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Russia’s Putin hails victory in election criticised as illegitimate
Russian President Vladamir Putin has cemented his grip on power in a landslide election victory that has been widely criticised as lacking democratic legitimacy.
In a post-election news conference, Putin cast the outcome as a vindication of his decision to defy the West and invade Ukraine.
“No matter who or how much they want to intimidate us, no matter who or how much they want to suppress us, our will, our consciousness – no one has ever succeeded in anything like this in history,” Putin said in an address from his campaign headquarters early on Monday morning. “It has not worked now and will not work in the future. Never.”
Shortly after the last polls closed on Sunday, early returns pointed to the conclusion everyone expected: that Putin would extend his nearly quarter-century rule for six more years.
According to Russia’s Central Election Commission, he had some 87 percent of the vote with about 60 percent of precincts counted. The result means Putin, 71, will overtake Joseph Stalin and become Russia’s longest-serving leader in more than 200 years.
Communist candidate Nikolay Kharitonov came second with just under 4 percent, newcomer Vladislav Davankov third and ultra-nationalist Leonid Slutsky fourth, early results suggested.
Nationwide turnout was 74.22 percent when polls closed, election officials said, surpassing 2018 levels of 67.5 percent.
(Aljazeera)
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Late Spain goal eliminates Portugal, ends Ronaldo’s international career?
Mikel Merino scored in the first minute of second-half stoppage time, and Spain beat Portugal 1-0 on Monday to likely end the World Cup career of superstar Cristiano Ronaldo.
After being fouled, Merino took a quick free kick, ran towards the goal and fired past goalkeeper Diogo Costa after a pass from Ferran Torres.
Spain advanced to the quarterfinals for the first time since winning its only World Cup title in 2010 in South Africa. La Roja will play either the USA or Belgium on Friday at Los Angeles Stadium.
Ronaldo was trying to get Portugal to the quarterfinals for a second consecutive tournament – something the nation has not achieved before. Instead, his career on the biggest stage is likely over for the all-time leader in international goals (146) and appearances (233).
Merino did not come on as a sub until the 85th minute, and his heads-up play showed some of the versatility that helped Arsenal win its first Premier League title in more than 20 years in May. He had been doubtful to make Spain’s squad because of injuries, which also impacted his Premier League season.
The latest meeting of the Iberian Peninsula rivals – who first played a friendly in Madrid 105 years ago – was quite the contrast to their most recent World Cup match.
It was eight years ago that Ronaldo had his only World Cup hat-trick in a 3-3 draw with Spain, a group-stage opener considered one of the tournament’s best games.
The 41-year-old superstar scored three times in this tournament, but did not have many chances against Spain’s Unai Simon.
La Roja had created better chances, but extra time and possibly penalties loomed until Merino’s late intervention.

Spain broke a World Cup record with its sixth consecutive clean sheet, and goalkeeper Simon extended his record shutout streak to 609 minutes.
Spain broke its tie with Italy (1990) and Switzerland (2006-10) for the most consecutive World Cup matches not allowing a goal. Spain’s streak began with a 0-0 draw in the 2022 round of 16, when Morocco advanced after a penalty shootout.
There was also a surprising scoreless draw against Cape Verde to open group play in this tournament, followed by four consecutive shutout victories to advance to the quarterfinals.
Simon surpassed the previous record of 517 consecutive scoreless minutes during a 3-0 blanking of Austria to open the knockout round on Thursday. Famed Italy goalkeeper Walter Zenga set the standard in 1990 with five consecutive clean sheets in his home World Cup.
Simon’s shutout streak started in 2022 in Qatar, during a 2-1 loss to Japan to wrap up group play.
He came into the Portugal game having made only four saves in this World Cup – Austria had no shots on target – and on Monday in Arlington, Simon had to make two saves in the first half against Portugal, both from shots by Cristiano Ronaldo.
The second of those saves was an impressive diving stop when he was still in midair after reaching back to grab the ball with both hands.

[Aljazeera]
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Nyamhuri and Ngarava stun Bangladesh by defending 141
It was Newman Nyamhuri’s day – with bat and ball, and in the field. First, he scored a career-best 33 from No. 9 to push Zimbabwe from 70 for 8 to 141. Then he took two catches in the deep, the first of them an agile effort while tip-toeing the fine-leg boundary. Nyamhuri also broke Bangladesh’s 49-run fourth-wicket stand to open the floodgates for a memorable win. Zimbabwe successfully defended 141, beating Bangladesh by 25 runs.
It was a bowlers’ ODI played on a spicy pitch in Harare. Nahid Rana had made that much apparent by picking up 6 for 21, the best figures by a Bangladesh bowler in the format. The pace and bounce that tested Zimbabwe’s batters also troubled Bangladesh, as not a single over of spin was bowled out of the 33.1 needed for the defence.
Left-arm quick Richard Ngarava, leading Zimbabwe in an ODI for the first time, delivered with both bat and ball too. Ngarava added 63 with Nyamhuri for the ninth wicket, during which he scored 27. Fittingly, he took the final Bangladesh wicket to fall and finished with 3 for 31 to wrap victory.
Much of the damage Bangladesh sustained was of their own doing. After their top three batters threw their wickets away, Towhid Hridoy and Mehidy Hasan Miraz repeated the trick against deliveries they should ideally have put away to the boundary.
It all started in the second over, bowled by Blessing Muzarabani, as Tanzid Hasan pulled a short ball to Nyamhuri, who was placed a straighter than usual at fine leg. When Nyamhuri realised momentum was taking him beyond the boundary, he threw the ball back on the field of play, stepped over, then back in and calmly completed the catch. In the fourth over, Najmul Hossain Shanto sliced one to Ben Curran at deep third as Muzarabani got his second wicket. Three balls later, Soumya Sarkar slashed Ngarava to deep third as well, as Nyamhuri took his second catch.
Bangladesh were 17 for 3 and Zimbabwe sniffed an upset, but Hridoy and Nurul Hasan dug in. Ngarava used attacking fields – two slips were a given for much of the partnership – as both batters kept getting beaten. Hridoy and Nurul seemed in no hurry, but just when Bangladesh were beginning to gradually regain momentum, Hridoy, on 25, flashed at a short and wide ball outside off from Nyamhuri in the 19th over. Curran, at deep third, almost overran the ball before swiftly moving to his left to catch it.
From there, it all unraveled for Bangladesh. From 66 for 3, they lost 7 for 50 to be bowled out for 116. Come the 21st over, Nyamhuri had Mosaddek Hossain fending behind. Three overs later, Mehidy fell to another great effort in the outfield, as Brian Bennett rushed forward to take a low catch at deep cover point to give Ngarava his second wicket.
At 89 for 6, Rishad Hossain joined Nurul as the last recognised batters for Bangladesh but they couldn’t do much. With no DRS available, Nurul, on 31, was unable to review what seemed like a tight lbw decision that went against him. Evans, who had landed that blow, had Rishad and Taskin caught in his next two overs, before Ngarava sealed victory.
But before Bangladesh, Zimbabwe’s batting had collapsed as well. They lost 8 for 34 after their openers Bennett and Curran put on 36. Mehidy had elected to bowl after he spotted moisture in the pitch and overcast conditions above. While the start didn’t go his bowlers’ way, it turned around in no time. Curran was run out for 18 as Mehidy’s throw from mid-off hit the stumps, before Taskin and Rana started the party.
Taskin had Bennett caught for 17 two balls later, and started the ninth over by bowling Craig Ervine for a first-ball duck with a beautiful ball that was short and seamed away to hit the top of middle stump. Rana got into the act later, in the 14th over, and his extra pace on a helpful pitch made him difficult to handle. By the time his first spell ended, Rana had Sikandar Raza caught behind, Wessly Madhevere fending to second slip, Clive Madande slicing to point, Innocent Kaia also caught by the wicketkeeper, and Evans lbw.
Evans was Rana’s fifth wicket, as the Bangladesh quick completed his third ODI five-for of the year. Rana got his sixth wicket when he cleaned Ngarava up with a yorker to end what turned out to be a defining stand.
But where Bangladesh threatened to bowl Zimbabwe out for a sub-100 total, Nyamhuri and Ngarava fought back to give Zimbabwe an outside chance. By the end of the day, they also contributed with the ball to convert that outside chance into victory.
Scores:
Zimbabwe 141 in 36.4 overs (Newman Nyamhuri 33, Richard Ngarava 27; Nahid Rana 6-21, Taskin Ahmed 2-32) beat Bangladesh 116 in 33.1 overs (Nurul Hasan 31, Towhid Hridroy 25; Richard Ngarava 3-31, Brad Evans 3-34, Newman Nyamhuri 2-22, Blessing Muzarabani 2-24) by 25 runs
[Cricinfo]
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Sri Lanka try to make a play after Greaves 180, Hope 112
Sri Lanka rolled the momentum they had built in the latter half of the second session to roll over the final two West Indies wickets, to take a 50-run first innings lead. By stumps, they had extended that to 142 for the loss of two wickets after Shai Hope and Justin Greaves had earlier taken their fifth-wicket stand to 242, the latter making 180, to keep the hosts in the contests.
At the crease by the close were Kamindu Mendis and Dinesh Chandimal, on a fairly brisk third wicket stand of 60 off 72. Kamindu’s entrance at 32 for 2 proved the catalyst for Sri Lanka’s improved rate of scoring, as he wasted little time in looking to take on the bowling.
Having watched from the other end for a couple of overs, he belatedly faced his fourth delivery of the innings, which he promptly got a thick edge over a slow-to-react Greaves at first slip. Two balls later he produced a more convincing boundary through extra cover, and then saved the best for last with a screaming drive square past cover.
At the start of the next over he flicked a loose one from Alzarri Joseph over deep square leg safely with the wind, and just like that he had raced to 23 off ten. Chandimal at the other end wasn’t as convincing, but he seemed to have fortune on his side.
Of his three boundaries, two came via edges, though an uppercut six off Alzarri signalled his intent as well to push the scoring along. By the close of play he had moved to 40 off 66, with Kamindu on 30 off 35. Sri Lanka moving at a healthy scoring rate of 4.18.
Prior to their intervention, a fiery opening burst from Shamar Joseph, allied with that trademark precision probing from Jayden Seales, accounted for the early removal of first innings centurion Lahiru Udara.
The opener was unable to add anything to his match tally, after failing to navigate a length ball that seamed back sharply to rap him just above the knee roll. Sri Lanka wasted a review as well, as replays showed this to be hitting the top of leg stump.
Chandimal and Nishan Madushka then came together to prevent any further inroads and they managed to scratch together a 51-ball stand of 30. But with the pitch now showing more variable bounce and the West Indian seamers utilising the lateral movement on offer with the new ball effectively, there were some nervy moments.
Both Madushka and Chandimal were beaten on the outside edge by the excellent Seales, as he continued to probe that channel outside off, while the introduction of Alzarri forced the Lankan batters to deal with some uncomfortable bounce.
And it was just this that brought about Madushka’s dismissal, as one rose up from a good length to take the edge off the shoulder of the bat. There was still work to do though, as this seemed to be clearing first slip, only for John Campbell to jump fully extended with both hands and claim the catch.
But despite those early wicket, as Sri Lanka seek an unlikely victory, they will hope that in Chandimal and Kamindu they have two batters capable of getting some fast runs on the fifth morning before presumably putting the hosts back into bat.
If that were to be the case, it will be quick return to the middle for a batting unit that had occupied roughly six sessions of play across this Test. Much of that owed to Hope and Greaves, who began the fourth day as they had carried on for much of the previous day.
For most of the morning it was essentially the Hope and Greaves show, with both batters taking on whatever the Sri Lankans through at them with consummate ease. The only areas of concern were some increasingly frequent deliveries keeping low off a length, but it wasn’t persistent enough to cause any undue concern – at least not at this juncture.
The pair moved along in lockstep, like they had done for most of the previous day. With West Indies unbothered about the scoring rate, the pair were more than content batting time and playing each ball on merit. There were just five boundaries in the session, three coming off the bat of Greaves – who showcased his serious batting chops with pair of picture book drives and a whip through midwicket.
Their centuries too came around four overs apart, with Hope the first to get there off 198 deliveries, and shortly after Greaves reached his of 201 balls. They were significant milestones as well, with this Hope’s fifth Test century but the first in the Caribbean, and for Greaves it was his second ton at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium and third overall in Tests. It also showcased his growing ability to convert his starts, with his Test centuries now outnumbering his Test fifties three to one.
However, with less than 15 minutes to lunch, Hope fell in an unusual manner as he aimed to pad away an innocuous leg-stump delivery from Sonal Dinusha. As the ball passed and went through to keeper Kusal Mendis, Hope had reflexively dragged his back foot out of the crease. And just as that happened, the ball had bounced off Kusal’s gloves and hit the stumps.
It stopped the Hope-Greaves marathon stand at 242 off 459 deliveries, after which Sri Lanka’s attack finally began to be rewarded for their tireless efforts across the innings. Much of this owed to the tenacity of Asitha Fernando, who dug deep into his reserves to find the energy to produce an exemplary spell of short-pitched bowling.
He battered and bruised Roston Chase – a period that resulted in a finger injury which kept him off the field once West Indies began bowling – before eventually wrangling an edge through to the keeper. A pair of bouncers also accounted for Anderson Phillip and Shamar, the latter giving him is third Test five-wicket haul.
In between Milan Rathnayake dismissed Alzarri – also with a short ball, as he looked to take on the man at fine leg – but the prize scalp of Greaves was reserved for Jayasuriya, as the tall allrounder finally faltered 325 deliveries into his innings – getting a leading edge to point off one that spun out of the rough.
Scores:
Sri Lanka 549 for 9 dec and 92 for 2 (Dineh Chandimal 40*, Kamindu Mendis 30*; Alzarri Joseph 1-17) lead West Indies 499 (John Campbell 72, Justin Greaves 180, Shai Hope 112; Asitha Fernando 5-130, Prabath Jayasuriya 3-131) by 142 runs
[Cricinfo]
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