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McLaughlin-Levrone threatening long-time world 400m record after breaking US time

McLaughlin-Levrone threatening long-time world 400m record after breaking US time
United States’ Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone competes in the women’s 400 meters semifinal at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo, Tuesday, Sept. 16, 2025. (AP)
Updated 2 min 54 sec ago

McLaughlin-Levrone threatening long-time world 400m record after breaking US time

McLaughlin-Levrone threatening long-time world 400m record after breaking US time

McLaughlin-Levrone finished her 400-meter semifinal at the world championships Tuesday in 48.29 seconds
It was the fastest time of 2025, the seventh fastest time ever

TOKYO: One record down, and maybe one more to go for Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone.
McLaughlin-Levrone finished her 400-meter semifinal at the world championships Tuesday in 48.29 seconds, shattering a 19-year-old American mark held by Sanya Richards-Ross by .41 seconds.
It was the fastest time of 2025, the seventh fastest time ever, and it makes the thought of breaking the 40-year-old record of 47.60 seem totally possible in the final Thursday.
“Honored, for sure,” McLaughlin-Levrone said about breaking the US record she’s been targeting since she moved over from the hurdles. “I definitely wasn’t expecting that time. It just shows the fitness is there. I’m excited for the finals and grateful to have taken down a record by an amazing woman.”
Richards-Ross, the best American 400 runner of her generation, set the record of 48.70 in 2006 and won the 400 at the London Olympics six years later.
Now, all eyes are on the mark set by an East German, Marita Koch, in 1985. It is one of the few remaining records from the Eastern Bloc era. No woman has broken 48 seconds since Koch’s record, and even McLaughlin-Levrone said that should be the first goal before thinking about the mark.
But McLaughlin-Levrone has a knack for breaking records. She’s done it six times in her “main” event, the 400 hurdles, which she took a break from this year to see what she could do in the 400 flat. Her record in the hurdles stands at 50.37.
McLaughlin said that while she was surprised to see the 48.29 pop up on a sultry night in the same stadium where she won the hurdles — with a world-record time — four years ago in the Tokyo Olympics, “The last 30 meters were a little reserved.”
“But it wasn’t surprising because I know the work that has been put in. It’s really just about executing, and I’m grateful that it showed me it’s there.”
McLaughlin-Levrone, who trains with renowned coach Bobby Kersee, said she’s been working with a former UCLA runner Willington Wright to get her ready for the rigors of the world championships.
“He’s a quarter-miler who’s really strong, helping me with my fitness and simulating what those rounds are going to feel like,” she said. “He did a great job at that.”


Revamped Bayern face early test as Chelsea come to town

Revamped Bayern face early test as Chelsea come to town
Updated 3 sec ago

Revamped Bayern face early test as Chelsea come to town

Revamped Bayern face early test as Chelsea come to town
Forwards Leroy Sane, Kingsley Coman, Thomas Mueller and Mathys Tel all left in the summer
Only two replacements have been brought in: Luis Diaz, from Liverpool, and Nicolas Jackson, from Chelsea on loan

MUNICH: Bayern Munich’s revamped line-up faces an early test in their Champions League opener at home against Club World Cup winners Chelsea on Wednesday.
A rematch of the 2012 final at the same venue, won on penalties by the English club, Bayern have little time to settle after a summer of upheaval, particularly up front.
Forwards Leroy Sane, Kingsley Coman, Thomas Mueller and Mathys Tel all left in the summer. Only two replacements have been brought in: Luis Diaz, from Liverpool, and Nicolas Jackson, from Chelsea on loan.
With Jamal Musiala and Alphonso Davies out with long-term injuries, the lack of summer activity earned Bayern some rare criticism from talisman Harry Kane.
Not known for controversial statements, the 32-year-old Kane called Bayern’s squad “thin,” adding “maybe one of the smallest I’ve had in my career.”
With four goals and two assists in his opening five games, Diaz has hit the ground running in Germany.
But Chelsea, crowned Cup World Cup winners after a dominant display against Paris Saint-Germain just two months ago, are likely to pose a sterner test.
Like Chelsea, Bayern are expected to make it out of the league phase but have their sights set on qualifying directly and avoiding another two-legged knockout tie.
Last year, Bayern finished 12th and struggled to get past Celtic, winning 3-2 on aggregate.
Kane admitted on Saturday the extra burden cut their momentum later in the season.
“It’s important to be in the top eight because that extra game can make a big difference.
“Last year, playing that Celtic game home and away in our busiest period, it made a big difference, and we ended up losing a few players after that period in March.
“It’s important to start well.”
Just over 13 years since Chelsea upset Bayern in their own backyard, both sides have since won another Champions League title.
Mueller’s summer departure leaves Bayern captain Manuel Neuer as the only player from either team set to take part on Wednesday.

- Jackson’s ‘hard role to play’ -
Jackson came off the bench in his Bayern debut on Saturday and is unlikely to start against his parent club on Wednesday.
But moments after Jackson’s debut, the England captain said the Senegal striker was more than just a “back-up.”
“I think a lot of people assume that, but he’s someone who can play across the whole front four, and I think there’ll be many times we’ll play together.
“I don’t see him as a back-up — I see him as an attacking player who can help us.”
With Kane, Diaz, Michael Olize and Serge Gnabry impressing for Bayern this season, Jackson will have limited opportunities at first — a difficult task for a player often criticized for missing crucial chances.
It is a role familiar to former Bayern striker Claudio Pizarro, who became a super-sub behind Mario Gomez, Mario Mandzukic and later Robert Lewandowski during a near 15-year association with the club.
Pizarro, who also had a stint at Chelsea, told AFP in Berlin on Saturday: “In my situation during my time at Bayern, I knew my job.
“I have to come in, score my goals, be ready to do my thing when I have the chance.
“It’s a hard role to play. I hope (Jackson) will adapt like Luis (Diaz).”
A six-time German champion, Pizarro said Jackson’s arrival could unleash healthy competition like that which drove Bayern to the treble in 2013, a year after the painful loss to Chelsea.
Pizarro revealed how the rivalry between his former teammates Arjen Robben and Franck Ribery on each wing pushed Bayern to greater heights.
“One wanted to be the best, the other as well: Franck and Arjen. They were great for us, but they always wanted to be better than the other.
“It was a good fight.”

PSG fear impact of injuries as they put Champions League title on the line

PSG fear impact of injuries as they put Champions League title on the line
Updated 5 min 1 sec ago

PSG fear impact of injuries as they put Champions League title on the line

PSG fear impact of injuries as they put Champions League title on the line
  • PSG host Atalanta on Wednesday for their first game in Europe
  • The French champions lost three of eight league phase games last season

PARIS: There is the sense that the new season gets up and running for real this week for Paris Saint-Germain as they begin their defense of the Champions League title amid doubts as to how much longer their squad can handle being pushed to the limit by a crowded calendar.
PSG host Atalanta on Wednesday for their first game in Europe, three and a half months after their stunning 5-0 destruction of Inter Milan in last season’s final in Munich.
Luis Enrique’s team will also entertain Bayern, Tottenham Hotspur and Newcastle United in the league phase, with trips to Barcelona, Bayer Leverkusen, Athletic Bilbao and to Lisbon to face Sporting on the horizon too.
Those are tough games, although PSG’s poor start in last season’s Champions League has shown that they might not need to be at their very best immediately.
The French champions lost three of eight league phase games last season, but still won Europe’s elite club competition for the first time following a dazzling run of form from the turn of the year.
The concern now, however, is that last season’s exertions could catch up with them and seriously jeopardize their chances of retaining the trophy.
The Parisians played 65 games during 2024/25, in a season spanning 11 months. That included 17 matches in the Champions League and seven in the Club World Cup, where their marathon campaign concluded with a 3-0 loss to Chelsea in mid-July.
Three weeks later they were back for pre-season training, and a week after that they started the new campaign against Tottenham in the UEFA Super Cup.
Fast forward a month and PSG — who won the Super Cup on penalties — have won their first four games in Ligue 1 but it looks like the recent efforts are beginning to catch up with them.
Ballon d’Or favorite Ousmane Dembele and Desire Doue are out for several weeks with muscle injuries suffered playing for France, while Khvicha Kvaratskhelia, Lee Kang-in and Lucas Beraldo came off hurt in Sunday’s 2-0 victory over Lens.
“It happens to everyone. It is a bit of a difficult time for us because we have a lot of players injured,” said Luis Enrique, the coach with his own arm in a sling after fracturing a collarbone in a cycling accident.
“I am calm about it and I hope we will manage to overcome it.”
It is not solely luck that PSG avoided serious injuries last season, owing much to the coach’s management of the squad.

- Hakimi in the red zone? -

Nineteen PSG players played more than 1,000 minutes in 2024/25, the same number as Real Madrid and Barcelona for example.
But the Club World Cup, often played in searing heat and involving numerous long journeys across the United States, had to take a toll.
PSG used 19 players in that competition, while Chelsea fielded 27 — the French side looked rinsed in the final and were torn apart.
If they do go to the latter stages of the Champions League again, PSG are looking at playing at least 55 games this season, including the FIFA Intercontinental Cup in December.
And there is a World Cup coming at the end of the season, where a large bulk of PSG’s players will be present.
The year is set to be even more intense for Achraf Hakimi, who played more minutes than anyone else for PSG last season — he will also feature heavily for Morocco as they host the Africa Cup of Nations in December and January.
Hakimi has no natural understudy at right-back at PSG, who surprisingly opted not to add significant depth to their squad in the transfer window, signing only one new center-back in Illia Zabarnyi, while Lucas Chevalier replaced Gianluigi Donnarumma in goal.
“Injuries to high-profile players are only one visible part of the workload crisis facing professional football and are not surprising,” said global players’ union FIFPro last week.
“The impact is not felt just by the players but increasingly also by clubs, national teams, fans and national competitions.”
Yet despite the concerns, there is huge excitement at PSG as they put their title on the line in Europe.
“It is a special moment. We know how difficult this competition is, but we are relaxed about it and we are hoping to put in a good performance in our first game,” said Luis Enrique.


Italian third-tier club Crotone under court control for Mafia infiltration

Italian third-tier club Crotone under court control for Mafia infiltration
Updated 39 min 55 sec ago

Italian third-tier club Crotone under court control for Mafia infiltration

Italian third-tier club Crotone under court control for Mafia infiltration
  • Tuesday’s decision means the club will continue its sporting activities but under the supervision of court-appointed administrators
  • The club itself is not under investigation

ROME: Italian third division soccer club Crotone has been placed under judicial administration for a year after police found “sufficient evidence” of pervasive Mafia infiltration, prosecutors said on Tuesday.
Crotone, based in the southern Calabria region that is home to the powerful ‘Ndrangheta Mafia, sit seventh in Group C of the Serie C league on five points from four games.
Crotone played in the top-flight Serie A for two consecutive seasons between 2016 and 2018 and again in 2020-2021.
Tuesday’s decision means the club will continue its sporting activities but under the supervision of court-appointed administrators. The club itself is not under investigation.
“FC Crotone will actively collaborate with the judicial administrators appointed by the court to continue its activities in the best interests of the club, fans and sport in general,” it said in a statement.
Crotone said the court decision “does not even remotely suggest complicity or connivance by the club, its shareholders, or its managers and collaborators.”
The prosecutors’ office of the city of Catanzaro said in a statement that Crotone had been “subjected, over the last decade, directly or at least indirectly, to conditions of intimidation and subjugation by members of local ‘Ndrangheta clans.”
The local mob had, in particular, infiltrated the club’s security and ticketing operations, and the judicial administration regime is expected to help steer its economic activities back onto a legal path, prosecutors said.
Mafia infiltration of Italian soccer, including the lucrative merchandising and ticketing businesses, is a well-known phenomenon, with recent investigations targeting hard-line ‘ultra’ fan groups at top clubs Inter and AC Milan.


Holloway’s long reign as world champion ends in high hurdles semis

Holloway’s long reign as world champion ends in high hurdles semis
Updated 16 September 2025

Holloway’s long reign as world champion ends in high hurdles semis

Holloway’s long reign as world champion ends in high hurdles semis
  • The 27-year-old American won the last three world titles over six years
  • Mason’s 13.12 was the top time of the three semifinals ahead of world leader Cordell Tinch

TOKYO: Olympic gold medallist Grant Holloway failed to get through the semifinals of the 110 meters hurdles at the world championships on Tuesday, guaranteeing a new champion in the event in Tokyo.
The 27-year-old American won the last three world titles over six years but only finished sixth in 13.52 seconds in a highly competitive third semi won by Jamaican Tyler Mason.
Mason’s 13.12 was the top time of the three semifinals ahead of world leader Cordell Tinch of the United States (13.16) and Japan’s Rachid Muratake (13.17), whose performance drew a rapturous cheer from the crowd at the National Stadium.
American Ja’Kobe Tharp (13.19) and French young gun Just Kwaou-Mathey (13.22) went through to the final later on Tuesday as the two “fastest losers,” the latter by two thousandths of a second from Jamaica’s Demario Prince.


Abu Dhabi set for three-day NBA Academy Showcase

Abu Dhabi set for three-day NBA Academy Showcase
Updated 16 September 2025

Abu Dhabi set for three-day NBA Academy Showcase

Abu Dhabi set for three-day NBA Academy Showcase
  • NBA’s vice president and head of basketball operations for Europe and the Middle East, says the league’s collaboration with DCT Abu Dhabi since 2022 has accelerated basketball growth in the region
  • Standfirst 2: Showcase will be at NYU Abu Dhabi before the Knicks and 76ers meet at Etihad Arena on Oct. 2 and 4

ABU DHABI: When Shai Gilgeous-Alexander capped off the 2024-2025 season by leading the Oklahoma City Thunder to the NBA championship and claiming both the regular season MVP and finals MVP awards, he became the latest alumnus of the NBA’s Basketball Without Borders program, part of the league’s global development pathway, to reach the pinnacle of the sport.

That pathway will be on display in Abu Dhabi this month with the first NBA Academy Showcase in the Middle East, hosted at New York University Abu Dhabi from Sept. 25-27. The event will bring together elite youth teams from Senegal’s NBA Academy Africa, Australia’s Centre of Excellence, France’s INSEP Academy, and the US-based IMG Academy Ascenders, who will compete in front of NCAA coaches and NBA scouts as they look to take the next step toward college or professional careers.

Neal Meyer, vice president and head of basketball operations for NBA Europe and the Middle East, told Arab News the choice of Abu Dhabi was no coincidence.

“Since 2022, our collaboration with the Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi has significantly accelerated the growth of basketball across the region, with Abu Dhabi emerging as a key regional hub for basketball development,” he said.

“The city’s world-class infrastructure, commitment to creating opportunities for young people to play basketball, and international outlook make it an ideal location for this first-of-its-kind elite event.”

The showcase takes place just days before the New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76ers face off at Etihad Arena on Oct. 2 and 4 as part of the NBA Abu Dhabi Games 2025 presented by ADQ.

The games will give fans in the region a rare chance to see some of the world’s best players in person, with two of the NBA’s historic rivals to meet in the UAE capital.

Meyer believes the back-to-back events underline how Abu Dhabi has quickly established itself on the world basketball map.

Globally, the NBA Academy and Basketball Without Borders programs have produced more than 140 NBA and WNBA draftees, including Philadelphia 76ers star Joel Embiid, the 2023 NBA MVP who fans will see in action at Etihad Arena.

The NBA Academy programs have alumni from more than 40 countries who earned NCAA Division I scholarships, underlining their role as a gateway to elite basketball.

“These success stories provide young boys and girls across the world with real-life examples to look up to and allows them to dream of a future playing elite basketball,” Meyer said. “Bringing the live NBA experience to Abu Dhabi through preseason games has been a huge driver.

“But also everything we’re doing to create more opportunities for youth to play the game, whether that’s by expanding our Jr. NBA Abu Dhabi League that has reached more than 20,000 boys and girls since we launched it in 2022 or refurbishing community basketball courts in collaboration with ADQ,” he added.

Since the inaugural NBA Abu Dhabi Games in 2022, participation has surged by more than 400 percent in the capital. Across the UAE, basketball has grown by 60 percent, while the wider Middle East has recorded growth of more than 50 percent.

With initiatives such as the Jr. NBA Abu Dhabi League, refurbished community courts and now the inaugural NBA Academy Showcase, the NBA is laying the foundations for a long-term talent pathway in Abu Dhabi and the wider Middle East.

Arab players such as Lebanon’s Rony Seikaly and Egypt’s Alaa Abdelnaby and Abdel Nader have featured in the league before, but with Abu Dhabi driving the game’s growth — and the showcase providing a new platform for young prospects — the stage may now be set for the emergence of the first Emirati player in the NBA.

“Given the popularity, interest and now opportunities to play basketball in the UAE, there’s no reason why we shouldn’t start to soon see NBA-level players coming from the region,” Meyer said.

“Our grassroots efforts in Abu Dhabi — including events like these — are important steps in building a pipeline to one day produce the NBA’s first Emirati player.”