Frenchman surges ahead as Toyota team-mates hit trouble on penultimate day.
Sébastien Ogier stands on the cusp of surpassing Markku Alén’s Vodafone Rally de Portugal record – providing he can maintain his lead over Hyundai Motorsport rival Ott Tänak on the event’s final day tomorrow (Sunday).
A tumultuous Saturday at the 2024 FIA World Rally Championship’s fifth round wreaked havoc among some of the series’ top drivers, reshuffling the leaderboard and granting Ogier an 11.9-sec overnight lead.
The Frenchman’s Toyota Gazoo Racing team began this penultimate leg with all guns blazing, locking out the podium after a near-perfect opening day. However, their fortunes took a dive early this morning when Kalle Rovanperä and Takamoto Katsuta both faltered on the brutal gravel terrain.
Overnight leader Rovanperä looked poised to tighten his grip on the top spot after blitzing the Felgueiras opener, but he misjudged a right-hander in Montim shortly afterwards and rolled out of contention. Katsuta’s exit was less dramatic but equally devastating: a rearward impact shattered his GR Yaris Rally1 car’s suspension as the Japanese driver battled for third.
Toyota’s hopes rested on Ogier’s shoulders. He tussled for the lead with Tänak and briefly relinquished the position on Amarante 1 before going back in front when the Estonian nursed a deflated tyre in the following stage.
Although Tänak maintained the pressure with benchmark times over the first two stages of the repeated afternoon loop, Ogier responded with a brace of stage wins to widen the gap.
Victory for Ogier on Sunday would be his sixth in Portugal. At present he jointly tops the event’s roll of honour with Italian legend Markku Alén, known for his dominance with Fiat and Lancia in the 1970s and 80s.
“It’s been a good day,” said Ogier. “A tricky one, we didn’t expect so many things happening today. Unfortunately on Toyota’s side it was not a perfect day. For me it was good, but we lost two cars.
“We have to try and finish the job tomorrow now,” he added.
The drama up ahead brought good news for Thierry Neuville, who ended the day 59.5sec behind team-mate Tänak having climbed from sixth to third. With main title rival Elfyn Evans languishing in sixth, Neuville is poised to extend his championship lead and his Saturday standing will earn him 13 points providing he completes Super Sunday.
Neuville overtook Dani Sordo in the first stage of the day but the Spaniard kept touch with his colleague, ending the day 14.2sec further back to make it three Hyundais in the top four.
Behind Sordo by only 7.3sec was M-Sport Ford hotshot Adrien Fourmaux, who held a comfortable buffer of almost two minutes to Evans. Evans struggled to get into a rhythm with his GR Yaris, and an early spin exacerbated his challenges.
Rally2 cars filled the remainder of the leaderboard, with Nikolay Gryazin sitting seventh in his Citroën C3. Jan Solans was the first of the WRC2-registered drivers while Josh McErlean and Yohan Rossel completed the top 10.
Leading positions after Saturday: 1. S Ogier / V Landais FRA Toyota GR Yaris 3h 1m 55.8s 2. O Tänak / M Järveoja EST Hyundai i20 N +11.9s 3. T Neuville / M Wydaeghe BEL Hyundai i20 N +1m 11.4s 4. D Sordo / C Carrera ESP Hyundai i20 N +1m 25.6s 5. A Fourmaux / A Coria FRA Ford Puma +1m 32.9s 6. E Evans / S Martin GBR Toyota GR Yaris +3m 23.8s
Students at University College Dublin (UCD) have set up an encampment in Belfield in solidarity with Palestine.
The camp was established on Saturday evening at the main lake at the south Dublin campus by UCD Studentsâ Union (UCDSU) and the collegeâs Boycott, Divest and Sanctions (BDS) group.
It is the second such encampment at an Irish university in recent weeks. Trinity College students last Wednesday ended a six-day encampment, which had resulted in public access to the Book of Kells being blocked, after the university committed to divest from three Israeli companies in which it held investments as part of its endowment funds.
In a statement, the UCD protest organisers issued a list of 12 demands, and said that the peaceful encampment would continue until these demands are met.
These include calls for the university to end all academic ties with Israel; to disclose all ties, academic and financial, with Israeli institutions and enterprises and to commit to divest from any investments in the country; to provide scholarships for Palestinian students and pathways for Palestinian academics to work within UCD; and to remove Israeli goods and supplier contracts from campus.
The protest organisers also called on the university to issue a public statement calling for âan end to the genocide of the Palestinian people by the settler state of Israelâ.
Other demands include flying the Palestinian flag on campus until a permanent ceasefire is agreed; and the naming of the Centre of Future Learning building, which is under construction, after Palestinian writer and poet Refaat Alareer, who was killed in an airstrike in Gaza last December.
âWe will not accept the inclusion of any neutral statement that condemns all forms of violence on both sides, which creates a false moral and material equivalence, underplaying the genocidal destruction Israel has unleashed on the Palestinian people,â concluded the statement.
UCD students in April protested against the visit of Nancy Pelosi, former speaker of the US House of Representatives, to campus to receive an honorary degree.
UCD studentsâ union president Martha NÃ Riada was removed from the conferring ceremony by security staff as she called Pelosi âa Zionist and war criminalâ.
Come join the encampment, as students and staff @ucddublin we’re calling on our University to cut ties with Israeli institutions. Academic freedom can’t be used as a reason not to stand against genocide when all Universities in Gaza are destroyed. https://t.co/68KdzNX0l4
In a post on X on Saturday evening, Ms NÃ Riada said âacademic freedom canât be used as a reason not to stand against genocide when all universities in Gaza are destroyedâ.
Teenagers convinced they are the wrong gender are breaking an NHS ban on puberty blocker drugs by buying them online from foreign dealers.
Social media sites including Reddit, X and Facebook have been flooded with links to websites where the teens can buy the ‘dangerous’ drugs without any age checks or prescriptions.
This week an undercover Mail on Sunday reporter posing as a young teenage girl was able to buy large quantities of puberty blockers shipped to Britain from Turkey, Hong Kong and Russia.
Last night Health Secretary Victoria Atkins said she was ‘appalled’ and ‘looking closely’ at new laws to crack down.
The drugs, which halt the onset of adolescence, were banned for under-18s by the NHS last month following an outcry over their use by London‘s Tavistock gender identity development clinic, which prescribed them to hundreds of children.
Serkan Senvardar, a dealer based in Turkey, shipped a testosterone-blocking drug called bicalutamide from Istanbul
A government review by Dr Hilary Cass found that the drugs posed danger to children and ‘no evidence’ that they gave them ‘time to think’ before changing gender
Medics warned the drugs can damage brain and bone development and cause infertility.
That led to a damning government review by Dr Hilary Cass, who said the drugs pose a danger to children. Former Tavistock patients have sued the NHS over the scandal.
Dr Cass also found ‘no evidence’ the drugs gave the young ‘time to think’ about whether they really wanted to change gender.
But by following advice and links on Reddit, a Mail on Sunday reporter posing as a young teen-ager easily bought the puberty blocker drugs from three different websites in recent weeks.
The online pharmacies charge from £52 for a nasal spray to £228 for a syringe. One website boasted ‘express delivery’ and offered a 10 per cent discount for payment with the cryptocurrency Bitcoin.
Serkan Senvardar, a dealer based in Turkey, shipped a testosterone-blocking drug called bicalutamide from Istanbul. It arrived in London seven days after our reporter placed the order.
Sold under the brand name Casodex, bicalutamide is a prescription-only medication usually used for treating prostate cancer.
Health Secretary Victoria Atkins said she was ‘appalled’ and ‘looking closely’ at new laws to crack down
But influencers posting on Reddit have advised boys wanting to transition to girls that ‘it’s pretty effective at basically making testosterone useless’.
Last week the MoS tracked Mr Senvardar to the holiday resort of Marmaris in Turkey, where he initially told our undercover reporter she could buy more Casodex. When we later confronted him about his business, he denied involvement in the online operation.
Reacting to our findings last night, Health Secretary Ms Atkins pledged to look at ‘legislative options’ to crack down on the black market in puberty blockers.
‘I’m appalled that dangerous drugs like this are being sold to vulnerable children and commend The Mail on Sunday’s vital public interest journalism,’ she said.
Tory MP Paul Bristow said: ‘This all sounds like every parent’s worst nightmare. The people trading in distribution of these products that can cause irreversible damage to young bodies are vile.’
Former Health Secretary Sajid Javid said: ‘These powerful drugs were never designed to be available on demand but this investigation makes clear thousands of children are at risk. We must be relentless in s
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Exposed: The black market dealers selling puberty blocker drugs to British teenagers who are cheating ban
Crawley blew MK Dons away for the second time in a matter of days as a 5-1 victory at Stadium MK – and an 8-1 win on aggregate – took them to the Sky Bet League Two play-off final.
Scott Lindsey’s side had established a 3-0 first-leg lead in West Sussex on Tuesday – and that was extended to 5-0 within the first half-hour in Buckinghamshire, courtesy of Jay Williams and Danilo Orsi.
Max Dean volleyed in to pull one back for the hosts, but the two-goal cushion on the night was restored by Orsi after slick build-up between Klaidi Lolos and Liam Kelly.
Dean saw a penalty well-saved by Reds goalkeeper Corey Addai, before Jack Roles came off the bench to smash in a fourth, shortly after he had crashed a shot off the left-hand post.
Orsi then turned in a Ronan Darcy cross in second-half stoppage time to complete his hat-trick and round off a thoroughly one-sided affair.
Crawley will face Crewe at Wembley on Sunday May 19 – live on Sky Sports Football – with a place in Sky Bet League One at stake.
How Crawley ripped MK Dons to shreds
Only once has a deficit of three goals or more been successfully overturned in play-off history – when Sheffield Wednesday beat Peterborough last season – so MK Dons boss Mike Williamson called for “relentless” attacking from his players to turn the game in their favour.
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Crawley take an early lead as Jay Williams storms forward from midfield and squeezes his shot into the back of the net
Three minutes in, the difficulty of their task was cranked up a notch when Williams stormed forward from midfield, pinched the ball from Alex Gilbey and squeezed a shot into the bottom left corner under pressure.
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Milton Keynes Dons’ Max Dean somehow avoids a red card after stamping on Jay Williams
MK enjoyed spells of possession after that, but they were passive with it and so it came as little surprise when Crawley – who looked like the home side – established a 5-0 aggregate lead with Orsi taking advantage of Dan Harvie’s misjudging of a bounce and firing in his 22nd goal in all competitions this season.
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Crawley look Wembley bound as Danilo Orsi fires them into a commanding two goal lead!
In first-half stoppage-time, Dean volleyed in to halve the deficit on the night after a lapse in concentration at the back, though there were question marks over whether he should have even been still on the pitch after appearing to stamp on Williams earlier in the half.
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Danilo Orsi taps home his second of the night to send Crawley into dreamland!
Two minutes into the second half, Crawley had restored their two-goal cushion on the night in style, with Klaidi Lolos threading the ball to Liam Kelly, who squared for Orsi to nonchalantly roll in his second of the night. The shouts of ‘ole’ could be heard from the away section by this point.
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Jack Roles smashes home Crawley’s fourth of the night and seventh of the tie!
MK then won a penalty when Kelly was adjudged to have handled Ellis Harrison’s cross, but Dean was unable to beat Corey Addai, who dived to his right to bat the spot-kick away.
As the hosts’ energy began to wane, Roles tried to catch them out with an early shot that hit the post after the slightest of touches from goalkeeper Filip Marschall, but he did manage to put one away shortly afterwards, taking charge after Orsi had held the ball up.
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Danilo Orsi completes his hat-trick as Crawley score their fifth goal of the night and humiliate MK Dons
And it got even better for the ruthless Reds, as Orsi bundled in to complete his treble on an incredibly memorable night.
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Crawley’s Danilo Orsi and Liam Kelly react to their stunning 8-1 aggregate victory over Milton Keynes Dons to reach the League Two play-off final
Williamson: MK Dons ran out of steam
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MK Dons head coach Mike Williamson believes his side ran out of steam after a hard season over the two play-off semi final ties against Crawley.
MK Dons head coach Mike Williamson told Sky Sports:
“We just ran out of steam in terms of the season, the night. I feel for the boys in there because it’s a real, real tough one to take. I’ve had some tough days in football and I think this is up there with the hardest time and defeat.
“Those boys have given everything; I don’t look at it on a one-off occasion, I look at it over the course since we’ve come in and they’ve run their socks off. Even today when we lost our composure and our shape, they still carried on running. For me, that’s going to take them a long way.
“What I know about football is when you’re hurting, you have to react to it and that is just getting your head down and working hard.
“I need to say congratulations to them. I thought they were excellent over both legs. For us, it was another night of what could go wrong did go wrong. The early goal was hard to take, but the boys didn’t change the way they wanted to play in the first half and until we got to the last 20 minutes, it opened up completely and I felt it got away from us.”
Lindsey: My boys were outstanding tonight
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Crawley manager Scott Lindsey praises his side after their ‘outstanding’ 5-1 victory over MK Dons to reach the League Two play-off final.
Crawley manager Scott Lindsey told Sky Sports:
“I’m really proud. We came into this game really humble and really respectful that we had another task in the shape of MK Dons – who are a very good side. Even though we were 3-0 in front at half time, as it were, we felt we still had a lot to do, so we kept our feet firmly on the ground coming into the game.
“My boys didn’t half perform well tonight – I thought we were outstanding. We scored some great goals, we were aggressive in the press and aggressive with the ball.
“As a manager, you know how football can be – it’s got a nasty habit of kicking you where it hurts, so you never really relax until the final whistle, if I’m honest with you. But I actually enjoyed certainly the last 20 minutes where we were brilliant with the ball. We picked them off, made them run and it was clear to see they got frustrated with that.
“We’ll recover tomorrow and we’ll be back in on Monday and getting to work. We’ll watch Crewe at length and in detail, start putting a gameplan together in the early part of the week and nothing will change with our preparation. We’re really looking forward to it.”
Coco Jones served up a sweet treat in the form of her new single ‘Here We Go (Uh Oh),’ which arrived this month alongside its performance-driven music video.
The powerful track was offered up as the first taste of the GRAMMY winner’s forthcoming album debut.
Now, Jones is taking fans behind the scenes to see how the stunning clip was pieced together.
Choreography powers the visual, which has received praise in earnest for being her most compelling effort yet.
The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has issued a directive to all foreign missions in Nigeria, insisting on the exclusive use of the Nigerian Naira for all consular transactions within the country. This directive also extends to Nigerian foreign missions abroad, which are now required to accept Naira in their financial operations.
The move is part of a broader effort by the EFCC to combat the “dollarisation” of the Nigerian economy, a practice that has contributed to the weakening of the local currency, according to the commission. In an advisory to the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Ambassador Yusuf Tuggar, titled “EFCC Advisory to Foreign Missions against Invoicing in US Dollar,” the commission expressed its concern over the persistent use of the US dollar for consular services within Nigeria by some foreign missions.
In the letter dated April 5, 2024, EFCC Chairman Ola Olukoyede highlighted the illegality of this practice, citing Section 20(1) of the Central Bank of Nigeria Act, 2007, which stipulates that the Nigerian currency issued by the central bank shall be the sole legal tender in the country.
The EFCC’s letter to the Foreign Ministry states, “This practice not only contravenes the extant laws and financial regulations in Nigeria but also undermines the sovereignty of our national currency. It is a direct challenge to our monetary policy and the aspirations for sustainable economic development.”
The commission has called for immediate compliance from all diplomatic missions in Nigeria, emphasizing that any transaction conducted in any currency other than the Naira is illegal and cannot be tolerated. The EFCC warned that such actions represent an affront to Nigeria’s sovereignty.
The enforcement of this policy has already seen the EFCC resuming operations against irregular currency trading activities. In recent efforts to stabilize the Naira, EFCC operatives conducted a series of raids in the Wuse Zone 4 market in Abuja, targeting illegal Bureau De Change (BDC) operators. The operations, which involved the arrest of several currency speculators, have been met with resistance, culminating in altercations and minor damages during the enforcement activities.
This initiative by the EFCC is seen as a crucial step towards reinforcing the standing of the Nigerian Naira in the economic transactions within the country, especially in dealings that involve international actors such as foreign missions. The commission has reaffirmed its commitment to ensuring that all financial activities within the borders of Nigeria align with the national laws and financial regulations.
Ange Postecoglou isnât worried about set pieces, as he has made clear repeatedly over the past few weeks. Football being football, the more he is asked and the more he plays down their importance, the more goals Spurs seem to concede from set pieces. At the same time, as Arsenal score more and more from set pieces, their set-piece coach, Nicolas Jover, has become an increasingly prominent figure, bouncing up from the bench every time Arsenal are awarded a corner or free-kick near the box.
Set pieces feel like the new frontier. It may look familiar as Declan Rice bends one in, Ben White checks the keeper and a phalanx of big blokes charge to the near post, but the blocking runs are more carefully plotted that ever before.
Data analysis means that set plays are becoming more and more sophisticated. Google DeepMind, which has previously looked at board games such as Go, has worked in collaboration with Liverpool to demonstrate how artificial intelligence can improve positioning at corners.
But thereâs an assumption here that Postecoglou seems not to share, which is that set plays are somehow separate from the rest of the game. Thatâs why DeepMind has begun looking at football with corners. There is a fixed point from which the ball will be delivered: far fewer variables than from open play.
Before the 2018 World Cup, Gareth Southgate realised that practising set pieces was efficient: relatively large gains for a relatively small amount of work. The result was Englandâs best World Cup since 1990, based largely on Harry Maguire and John Stones being good in the air, and Kieran Trippierâs delivery.
Countless managers over the years have come to a similar conclusion: good balls into the box plus big lads plus organisation equals a threat, no matter what differential of ability there might be in other areas of the game.
Postecoglou seems not to share that view. In the wake of defeat in the north London derby, when all three of the goals Tottenham conceded came from corners â two of Arsenalâs and one of their own â he pointed out that his sides have often initially struggled to defend set plays but have then improved. âThere is an underlying reason for that which Iâm very, very comfortable with,â he said. âEventually I will create a team that has success and it wonât be because of working on set pieces.â
His vision, seemingly, is holistic: he sees set pieces as part of a wider whole, not a discrete part of the game. In one sense, Postecoglou is right: going into the weekend Spurs had conceded 14 goals from set plays this season. In terms of goals conceded, only Nottingham Forest have a higher proportion coming from set plays. Even if that figure could be halved, which would represent remarkable success, itâs not going to close the gap to Manchester City or Arsenal. If Spurs are to bridge to the leagueâs elite, it will be by improving coherence and consistency in more general play, which almost certainly demands some strengthening of the squad.
More contentious is the implication that improvements elsewhere will bring improvement to the defending of corners â although they may reduce the number of corners conceded which would, clearly, be a major help. Certainly thatâs not how the numerous clubs who now employ set-piece specialists see it.
But then this has been an underlying issue almost since coaching began: having broken the game down into component elements that can be practised, how do you put it back together again to make it relevant for the fluent whole? Football is the most fluid of all major ball sports, the one with the fewest fixed points and the longest passages between breakdowns, and that makes it difficult to analyse and predict and thus to practise.
As Guardiola evolved and adapted, he decided set pieces were worth working on separately. Joverâs impact was immediate: in his first season at the Etihad, City scored more goals from set plays than any other side in the league and conceded the second fewest. But what is perhaps most significant is Guardiolaâs shift of mentality, that he had come to see set plays as part of the game worth practising and treating differently.
Arteta was clearly impressed, and persuaded Jover to join Arsenal in 2021 when Andreas Georgson returned to Malmö. The season before Jover arrived, Arsenal scored six goals from set plays (penalties excluded); under him they have scored 16, 15 and, this season so far, 22. Goals conceded from set plays have remained largely unchanged at around six.
This season, Arsenal have a net gain from set plays of 16. Thatâs only two more than City â not huge, although when the title race could go down to goal difference, itâs not irrelevant either.
Tottenham, meanwhile, have conceded three more than they have scored this season from set plays. Set plays alone, in other words, account for 19 of the difference of 49 between Arsenalâs and Tottenhamâs goal difference.
Postecoglou is right that an improvement in set plays alone would not be enough to elevate Tottenham into the elite, but equally set plays do account for around 40% of the gap; the bigger issue, though, is whether he is right that when general play improves, set plays will necessarily improve with it.
Arteta clearly believed his side needed extra help in that area. So far, his belief in the value of specialism is being rewarded.