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How bad can August storms get?

How bad can August storms get?

Spectator20 hours ago
Injury time
England bowler Chris Woakes won a standing ovation for coming out to bat against India at the Oval with his arm in a sling after dislocating his shoulder – although in the event he didn't have to face a ball before England lost. Some other sportsmen who carried on while injured:
— Franz Beckenbauer played out half an hour of extra time during the semi final of the 1970 football World Cup, also with his arm in a sling after dislocating his shoulder. His German team beat Italy 4-3.
— Manchester City goalkeeper Bert Trautmann played the last quarter of an hour of the 1956 FA Cup Final with a broken neck after colliding with a Birmingham City player. His side won 3-1.
— Tiger Woods won the 2008 US Open in spite of playing with a torn anterior cruciate ligament and two stress fractures in his leg.
World class
The government wants to ban universities from taking foreign students where they have a high drop-out rate. Which countries sent the most students to Britain in 2023/24?
India 166,310
China 149,885
Nigeria 57,505
Pakistan 45,720
US 23,250
Hong Kong 17,258
Malaysia 12,760
Bangladesh 12,285
Saudi Arabia 9,680
Source: Higher Education Statistics Authority
Road toll
How do deaths from drink-driving compare with those from driving under the influence of illegal or medical drugs? In 2023, 869 drivers died in road accidents. Of those:
— 771 were tested for alcohol, which was found in 171 cases.
— 27 were tested for medical drugs likely to cause impairment; 23 were positive.
— 612 were tested for 'drugs of misuse', of which 131 were positive.
Source: Department for Transport
Storm surge
Scotland and the north of England were hit by unusually strong storms by August standards. How bad can August storms get?
— On 14 August 1979 a storm struck the Irish Sea during the Fastnet Yacht Race, with wind speeds of up to 63mph. Of 303 boats which began the race, only 86 finished; 15 competitors and 6 spectators died.
— On 25 August 1986 ex-Hurricane Charley struck the British Isles with winds of up to 65mph. Ireland was especially affected, with 7.8in of rain in 24 hours.
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Bayern Munich 4 Tottenham 0: Thomas Frank's side humiliated by German champions… days before facing PSG in Super Cup
Bayern Munich 4 Tottenham 0: Thomas Frank's side humiliated by German champions… days before facing PSG in Super Cup

Scottish Sun

time22 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Bayern Munich 4 Tottenham 0: Thomas Frank's side humiliated by German champions… days before facing PSG in Super Cup

Spurs fans will be fearing the worst ahead of Wednesday's clash with PSG Bayern Munich 4 Tottenham 0: Thomas Frank's side humiliated by German champions… days before facing PSG in Super Cup HARRY KANE came back to haunt Tottenham in his second outing against his old club. But the Spurs icon was left red-faced after ballooning a penalty over the crossbar. Advertisement 6 Bayern Munich ran out 4-0 winners against Tottenham Credit: PA 6 Former Spurs skipper Harry Kane scored against his old side Credit: SHUTTRSTOCK 6 But he was left red-faced after ballooning a penalty over the crossbar Credit: GETTY 6 Kane laughed off the miss Credit: PA The England captain was facing Spurs for the second time since joining Bayern Munich for £86million in 2023. And once again it was a friendly, Spurs' final match before next week's Uefa Super Cup clash with Paris Saint-Germain, He showed the kind of clinical finishing that helped him become the North Londoners' record goalscorer with 280 strikes with his 12th-minute opener. But soon after, he repeated the terrible spot-kick he struck for his country in the World Cup quarter-final three years ago by firing into Row Z. Advertisement It did not stop Bayern from running riot, though, as they added three stunning further goals from Kingsley Coman, Lennart Karl and Jonah Kusi-Asare. It was a difficult afternoon for Thomas Frank, who was given a painful insight into the quality of opposition his injury-hit side may face in the Champions League this year. Spurs were without first-team starters James Maddison, who will miss the rest of the season with a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament, Dejan Kulusevski, Destiny Udogie and Dominic Solanke. While stalwart Son Heung-min, old mucker of Kane, is no longer at the club following his blockbuster move to LAFC in America. Advertisement SUN VEGAS WELCOME OFFER: GET £50 BONUS WHEN YOU JOIN 6 Harry Kane didn't celebrate his goal out of respect for his former side Credit: PA Spurs gave Joao Palhinha his debut just days after completing his loan move - from Bayern. The Portuguese, 30, is short of fitness but was given a thorough work-out in the 45 minutes he played against his parent club, whose attacking players caused Spurs all manner of problems. Advertisement James Maddison could miss 2025-26 season as Tottenham confirm midfielder suffered ACL injury Bayern's two Ballon d'Or nominees, Kane and Michael Olise, combined for the opener in the 12th minute. Olise lofted a ball from deep to Kane, who controlled it beautifully, before clinically firing into the far corner with his weaker left foot. The Three Lions captain had looked a fraction offside in the build-up, but the goal was given anyway. He did not celebrate it, out of respect for his old side. Minutes later, Kane had the chance to make it 2-0 from the penalty spot after Palhinha had tripped Josip Stanisic in the box, though it was debatable how much contact was made. Advertisement Everyone in the Allianz was expecting the net to bulge and for Kane to have his second against the club that made him. But instead, the 32-year-old slipped in his run-up and skied it well over the crossbar, just like he had in Qatar three years ago. This was obviously a far less serious occasion, though and Kane, along with his Bayern team-mates, quickly shrugged off the gaffe. It was one-way traffic from them on until half-time. Advertisement 6 The embarrassing defeat to Bayern will give Spurs boss Thomas Frank plenty of food for thought before next week's Uefa Super Cup Credit: SHUTTERSTOCK "But remarkably, Bayern did not add to their lead, despite a flurry of chances falling their way. Midfielder Leon Goret2zka was particularly wasteful. Spurs, meanwhile. looked short of creativity without the injured Maddison. Advertisement Frank was already keen to sign a new No.10 before the England star did his ACL against Newcastle. This insipid display only highlighted the need for more help in the transfer market, with Bayern firing home three bangers courtesy of Coman plus teenage subs Karl and Kusi-Asare. Spurs fans will no doubt be fearing the worst when they face PSG, the reigning Champions League winners, in the Super Cup this coming Wednesday.

Is Bundesliga tax still real? Wirtz, Sesko et al would suggest not
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Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Is Bundesliga tax still real? Wirtz, Sesko et al would suggest not

Three or four years ago an idea began to take hold that players signed by Premier League clubs from the German Bundesliga were, if not destined for failure, then certainly subject to a kind of rule of thumb whereby they tended to find a level somewhat below the high expectations set by their past performances. This was around the time of Jadon Sancho, Timo Werner, Naby Keita and Christian Pulisic making underwhelming entrances to the English top flight — underwhelming, at least, in the context of the hype that had attended their signings. There were various attempts to explain the phenomenon and even a name applied to it: the Bundesliga tax, referring to the percentage reduction you should expect to slap on to the promising numbers of your club's new import from Germany. There was certainly some logic to the idea that such a 'tax' existed: not only is the overall level of the Bundesliga weaker than the Premier League, there was also the argument that as a particularly transition-based league, with lots of fast counterattacks into open space, the German top flight could make forwards, in particular, look better than they really were. Then Erling Haaland came along and scored at a better rate in his first two seasons at Manchester City (63 goals in 66 league games) than he had done in the Bundesliga (62 goals in 67 games for Borussia Dortmund). And despite those aforementioned high-profile misses in the market, clubs have clearly not been deterred from recruiting from Germany. This summer alone, Chelsea, buyers of Werner and the similarly disappointing Christopher Nkunku in previous years, have made the Dortmund winger Jamie Gittens their second most expensive acquisition of the window, while Liverpool, who made a rare misjudgment with Keita, have pivoted majorly towards the Bundesliga, adding the Bayer Leverkusen duo Florian Wirtz and Jeremie Frimpong and Eintracht Frankfurt's Hugo Ekitike to the 2023 arrival Dominik Szoboszlai. And now it looks as if Manchester United are about to spend one of their biggest fees since Sancho on RB Leipzig's Slovenian beanpole, Benjamin Sesko. That comes after Ekitike's erstwhile strike partner Omar Marmoush joined City in January, when Aston Villa also signed Donyell Malen from Dortmund and Tottenham brought in Mathys Tel on loan from Bayern Munich (a deal they made permanent this summer). Can they all be wrong? Are United, in signing Sesko, about to fall into another transfer-market trap? If Liverpool, with all the institutional smartness of their operation, are signing three Bundesliga stars in one window, we can probably safely park the idea that German-based players are somehow inherently unsuited to English football. If we look at forwards alone, and simply list those who have transferred from the Bundesliga to the Premier League over the past ten seasons and grade them crudely as 'success' or 'failure', it yields pretty much the sort of 50-50 split you would expect, with some notable successes — not only Haaland, but also Son Heung-min, Roberto Firmino, Kevin Schade and, though he's probably more of a qualified success than a resounding one, Kai Havertz — to balance out the 'flops'. JAMES GILL/DANEHOUSE/GETTY IMAGES In fact, far from being unsuited to English football, the activity of Premier League clubs may lead you to believe that they think quite the opposite of Bundesliga players. Of the 27 forwards sold by a Bundesliga club for a fee greater than €30million, according to Transfermarkt, 19 have been signed by English teams. That may be because they see the German top flight, out of the major European leagues, as being most similar to the Premier League in its tempo and emphasis on pressing. But of course, just because the players may be well-placed to adapt to the pace and pressing demands of the Premier League, that doesn't mean there aren't other aspects of English football that present more of a challenge: for one, its sheer physicality and athleticism. Werner's post-match interview after his very first match for Chelsea, when he admitted with disarming frankness that he had never encountered defenders 'so tall, so big' as Brighton & Hove Albion's, still sticks in the mind. Speaking to a figure who works in German football last year, he advanced the view that 'the athletic standards in Germany are much lower', giving the example of Brighton's Georginio Rutter, whose burst of speed was absolutely exceptional in the Bundesliga, but quite normal in the Premier League. Besides Haaland, it could be argued that tall, focal-point centre forwards are one category of player that has generally struggled to make the transition from Germany to England. In recent seasons Sébastien Haller, Niclas Füllkrug, Taiwo Awoniyi, Wout Weghorst and Hwang Hee-chan — all of whom, besides Hwang, put up very good goalscoring numbers in the Bundesliga — have failed to replicate their output when transferred to a middling team in the Premier League. Does that bode ill for Sesko who, after all, is also joining a middling Premier League team? Perhaps, but then again Sesko is not exactly like those players: he's surprisingly quick for such a tall man (in fact he clocked the 26th fastest top speed in the Bundesliga last season) and, at 22, he's also significantly younger than any of those strikers were when they moved to England. If he can thrive in the Premier League, perhaps that will end the idea of a Bundesliga tax once and for all.

Teen war refugee, 13, discovered playing tennis against Glasgow wall makes Wimbledon final
Teen war refugee, 13, discovered playing tennis against Glasgow wall makes Wimbledon final

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

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Teen war refugee, 13, discovered playing tennis against Glasgow wall makes Wimbledon final

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A UKRAINIAN war refugee who was discovered playing tennis against the wall of a Glasgow hotel has been hailed for his 'fairytale' journey to a Wimbledon final. Thirteen-year-old Illia Snaksarov reached the finals at SW19 by seeing off competition from across the UK in the junior event - just months after he was spotted by a city council interpreter and introduced to a nearby tennis club. 1 Illia Snaksarov escaped war in Ukraine and is now a Wimbledon finalist Credit: BBC SPORT The teen, who fled Russia's invasion and arrived in Glasgow two years ago, quicky rose in club ranks, going on to win regional heats of the Lawn Tennis Association's Play Your Way To Wimbledon earlier in the summer. Snaksarov lost 6-3, 6-2 in the final at Wimbledon to England's Mayr-Brown Devall but his parents Vlad and have hailed his incredible achievement and praised coaches at Western Tennis Club who have taken Illia under their wing. Mum Sviltana said: 'It has been an incredible experience for us and for Illia, who has been able to play so many matches with so many different kids from all over the country. 'We have had so many emotions, nerves and tears of happiness among them. It's been amazing.' Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine the Snaksarovs fled to the UK from their home town of Khmelnitsky, in the region of Podolia, via Poland and London. Illia, mum Svitlana and dad Volodymyr were eventually rehomed in the Calton area in the east end of the city, where their son attends St Mungo's Academy. Mum Svitlana worked as a childminder in Ukraine and now volunteers in a charity shop while taking English classes at college. Dad Volodymyr, a grocer who ran junior tennis competitions in Ukraine now embroiders bracelets in the colours of his country to sell to raise funds for the war effort in Ukraine. He also coaches his son on the city's municipal tennis courts. He said: 'Thanks to the Western Club and the Lawn Tennis Association we have found ourselves in a fairytale this week. All is very good.' Coach Julie Gordon, from Western Tennis Club said: 'What Illia has achieved is truly remarkable, considering the hardships he and his family have had to endure fleeing the war in their home. Three years ago it was hard to imagine him playing at a Wimbledon final. Ben Shelton in tense exchange with Flavio Cobolli on live TV after controversial gesture ahead of US Open 'Reaching the finals of an event like this is hugely significant for any young player, but Illia has show so much resilience and determination, and huge talent too, and his family have been incredible. 'He's one of a few players who we have here at the club who have fled the war in Ukraine. 'We're so proud to have him playing at Western, and look forward to seeing what he achieves next.' Keep up to date with ALL the latest news and transfers at the Scottish Sun football page

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