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Argentina lined up to play controversial friendly in RUSSIA this year despite Fifa ban

Argentina lined up to play controversial friendly in RUSSIA this year despite Fifa ban

The Suna day ago

ARGENTINA are set to play Russia in an international friendly this November, according to reports.
The Russian national team has largely been shunned since the country's invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
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Russia were kicked out of the 2022 World Cup, and have been banned by Fifa ever since.
Argentine football reporter Gaston Edul claimed last month that a meeting could be on the cards.
And further reports from Telegram in Russia suggest that a game is in the works for the November international break.
Such a deal would see the world champions travel to Moscow's Luzhniki Stadium for a match.
A preliminary agreement has reportedly been agreed, with the Luzhniki having been reserved for dates between November 10 and 18.
Should the match go ahead, it is unlikely that big stars such as Lionel Messi will participate.
That's because Western sponsors would likely be uncomfortable with their partners playing in Russia.
Russia's ban has seen them not play in Fifa or Uefa competitions since 2021.
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Their last competitive match was a 1-0 defeat at Croatia on November 14, 2021.
They have since participated in 16 friendlies, primarily played in Moscow.
Russia's opponents have included Qatar, Iraq, Cameroon and Serbia.
US president Donald Trump recently claimed that participation in the 2026 World Cup could be an incentive for Russia to end their invasion of Ukraine.
During a chat with Fifa president Gianni Infantino, Trump, 78, was at first not even aware that Russia were banned.
He asked: "I didn't know that. Is that right?"
To which Infantino replied: "That is right.
"They are banned for the time being from playing but we hope that something happens and peace will happen so that Russia can be readmitted."
Trump then said: "That's possible. Hey, that could be a good incentive, right? We want to get them to stop. We want them to stop.
"Five thousand young people a week are being killed - it's not even believable."
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Russia is at war with Britain and US no longer a reliable ally, UK adviser says
Russia is at war with Britain and US no longer a reliable ally, UK adviser says

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  • The Guardian

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Russia is at war with Britain, the US is no longer a reliable ally and the UK has to respond by becoming more cohesive and more resilient, according to one of the three authors of the strategic defence review. Fiona Hill, from county Durham, became the White House's chief Russia adviser during Donald Trump's first term and contributed to the British government's strategy, and made the remarks in an interview with the Guardian. 'We're in pretty big trouble,' Hill says, describing the UK's geopolitical situation as caught between 'the rock' of Vladimir Putin's Russia and 'the hard place' of Donald Trump's increasingly unpredictable United States. The best known of the reviewers appointed by Labour, alongside Lord Robertson, a former Nato secretary general, and retired general Sir Richard Barrons, Hill, 59, said she was happy to take on the role because it was 'such a major pivot point in global affairs'. She remains a dual national even after living over 30 years in the US. 'Russia has hardened as an adversary in ways that we probably hadn't fully anticipated,' Hill says, arguing that Putin sees the Ukraine war as a starting point to Moscow becoming 'a dominant military power in all of Europe'. As part of that long-term effort, Russia is already 'menacing the UK in various different ways,' she says, citing 'the poisonings, assassinations, sabotage operations, all kinds of cyber attacks and influence operations. The sensors that we see that they're putting down around critical pipelines, efforts to butcher undersea cables.' The conclusion, Hill says, is that 'Russia is at war with us'. Though the foreign policy expert, a long time Russia watcher, says she first made a similar warning in 2015, in a revised version of a book she wrote about the Russian president with Clifford Gaddy, reflecting on the invasion and annexation of Crimea. 'We said Putin had declared war on the West,' she says. At the time, other experts disagreed, but Hill says events since demonstrate 'he obviously had, and we haven't been paying attention to it'. The Russian leader, she argues, sees the fight in Ukraine as 'part of a proxy war with the United States; that's how he has persuaded China, North Korea and Iran to join in'. Putin believes, she says, that Ukraine has already been decoupled from the US relationship because 'Trump really wants to have a separate relationship with Putin to do arms control agreements and also business that will probably enrich their entourages further, though Putin doesn't need any more enrichment'. When it comes to defence, however, Hill says that the UK cannot rely on the military umbrella of the US as during the Cold War and in the generation that followed, at least 'not in the way that we did before'. In her description, the UK 'is having to manage its number one ally', though the challenge is not to overreact because 'you don't want to have a rupture'. This way of thinking even appears in the defence review published earlier this week, which says 'the UK's long-standing assumptions about global power balances and structures are no longer certain' – a rare acknowledgement in a British government document of how far and how fast Trumpism is affecting foreign policy certainties. The review team reported to Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, and defence secretary John Healey. Most of Hill's interaction were with Healey however, and Hill said she only met the prime minister once – describing him as 'pretty charming … in a proper and correct way' and as 'having read all the papers'. Hill is not drawn on if she advised Starmer or Healey on how to deal with Donald Trump, saying instead 'the advice I would give is the same I would give in a public setting'. 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Some of that, Hill says, is about a greater recognition of the level of external threat and initiatives for greater integration, by teaching first aid in schools or encouraging more teenagers to join school cadet forces, a recommendation of the defence review. 'What you need to do is get people engaged in all kinds of different ways in support of their communities,' she says. Hill says she sees that deindustrialisation and a rise of inequality in Russia and the US has contributed to the rise in national populism in both countries. Politicians in Britain, or elsewhere, 'have to be much more creative and engage people where they are at' as part of a 'national effort'. If this seems far away from a conventional view of defence, that is because it is, though Hill also argues that traditional conceptions of war are changing as technology evolves and with it what makes a potent force. 'People keep saying the British army has the smallest number of troops since the Napoleonic era. 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Vasyl Lomachenko's five best fights as modern great retires
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Vasyl Lomachenko shocked the boxing world yesterday by announcing his retirement from boxing at 37. The Ukrainian had a short but hugely successful pro career, becoming the fastest fighter ever to be a three-weight world champion, doing so in just 12 fights. He also amassed arguably the greatest amateur record of all time, 396-1, claiming two Olympic gold medals along the way. To honour the career of one of the best pure boxers the sport has ever seen, here are Lomachenko's five best wins as a professional. Guillermo Rigondeaux December 19, 2017, Madison Square Garden – Lomachenko faced another amateur legend and two-time Olympic Champion - Guillermo Rigondeaux. Rigondeaux came into the fight having not lost since 2003 as an amateur, but had moved up two weight classes to face Lomachenko. It was clear that Lomachenko, eight years younger, would be too much for Rigondeaux from the opening bell. His speed, strength and dynamism going forwards were more than even the Cuban defensive master could handle. The Cuban champion was unable to put any shots together against the WBO champion, who was able to anticipate anything coming his way and extinguish the fires with ease. The fight ended before the seventh round as Rigondeaux retired on his stool, claiming an early hand injury stopped him from continuing. But this was the fourth consecutive opponent of Lomachenko's who said ' no mas '. At the time of the retirement, all three scorecards were in favour of the Ukrainian, 59-54. 59-54 and 60-53. Jorge Linares May 5, 2018, Madison Square Garden – Having sought out new challenges at lightweight, Lomachenko took on the WBA lightweight champion Jorge Linares. On fight night, the Venezuelan found initial success in punching with Lomachenko to stem the flow of his volume punching, but the former super featherweight champ's footwork allowed him to get in and out of range before any of Linares' counters could meaningfully land. Lomachenko suffered the first real setback of his career in the sixth round as he got perhaps too comfortable entering Linares's range and got caught with a well-timed right hand that put him on the canvas. He beat the count but was saved by the bell before Linares had the opportunity to follow up. The fight was a stalemate on the scorecards in the tenth round. But this would not matter as Lomachenko pushed Linares back to the ropes and landed a body shot that dropped the WBA champion to one knee. He beat the count, but the referee chose to end the fight in the tenth, giving the Ukrainian a world title in his third weight division. Luke Campbell August 31, 2019, The O2 – It was another battle of the Olympic gold medallists as 'Loma' travelled to the UK to fight Luke Campbell. Campbell had a mixed run as a pro up to the Loma fight, having been beaten twice already, but had an amateur pedigree that meant you could never write him off. The opening rounds were cagey as the much taller Campbell attempted to keep Lomachenko at the end of his jab, but what some mistake for Campbell getting the better of his opponent is the Ukrainian downloading all of Campbell's reactions, movements and habits before taking over. That is exactly what he did, gliding around Campbell, landing hooks to head and body at will, then pivoting away at an angle – boxing for the purists. Lomachenko had Campbell hurt at the end of the fifth round, landing a flurry of hooks, and as Campbell looked ready to drop, the bell sounded. But the writing was on the wall, and the champion knew how to get to his opponent. He once again breached the defences of Campbell in the eleventh, but there was no bell to save him this time, and he got dropped by a right hook. He made it up before the count, but Lomachenko won a wide decision, 119-108, 119-108 and 118-109. Gary Allen Russell Jr June 21, 2014, Carson – After losing a controversial split decision to an overweight Orlando Salido for the WBO super featherweight title in his second professional fight, Lomachenko would get another shot in his next fight against the unbeaten but unproven Gary Allen Russell Jr. Russell Jr's game plan was clear from the outset; he wanted to outpunch 'Loma'. But as any great fighter does, the Ukrainian adjusted on the fly to nullify Russell Jr's fast combinations, absorbing them on the gloves or simply making him miss. Lomachenko was landing the more effective and eye-catching work through the middle rounds, making Russell Jr look lost at times with his hypnotic footwork. The American could not keep up or make any changes to turn the tide, highlighting the gap in quality between the two Lomachenko's body work came home to roost in the championship rounds as Russell Jr began to fade and was hurt on multiple occasions. Despite a mysterious 114-114 draw on one scorecard, the Ukrainian came home to win a majority decision with 116-112 on two scorecards and claim his first world title. Nicholas Walters November 26, 2016, Las Vegas – Lomachenko took on what was supposed to be the toughest test of his career against an avoided power puncher in Nicholas Walters, who was unbeaten in 27 fights with 21 knockouts. Many thought that Walters would have the ingredients to give Lomachenko serious problems. His wide, bladed stance and powerful hooking should have made it more difficult for Lomachenko to pivot around him and unload combinations. But on the night, the WBO super featherweight champion proved he had still not shown his true potential. His upper body movement made him impossibly elusive, bobbing and weaving, then springing back with attacks at previously unknown angles to Walters. Credit to Walters, who changed his game plan, moving down to hook the body more in the sixth round. But as quickly as he adjusted, Lomachenko had it covered before the round was even over. Outgunned and outmatched, Walters retired in the seventh round and would not fight again until 2023.

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