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Voodoo wrestling and attempted poisonings: Jeamie TKV’s incredible family history

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“VOODOO – you know, the word voodoo,” says Jeamie TKV, when I ask him to spell what he’d just said.

No, it wasn’t a word that sounded like voodoo. It was voodoo. It’s not a word you tend to hear very often when conducting boxing interviews with blokes from North London. Nor would you expect, when sitting down with the British heavyweight champion, to end up discussing military coups, murder plots and Congolese wrestling.

Not Congolese voodoo wrestling, anyway.

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“In Congo, they do voodoo wrestling; it’s a bit different,” says TKV, with more than a dash of understatement. “They do witchcraft.

“In boxing, you have your trainer in your corner; in wrestling, you have a witch doctor. Whoever’s is more powerful wins the fight.”

But this is wrestling – it’s not a real fight… right?

TKV says it is. Congolese wrestling, he says, is a real sport; a variant of the freestyle amateur wrestling in which he participated when growing up in Tottenham, just with some black magic rituals, trances, chants and spells thrown in.

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“It sounds like bulls**t, but people believe it,” says TKV. “And I’ve seen it happen. It’s crazy, but I’ve seen it. If I tell you half the stuff that happens, you’ll think ‘this guy’s been watching too many movies’.

“All of this, I studied in university. I made a documentary about it, called The Story Behind Voodoo Wrestling. It’s really bad in Africa – people use it for bad reasons.”

Like winning fights. Does it happen in boxing, too?

“My teammate was doing witchcraft when I boxed [amateur] for Congo,” says the London-born TKV, who holds dual nationality and wore the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) vest in qualifiers for the 2020 Olympics.

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But he doesn’t dabble in the dark arts himself. As a Christian, he prefers the power of prayer.

“My dad was very famous in Congo in the late ’80s for wrestling; wrestling is huge there,” he says. “He brought a pastor to pray in his corner to counteract the witchcraft.”

Whoever was in his corner, and whatever the forces at play, Makasi Tshikeva – father of Jeamie Tshikeva, to give TKV his full surname – was a wrestler of high enough pedigree to turn pro in the UK and later set up Haringey Wrestling Club.

Makasi had moved to London, seeking asylum for himself and his family after two generations of persecution from the military and government, in 1991, a year before Jaemie was born.

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And while it was wrestling that occupied TKV’s childhood, it is boxing in which he has now made his name – and for which the man behind the persecution of his father and grandfather is well known. Mobutu Sese Seko, the then-president of Zaire (now DRC), was the dictator who bankrolled The Rumble In The Jungle in 1974.

But when he wasn’t helping Don King to bring Muhammad Ali and George Foreman to fight in Kinshasa, Mobutu was notorious for running a totalitarian regime defined by corruption, nepotism and the use of deadly force against threats.

One such threat was TKV’s grandfather, a Congolese army general who had at one point been a friend and ally of Mobutu, and in 1960 helped him lead the coup that deposed prime minister Patrice Lumumba and eventually put Mobutu in power.

But the further Andre-Bruno Tshikeva rose through the ranks, the more this concerned Mobutu.

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“Mobutu killed my granddad because my grandad helped when the Cubans went into Angola,” says TKV, referring to when, in 1975, Cuba intervened in the Angolan civil war, sending troops to support the communist president against a pro-western opposition coalition.

Andre-Bruno helped the Angolan forces defend against the Cuban intervention and restore control. His part in the victory impressed the pro-Angola United States, who lined him up to lead the self-declared Republic of Cabinda, an Angolan exclave.

“The CIA [which supported Cabindan independence] were so impressed with him, they offered him to be the president when it became a country,” says TKV.

“They informed Mobutu about that and he felt my grandad was a threat now, because he’d helped him to overthrow Lumumba. But he couldn’t just get rid of him – he had to do it in a smart way.

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“He sent him to protect a base in a town where the French and Belgians and Americans did a lot of business, and then paid rebels to go and kill some civilians, to make my granddad look bad.

“Then he sent soldiers to arrest my grandad. He said to them: ‘How can you do this? I put you in this position.’ They said, ‘Mobutu said we have to.’

“My grandad was security for King Baudouin, the King of Belgium. King Baudouin told Mobutu: ‘I don’t believe General Tshikeva would do that – if you arrest him, you’re not allowed to kill him.

“So, my grandad got sentenced to life in prison, but there were a lot of attempts on his life. He got poisoned several times, and one night someone put a letter under his door saying at such-and-such a time, the doors are gonna open and you can escape. He knew something was off, so he stayed in his cell. When the time came, the doors opened, and all the other prisoners started running, and he just heard the gunshots outside.

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“Eventually his sentence was commuted. He did six years and was released, but because he’d been poisoned, he died soon after.

“My grandad was a very powerful man. He had 10 wives, multiple houses, a lot of money. But after he died, some family members took everything and didn’t leave nothing to his wives and kids, so my dad ended up going in the army to make ends meet.”

Dad Makasi Tshikeva became a commando, but once Mobutu learned who he was – that the son of a man he’d had killed was rising through the military ranks – he attempted to put an end to him, too.

“My dad was invited to a private meal and the chef said, ‘I’ve been told to poison you.’ So, he took a different plate and when he didn’t die, Mobutu was angry.

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“Later, he was doing a climbing exercise and they loosened the rope he was supposed to climb, so he’d fall. A friend warned him, so he used a different rope.

“He knew his life was at risk, and he had just had my elder brother, so he decided to leave and come to the UK.

“He was famous in Congo but came here with nothing. He likes to say, ‘I went from having cleaners to becoming a cleaner.’ He didn’t know no one, didn’t speak the language, and had to find a way to bring his wife and kids over.”

Once he did so, and had learned to speak English, Makasi resumed his wrestling career.

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No voodoo was involved this time, but he embraced the spectacle and ceremony of professional wrestling under the monicker Big Papa T, winning several regional championships.

As he did so, he started training young Jeamie in freestyle amateur wrestling, leading to an early introduction to competitive fight sports.

“All I knew growing up was wrestling; I grew up competing,” says TKV. “I won the junior world championships in Amsterdam when I was 10. I was too young to enter but my dad put me up as a 12-year-old. I was a national champion, too, and had a four-five-year winning streak in freestyle wrestling.”

But as he went from boy to man, and a very big man at that, another sport emerged as a more attractive proposition: boxing.

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“When I was 18, my dad was doing a youth programme, with all the coaches from the area doing their respective sports,” he says. “My dad was coaching wrestling, but he said ‘why don’t you give boxing a try?’, and I said ‘yeah, why not.’

“The coach said: ‘You’re a natural – you can make millions!’ He made it sound so easy, and there’s no money in freestyle wrestling – you have to either turn pro or you try MMA.

“I became addicted to boxing from that day on; from the first session, really. It wasn’t just the [prospect of] money, it was just really good.

There followed a claimed 72-bout amateur run, including two national titles, five London championships and an African Games silver medal in 2019.

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The coronavirus pandemic delayed his pro career, which didn’t start until March 2022, when he was 28. But the man born Tshikeva, and rebranded TKV “to stand out”, has moved quickly, and last time out – in November, in just his 11th pro bout – he was crowned British champion.

Frazer Clarke, his co-challenger for the vacant title, was favoured to win, but TKV tapped into the psychology of pro wrestling to unsettle the Olympian.

“The first presser we did, we were very nice to each other. I gave him a lot of compliments, there was no back and forth; it was very respectful. But then the fight got postponed when I picked up a [rib] injury.

“He made a few comments I didn’t like, saying it was a fake injury, so the second presser, I put it on him. I pretended to be upset; I was teasing him, teasing him. From then on, he was upset – I’d never seen Frazer stick the middle finger up before.

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“So, I knew when we got into this fight, he’d start off fast – and I knew he had no stamina. People watching were worried, but when I went back to my corner after the first round, my trainer [Barry Smith] said: ‘Brilliant! He’s thrown the kitchen sink at you.’ After three rounds, he had nothing left.”

Even so, Clarke lasted the distance, but only after an extremely rocky 11th round.

“He was lucky to survive that,” says TKV, “but to be honest with you, I don’t know how I did 12 rounds either.

“I really had a bad camp – I had a bad back, in the middle of camp I got cut in sparring, I pulled my intercostal muscle, and then I had that flu that was going around. A week before the fight, I couldn’t even do two rounds on the pads.”

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Both men went the full 12 in a hard-hitting, physically draining brawl that served as an appropriately exciting main event to mark the BBC’s return to televised boxing after a 20-year absence.

“It was a big deal,” says TKV of the opportunity to perform on the national broadcaster. “I’m all about making history, and I made history.”

Winning British boxing’s flagship prize gives him a platform to make more, especially with so many domestic rivals jostling for the Lonsdale Belt and world honours.

One obvious challenger would be David Adeleye, who thwarted TKV’s first title shot with a controversial sixth-round stoppage last April and then vacated the belt rather than accommodate a mandated rematch.

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“He was holding my arm, the ref said ‘break’, and then he hit me,” says TKV of the circumstances behind the first knockdown of his career and which led to the second defeat on his 9-2 (5) record.

“He knew what he was doing; it was deliberate. But yeah, I’ll take it [a rematch] any time, even if I’m entitled to give him the same energy he gave me [by not taking the fight].”

The big dream, though, is to tread in the footsteps of giants and fight in the former Zaire. “That would be the greatest thing,” says TKV of the prospect of taking big-time boxing back to Kinshasa.

“Imagine me and [Martin] Bakole – he’s a huge star there. That would be such a big, big, big card – The Rumble In The Jungle 2.”

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The long-term goal, unsurprisingly, is “to fight for the world title and win it, with God’s grace”.

And if a world title fight is to take place in the Congo, TKV may indeed need God in his corner – because he’ll be back in the land of his fighting father, where witch doctors decide outcomes just as routinely as coaches.

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Michigan vs. UCLA prediction, pick, odds, spread, where to watch live

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No. 2 Michigan faces UCLA Saturday on CBS in a clash of Big Ten foes. This will be the 13th matchup between Michigan and UCLA since the turn of the century, with both programs having six wins against each other during that stretch.

The Wolverines (23-1) are off to their best 24-game start in school history, but are coming off an upset scare against Northwestern. Michigan trailed by as many as 16 points on the road before storming back in the second half to seal an 87-75 win over the Wildcats. Michigan’s lone loss came against Wisconsin last month at home.

UCLA has won five of its last six games after starting 4-3 in Big Ten play. The Bruins are coming off a 77-73 win over Washington after guard Trent Perry dropped 23 points. UCLA heads into the weekend 3.5 games back of Michigan in the Big Ten standings. 

The Wolverines hold a 2.0-game lead over Illinois for first place.

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Michigan vs. UCLA: Need to know

Michigan could make race for No. 1 interesting: Michigan is the projected No. 1 overall seed in CBS Sports’ latest Bracketology projections. The Wolverines jumped to No. 1 overall after Arizona lost to Kansas earlier this week. With Arizona dropping its first game of the season, the AP Top 25 poll on Monday should be interesting. Arizona has been the consensus top-ranked team for several weeks. It wouldn’t be surprising to see Michigan get some consideration for No. 1.

Can UCLA get Donovan Dent going? The key to a potential upset for UCLA will be Dent. The former New Mexico star has had an up-and-down season with the Bruins after transferring in last offseason. Dent is having one of his best stretches at UCLA after recording at least 10 assists in three consecutive games. He played all 40 minutes against Washington and finished with 17 points, 10 assists and six rebounds.

Aday Mara faces his old team: A storyline to monitor will be Mara, who played the first two seasons of his career at UCLA, facing his old team. Mara played limited minutes under coach Mick Cronin at UCLA but has found a consistent role with the Wolverines. Michigan coach Dusty May has routinely deployed two-big lineups in his rotation. With Mara assuming a more prominent role, he has become one of the nation’s best defensive players.

Where to watch Michigan vs. UCLA live

Date: Saturday, Feb. 14 | Time: 12:45 p.m. ET
Location: Crisler Center — Ann Arbor, Michigan
TV: CBS | Live stream: CBSSports.comCBS Sports App
Streaming on Paramount+ Premium  

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Michigan vs. UCLA prediction, pick

For the first 30 minutes of game time against Northwestern, Michigan looked vulnerable. Then, the Wolverines flipped the switch and looked like the team ranked No. 2 in the country. This game will be a tougher challenge for Michigan than its last matchup against Northwestern. Still, I expect Mara to have a big game against his old team and star forward Yaxel Lendeborg to have a bounce-back performance on offense after scoring just 35 points total in his last three games. Pick: Michigan -15.5

Who will win and cover in every college basketball game? Visit SportsLine to get picks from the model that simulates each game 10,000 times and is up more than $1,200 for $100 players on its top-rated spread picks the past six years. 

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At Pebble Beach, Rory McIlroy confronts a new career question

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PEBBLE BEACH, Calif. — There is a warning sign on the 18th tee box at Pebble Beach that might also serve as a piece of course advice.

“NO SITTING ON FENCE.”

The genius of Pebble Beach exists in the extremes. Jagged rocks and foreboding surf and enormous dunes and tiny greens. Of the many skills required to thrive here, decisiveness is perhaps the most important. On the 18th tee box and in the winner’s celebration on the 18th green, there is no sitting on the fence.

Rory McIlroy knows this better than most. Anyone with a little bit of golf in their soul understood what McIlroy meant last February, when he suggested that winning at Pebble Beach for the first time meant a little bit more.

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“There’s a few what I would call cathedrals of golf,” McIlroy said then. “Here, Augusta, St. Andrews — maybe a few more you could add in there.  I had a big fat zero on all of those going in here.  To knock one off at Pebble is very cool.”

Of course, anyone with a little bit of golf in their soul also knows what came after that victory at Pebble Beach: a third-career win at the Players Championship, and then a career-altering, sport-rattling, Grand Slam-clinching victory at the Masters.

When the tomes are written, that last victory in Augusta will be remembered as the one that kicked the door down for McIlroy. But it may be said that his first victory of 2025, at Pebble Beach, was the one that broke the lock.

“I’m a big historian of the game and I remember all the championships that have been played here,” McIlroy said then, eerily foreshadowing the history he would soon create at Augusta. “And to add my name to that list is pretty cool.”

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Now, in 2026, the historian has been sent back into the library. With no further major championships to conquer and no additional road Ryder Cups to win, McIlroy has been forced to reset his goals. And, in doing so, he’s had the opportunity to confront a new question: Which “cathedrals” come next?

On Friday at Pebble Beach, the same day McIlroy shot five under to move into contention heading into the weekend, the Grand Slam winner faced the question himself for the first time.

“There’s places I haven’t won that I would love to,” McIlroy said. “St. Andrews being one of them. Riviera next week would be another. Riviera and Muirfield Village are two. They’re wonderful golf courses but who hosts the events as well. You know, Tiger and Jack. I was able to win Bay Hill but not while Arnie was around, so it would be nice to win both those tournaments while both those guys are alive and kicking.”

And perhaps the biggest outstanding victory on McIlroy’s list? Only the most elusive major championship site in the sport: the home of golf.

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“There’s a lot of golf courses with a lot of history. There’s a lot of old U.S. Open sites that have had some great things happen at them,” McIlroy said. “Yeah, this is certainly one, Augusta was another, and the last one I think — not the last one, but the biggest one on the list would probably be St. Andrews.”

McIlroy will likely have at least one more chance to close out a major victory at the Old Course in the prime of his playing career. That will arrive in 2027, when the golf world returns to St. Andrews for the 155th Open shortly after his 38th birthday.

These are champagne aspirations to be sure, but it would be foolish to discount them as insignificant. As McIlroy learned at Pebble Beach last February (and again at Augusta National in April), breakthroughs often come in multiples.

And when it comes to picking his spots? Well, McIlroy certainly isn’t sitting on the fence.

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Sir Jim Ratcliffe apologises to the Glazers after Man United co-owner’s immigration comments

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Manchester United co-owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe sparked outrage earlier this week when he claimed the UK had been “colonised by immigrants”

Sir Jim Ratcliffe has apologised to the Glazers for his controversial comments about immigration which brought shame on Manchester United. It’s understood Ratcliffe contacted his fellow co-owners to explain himself and for the furore he had caused.

Ratcliffe sparked outrage when he claimed in an interview that immigrants had “colonised” the UK. The FA are now examining the comments before deciding whether to launch a full-scale investigation. In the meantime, the damage done to United’s image and reputation has been massive.

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The Glazers are said to have huge concerns about what effect the backlash from Ratcliffe’s comments will have on United’s relationship with sponsors and commercial partners moving forward. There are also worries about what impact the events of this week could have on United’s hopes of building a new stadium.

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Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham slammed Ratcliffe’s comments as being “inaccurate, insulting and inflammatory”.

Burnham has worked closely with Ratcliffe and United on plans to either regenerate Old Trafford or build a new £1billion stadium. The Glazers are desperate to see the project come to fruition because it would increase United’s valuation.

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But the project will depend on alignment between the club, local councils and Greater Manchester leaders. Ratcliffe, who bought a £1.25billion stake in United in 2024, issued a statement on Thursday after his comments sparked an avalanche of condemnation.

He said: “I am sorry that my choice of language has offended some people in the UK and Europe, but it is important to raise the issue of controlled and well-managed immigration that supports economic growth.

“My comments were made while answering questions about UK policy at the European Industry Summit in Antwerp, where I was discussing the importance of economic growth, jobs, skills and manufacturing in the UK.

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“My intention was to stress that governments must manage migration alongside investment in skills, industry and jobs so that long-term prosperity is shared by everyone.

“It is critical that we maintain an open debate on the challenges facing the UK.”

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Ireland U20s hold out for 30-27 Cork victory

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Ireland U20 held off the gritty Italians 30-27 in a tight high-scoring 6 Nations game at Virgin Media Park in Cork on Friday night.

Tries a plenty in both halves – as both teams claimed bonus-point tries, a game that was in the balance for most of the night, saw the home side edge home by three points in the end.

Ireland score first

Ireland took an early lead with a relatively easy penalty kick for Garryowen’s Tom Wood. The Munster player comfortably slotted over from directly in front of the post for a 3-0 lead.

Barrett scores Ireland’s opening try

Winger Derry Moloney opened the Italian defence as he burst through the visitors side. Beginning in his own half, the Leinster speedster was supported by Noah Byrne and then by Christopher Barrett.

With Moloney offloading to Byrne, Barrett then received possession of the ball, and had the task of touching down for the game’s opening try. A second successful kick of the night from Tom Wood – this time, a conversion – pushed Ireland out to a 13-0 advantage with just over 13 minutes played on the clock.

Ireland defence breached

Despite some moments of both poor passing and substandard handling, the Italians were next on the scoresheet. Winger Luca Rossa was on the receiving end of an Azzurri move as the Irish defence was breached for the first time tonight. Francesco Braga added the extras for the visitors, leaving Ireland with a 10-7 lead approaching the end of the first quarter of play.

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Winger Ryan gets on score sheet

The hosts laid a charge to the Italian line following a powerful brake from centre Rob Carney. With Ireland pummelling the defensive line, winger Daniel Ryan eventually touched down in the furthest corner from thew Main Stand.

With a more difficult conversion attempt – right on the side line – Wood was unsuccessful this time, meaning Ireland had a 15-7 lead.

Converted try and penalty give Italians half-time advantage

Italy struck back immediately with a pushover try that saw hooker Valerio Pelli crash over for a five-pointer. A favourable position have Braga a relatively easy effort – which he converted, as the Irish lead was reduced to a single point.

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With the half-time whistle close, Italy won a penalty which Brage kicked to give the Italian side an unexpected 17-15 lead at the interval.

Half-time: Ireland U20 15  Italy U20 17

The home side claimed the first score of the second half. Excellent teamwork and understanding between centre Rob Carney and Derry Moloney saw the winger score.

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With Carney in possession as he made rapid throughout from his own half of the field to the opposition’s, the Cashel RFC man kept the Italian defence guessing as to whether he would go for the line himself or pass out to Moloney. Ultimately he did neither, as a nicely placed grubber kick was successfully chased by Moloney who score in the corner to the delight of the home fans.

Tom Wood was unsuccessful with his effort – his second missed kicked of the evening.

Pelli’s second try

With the Italians enjoying a period of domination on the field, Valerio Pelli claimed his second try of the night. As Italy made numerous efforts to cross the try-scoring line, the brawn and strength of the Mogliano Veneto Rugby player was required to complete the task. Kicker Braga missed at the posts for the first time, as the Italians held a slender 22-20 advantage.

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Bonus-point try for Josh Neil

Ireland soon fought back as they noticeably upped the tempo. With the Azzurri defence penalised near their own line, Ireland reacted quickly and three quick motions saw Josh Neil of Leinster in for the bonus-point try.

Wood kicked – from directly in front of the posts – for a 27-22 lead, but the Munster number 10 soon extended this advantage, as a successful penalty kick – which saw Italian Davide Sette sin-binned – gave Ireland a little breathing space on the score board, 30-22, with the game inside the final quarter.

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Replacement Jacopo de Rossi gave the Italians hope of taking the victory in this game when his teammates’ powerful maul allowed him touch down for a try, his side’s bonus-point five-pointer. Braga, who had been so successful with his kicking in the opening period, missed his second of this half, as Ireland faced into the final 10 minutes with a slender three-point advantage.

Final score: Ireland U20 30  Italy U20 27

Ireland U20 Team

15. Noah Byrne (Dublin University FC/Leinster), 14. Derry Moloney (Blackrock College RFC/Leinster), 13. Rob Carney (Cashel RFC/Munster), 12. James O’Leary (UCC/Munster), 11. Daniel Ryan (Galway Corinthians RFC/Connacht), 10. Tom Wood (Garryowen FC/ Munster), 9. Christopher Barrett (UCC RFC/Munster).

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1. Max Doyle (UCD RFC/Leinster), 2. Lee Fitzpatrick (Blackrock College RFC/Leinster), 3. Sami Bishti (UCD RFC/Leinster)(captain), 4. Dylan McNeice (UCD RFC/Leinster), 5. Donnacha McGuire (UCD RFC/Leinster), 6. Joe Finn (Garryowen FC/Munster), 7. Josh Neill (Old Wesley RFC/Leinster), 8. Diarmaid O’Connell (Galway Corinthians RFC/Connacht).

Replacements:

16. Rían Handley (Old Wesley RFC/Leinster), 17. Christian Foley (Young Munster RFC/ Munster), 18. Blake McClean (Instonians RFC/Ulster), 19. Ben Blaney (Terenure College RFC/Leinster), 20. Billy Hayes (Garryowen FC/Munster), 21. James O’Dwyer (Old Belvedere RFC/Leinster), 22. Charlie O’Shea (UCC RFC/Munster), 23. Johnny O’Sullivan (Dublin University FC/Leinster).


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Norway’s Johannes Klaebo ties Olympic record with 8th gold medal

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Norway's Johannes Klaebo ties Olympic record with 8th gold medalJohannes Klaebo of Norway wins the 10km interval start free 10K men’s cross country event in Tesoro, Italy, on Friday at the Milan Cortina Olympics.

TESERO, Italy — Norway’s Johannes Klaebo won the men’s 10km freestyle cross-country ski race on Friday to earn his eighth Olympic title and equal the record for the most gold medals at the Winter Games.

Mathis Desloges of France won silver, his second of the Milan Cortina Olympics, while Norway’s Einar Hedegart won the bronze.

The victory was the third of this Olympics for Klaebo, 29, and tied the Norwegian skier with three of his compatriots — fellow cross-country skiers Marit Bjoergen and Bjorn Daehlie and biathlete Ole Einar Bjorndalen — with eight gold medals overall. He is scheduled to ski in three more events and could take the outright lead for gold medals by an individual Olympian.

“Today is one of the toughest races we’ve done, and everyone was completely exhausted when we crossed the finish line. For me, today was really hard. I tried to open with control and at the end there it was really hard,” said Klaebo, who won his first three Olympic golds at the 2018 Pyeongchang Games and two more at the 2022 Beijing Games.

“I’m really satisfied with being first. This is my first time winning a 10k in interval style.”

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Hedegart, a biathlete who shifted his focus to cross-country skiing and was considered one of Klaebo’s biggest challengers, came close to taking victory, but lost steam on a climb in the final section of the race.

He ended up in third, 14 seconds behind the winner, with Desloges 4.9 seconds adrift in the interval-style race.

“I’ve never experienced this kind of dizziness. I was so dizzy the last two kilometers and I had nothing left in the tank, so it was just pain and suffering,” Hedegart said.

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“In the last 200m I didn’t know if I was going to make it to the finish line, and even though it was only downhill I was so scared that I would pass out.”

Skiers faced another day of warm weather, with temperatures hitting 42 degrees, prompting some to forgo their tops and only wear a race bib. Those starting earlier in the competition had an advantage as conditions deteriorated over the course of the race, causing several skiers to crash when going down hills.

Course officials decided against salting the track to make the snow more compact, as they had done the previous day for the women’s 10km freestyle event.

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–Reuters, special to Field Level Media

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Malinin falls twice as Kazakhstan’s Shaidorov takes gold medal

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USA’s Ilia Malinin, the red-hot favourite for men’s figure skating gold at Milan-Cortina 2026, falls twice as he misses out on a podium finish to give Mikhail Shaidorov of Kazakhstan the gold medal.

READ MORE: Shaidorov wins gold as ‘Quad God’ Malinin crumbles

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‘Quad God’ falls to earth as Mikhail Shaidorov wins gold in figure skating drama

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Figure skating’s self-styled ‘Quad God’ fell to earth on Friday as Kazakhstan’s Mikhail Shaidorov came from nowhere to claim gold in a dramatic finish to the men’s singles competition in Milan.

All-conquering Ilia Malinin headed into the free skate with a five-point lead over his rivals and audacious plans to make history by becoming the first skater to land seven quad jumps.

Instead Malinin, unbeaten in all competitions for over two years, fulfilled just three – falling on two more – as he plummeted out of medal contention to finish in eighth place.

“I blew it,” the emotional American told NBC.

As the 21-year-old Malinin left the ice in tears, Shaidorov, who started the night in fifth place, over 15 points behind his rival and a 100-1 shot to make up the difference, looked shell-shocked to become Olympic champion.

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Earlier, Malinin’s rivals had done all they could to aid his coronation. Starting the free skate in third place, Adam Siao Him Fa fell twice to also slide down the standings, while Japan’s Yuma Kagiyama clung onto silver place despite two falls.

Malinin took to the ice with the gold at his mercy, but his routine quickly unravelled.

His quad axel – a jump only he has mastered – became a single, his quad loop a double and he fell on both his lutz and salchow.

It was a shocking end to the Olympic cycle for Malinin, who had failed to make the 2022 Olympic team when compatriot Nathan Chen made history by landing five quads in his winning routine to Elton John’s ‘Rocket Man’.

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These days, five quads were supposedly the preserve of an also-ran. They were landed by Shaidorov, who then sat and watched his rivals falter in front of him. Shun Sato leaped from ninth place to take bronze medal on a night to remember.

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2026 NBA 3-Point Contest odds, field, time: Expert picks for NBA All-Star Weekend

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One of the annual highlights of NBA All-Star Weekend features the league’s best marksmen competing from beyond the arc, and the 2026 NBA 3-Point Contest will take place on Saturday. The NBA 3-Point Contest field features two past winners in Devin Booker and two-time champion Damian Lillard, as well as All-Stars Donovan Mitchell, Tyrese Maxey, Jamal Murray and Norman Powell. Veteran Bobby Portis and rookie Kon Knueppel round out the field. The event takes place at the Intuit Dome in Los Angeles during NBA All-Star Saturday Night, which has a start time of 5 p.m. ET.

Knueppel (+250) and Lillard (+480) are the top-two favorites, per the latest 2026 3-Point Contest odds from FanDuel Sportsbook, with Booker at +600. Maxey and Murray are both at +650 to utilize in NBA bets, followed by Mitchell (+750). You can potentially find value at the bottom of the NBA odds board in Powell (+950), a former LA Clipper who is familiar with the Intuit Dome rims and in Portis (+1500) who leads the field in 3-point percentage. Before making any 2026 NBA 3-Point Contest picks, be sure to check out the 2026 NBA All-Star Weekend predictions from SportsLine expert Mike Barner.

New users can target the DraftKings promo code, which offers $300 in bonus bets if your first $5+ bet wins:

Barner is one of the most respected voices in the industry, and his work has appeared in Sports Illustrated and on Yahoo, RotoWire and KFFL. He’s also been featured on ESPN Radio. He digs deep into the data, examining team trends and projecting game outcomes. If there’s anybody who can spot an edge in a matchup or identify a player in position to break out, it’s him.

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Barner’s expertise has been on full display lately as he enters the All-Star break on a 40-17 run on NBA picks (+2014). He is coming off a dominant 2024-25 NBA season, finishing 239-178-2 and returning $3,209 to $100 bettors. Anyone following at sportsbooks and on betting apps could have seen huge returns.

Now, he has analyzed the 2026 NBA 3-Point Contest lineups from all angles and just locked in his coveted pick and predictions. He is only sharing his NBA picks and analysis at SportsLine.

Top 2026 NBA 3-Point Contest predictions

Barner is fading Damian Lillard (+480), despite him being one of the favorites and a two-time winner of this event (2023, 2024). Lillard has not played this season as he recovers from a torn Achilles, which poses two issues. One is that his movement around the ball racks may be a bit limited compared to his prior contest appearances. Another is that he will likely lack rhythm having not played a competitive game in nearly 10 months.

While Lillard has played just one game at the Intuit Dome, which came last season, it’s worth noting his 3-point shooting in that contest. He went 1 for 9 from beyond the arc for an 11.1% rate. Among his 50 games last season with at least 7 attempts from downtown, that 1 for 9 performance was his worst all year. Thus, Barner doesn’t see Lillard joining Larry Bird and Craig Hodges as the only three-time winners of the NBA 3-Point Contest. See more predictions at SportsLine.

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How to make 2026 NBA 3-Point Contest picks

Barner has studied the NBA 3-Point Contest from every angle and predicts the winner will “make history” with his performance. See who it is over at SportsLine.

Who wins the NBA 3-Point Contest 2026, and who is poised to have a historic performance? Visit SportsLine now to get Mike Barner’s pick for the NBA Three-Point Contest 2026, all from the expert who has crushed his NBA picks, and find out.

2026 NBA 3-Point Contest odds, field

See picks at SportsLine.

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3-Point Contest odds (via FanDuel)
Kon Knueppel +250
Damian Lillard +480
Devin Booker +600
Jamal Murray +650
Tyrese Maxey +650
Donovan Mitchell +750
Norman Powell +950
Bobby Portis +1500

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Liam Rosenior hails Chelsea’s ‘outstanding professionals’ after cup win at Hull

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Chelsea boss Liam Rosenior admitted his side’s work ethic was the stand-out feature as they cruised to a 4-0 win at his former club Hull in the fourth round of the FA Cup.

Pedro Neto fired a hat-trick, his second direct from a corner, while Brazil winger Estevao was also on target as Championship promotion chasers Hull were swept aside at the MKM Stadium.

Rosenior, making his first return to the club where he was player and manager, said: “The overall positive thing was the application of the team. Our pressing, our intensity, our work rate and Pedro exemplified that, to be honest.

“That’s why he scores the goals that he does. I’m very lucky to have such talented players. What I’m really realising quickly is they’re not good players, they’re outstanding professionals.

“It was a really professional performance against a very good team, who are pushing for the Premier League.

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“This is not an easy game, and some of our football was everything I want to see. But before that, the values of what the team stood for tonight made me a very happy coach.”

Chelsea spurned several first-half chances, with Rory Delap and Estevao the guilty parties in particular, while Hull never threatened an upset.

Tigers boss Sergej Jakirovic has led them to fourth in the second tier, five points off the top two and Rosenior hopes his former club can seal top-flight promotion.

“The spirit and the character of the team and their threat in transition,” he said. “I really hope it happens. So I wish them all the best.

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“It’s so nice to see so many really welcoming faces here and I think the manager is doing a fantastic job.”

While Rosenior made seven changes, Jakirovic made six of his own with one eye on his side’s promotion push.

The Bosnian, who felt Chelsea’s extra quality was evident, said: “It’s difficult, because we played against Chelsea. I think we gave everything today.”

Lewis Koumas went closest to a consolation for the Tigers when his low late effort hit a post.

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“Towards the end, I think that we deserved one goal,” Jakirovic said. “We had a few nice chances and I said to (Rosenior) that we deserved the goal and of course, he agreed.

“Congratulations to my players. Maybe if we play our next games like this, with this passion, energy, intensity, that we are complicated, that we are tactically good, that we can be much higher in the table.”

Both head coaches condemned some abusive chanting from a section of home fans during the tie.

The stadium announcer warned against it at half-time and again in the 60th minute when he confirmed some arrests had been made.

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Chelsea Pride, the club’s official LGBTQ+ supporter group, released a statement which read: “Tonight, homophobic chanting was once again directed at our supporters. This is utterly unacceptable.

“We acknowledge that Hull City made stadium announcements, confirmed CCTV was being monitored, and that arrests have been made. Action matters. Accountability matters. Consequences matter.

“But let us be clear, the fact that this chant is still being heard in 2026 is a stain on our game.”

Rosenior said: “Without knowing what has happened, any discriminatory language in any form, about anything, is unacceptable so I hope it get gets dealt with.”

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Jakirovic added: “This is not a place for this, for sure, in the stadium and also in public as well. This is not good.

“The stadium is not a place for that and this is the reason why they have been arrested.”

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Shakur Stevenson accepts offer for catchweight fight: “I’m gonna cook him”

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Shakur Stevenson is making it quite clear that he will fight anybody.

The pound-for-pound talent recently became a four-weight world champion at the age of 28 with a dominant points win over Teofimo Lopez. Stevenson now holds the WBO world title at 140lbs, and has been stripped of his WBC belt at 135.

Riding high from that win, and for good reason, the Newark southpaw has been calling out fighters left, right and centre, one being Ryan Garcia. Garcia, who challenges for the WBC Welterweight World Title held by Mario Barrios next weekend in Las Vegas, also wants it to happen.

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Speaking to the Ring Magazine just over a week out from his title effort, Garcia confirmed Stevenson as his next target.

“I really want to fight Shakur. [The Haney rematch] is always gonna be there, but that’s who I want to fight. I want to go from Barrios to Shakur … 144. I’ll make a whole division called 44. Me and Shakur. He said he’d do it. I know he’s confident, so let’s run it.”

Speaking on X shortly after Garcia’s words went live, Stevenson said:

“144 Ryan, let’s do it… I’ll be at your fight now scrub! VADA will be involved so don’t run from that.”

His mention of the Voluntary Anti-Doping Agency alludes to Garcia’s previous failed test that saw his victory over Devin Haney overturned to a no contest. Stevenson then followed up with a promise.

A lot must happen for these fighting words to turn into something concrete. Garcia first has a challenge in Barrios, who looks to retain his world title with a win for the first time following two draws.

Next, Stevenson seems to be committing himself to numerous match-ups and must settle on a route. He has expressed an interest in Isaac Cruz and Conor Benn, and may look at other champions in the super-lightweight ranks to unify.

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