Fast-forward six decades: the recent documentaryMy Mom Jayne, directed by her daughter Mariska Hargitay, also an actress, told the story of the return to the family, courtesy of Humperdinck, of a piano that once belonged to Mansfield. As he explains it, he had bought the piano from her estate. "And it was a Gershwin piano – I believe Gershwin composedRhapsody in Blueon it. I had the piano for 29 years. But Mariska's husband got in touch and wanted to buy it off me. So I sold it to them, and it's gone back to the owners, back to the original family." Did he make some money on that? "Actually, I sold it for the same price as I bought it [for], although it was quite expensive when I bought it: 80 grand." As for his current home: he downsized here after the death, four years ago, of his wife, Patricia. They married in 1964, and she lived with Alzheimer's for 10 years before contracting Covid in early 2021. Little wonder the man wants to keep busy. "[The loss] changed my whole way of thinking, my whole way of reading a lyric. Because each song that I do seems to apply to the situation," says the singer, whose repertoire includes the songsA Man Without Love,The Way It Used to BeandForever and Ever (And Ever). "It's more real now than it's ever been. The reason why I want to work, I want to carry on doing this until God calls me, is because I love to do it. It's my way of life. I enjoy writing poetry. But I don't think I'll be satisfied in my life just sitting at home doing nothing." Humperdinck first started performing in America 1968, relocating there full-time not long afterwards. "Although I don't consider it my home; my home is definitely Leicester." His move was one of financial necessity, not artistic choice. "In those days, when I first got successful, there was a super-tax – 90 per cent or something. It was ridiculous, people couldn't survive on that. I wanted to be successful and keep what I was earning. I did 300 concerts a year when I first started. And most of [the earnings] would have gone in taxes. So it was a management move. Gordon Mills said: 'We better go somewhere where we can keep the money a bit more.'" Mills was the friend and impresario who started managing the singer, then going by the stage name Gerry Dorsey, in 1965. Their partnership was tested early on when Humperdinck heard a new song co-written by German songwriter Bert Kaempfert. He was convinced thatStrangers in the Nightwas a smash, but Mills told him it had already beenclaimed by another singer. "I think there's a lot more to that than meets the eye," says Humperdinck carefully of that long-ago switcheroo. First, "I'd already recorded it, but they can't find the tape… But when Gordon Mills said to me, 'You can't have it,' I said: 'But Gordon, it's a definite number one.' He says: 'Well, Sinatra wants it.' I think there was a little cash involved in that – Sinatra paid for it." Did he ever come across Frank Sinatra during his time in Vegas? "Oh, yeah. I came across him a lot. I used to play in his golf tournaments. Sinatra was a very unusual person. I can't believe how much power this man had. He just dominated the business." Was Humperdinck intimidated by him? "I wasn't afraid of him. I just put up with, ah, what you have to put up with," he says with a shrug. There were much better relations with Sinatra's fellow Rat Packers, Dean Martin and Sammy Davis Jr. "In all the people of the past, Dean was probably my favourite. I used to dine with him quite a lot over here, at La Famiglia, a restaurant in LA. Because his agent was my agent. My agent used to say: 'I'm having dinner with Dean tonight. You want to come?'Do I want to come?Course I do!" Humperdinck and Mills's relationship was a fruitful partnership, until it wasn't. The saga of its unravelling emerges when our conversation turns to his friendship withElvis Presley– another "lovely, lovely guy". Humperdinck says: "I learnt a lot from watching Elvis. I always took notes. He was probably the best performer I ever saw on stage. He was good at what he did, and confident, but not conceited." He adds: "When somebody asked him, 'Who are your friends in showbusiness?', he always mentioned me. He said the reason for that was that I reminded him of the twin brother he lost at birth. But I think it's the sideburns," he adds with a twinkle. "I saw some of his movies," he continues. "When I first became successful in [America], Gordon Mills was getting a lot of scriptsfor me. But he used to dump them. He didn't want me to be six months, eight months in the [film] studio – because then you're making money for them." So, for all his successes on the small screen – in the fashion of the early 1970s, Humperdinck hosted his own all-star variety shows on American and British television – "that's how it finished up: I didn't do any movies. I would have loved that part of my life to be in movies". Does the singer ever regret heeding Mills's suggestion that he should call himself Engelbert Humperdinck (the name pinched from the 19th-century German operatic composer)? Billy Fury it wasn't. "No. He was a genius in that respect. He started with me very well. We were best buddies. He was my best man, I was his best man. But I think he got so powerful with having this stable of me,Tom Jonesand Gilbert O'Sullivan. But it was a big company, money went to his head, and he got too big for his boots." Jones, pointedly, is not another lovely, lovely guy. Which brings up another reason for Humperdinck's split from Mills. "He had different ideas about [my career]. He was very partial to Tom – they were both Welsh – and I guess there was a closeness there. I felt a little bit left out, that both the reins weren't together – one was here and one is here. Therefore, I got a bit upset, and I left the organisation." (Humperdinck split from his manager in 1977 and, he says, "lost a fortune"; Mills died nine years later.) So Mills was favouring Jones over you? "Oh yeah, without a doubt. Mind you, I thinkTom Jones is a great performer, great singer, great everything. Although we're not friends, I still think he's probably one of the best singers the world has ever known. And I always will say that. I'm not jealous of him, in fact." Humperdinck has changed his tune. Early in 2024 he was quoted as saying of Sir Tom: "I think he's lost his voice. I don't think he's got it anymore." It was the latest salvo in – as the tabloid headline had it – an "ageing sex bombs at war" saga that has rumbled on for decades, long after they were labelmates onDecca Records. As for that that "sex bomb" appellation: that's a harder one for Humperdinck to defuse. His 2011 memoir contained details of his "string of affairs and one-night stands". As he later put it, he'd had "more paternity suits than casual suits", and had some serious "making up" to do with his wife over his womanising. Last year an ex-girlfriend of Jones's claimed that, around 1980, Humperdinck made a pass at her – adding fuel to the feud. Jones, clearly still furious, recently told a a newspaper: "There's nothing friendly about him and I. He's a p----, quote me on that." Today, though, Humperdinck takes the high road, saying it's Jones's "choice" to refuse his olive branch. "I wish it wasn't the way, but it is what it is. I don't like to hold grudges. Life is too short for that sort of the thing." The Last Waltz Tour starts on September 7. Ticketshere Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

Engelbert Humperdinck: ‘I’m not jealous of Tom Jones’

Engelbert Humperdinck: 'I'm not jealous of Tom Jones' Visitors toHouse of Kong, the current East London exhibition that takes fa...
Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer who went the distance with Muhammad Ali twice, dead at 75New Foto - Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer who went the distance with Muhammad Ali twice, dead at 75

Joe Bugner, a former heavyweight boxer who foughtMuhammad Alitwice in his career, has died. Bugner was 75 years old. "It is with great sadness that the Former British, European Commonwealth Heavyweight Champion and World Championship contender Joe Bugner has passed away at his care home in Brisbane, Australia," theBritish Boxing Board of Controlconfirmed on Monday. "The British Boxing Board of Control passes on its condolences to Joe's family." Click Here For More Sports Coverage On Foxnews.com Bugner was atalented boxer, but he wasn't in the good graces of those in his native Britain after sending Henry Cooper, a boxing legend in the commonwealth, into retirement after beating him in 1971. The victory gave him the British, Commonwealth and European heavyweight titles. Bugner didn't hold on to those belts after losing them later in 1971. Read On The Fox News App Hulk Hogan Netflix Documentary Was In Production Before His Death; Wrestler Did 20-Plus Hours Of Interviews He went on to face off against Ali for the first time in 1973 when they entered the ring in a non-title fight inLas Vegas. Bugner was able to go the distance against the boxing icon, though Ali would get the win by points. Just five months later, Bugner was in the ring against the legendary Joe Frazier, this time on home soil at Earl's Court in London. Like the fight against Ali, Bugner was able to go the distance, but he came up short as Frazier won by points. The most thrilling fight, though, came between Bugner and Ali in Kuala Lumpur in 1975, their second time fighting each other. In front of a packed-out crowd, Bugner and Ali went a full 15 rounds on the canvas, though the former came out as the loser by points once more. Bugner fought for 32 years, ending his career in 1999 before relocating to Australia. He spent the final years of his life in an assisted living home after being diagnosed with dementia. Bugner went 69-14 over his 83 fights, 41 of which ended inside the distance. Bugner was a Hungary-born boxer who moved to Britain as a child refugee amid the 1956 Soviet invasion. Follow Fox News Digital'ssports coverage on X, and subscribe tothe Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter. Original article source:Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer who went the distance with Muhammad Ali twice, dead at 75

Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer who went the distance with Muhammad Ali twice, dead at 75

Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer who went the distance with Muhammad Ali twice, dead at 75 Joe Bugner, a former heavyweight boxer who foughtMuh...
Europe resumes World Cup qualifying with first games for recent champions France, Germany, SpainNew Foto - Europe resumes World Cup qualifying with first games for recent champions France, Germany, Spain

GENEVA (AP) — European soccer now focuses onqualifying for the 2026 World Cupwith recent champions France, Germany and Spain among the nations starting a six-game, 11-week sprint to advance to the tournament being played across North America. The European qualifying program returns Thursday with six days of games involving 54 teams — 24 of them kicking a first ball on their intended road to play on soccer's biggest stage in the United States, Canada and Mexico starting June 11. Italy began its campaign —shakily— in June and resumes its quest to avoid a third straightfailure to qualifyalready trailing nine points behind group leader Norway. England opened in March and looks to add to three straight wins with no goals conceded for coach Thomas Tuchel. Among those starting their qualifying program are top-tier teams who played athrilling set of Nations League gamesin March and June. Spain, the 2010 World Cup winner, begins at Bulgaria on Thursday when 2014 champion Germany starts at Slovakia. France, the 2018 title winner, starts Friday away against Ukraine in Les Bleus' first game in the competition since losing anepic final against Argentinain December 2022. Ukraine will host that game in Wroclaw in neutral Poland because of security concerns at home during the Russian military invasion. Russia's teams werebanned by UEFA and FIFAfrom all international competitions in February 2022 when the war began. How to qualify Europe has 16 entries in the first 48-team men's World Cup, three more than in the 32-team format played in 2022. The 12 first-place teams when qualifying groups end in November advance direct to the tournament. The 12 runners-up go to the playoffs scheduled in March, joined by four winners of Nations League groups played last year. Those extra teams couldinclude, remarkably, San Marino, 210th and last of themen's national teams ranked by FIFA. The 16 European playoffs teams will be seeded into four knockout brackets of four teams each. They play single-game semifinals and finals on March 26 and 31, to decide the four remaining World Cup slots. Smallest groups since 1989 The extra World Cup entries given by FIFA, and Nations League knockout stage expanded by UEFA, have changed the qualifying formula. Europe now has its first World Cup qualifying groups of just four teams since those that finished in November 1989, just days after the Berlin Wall fell and reshaped the continent. High-ranking nations that once had to play in groups of five or six teams across 15 months now have a condensed program playing two games in each of three straight months. An injury could remove a key player for the entire qualifying program. Germany will not haveJamal Musiala, who sustained a serious leg injury playing for Bayern Munich at the Club World Cup in July. The format changes again next year. After the 2026 World Cup,the FIFA schedulefor men's national-team games will combine the separate September and October breaks into a four-game block over back-to-back weekends. Toughest groups European champion Spain's reward for beating the Netherlands in a Nations League quarterfinal in March was to land in a four-team group withTurkey and Georgia, two breakout successes at Euro 2024. Georgia, with star winger Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, was the most dangerous team among third-seeded options in the draw last December. Georgia hosts Turkey on Thursday and plays at Spain on Oct. 11. Maybe the hardest to predict is the four-team group of Switzerland, Sweden, Slovenia and Kosovo. Switzerland was animpressive quarterfinalistat Euro 2024 yet must face some of Europe's most expensive forwards — Slovenia'sBenjamin Šeško, now at Arsenal, and a Sweden attacking line ofAlexander Isak,Viktor GyökeresandAnthony Elangawho were collectively signed for more than $300 million this season by, respectively, Liverpool, Arsenal and Newcastle. A talented Kosovo squad thatactively recruits from its migrant populationin Switzerland comes to Basel on Friday with the Swiss team captained by its all-time greatGranit Xhaka, who has family ties to Kosovo. Norway leads Italy and Israel One group sure to make news is currently led by Norway ahead of Israel and Italy. Norway has not qualified for a men's World Cup since before 25-year-old Erling Haaland was born. The team is on track after the star forward scored in each of four straight wins since starting in March. Norway has no fixture Friday in the five-team group and hosts last-place Moldova next Tuesday. Italy, infamously, has not played a World Cup tournament game since June 2014. Then, Giorgio Chiellini wasbitten by Uruguay's Luis Suárezin a 1-0 loss that sent the four-time champion home from the group stage in Brazil. Italy hosts Estonia on Friday, three days before going to face Israel in neutral Hungary, at Debrecen. Israeli teams havenot been allowed to host home gamesin international competitions for security reasons since the October 2023 attack by Hamas. Norway hosts Israel on Oct. 11 in Oslo andpledged last monthto donate its profits from ticket sales at that game to humanitarian aid work in Gaza. ___ AP soccer:https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

Europe resumes World Cup qualifying with first games for recent champions France, Germany, Spain

Europe resumes World Cup qualifying with first games for recent champions France, Germany, Spain GENEVA (AP) — European soccer now focuses o...
Gerard Depardieu to Stand Criminal Trial Over Rape and Sexual Assault ChargesNew Foto - Gerard Depardieu to Stand Criminal Trial Over Rape and Sexual Assault Charges

Gerard Depardieu, who has triggered a watershed moment for the #MeToo movement in France, will stand in a criminal trial where he will be prosecuted on rape by digital penetration and sexual assault allegations filed by French actor Charlotte Arnould. Arnould filed those charges in 2018, when she 22, and alleged that she had been raped twice by Depardieu at his home in Paris on Aug. 7 and 13. Depardieu was indicted on those charges since Dec. 16, 2020, and attempted to have the charges dropped in 2022, calling the accusations baseless, but the Paris prosecutor said there were "serious and confirmed evidence that justifies Gérard Depardieu to remain charged," according to news outlet France 24. More from Variety How France's #MeToo Movement Is Transforming Cannes and the Country's Film Industry: 'The Conditions Under Which Work Is Produced Matter' France's New CNC President Gaetan Bruel Speaks Out on Trump's Proposed Tariff on Foreign-Made Movies and French Industry's MeToo Reckoning Gerard Depardieu Found Guilty on Sexual Assault Charges, Given 18-Month Suspended Prison Sentence Earlier this year, Depardieu was convicted of sexual assault against two women and received an 18-month prison sentence from a Paris court, following a four-day-trial during which Depardieu refuted all accusations. The verdict stemmed from sexual assault charges filed by two women, a set decorator and an assistant director, who worked on the shoot of "The Green Shutters" in 2021. Prosecutors also requested the court to fine the actor and obligate him to undergo psychological treatment, as well as have him registered in the sex offenders file. The set decorator and the assistant director were part of the 13 women of sexually inappropriate behavior in a report published by French investigative news website Médiapart in April 2023. While he's now reluctantly retired from acting in the wake of these accusations, Depardieu was offered a role by Fanny Ardant, the well-known French actress-turned-filmmaker who took a stand for him during the trial — and shot the film in Portugal in the Spring. Best of Variety Samsung, Sonos, Criterion Collection Among Top Brands on Sale for Labor Day - See Running List Here What's Coming to Disney+ in September 2025 New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Gerard Depardieu to Stand Criminal Trial Over Rape and Sexual Assault Charges

Gerard Depardieu to Stand Criminal Trial Over Rape and Sexual Assault Charges Gerard Depardieu, who has triggered a watershed moment for the...
Kim Novak, 92, says 'it's close to the end' as Hollywood legend reflects on leaving industry at career peakNew Foto - Kim Novak, 92, says 'it's close to the end' as Hollywood legend reflects on leaving industry at career peak

Kim Novakreflected on aging and her decision to turn her back on Hollywood in an attempt to reclaim her story. "It's not easy getting old," Novak, 92, said in the upcoming documentary "Kim Novak's Vertigo," according toPeople magazine."I'm feeling it's close to the end." "I've been feeling the need to free something…." the beginning of the film began. Novak famously chose to leave Hollywood at what many considered would have been the peak of her career. "When I left, I was at the top of my game," she said in the documentary about her exit from the industry in 1966. Kim Novak Explains Why She Left Hollywood: 'I Felt Like I Was Losing Myself' "Hollywood swallowed people whole," Novak said, referencingMarilyn Monroe's death.The actress died at 36 and her death was ruled a possible suicide by the Los Angeles County coroner's office. "I didn't want that to happen to me," Novak noted. Read On The Fox News App The "Picnic" star turned her back on Hollywood after her Bel Air home was destroyed in a mudslide. She chose a cliff dwelling in Big Sur to become her place to start over, where she focused on other artistic skills. "My survival mode was to paint," Novak said. Like What You're Reading? Click Here For More Entertainment News Novak opened up about how she felt waking up on her first morning after leaving Hollywood in a 2021 interview with Fox News Digital. "Liberated. Totally liberated," she recalled. "I thought, 'Wow, I'm going to live my dream and not for someone else.' It was wonderful. My cat was purring, the birds were singing, the waves were crashing – we were all just content." "The first thing I did when I woke up was to get all my art equipment, set up my easel and look out the window," Novak added. "I thought to myself, 'This is paradise.' Hollywood offers money and prestige, but nothing ever compares to that feeling I felt that morning." Click Here To Sign Up For The Entertainment Newsletter Years later, Novak's true story will be told in "Kim Novak's Vertigo." "This is not a Hollywood-y documentary of famous names, this is about Kim, the person," Novak's manager, Sue Cameron, said. "She turned down a million dollars to write her autobiography 25 years ago. Because they wanted all the Hollywood dirt, and she says, 'No, that's not who I am, I won't do it.'" "She's the last living golden goddess of film," Cameron said. "And what's more important is in this documentary, we show her as the true fighter she was for women, even way back in the '50s, when they tried to force her to wear certain makeup, and she would go wipe it off. She was the very first woman to have her own production company." Original article source:Kim Novak, 92, says 'it's close to the end' as Hollywood legend reflects on leaving industry at career peak

Kim Novak, 92, says 'it's close to the end' as Hollywood legend reflects on leaving industry at career peak

Kim Novak, 92, says 'it's close to the end' as Hollywood legend reflects on leaving industry at career peak Kim Novakreflected o...
Carson Kelly delivers the Cubs a wild 7-6 victory over the BravesNew Foto - Carson Kelly delivers the Cubs a wild 7-6 victory over the Braves

CHICAGO (AP) — Carson Kelly hit a tying two-run homer in the eighth inning and a game-ending single in the 10th, sending the Chicago Cubs to a wild 7-6 victory over the Atlanta Braves on Monday. Ian Happ had three hits for Chicago, including his 19th homer. Dansby Swanson drove in two runs, and Matt Shaw had a run-scoring double. Seiya Suzuki began the Cubs' 10th on second as the automatic runner. Suzuki advanced on Nico Hoerner's one-out grounder to second before Kelly hit a liner into the corner in left off John Brebbia (1-1). Andrew Kittredge (4-3) worked a perfect 10th for the win. The Cubs trailed 6-1 before Shaw doubled home Swanson in the fifth. Swanson hit a two-run double off Hunter Stratton in the sixth, and Kelly completed the comeback with his 14th homer on a 3-2 curveball from Pierce Johnson. Michael Harris II drove in four runs for Atlanta on a pair of two-out hits. Drake Baldwin had two hits and scored twice. Harris' two-run single off Colin Rea made it 3-0 in the third. He also hit a two-run double in Atlanta's three-run fifth after Taylor Rogers retired the first two batters of the frame. Harris' single — driving in Ronald Acuña Jr. and Baldwin — landed in between Cubs center fielder Pete Crow-Armstrong and right fielder Kyle Tucker. Crow-Armstrong peeled off and Tucker came up emptyon a diving attemptas the ball landed in right-center. After a tough start to the season, Harris is batting .335 (59 for 176) with 11 homers and 33 RBIs in 43 games since the All-Star break. Key moment Kelly's hit set off a wild celebration for the crowd of 39,673 at Wrigley Field. Key stat The Cubs improved to 23-45 when their opponent scores first. Up next Joey Wentz (5-4, 4.92 ERA) starts for Atlanta on Tuesday night, and fellow left-hander Shota Imanaga (8-6, 3.08 ERA) pitches for Chicago. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Carson Kelly delivers the Cubs a wild 7-6 victory over the Braves

Carson Kelly delivers the Cubs a wild 7-6 victory over the Braves CHICAGO (AP) — Carson Kelly hit a tying two-run homer in the eighth inning...
Baz stops losing streak as Rays rout Mariners 10-2 for 4th straight winNew Foto - Baz stops losing streak as Rays rout Mariners 10-2 for 4th straight win

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Shane Baz pitched six shutout innings to end his eight-game losing streak and the Tampa Bay Rays beat the Seattle Mariners 10-2 on Monday night for their fourth consecutive victory. Nick Fortes hit an early three-run homer and scored three times. Tristan Gray also went deep and Yandy Díaz had a two-run double for the Rays (68-69), who moved within 4 1/2 games of the Mariners for the last American League playoff spot. Seattle holds a 1 1/2-game lead over Texas for the third and final wild card. Junior Caminero went 3 for 4 with two RBI singles. Jake Mangum also had three of Tampa Bay's 13 hits at George M. Steinbrenner Field. Mariners starter Luis Castillo (8-8) allowed five runs and six hits in four innings. Baz (9-11) scattered five hits and two walks while striking out six to earn his first win since June 26. Fortes' flyball over the right-center wall in the second had Dominic Canzone reaching to try and bring it back. Canzone protested he lost his glove in the process, but after a replay review, Fortes had a three-run homer and the Rays had a lead they did not relinquish. Pinch-hitter Leo Rivas connected for a two-run shot in the Seattle ninth, his first major league homer. Key moment Baz found himself in a jam in the sixth after Randy Arozarena and Cal Raleigh opened the inning with back-to-back singles. Baz coaxed a flyout from Julio Rodríguez, a harmless grounder to first from Josh Naylor and got out of the inning by striking out Eugenio Suárez. Key stat Baz's losing streak was the longest of his career. Up next Rays right-hander Drew Rasmussen (10-5, 2.64 ERA) faces RHP Bryan Woo (12-7, 2.95) when the series continues Tuesday night. ___ AP MLB:https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Baz stops losing streak as Rays rout Mariners 10-2 for 4th straight win

Baz stops losing streak as Rays rout Mariners 10-2 for 4th straight win TAMPA, Fla. (AP) — Shane Baz pitched six shutout innings to end his ...

 

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