The Golden State Storm, Northern California’s newest professional women’s football team, is highlighting high school girls’ flag football to inspire the next generation of athletes.”This has opened the door for them to actually be able to show off their skill, their speed, their agility, and really just be rock stars out there,” said Nichelle Haynes, a parent.The Vanden Vikings girls’ flag football team, formed last year, is one of the teams benefiting from this initiative. Players have expressed excitement about the camaraderie and teamwork they experience.”It’s fun. There’s a lot of team chemistry. We’ve all been friends before we even got on the team. So like, if we play as a team, we’re going to win as a team,” said Makenna Holloway, a player for Vanden High School.Parents like Nichelle are thrilled about the opportunities now available for girls interested in flag football. “I mean, I’m super excited about all the opportunities that they have now for the girls playing flag football. So, I mean, it’s about time, right? Because so many women have always had an interest in football. We just never had an entryway,” said Haynes.The Storm is hosting its first-ever Golden State Showdown matchup, featuring Vanden and Rocklin high schools, to provide accessibility and showcase what the professional space can look like. The team aims to encourage players to continue the sport at the collegiate level and beyond.”This is more so for us to really just focus on providing accessibility and showing them what the professional space can look like. Obviously, the sport is growing at the collegiate level, so we want them to continue that in the collegiate level, and after that, there will be a professional space for them to play,” said Guppy Uppal, a team representative.Players and parents are hopeful for the future of the sport. “I want to go to college to do this and play professionally,” said Holloway. Haynes added, “With this coming, this has opened up a lot of doors for a lot of girls who have never thought about competing on the next level when it comes to sports.”The outreach program is just the beginning of what the professional team has planned. Over the next eight weeks, the team will travel across Northern California to build connections with high school flag programs and shine a spotlight on local talent.”This is the opportunity for us to really go out there and build our touch point with the girls’ high school flag programs across the Northern California region, but also amplify the talent that is that currently exists here,” said a team representative.The Golden State Storm will highlight 24 matches this fall across the Sacramento and San Joaquin regions, all in hopes of growing flag football in Northern California.See more coverage of top California stories here | Download our app | Subscribe to our morning newsletter | Find us on YouTube here and subscribe to our channel
FAIRFIELD, Calif. —
The Golden State Storm, Northern California’s newest professional women’s football team, is highlighting high school girls’ flag football to inspire the next generation of athletes.
“This has opened the door for them to actually be able to show off their skill, their speed, their agility, and really just be rock stars out there,” said Nichelle Haynes, a parent.
The Vanden Vikings girls’ flag football team, formed last year, is one of the teams benefiting from this initiative. Players have expressed excitement about the camaraderie and teamwork they experience.
“It’s fun. There’s a lot of team chemistry. We’ve all been friends before we even got on the team. So like, if we play as a team, we’re going to win as a team,” said Makenna Holloway, a player for Vanden High School.
Parents like Nichelle are thrilled about the opportunities now available for girls interested in flag football.
“I mean, I’m super excited about all the opportunities that they have now for the girls playing flag football. So, I mean, it’s about time, right? Because so many women have always had an interest in football. We just never had an entryway,” said Haynes.
The Storm is hosting its first-ever Golden State Showdown matchup, featuring Vanden and Rocklin high schools, to provide accessibility and showcase what the professional space can look like. The team aims to encourage players to continue the sport at the collegiate level and beyond.
“This is more so for us to really just focus on providing accessibility and showing them what the professional space can look like. Obviously, the sport is growing at the collegiate level, so we want them to continue that in the collegiate level, and after that, there will be a professional space for them to play,” said Guppy Uppal, a team representative.
Players and parents are hopeful for the future of the sport.
“I want to go to college to do this and play professionally,” said Holloway.
Haynes added, “With this coming, this has opened up a lot of doors for a lot of girls who have never thought about competing on the next level when it comes to sports.”
The outreach program is just the beginning of what the professional team has planned. Over the next eight weeks, the team will travel across Northern California to build connections with high school flag programs and shine a spotlight on local talent.
“This is the opportunity for us to really go out there and build our touch point with the girls’ high school flag programs across the Northern California region, but also amplify the talent that is that currently exists here,” said a team representative.
The Golden State Storm will highlight 24 matches this fall across the Sacramento and San Joaquin regions, all in hopes of growing flag football in Northern California.
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla., May 8, 2025 (Newswire.com)
– USPA Global, the company that manages U.S. Polo Assn., the official brand of the United States Polo Association (USPA), is proud to support the Alexander W. Dreyfoos School of the Arts as a sponsor of Derby of Dreams: Racing for the Arts and Academics and by providing $10,000 in scholarships to graduating seniors at the renowned public arts magnet high school.
Derby of Dreams: Racing for the Arts and Academics took place on Saturday, May 3rd, 2025, at the iconic Polo Club at the USPA National Polo Center (NPC), in Wellington, Florida. Guests were dressed in their Derby best as they watched the Kentucky Derby live on the picturesque grounds of NPC while enjoying a gourmet dinner, signature mint juleps, and USPA 135th Anniversary Rosè. A highlight of the evening was the Bowtie and Hat Competition, encouraging attendees to show off their finest Derby attire.
Incredible performances were made by Grammy and Tony Award winner John Lloyd Young, Grammy Award-winning trumpeter Charlie Porter, and Broadway veteran, X Factor finalist, and celebrity vocal coach Tara Simon. The special event honored J. Michael Prince, President & CEO of USPA Global, and Kimberly Bluhm, philanthropist and art collector, for their outstanding contributions to arts and education.
“It is truly an honor to be recognized by the Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation, an organization that makes such a powerful impact on the lives of young creatives and scholars,” said J. Michael Prince, President and CEO of USPA Global. “As a brand deeply rooted in the values of tradition, excellence, and opportunity, U.S. Polo Assn. is proud to support the Derby of Dreams and the incredible students at Dreyfoos.”
“Our brand mission extends beyond sport and fashion – it’s about empowering future generations through education, creativity, and access to opportunity in the communities we serve,” Prince added.
Presented by the Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation, Derby of Dreams supports the award-winning Alexander W. Dreyfoos School of the Arts. Funds raised provide students with vital resources such as college and testing prep, private lessons, classroom enhancements, instruments, financial aid, and scholarships.
For the second year in a row, USPA Global/U.S. Polo Assn. established two $5,000 college scholarships to benefit graduating seniors at the A.W. Dreyfoos School of the Arts. The school is a renowned public arts magnet high school dedicated to providing academic excellence in West Palm Beach, Florida. The recipients were Vejas Roby and Eszter Veres.
These scholarships, graciously donated through the Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation, signify U.S. Polo Assn.’s commitment to fostering artistic and academic excellence in Palm Beach County.
“We are deeply grateful to U.S. Polo Assn. for their generous support, which plays a vital role in expanding access to the art, music, and design resources our talented students need to thrive,” said Dr. Chris Snyder, Executive Director of the Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation. “This continued partnership not only empowers our school community but also opens doors for exceptional graduating students through meaningful scholarship opportunities that help elevate their academic and artistic journeys.”
The Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation provides support for the arts and academic curriculum at the Dreyfoos School of the Arts, a public arts high school, ranked #91 out of nearly 25,000 public high schools in the nation, among the ten best schools in Florida, and the #1 public school in Palm Beach County. Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation, Inc. | P.O. Box 552, West Palm Beach, FL 33402 | Phone 561-805-6298 | info@soafi.org
About U.S. Polo Assn. and USPA Global
U.S. Polo Assn. is the official brand of the United States Polo Association (USPA), the largest association of polo clubs and polo players in the United States, founded in 1890 and based at the USPA National Polo Center in Wellington, Florida. This year, U.S. Polo Assn. celebrates 135 years of sports inspiration alongside the USPA. With a multi-billion-dollar global footprint and worldwide distribution through more than 1,100 U.S. Polo Assn. retail stores as well as thousands of additional points of distribution, U.S. Polo Assn. offers apparel, accessories, and footwear for men, women, and children in more than 190 countries worldwide. Historic deals with ESPN in the United States and Star Sports in India now broadcast several of the premier polo championships in the world, sponsored by U.S. Polo Assn., making the thrilling sport accessible to millions of sports fans globally for the very first time.
U.S. Polo Assn. has consistently been named one of the top global sports licensors in the world alongside the NFL, NBA, and MLB, according to License Global. In addition, the sport-inspired brand is being recognized internationally with awards for global and digital growth. Due to its tremendous success as a global brand, U.S. Polo Assn. has been featured in Forbes, Fortune, Modern Retail, and GQ as well as on Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg, among many other noteworthy media sources around the world.
USPA Global is a subsidiary of the USPA and manages the global, multi-billion-dollar U.S. Polo Assn. brand. Through its subsidiary, Global Polo Entertainment (GPE), USPA Global also manages Global Polo TV, which provides sports and lifestyle content. For more sports content, visit globalpolo.com.
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Photo Captions:
L to R: CEO of Dreyfoos School of the Arts Foundation Dr. Chris Snyder, Students Vejas Roby and Eszter Veres, President and CEO of USPA Global J. Michael Prince, USPA Global Vice President of PR Stacey Kovalsky.
L to R: Dreyfoos Student Vejas Roby, President and CEO of USPA Global J. Michael Prince, and Dreyfoos Student Eszter Veres at the Derby of Dreams: Racing for the Arts and Academics at the USPA National Polo Center.
Grammy and Tony Award Winner and Jersey Boys star John Lloyd Young performs at the Derby of Dreams: Racing for the Arts and Academics at the USPA National Polo Center.
President and CEO of USPA Global J. Michael Prince accepts his honor for his outstanding contributions to arts and education at the Derby of Dreams: Racing for the Arts and Academics at the USPA National Polo Center.
PHILADELPHIA, PA AND WEST PALM BEACH, FL, May 1, 2025 (Newswire.com)
– The United States Polo Association (USPA) and Work to Ride are pleased to announce that the USPA has awarded a $1 million grant to Work to Ride (WTR), a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to equine sports and education based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
The funding will support the completion of a new 45,000-square-foot indoor riding facility, the McCausland Arena, at the Chamounix Equestrian Center, located just 10 minutes from Center City and home to the WTR program. The grant is specifically aimed at aiding in the completion of the new facility (Phase 1), further enabling WTR to provide year-round programming and services for the first time in 30 years.
Additionally, the project will benefit Philadelphia’s community and the greater Philadelphia area, with a continued focus on targeting youth in surrounding neighborhoods with high concentrations of under-resourced families through after-school programming featuring equestrian programs, polo training, and equine education. While the USPA grant is dedicated to Phase 1, the broader project also encompasses the future refurbishment of the existing 50-year-old equestrian center and stable (Phase 2). This phase will create a safe, functional, and welcoming space for youth and horses, with plans to include new windows, roofing, and updated learning areas and bathrooms.
“I am beyond thrilled to announce this partnership with the USPA, U.S. Polo Assn., and USPA Global,” stated Kareem Rosser, Executive Vice President of Work to Ride. “Both Work to Ride’s and the USPA’s interscholastic and intercollegiate programs have had a profound impact on my life, offering a rare opportunity to participate in a sport that has transformed my future. I’m especially excited about their meaningful contribution to our project and their ongoing commitment to making polo more accessible and inclusive for all.”
This partnership with USPA, U.S. Polo Assn., and USPA Global underscores a shared commitment to advancing the growth of the sport of polo while simultaneously enhancing the visibility and impact of all involved parties. Additionally, providing a space for USPA Intercollegiate/Interscholastic programs, USPA events, and other USPA activities further fosters youth participation and strengthens the sport’s continued development.
“We are proud to support Work to Ride, an organization that has made a lasting impact on under-resourced urban youth through polo and other equine disciplines and education. This partnership strengthens our commitment to fostering the next generation of polo players and providing them with valuable life skills,” said Chris Green, Chief Operating Officer & General Counsel of USPA.
As part of this grant agreement between the USPA and Work to Ride, U.S. Polo Assn., the official brand of the USPA, will be the Official Apparel and Jersey Sponsor for Work to Ride. The multi-billion-dollar global sports brand will provide team jerseys, whites, and polo gear bags for all Work to Ride program participants. U.S. Polo Assn. will also provide staff apparel for Work to Ride employees at the facility for events.
“U.S. Polo Assn. is thrilled to give our support to the Work to Ride Program, an organization that empowers youth through horsemanship, equine sports and education,” said J. Michael Prince, President and CEO of USPA Global, the company that manages and markets the global, multi-billion-dollar U.S. Polo Assn. brand. “Through this program, we will not only support the community but also the next generation of polo players and their equine partners while deepening our authentic connection to the sport.”
Founded in 1994, Work to Ride is a community-based program that aids Philadelphia’s under-resourced youth through constructive activities centered on horsemanship, equine sports, and education. The program is housed at Chamounix Equestrian Center, located in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. This setting provides a unique opportunity to bring Philadelphia’s youth in contact with animals and nature.
Work to Ride is designed as a long-term program for 8- to 18-year-old students who must commit to a minimum of one year of participation. Through participation in evidence-based programs, students are working early mornings and after school for the opportunity to acquire life skills such as responsibility, decision making, and leadership while they learn to ride horses and play polo. In the process, they learn that the life limitations they see around them in local neighborhoods may not have to be so limiting after all.
For 25 years, WTR has been a successful participant in the USPA’s Intercollegiate/Interscholastic Program. WTR participants and graduates have surpassed expectations, competing in and winning interscholastic and intercollegiate tournaments. To further strengthen this success, the planned building and renovations are essential for the expansion of programs and services, providing more young people with the opportunity to engage in this unique, urban equestrian community in the largest urban park in the United States and ensuring its sustainability for years to come.
About Work to Ride
Founded in 1994, Work to Ride (WTR) is a 501(c)(3), nonprofit community-based prevention program that aids Philadelphia’s under-resourced youth through constructive activities centered on horsemanship, equine sports, and education. The program is housed at Chamounix Equestrian Center, located in West Fairmount Park, Philadelphia. This setting provides a unique opportunity to bring Philadelphia’s youth in contact with animals and nature. Work to Ride has been featured on ESPN:E60, HBO Real Sports, and Sports Illustrated, to name a few. For more information, visit www.worktoride.net and follow on Instagram and on Facebook.
About United States Polo Association
The United States Polo Association® is organized and exists for the purposes of promoting the game of polo; coordinating the activities of its member clubs and registered player members; arranging and supervising polo tournaments, competitions and games; and providing rules, handicaps and tournament conditions for those events. Its overarching goals are improving the sport and promoting the safety and welfare of its human and equine participants. Founded in 1890, the USPA is the largest voluntary sports organization in North America for the sport of polo. The USPA is currently made up of more than 200 member clubs and over 5,000 registered player members. It annually awards and oversees roughly 50 national tournaments hosted by its member clubs. For more information, please visit uspolo.org.
About U.S. Polo Assn. and USPA Global
U.S. Polo Assn. is the official brand of the United States Polo Association (USPA), the largest association of polo clubs and polo players in the United States, founded in 1890 and based at the USPA National Polo Center in Wellington, Florida. This year, U.S. Polo Assn. celebrates 135 years of sports inspiration alongside the USPA. With a multi-billion-dollar global footprint and worldwide distribution through more than 1,100 U.S. Polo Assn. retail stores as well as thousands of additional points of distribution, U.S. Polo Assn. offers apparel, accessories, and footwear for men, women, and children in more than 190 countries worldwide. Historic deals with ESPN in the United States and Star Sports in India now broadcast several of the premier polo championships in the world, sponsored by U.S. Polo Assn., making the thrilling sport accessible to millions of sports fans globally for the very first time.
U.S. Polo Assn. has consistently been named one of the top global sports licensors in the world alongside the NFL, NBA, and MLB, according to License Global.In addition, the sport-inspired brand is being recognized internationally with awards for global and digital growth. Due to its tremendous success as a global brand, U.S. Polo Assn. has been featured in Forbes, Fortune, Modern Retail, and GQ as well as on Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg, among many other noteworthy media sources around the world.
USPA Global is a subsidiary of the USPA and manages the global, multi-billion-dollar U.S. Polo Assn. brand. Through its subsidiary, Global Polo Entertainment (GPE), USPA Global also manages Global Polo TV, which provides sports and lifestyle content. For more sports content, visit globalpolo.com.
What do India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and the other teams need to do in order to seal a spot? Al Jazeera breaks it down.
The race for the semifinals at the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup is heating up as all 10 participant nations enter the second half of their group-stage matches and look to climb up the points table.
After their huge win over Sri Lanka on Wednesday, India leapt up from fourth to second spot in Group A and removed the Asian champions from the reckoning.
Sri Lanka are already out of semifinal contention; their final group game against New Zealand on Saturday is inconsequential.
In Group B, debutants Scotland also made an early exit after losing all three games. On Sunday, they will attempt to finish the tournament on a high with an upset of their much higher-ranked British rivals, England.
Which teams, then, can still qualify for the semifinals and what do they need to do in order to get there?
Here’s Al Jazeera’s breakdown of the permutations:
Which teams can qualify for the Women’s T20 World Cup semifinals?
Group A:
Australia
India
New Zealand
Pakistan
Group B:
England
South Africa
West Indies
Bangladesh
Two falcons 🦅 Two camels 🐫 10 captains 😎 ONE trophy 🏆
Beat both Pakistan and India in their remaining two group games to finish on top of the table with eight points.
In case of a loss against Pakistan, Australia would need to beat India and hope New Zealand beat Pakistan and Sri Lanka beat New Zealand. This would result in six points for Australia and India, and four each for New Zealand and Pakistan.
If Australia beat Pakistan but lose to India, they would want New Zealand to lose against both Pakistan and Sri Lanka, resulting in six points for Australia and India and four each for Pakistan and New Zealand.
Should they lose both games, Australia will find themselves in a tricky situation – but their high net run rate may still save them. They will hope for two losses for New Zealand against Sri Lanka and Pakistan. Australia will still need their net run rate to be higher than Pakistan’s in order to secure the second qualifying spot from Group A.
How can India qualify for the semifinals?
A win over Australia in their final group game and one loss each for New Zealand and Pakistan will ensure India’s qualification on points.
If India lose to Australia, they would require Australia to record a huge win over Pakistan – in order to eliminate Fatima Sana’s team on net run rate – and New Zealand to lose at least one of their games. Group A would then have Australia on top and India in second spot on net run rate.
Should India lose to Australia but New Zealand win both their matches, the Australasian teams will qualify for the semis with at least six points each – and Harmanpreet Kaur’s team will be eliminated.
If India lose to Australia but New Zealand lose to Pakistan, Australia will qualify as table toppers and leave the other three teams to fight it out on net run rate.
Two wins in their last two matches against Sri Lanka and Pakistan will seal the deal for the White Ferns with six points.
Failing to win both games will lead to New Zealand’s removal on two points.
If New Zealand win one of their two games, they will hope their geographical neighbour Australia will hand big defeats to both India and Pakistan and help them finish second on a higher net run rate.
How can Pakistan qualify for the semifinals?
In ideal circumstances, Pakistan need to pull off miraculous wins over both New Zealand and Australia and rely on India to defeat Australia. This improbable scenario would send India and Pakistan into the semifinals with six points each.
In a slightly more realistic situation, if Pakistan beat New Zealand but lose to Australia, they would need Australia to beat India with a huge margin and Sri Lanka to beat New Zealand in a similar manner. This would result in four points for both Pakistan and India and the team with the higher net run rate will qualify.
If Pakistan lose both their games, they will end yet another World Cup campaign at the group stage. Pakistan have never qualified for the semifinals of a World Cup [File: Giuseppe Cacace/AFP]
How can England qualify for the semifinals?
England need two wins in their two games to finish on eight points and qualify as table toppers.
One win and one loss will see them finish on six points and enter a net run rate battle against South Africa, West Indies and Bangladesh.
Should England lose to both Scotland and West Indies, they can still qualify if their net run rate is higher than the other three teams.
How can South Africa qualify for the semifinals?
South Africa need to beat Bangladesh comprehensively in order to maintain their top position with both points and net run rate.
Should South Africa lose, they will need the West Indies to lose both their games. In this scenario, their healthy net run rate after the first three games could still see the Proteas women enter the semifinals in the second spot ahead of both the West Indies and Bangladesh.
How can the West Indies qualify for the semifinals?
The West Indies need two wins in their last two matches and hope that South Africa lose to Bangladesh or England lose both of their games.
If the West Indies win one game and England win both of theirs, the 2016 champions will hope that South Africa lose to Bangladesh by a big margin. Hayley Matthews’s team will then qualify ahead of South Africa on net run rate.
Two losses will result in a group-stage exit for West Indies.
The hosts, who won their first-ever T20 World Cup match in the tournament opener on October 3, will pull off a near-miracle if they beat both 2016 champions West Indies and 2023 runners-up South Africa and end up on six points. It will be enough to see them through to the knockouts.
In the other instance, Bangladesh will hope they can beat at least one of West Indies or South Africa with a big margin and enter the battle for net run rate.
Losing both of their games will send Nigar Sultana’s team crashing out of the tournament.
The Lakers picked LeBron’s 20-year-old son in the NBA Draft in June, making them the first father-son duo in the same team.
LeBron James and his eldest son Bronny James have claimed a piece of NBA history, making their long-awaited first appearance alongside each other for the Los Angeles Lakers.
The duo appeared together on Sunday at the start of the second quarter in the Lakers’ 118-114 preseason defeat to the Phoenix Suns in Palm Desert, east of Los Angeles.
While LeBron impressed with 19 points in just 16 minutes and 20 seconds on court before sitting out the second half, Bronny found the going harder with zero points in little more than 13 minutes on court. The younger James attempted just one shot.
“It was cool for both of us, especially our family,” LeBron James, 39, said after playing alongside Bronny, who celebrated his 20th birthday on Sunday. “It’s definitely a moment I’ll never forget.
“As a father it means everything. For someone who didn’t have a dad growing up, to be able to have that influence on your son, to be able to have moments with your son, to work with your son – that’s one of the greatest things a father could ever hope for.”
James senior admitted though that there were moments on court that felt surreal.
“We came out of a timeout and we kind of stood next to each other. I kind of looked at him. It was like being in The Matrix or something. It just didn’t feel real. But it was great to have those moments.”
Anticipation about when the James duo would become the first father-son duo to appear in the same NBA lineup together has built since the Lakers picked Bronny with the 55th pick in the NBA Draft in June.
“I’m thrilled that I get to be a part of this,” new Lakers coach JJ Redick said after the James double act.
“It’s cool as a basketball fan. I think it speaks to the longevity of LeBron and his competitive stamina. And it speaks to the work that Bronny has done to get to this point.”
Redick introduced Bronny James to the floor, with the Lakers leading 34-25 in the second quarter.
LeBron James has said playing with Bronny on the same team has given him a new lease on life as he enters the 22nd season of a glittering career.
“It’s a lot of excitement, a pure joy, to be able to come to work every day, put in hard work with your son every day and be able to see him continue to grow,” James said.
“We push each other. He pushes me. I push him. We push our teammates, and vice versa. So it’s just a very joyous moment not only for myself, but for our family.
“So it’s pretty awesome. Gives you a lot of life.”
Bronny said at the Lakers’ recent media day he was fuelled by the words of critics who have suggested he owes his place on the Lakers roster entirely to his superstar father.
“I’m just taking all that stuff, that criticism and backlash that people have given me and turning it into something that can fuel me,” he said.
Bronny is expected to spend most of his rookie season in the developmental G League rather than the Lakers senior squad.
The Lakers open their 2024-25 regular season campaign with a home game against the Minnesota Timberwolves on October 22.
At first we studied how my disabilities and prosthesis might affect my ability to meet the requirements in-flight. At a later stage we went into detail, to the point of figuring out, for example, whether I should compulsorily use my prosthesis in space, since legs are hardly used there.
In summary, I can say that although I would need the prosthesis at some stages, disabilities like mine fully meet the needs of space travel. I am very happy to say that we have not identified any hiccups capable of precluding a person with disabilities like mine from a long-duration space mission. This has an incredible positive outcome.
Why is it important that people with disabilities can also operate in space? And what specific disabilities are we talking about?
I’ll start with the second question. Fly! looked at a specific group of disabilities, those in the lower limbs. From the results I think we can extrapolate different variables in that group that are compatible with long-duration space missions. We need to progress step by step, starting with the basics, and I am sure that starting to study lower limb disabilities was a good choice. I hope we can soon focus on other disabilities, which allows me to answer the first part of the question: Why is it important?
The ESA recognizes that talented people can boast different histories and backgrounds—meaning gender, sex, ethnicity, physical abilities. Everywhere in the world there are those who could make valuable contributions to human space exploration. Of course, this involves becoming astronauts.
And the experience and knowledge of people with physical disabilities can bring new and valuable ideas, different ways of thinking, motivation, inspiration. For this to happen, everyone needs to have fair representation among the staff, with appropriate professional positions and roles. This is a goal, and the ESA is working to achieve it.
In September, the Polaris Dawn mission is expected to take off from Cape Canaveral, and will feature the first spacewalk by nonprofessional astronauts. What do you think?
They are inspiring and no less important in the landscape of human exploration of the cosmos, because every time these missions become a reality, they help enrich the knowledge we have as a community. Polaris Dawn is doing new science; it’s testing new technologies. That’s why I have great respect for private astronauts and their missions—they make a major contribution to the advancement of our space activities.
McFall and other ESA astronauts in a weightlessness simulation.
ESA/A. Conigli
When are you going into space?
I would love to travel beyond the atmosphere. I hope to have the opportunity, but what I hope most is that sooner or later someone with physical disabilities will be able to do it, fully integrated into the activities on the International Space Station.
About the timing, I hope that at the end of this decade it can happen. As for me, if I ever have the opportunity to fly in space, it will not be before 2027. But nothing is confirmed, and I am keeping my fingers crossed at the moment.
Japanese B-Girl Ami beats Lithuania’s Nicka in the gold medal competition as breaking makes a cameo at the Olympics.
The urban sport of breaking spun its way onto the Olympic stage for the first and possibly last time, with Japan’s B-Girl Ami winning the inaugural women’s gold.
Breaking, better known as breakdancing, made its debut amid the grand elegance of Paris’s Place de la Concorde, with 17 dancers known as B-Girls going head-to-head in a series of battles on Friday.
Ami, whose name is Ami Yuasa, beat Lithuania’s Dominika “Nicka” Banevic in the final, with China’s Liu “671” Qingyi taking bronze.
Japan’s Ami Yuasa, known as B-Girl Ami, celebrates after winning the gold medal during the B-Girls gold medal battle at the breaking competition at La Concorde Urban Park [Abbie Parr/AP Photo]
The sport blends urban dance with acrobatic moves set to the grooves of hip-hop music.
Its appearance at the Olympics could be a fleeting one, however, having already been dropped from the Los Angeles 2028 programme and no guarantees it will return in the future.
“It was disappointing it was decided that it wouldn’t be in LA, particularly before we even had a chance to show it,” said Australian B-Girl Rachel “Raygun” Gunn.
“I think that was possibly a little premature. I wonder if they’re kicking themselves now.”
Organisers ensured breaking made the most of its time in the spotlight in Paris, pumping up the volume for an excited crowd that included rapper Snoop Dogg.
“I still don’t believe that I’m here because breaking is so different,” said Italian Antilai Sandrini, known by her B-Girl name Anti.
“I never thought about breaking at the Olympics, so for me, it’s really huge.”
Lithuania’s Dominika Banevic, known as B-Girl Nicka, competes during the B-Girls quarterfinals [Frank Franklin/AP Photo]
Afghan B-Girl makes political statement
The first contest of the day was between India Sardjoe of the Netherlands, known by her B-Girl name India, and Refugee Olympic Team competitor, Talash.
Talash, whose real name is Manizha Talash, left Taliban-controlled Afghanistan to live in Spain two years ago and danced wearing a blue cape with “Free Afghan Women” printed on it.
Talash of Refugee Olympic Team in action [Angelika Warmuth/Reuters]
“There are so many people that are struggling everywhere, and this is why the world needs this,” said American B-Girl Logistx, also known as Logan Edra.
Breaking originated as part of hip-hop culture in New York in the 1970s.
What began in the block parties of the Bronx has reached the fountains and classical facades of one of Paris’s most opulent public spaces, overseen by the International Olympic Committee.
Logistx said finding a balance between breaking’s roots and Olympic competition had been “a messy process”.
“I’m just so happy with what everyone fought for on this journey because I feel like the culture pulled through,” she said.
Netherland’s India Sardjoe, known as B-Girl India, celebrates after competing during the B-Girls bronze medal battle [Abbie Parr/AP Photo]
Each battle sees B-Girls take turns to lay down their dance moves over a set number of rounds, with a panel of judges determining the winner.
The competition opened with a pool stage featuring four groups of four B-Girls, before moving onto the knockout round.
The B-Girls perform on a circular stage, accompanied by a DJ pumping out hip-hop classics and MCs hyping up the crowd.
B-Girls in the women’s event come from countries as diverse as Japan, Lithuania, Morocco and Australia.
The men’s competition takes place on Saturday.
China’s Qingyi Liu, known as B-Girl 671, competes during the B-Girls bronze medal battle [Frank Franklin/AP Photo]
Bhaker became India’s first-ever multi-medallist at an Olympics by winning her second bronze on a hot day in Paris.
Great Britain’s Nathan Hales clinched the men’s trap gold at the Paris Games with a new Olympic record, while the Serbian pair of Zorana Arunovic and Damir Mikec rallied to win the 10-metre air pistol mixed team event.
Hales hit 48 shots out of 50 in his Olympic debut and fell agonisingly short of his own world record of 49 on a hot afternoon at the Chateauroux Shooting Centre on Tuesday.
The 28-year-old missed just one shot in each of the two stages to put daylight between himself and Qi Ying (44) of China, who settled for silver.
“That’s quite something,” Hales said of his new status as an Olympic champion.
Earlier, in the mixed-team pistol event, Arunovic and Mikec drew level when Turkey’s Sevval Ilayda Tarhan and Yusuf Dikec looked on the brink of victory at 14-12 in the race to the magic number of 16.
Manu Bhaker creates history for India
Manu Bhaker and Sarabjot Singh claimed the bronze for India, beating the South Korean pair Oh Ye-jin and Lee Won-ho 16-10.
Bhaker, who won bronze in the women’s individual event, becomes India’s first multi-medallist at an Olympic Games since the country’s independence in 1947.
Silver medallists Sevval Ilayda Tarhan and Yusuf Dikec of Turkey, Gold medallists Zorana Arunovic and Damir Mikec of Serbia, and Bronze medallists Manu Bhaker and Sarabjot Singh of India pose with their flags [Amr Alfiky/Reuters]
‘Nadalcaraz’ enter quarterfinals, Gauff leaves in tears
Rafa Nadal and Carlos Alcaraz combined their formidable firepower to down Dutchmen Tallon Griekspoor and Wesley Koolhof and reach the quarterfinals of the men’s tennis doubles.
Meanwhile, women’s second seed Coco Gauff’s challenge wilted as she was knocked out in the third round 7-6(7) 6-2.
Gauff was left in tears at a crucial moment of the second set when an over-ruled line call saw her slip 4-2 behind, with the American becoming embroiled in a lengthy argument with the umpire and tournament supervisor.
USA’s Coco Gauff talks to an official during her match against Donna Vekic of Croatia [Edgar Su/Reuters]
North Korea bags first Olympic medal since Rio 2016
North Korea said they could learn from China after winning their first Olympic medal in eight years, settling for silver after a mixed doubles defeat to the table tennis superpower.
China arrived in Paris as the world’s undisputed table tennis kings, having won 32 of the 37 available golds since it became an Olympic sport.
They failed to claim the mixed doubles title when it was introduced three years ago in Tokyo but Wang Chuqin and Sun Yingsha set the record straight with an 11-6, 7-11, 11-8, 11-5, 7-11, 11-8 win over North Korea’s Ri Jong Sik and Kim Kum Yong.
For North Korea, they skipped the pandemic-postponed Tokyo Olympics in 2021 over COVID-19 concerns.
Kim said she and Ri had trained with the Chinese team to prepare for Paris and promised to come back stronger.
“We had some time with the Chinese team, which is the world’s best,” said the 22-year-old.
“Of course, it wasn’t enough in the end. We had a good performance but there are some regrets. We learned a lot from them.”
South Korea’s Lim Jonghoon, right, takes a selfie with North Korea’s Ri Jong Sik, left, and Kim Kum, second left, China’s Wang Chuqin, background, and Sun Yingsha, centre, and his teammate Shin Yubin, right, and Lim Jonghoon during the medal ceremony [Petros Giannakouris/AP]
Paris sizzles in heatwave
State forecaster Meteo France announced a high temperature of 37 degrees Celsius (98.6°F) in Paris, which led to heat protocols in some events.
Football players were allowed water breaks, tennis players could use additional breaks to take a shower, BMX riders sat under umbrellas between runs and horses were monitored with thermal cameras.
People refresh at a public water distribution in the centre of Paris, France [Martin Meissner/AP]
Neither Portugal nor France have been convincing at the tournament to date despite the array of talent at their disposal, but they have potential match-winners who only need an instant to find a decisive moment.
When: 9pm local time (19:00 GMT) kickoff on Friday, July 5
How to follow: Al Jazeera will have live text commentary of the game with build-up beginning three hours before kickoff.
Portugal and France head into their quarterfinal meeting as two tournament favourites that few actually expect to win Euro 2024.
It’s a mouth-watering encounter, filled with superstars on both sides, yet both have struggled to impress – most especially in attack.
Portugal’s campaign has seen a lot of ups and downs as the Selecao started with two wins before suffering a shock defeat to Georgia and needing a dramatic penalty shootout win over Slovenia to reach the quarterfinals.
While Bernardo Silva and Bruno Fernandes have found the net, their veteran skipper Cristiano Ronaldo has struggled in front of goal. The 39-year-old, playing in a record sixth Euros, had a penalty saved against Slovenia in extra time in the round of 16, prompting him to burst into tears of frustration.
Ronaldo scored in the shootout that followed, but questions have been raised over his place in the lineup as his goal-scoring powers are on the wane. The Al Nassr forward has taken more shots than any other at Euro 2024 (20) but has not scored in his last eight tournament matches.
Volksparkstadion is the home stadium of German football club Hamburger SV [Axel Heimken/AFP]
Will Mbappe or Griezmann outdo Ronaldo to ignite title bid?
Pre-tournament favourites and twice world champions France have also been sluggish, failing to score from open play in the tournament.
France’s stalwart forward Kylian Mbappe scored a penalty in his comeback against Poland after breaking his nose in their opener, while France’s other two goals have come courtesy of the opposition.
France’s assistant coach Guy Stephan said Mbappe and Antoine Griezmann have been singled out for unfair criticism.
“We all downplayed Mbappe’s broken nose a bit,” Stephan told reporters. “It doesn’t explain everything, but the shock was traumatic. The mask he is forced to play with is not easy, it’s difficult for his peripheral vision.
“He also had a somewhat tiring end to the season. But Kylian remains a top, top-level player. There are times when these top-level players are a little less good.
“With Griezmann, we’re talking about a player who has 133 caps, who has scored 44 goals, who, until last March, played more than 80 matches in a row for the France team,” he added.
The misfiring forward lines of both sides need to spark to life for both sides, as the winner of the contest awaits Germany or Spain in the semifinal in Munich.
Friday’s contest will be a repeat of the Euro 2016 final in Paris when Portugal stunned the hosts to win 1-0 thanks to an extra-time goal from striker Eder.
France are looking for their third triumph, while Portugal seek to add to their solitary 2016 title.
FIFA ranking:
Portugal (6), France (2)
Head-to-head record:
28 games – 6 wins for Portugal, 19 for France, 3 draws.
Last five matches: Portugal: D L W W W France: W D D W D
Tehran, Iran – It’s 2021, in Konya, Turkey, at the fifth edition of the Islamic Solidarity Games.
Farzaneh Fasihi’s heart races as she bends into position at the start line, the lingering effects of a COVID-19 infection still wearing her down.
Her chest is tight, but she’s determined to compete.
The starter’s gun goes off, and she lunges forward as swiftly as she can, her legs churning faster than ever before.
When she crosses the finish line, she collapses; not from exhaustion, but from the overwhelming emotion of breaking her own 100-metre sprint record, clocking a lightning-fast time of 11.12 seconds to win the silver medal.
“On the night before a race, memories of my life gush through my mind. All the hardships I’ve endured and all my successes pass before my eyes like a film reel,” Fasihi told Al Jazeera, speaking in a Zoom interview from Belgrade, Serbia. She is at a training camp ahead of the Paris 2024 Olympics, which kick off July 26, and where Iran’s fastest female runner of all time will compete in her favourite event, the 100-metre sprint.
Fasihi is no stranger to challenges, but a strong support system in her personal life has seen her through it all.
Farzaneh Fasihi of Iran wins a sliver medal in the 100-metres at the fifth Islamic Solidarity Games in Konya, Turkey on August 09, 2022 [Mustafa Ciftci/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images]
“I didn’t want to do it’
Born in 1993 in Isfahan, Iran, Fasihi, 31, hails from an athletic family. Her father was a volleyball player, and her brother a swimming and diving champion.
“Before I got married, my father attended all my training sessions,” she recalls. “My mother also attended all my competitions. Without their support, I could not have succeeded.”
From age five to 12, Fasihi did gymnastics. She recalls how her first foray into competitive sprinting was more by chance than design.
“In middle school, my gym teacher forced me to participate in a running competition. I didn’t want to do it,” Fasihi remembers. That day, she broke the Isfahan provincial record, igniting her passion for track and field.
In 2016, she made her international debut.
Fasihi’s team performed well above expectations, winning the silver medal in the 4×400 metre relay at the Asia Indoor Athletics Championship in Doha, Qatar.
But her standout performance did not catapult her sprinting career to new heights. With little support from the Iranian track and field federation, she left it all behind and became a personal fitness trainer.
That all changed in late 2018, when she decided to give competitive sprinting a second try.
A year later, that decision led to an unexpected outcome: she married one of her coaches, Amir Hosseini, who has been her staunchest supporter.
Farzaneh Fasihi during a training session with coach and husband Amir Hosseini at Aftab Enghelab Sports Complex in Tehran, Iran [Maryam Majd ATPImages via Getty Images]Fasihi constantly works on her technique and power, which are essential for an elite 100-metre sprinter. Athlete training facilities in Iran are not up to the same standards as other nations that invest heavily in sport [Maryam Majd ATP Images via Getty Images]
In 2020, with a support structure now firmly established with Hosseini, Fasihi’s career literally took off.
She participated in the World Athletics Indoor Championships, where the relatively unknown runner scorched the track with a sensational entry record time of 7.29 seconds in the 60-metre sprint held in Belgrade, Serbia.
Not only had Fasihi come out of nowhere to post a fast time – but she had also created history by becoming the first Iranian woman to compete at the championship. Her shock performance in Belgrade was where she was first given the nickname “Jaguar,” a testament to her ferocious speed off the starting block.
A year later, in 2021, she signed with the Serbian athletics club BAK, becoming the first female legionnaire – which effectively means a club signs and sponsors a foreign athlete to relocate and compete for them – in Iran track and field history.
“Becoming a legionnaire was a new path. It was a great risk, but I felt deep inside that I had to do it,” she said, hoping that it would inspire other female Iranian athletes.
Setting the record straight – this one’s ‘for the people’
In 2023, Fasihi would then go on to win gold at the 60-metre race at the Asian Indoor Athletics Championships in Astana, Kazakhstan, clocking a scintillating time of 7.28 seconds.
As outstanding and celebratory as that personal-best performance was – the setting of a new Asian 60-metre sprinting record would ordinarily be cause for wild celebrations – the day would be remembered for something far more profound.
As Fasihi walked to the podium, she turned directly to the camera and shouted: “For the people of Iran. For the happiness of the people of Iran!”
Her moment of protest went viral on social media, with Fasihi declining to carry the Iranian flag and instead bowing her head as she shed silent tears, refusing to sing the national anthem on the victory dias.
This was her statement, or way, to express the tragedy of the young Iranian woman Mahsa Amini, who in 2022 collapsed and died, allegedly after she was detained by Iran’s morality police for wearing an “improper hijab” (headscarf).
Amini’s death made international news headlines and galvanised female activists all over the world through the “Women, Life, Freedom” movement.
Fasihi has broken the Iranian 60 and 100-metre sprinting record on multiple occasions and is currently the number one ranked sprinter in Asia for 60-metres. She lives and trains in the capital, Tehran [Majid Asgaripour/WANA via Reuters]
Olympic dreaming
Two years earlier, Fasihi had already taken the first step towards her Olympic dream when she was selected through the so-called universality placement to participate in Tokyo 2020.
Universality placement is a policy set by the International Olympic Committee (IOC) allowing athletes from underrepresented countries to participate, even if they have not met the standard qualifying criteria. The policy exists to ensure broader global representation and inclusivity at the Olympic games.
In Tokyo, Fasihi competed in the 100-metre sprint, marking Iran’s return to this event after a 57-year hiatus. In the 1964 Summer Olympics, also in Tokyo, Simin Safamehr had made history as the first woman athlete to represent Iran at the games, coincidentally competing in the 100-metre sprint, as well as the long jump.
Fasihi placed 50th in Tokyo, all the while facing scrutiny over her hijab, triggering a firestorm of debate in the Iranian social media space as some claimed the strict dress code slowed her down, hindering her performance and limiting her media exposure and sponsorship opportunities.
But the Tokyo Olympics was also an opportunity for her to meet her sprinting idol, Jamaican track and field superstar Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce. “I liked her even more when we met. Her lifestyle is impressive as she is both a professional athlete, a wife and mother, and helps many charities.“
For Fasihi, her performance in Tokyo was below her best – but it only fueled her ambition to do better next time.
“What makes Paris [2024 Olympics] different is that I will compete on my own merit – not through universality placement,” Fasihi told Al Jazeera.
Fasihi leads the field in her heat of the women’s 100-metre race at the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, staged in 2021 due to COVID-19. She is delighted to have qualified on merit for the Paris 2024 Olympics, rather than relying on the underrepresented nations exception [Matthias Schrader/AP]
Despite the systemic challenges, especially the lack of official government support for elite female athletes in Iran, Fasihi remains steadfast in achieving her goals. She self-finances her training, participates in competitions and is working to secure modest sponsorships.
Fasihi believes that extensive investments in sport by countries like China, India, and Japan will yield impressive results in Asian athletics, but notes the disparity in resources across the continent.
“In Qatar, for example, athletes work with American trainers and the federation invites analysts, physiotherapists, and sports medicine physicians from around the world. Even China and Japan coordinate training camps in Florida [in the United States],” she said.
In May 2024, Fasihi competed in the Doha Diamond League’s 100-metre race, but came last in the final against a star-studded line-up of sprinters from the US, United Kingdom, Hungary, and Jamaica.
At the Paris Olympics, she will face off against the world’s best athletes. She is not someone who harbours unrealistic expectations. She only focuses on what she can control – and that’s her performance.
“Competing at the Olympics is a big challenge,” Fasihi said. “My goal is to compete with myself. I want to beat my own record.”
Fasihi looks forward to achieving more personal bests at the Paris 2024 Olympics [Maryam Majd/ ATP Images via Getty Images]
An inadvertent collision with Austria’s Kevin Danso caused France’s superstar Kylian Mbappe to suffer a broken nose.
Austria’s Kevin Danso has sent a message of sympathy to French striker Kylian Mbappe, who broke his nose in a collision with the defender’s shoulder during their Euro 2024 match.
“I wish him a good recovery and I hope he can quickly get back on the pitch,” Danso said on Tuesday on the social media platform X of the injury sustained during France’s 1-0 victory over Austria.
“To French supporters: I am sorry that Kylian Mbappe was injured from our duel,” added Danso, whose back was turned when Mbappe’s face struck his shoulder.
Mbappe collides with Austria’s Kevin Danso [Kacper Pempel/Reuters]Mbappe holds his nose after suffering the nose injury during a match against Austria [Martin Meissner/AP Photo]
France’s 25-year-old talisman was putting on a brave face, even asking social media followers to suggest ideas for a mask that may enable him to play in France’s next game against the Netherlands on Friday.
That led to a flood of memes online.
Mbappe left the field for treatment to his bloodied nose during Monday’s match, but returned minutes later and sat down on the pitch, prompting boos from Austria fans and a yellow card for unsportsmanlike conduct.
The French football federation said Mbappe was back at the team camp after hospital treatment with no need for immediate surgery and a mask was being prepared.
The incident comes hours before the German city staging a Euro 2024 match between Netherlands and Poland.
The German police have fired shots at a person who allegedly threatened officers with a pickaxe and an incendiary device on the sidelines of a Euro 2024 football fan parade in central Hamburg, according to a police post on social media platform X.
A major police operation was under way and the suspect was receiving medical care for injuries, the post on Sunday added.
The incident occurred in the St Pauli district of the city as Poland and the Netherlands prepared to play against each other in Hamburg’s Volksparkstadion at 3pm (13:00 GMT) on Sunday.
Fan marches were scheduled before the games, and a parade for Dutch supporters was held at 12:30pm (10:30 GMT), around the time of the incident.
Germany is hosting the monthlong tournament that began on June 14.
Euro 2024 kicks off in Germany when the hosts take on Scotland at Munich’s Allianz Arena in Group A on June 14, Friday.
High-profile players and breakout stars from the best leagues in the world will compete in the month-long Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) championship.
Here’s a look at our top 10 players to watch during the tournament:
⚽ Jude Bellingham (England)
Jude Bellingham’s stunning debut season at Spanish mega club Real Madrid has rapidly turned the attacking English midfielder into one of the hottest commodities in European football.
Bellingham took the Spanish giants by storm with 18 league goals in the 2023-24 season, helping Madrid win the La Liga title and reach the Champions League final.
Apart from his impressive statistics, the 20-year-old’s leadership qualities and winning mentality have earned him the status of a hero among the Bernabeu faithful.
Bellingham will be keen to build on his spectacular club performance and could be the X factor in England’s Euro 2024 campaign, as they look to claim a maiden European nations title.
England’s chances at Euro 2024 may rest with how well star midfielder Jude Bellingham performs in Germany [Matthew Childs/Reuters]
⚽ Florian Wirtz (Germany)
Florian Wirtz was named the Bundesliga’s Player of the Year for his key role in Xabi Alonso’s revolutionary 2023-24 title-winning team at Bayer Leverkusen, as the attacking midfielder racked up the joint second-most assists (11) and scored an equal number of goals.
Wirtz is one of the brightest stars to emerge out of Germany in the last decade, with a rare talent to control and dominate the midfield in a way few other players in world football can.
If host Euro 2024 nation Germany is to have any chance of winning the trophy on home soil, Wirtz will need to be at his impactful best in order for them to succeed.
Germany’s hopes of securing a home Euros title rest on the 21-year-old shoulders of attacking midfield sensation Florian Wirtz [Thilo Schmuelgen/Reuters]
⚽ Xavi Simons (Netherlands)
Xavi Simons is a product of Barcelona’s La Masia Academy and his game boasts admirable traits of ‘Total Football’ – a tactical system common in Dutch and Spanish football in which any outfield player can take over the role of any other player – allowing the 21-year-old to impact a game from a multitude of positions.
At RB Leipzig, Simons operated on both wings and also as an attacking midfielder, carrying the ball around, maximising possession and creating goal-scoring opportunities for his teammates.
If given the game time and attacking liberty by manager Ronald Koeman, Simons can be a standout player for the Netherlands, allowing the Dutch a puncher’s chance to defeat the main contenders at Euro 2024.
Xavi Simons’ sublime talent on the Dutch national team elevates the Netherlands from pretenders to contenders at Euro 2024 [Piroschka Van De Wouw/Reuters]
⚽ Rasmus Hojlund (Denmark)
Having joined Manchester United as their most expensive signing in the summer of 2023, Rasmus Hojlund fully justified his price tag, scoring 10 English Premier League goals and at just 21 years old, becoming the youngest player to reach double-figure goals in the 2023-24 EPL season.
After overcoming injury issues and a form slump, Hojlund emerged as a promising attacking talent in the final months of the Premier League and will be keen to carry that form into Euro 2024.
In the past year, Hojlund has also thrived at an international level, leading Denmark’s attack with a sizzling seven goals during the Euro 2024 qualifying campaign.
Euro 2024 could be forward Rasmus Hojlund’s breakout party as Denmark dare to dream of their first European championship since their miraculous Euro 1992 title [Liselotte Sabroe/Reuters]
⚽ Kevin De Bruyne (Belgium)
Playmaker Kevin De Bruyne was the midfield maestro behind Manchester City’s victorious 2023-24 English Premier League (EPL) title charge, orchestrating the Sky Blues’ charge to their fourth straight EPL title.
The Belgian was almost unstoppable in the second half of the season for City and is on form at the right time with Euro 2024 beginning mid-June.
Belgium will hope De Bruyne is fit and firing for the Euros, where they could benefit from his experience in a new-look squad that is hoping to improve on the team’s quarterfinal appearances at Euro 2016 and Euro 2020.
Victorious Manchester City captain Kevin De Bruyne, in white, will be hoping to lead Belgium to Euro 2024 glory, as well [Wolfgang Rattay/Reuters]
⚽ Kenan Yildiz (Turkey)
Eighteen-year-old Kenan Yildiz transformed Max Allegri’s dull Juventus side in Italy’s Serie A, helping the defensive-minded team score far more than expected.
His presence improved not only his fellow striker Dusan Vlahovic’s form, but also Juve’s wingbacks, allowing them space between the lines.
As one of Serie A’s most exciting attackers, Yildiz stands on the brink of stardom for Turkey, for whom he scored his first international goal against Germany in November last year.
Euro 2024 will be a homecoming of sorts for the lanky forward: Yildiz was born in Regensburg, Germany to a Turkish father and a German mother.
He will be hoping to elevate Turkey to at least the quarterfinals after the country was disappointingly knocked out at the group stage in the last two Euros.
Talented Turkish forward Kenan Yildiz will return to his place of birth in Germany with one thing on his mind: winning his country’s first Euro title [Fabrizio Bensch/Reuters]
⚽ Lamine Yamal (Spain)
At just 16 years old, Lamine Yamal already has set a list of extraordinary records in his young career: youngest scorer for Barcelona, youngest scorer in La Liga history and youngest scorer for the Spanish national team.
This Spanish wonderkid’s explosive nature on the wings and unique ability to find the back of the net makes him one of the best options the national team will have in attack at Euro 2024 in Germany.
Euro 2024 may turn out to be the global coming-out party for the player many believe is one of the greatest 16-year-old prospects to ever play the game.
Spain already co-holds the record for European championship victories with Germany at three a piece. Yamal’s once-in-a-generation potential might yield an unprecedented fourth trophy for Spain.
Lamine Yamal’s extraordinary talent landed him in the Barcelona team at just 16. Can this superbly gifted winger similarly impress at Euro 2024 as a key part of a stacked Spanish side hungry for glory? [Albert Gea/Reuters]
⚽ Phil Foden (England)
Phil Foden’s impressive haul of 19 goals and eight assists for Manchester City earned him the Player of the Season award, as his side clinched a record fourth successive English Premier League title.
The 23-year-old impressed in an attacking midfield position for City and should Gareth Southgate play him in the same position instead of out wide, Foden could be the Three Lions’ dangerman.
England nearly won their first Euro title just three years ago at the COVID-19-affected 2021 edition, agonisingly losing on penalties to Italy in the final.
A breakout tournament from Foden may be the extra weapon they need up front to finally end their Euros title drought.
England are hoping Phil Foden’s winning habits at Manchester City can rub off on the national team as they aim for a maiden Euro title in 2024 [Carl Recine/Reuters]
⚽ Kylian Mbappe (France)
Known for his mesmerising dribbling, speed and clinical finishing, Kylian Mbappe has been one of the premier players on an awesome France national team in recent years.
The 25-year-old, who will wear the captain’s armband at the Euros, heads into the tournament on the back of a terrific final season with Paris Saint-Germain, scoring a whopping 44 goals in all competitions. Mbappe has signed on to play for Real Madrid next season.
With Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo now in the twilight of their illustrious careers, Euro 2024 represents the ideal platform for Mbappe to signal to the global footballing community that he is ready to be crowned the world’s greatest player – and that there’s no better way to do that than by leading France to their first European Championship in 24 years.
A standout Euro 2024 performance by superstar striker Kylian Mbappe is France’s best chance of securing a first European Championship since 2000 [Stephane Mahe/Reuters]
⚽ Josko Gvardiol (Croatia)
Josko Gvardiol arrived at Manchester City primarily as a central defender, but the 22-year-old spectacularly transformed into a goal-scoring left back, making him one of the Premier League’s biggest matchup nightmares for opposing teams.
In the 2023-24 EPL season, when he wasn’t torturing opposing forwards and keeping clean sheets, Gvardiol also chipped in on the offensive end for City, scoring a handy five goals and bagging three assists in all competitions.
This rare defender-turned-attacker hybrid sensation is also versatile enough to play in a defensive midfield role for Croatia, allowing their captain Luka Modric to dictate the game in midfield.
Gvardiol’s unique skill set positions Croatia nicely to play the role of spoiler at Euro 2024.
As one of the best defenders in the world, Josko Gvardiol gives Croatia a great chance to record their best performance ever at a European Championship [Antonio Bronic/Reuters]
Scottie Scheffler plays his shot from the 12th tee on May 17, in Louisville, Kentucky. Andrew Redington/Getty Images
Back on the golf course just hours after his arrest this morning, Scottie Scheffler has made a solid start to the second round of the PGA Championship, going birdie, bogey, birdie, par over his first four holes.
That puts Scheffler, starting his round on the back nine, at 1-under par for the day and 5-under par for the tournament, which has him tied in eighth place at the moment.
Scheffler’s first shot of the day landed in the rough — not too far from a bunker — but the American responded well to set up a putt for birdie.
On the 11th hole, the world No. 1 had a two-putt for bogey after his tee shot missed the green. Then he bounced back with another birdie on the 12.
Another solid hole at the par-4 13th keeps Scheffler at 5-under, four shots behind leader Xander Schauffele.
Remember: In golf, competitors are trying to complete each hole in the fewest strokes possible. Par refers to the number of strokes a golfer is expected to take to complete a hole. A birdie means the golfer took one fewer stroke than par, while a bogey means they took one extra.
(Editor’s note: Executive sports editor Bill Burt wrote this piece about a Lawrence legend back in 2010. One of the greatest athletes ever produced by the famed city, ended up going to Phillips Andover, Yale University before being signed by the N.Y. Yankees. While he had success with the champs, he had other issues off the field that he never was able to overcome. He died 39 years ago on May 16 as a recluse. Check out the story, a sad one, here.)
Johnny Broaca was the American Dream. Better yet, he was Lawrence’s American Dream.
The son of Lithuanian immigrants, Broaca grew up in a tenement apartment and went on to become one of the greatest athletes ever to come out of Lawrence High.
From there, it was two years at Phillips Andover, and then on to Yale University. He aced his studies at two of the nation’s premiere educational institutions, but it was baseball that put him on the national map.
The New York Yankees signed Broaca, a star pitcher, in 1933, before he had even graduated from Yale. The same Yankees that boasted future Hall of Famers Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, Bill Dickey and Tommy Henrich.
Broaca’s second major league start was a complete game three-hitter. His third start was a complete game one-hitter.
A month into his major league career, he was 4-1 for the World Series favorites.
Soon, he would have a beautiful wife, and then a son.
Lawrence couldn’t have been prouder of one of its own.
It seemed Broaca had it all.
Yankees manager Joe McCarthy, usually careful when it came to praising young players, told baseball writers that Broaca was “a promising youngster whom nothing can stop.”
But stop he did.
Within three years, Broaca mysteriously walked out on the Yankees and eventually lost everything, including his contract, his wife, his son, and his passion for life.
“My dad said he just gave up,” said Madeline Varitimos of Methuen, Broaca’s niece, her eyes watering a bit. “My father spoke very little about Johnny. It’s sad. Still, all these years later, it’s very sad.”
Broaca attempted a comeback with the Cleveland Indians 18 months after going AWOL on the Yankees in 1937, but it was derailed by arm troubles.
He eventually moved back to Lawrence, and for the next 45 or so years lived alone in an apartment on Garden Street, working mostly as a union laborer.
Twenty-five years ago today, Broaca was found dead of a heart attack on the floor of his apartment. He was 75 years old.
He was alone.
So what happened to this living legend?
Did he have a breakdown? Was it a sore arm that sent him over the top? Or was it his marital problems?
Why didn’t Broaca pursue his second dream of becoming a teacher and coach? And why didn’t he ever try to contact his only son, who grew up 25 miles away?
Nobody knows, because Broaca took his reasons to his grave at Immaculate Conception cemetery in Methuen.
“When my father and I went to his apartment after he died, he had only two small pictures near his bed,” the 73-year-old Varitimos said. “One was Walter Winchell. The other was Howard Hughes. Both of them were recluses … It was a little strange.”
Neil A. Hawley Staff Photographer
A baseball prodigy
When Broaca was a boy, his family lived in an eight-family tenement in the Italian section of Lawrence on Middle Street.
Johnny was the second of three children. He had an older sister, Constance, and a younger brother, Victor — Varitimos’ father.
His father, John J. Broaca, worked in the paper mills in Lawrence, while his mother, Anna, tended to the family.
As Broaca told Boys’ Life magazine in a lengthy 1935 interview, baseball was a focal point of his life in Lawrence.
“I played (baseball) all of the time in my leisure and a lot at times when I should have been doing something else,” he said.
Broaca said in 1921, he saw an article in Boys’ Life magazine about the mechanics of pitching.
“I think it must have been about February or March, when we were all thinking about baseball but couldn’t play,” recalled Broaca. “I went to the reading room of the YMCA and picked up a pretty well-thumbed copy of Boys’ Life. One of the first things I turned to was an article about how to pitch … What interested me most were the diagrams.
“I studied that article harder than I studied any school lessons and practiced the grips on the baseball, along with the proper stance and form in front of the mirror.
“As soon as the snow got off the ground, I found a boy with a catcher’s mitt. And I began to practice in earnest.”
When Broaca got to Lawrence High, baseball was only part of his impressive resume. He not only was a straight-A student, he starred in four sports at the varsity level — football, basketball, baseball and track.
He was only the second athlete in school history to letter in four sports en route to winning the Cregg Medal as the school’s outstanding student-athlete in 1928.
“He could have been a great football player or a great basketball player, if that’s what he focused on,” said 87-year-old Sam Musumeci of Methuen, who grew up idolizing Broaca. “But baseball was his life.”
After Lawrence High, Broaca spent two prep years at Phillips Andover.
He ended his career there on a high of highs, beating rival Phillips Exeter in the final game of the year behind a brilliant 12-strikeout performance.
Neil A. Hawley Staff Photographer
First signs of trouble
Broaca chose to attend Yale University on a partial scholarship in the fall of 1930. Part of that was due to the fact that he would be playing for ex-Red Sox pitcher Smokey Joe Woods.
It appeared to be a dream come true, but Broaca struggled for the first time in his young life. And it had little or nothing to do with baseball.
His family was poor compared to those of his classmates, which meant he had to work a regular job as a waiter at a Yale fraternity to help pay for school. That alienated him from many of his teammates and classmates.
Broaca’s father would send money when he could, which wasn’t often. His mother would go down to the train station in Lawrence and send a care package that included homemade rye bread and $2.
Baseball at Yale wasn’t a problem. He was the ace of the staff each of the three years he pitched there. In 1932, he struck out a then-school record 13 batters in a win over rival Columbia.
But he also started having arm problems, which didn’t put him in good stead with his famous coach.
In early April 1933, Broaca’s junior season, he was suspended by Wood because he didn’t show up for practice for a week. Later in the month, he complained about pain in his back and arm. Wood still wanted him to pitch.
So Broaca quit the baseball team at Yale and called famed Yankees scout Paul Kritchell, who signed Broaca to a contract a few days later.
Broaca was immediately farmed out to their top minor league affiliate in the International League, the Newark Bears, where he was allowed to rest his arm for a few weeks. He eventually pitched and finished with a 7-2 record.
He returned to Yale in the fall of 1933, after the baseball season, to finish his coursework. He graduated on time in 1934 and said leaving Yale early was a blessing in disguise.
Broaca joined the big club, the Yankees, after he was done at Yale in May.
His dream of pitching in the big leagues was about to come true.
Courtesy photo. Johnny Broaca Courtesy photo. Johnny Broaca
Staff Photographer
Disappearing act
Broaca’s first career start, on June 2, 1934, was one of his worst. He allowed five runs and five hits, unable to get the Philadelphia Athletics out in the second inning before being yanked.
In his second start a week later, he allowed just three hits in a 4-2 complete game loss. In his third start, he made national headlines, striking out 10 St. Louis Browns and allowing only one hit over nine innings.
“It was one of the proudest days of my life,” recalled Musumeci of Broaca’s big day. “I was 11 years old. He made all of us proud to be from Lawrence.”
Broaca earned a regular spot in the famed Yankees rotation, which included future Hall of Famers Lefty Gomez and Red Ruffing. He finished his rookie season at 12-9.
In 1935, the Yankees were favorites to win the World Series, but finished second to the Detroit Tigers in the American League. Broaca, though, did his part, finishing at 15-7.
It was much the same in 1936, when he finished 12-7 and was among the top 10 in the majors in won-lost percentage (.632), earned run average (4.24) and fewest walks per nine innings (1.2).
This time, the Yankees won the World Series, beating the New York Giants in six games. Broaca was available in relief, but never saw any action in the fall classic.
But that was OK, because a few weeks after the season ended, Broaca married Cordelia Ireland, 22, of Orleans, Mass. The two had met during the summers when Broaca was at Yale and pitched in the famed Cape Cod League.
Armed with a World Series ring and a new wife, with their first child on the way, Broaca was supposed to be entering a new era of his life.
But 1937 proved to be his undoing. He got into arguments with McCarthy over his workout regimen, and his arm was in constant pain.
After a great first start in which he allowed six hits and one unearned run against the Athletics in late April, he didn’t win another game. Again, arm pain kept him off the mound — he was 1-4, pitching only 44 innings.
His Yankees career came to a head on July 16 in Detroit. McCarthy brought a disgruntled Broaca in to pitch in the eighth inning with the Yankees trailing 9-5.
Broaca finished the game, but not before allowing two homers, a triple, two doubles and a single, leading to five more Tigers runs.
He joined the team on the trip to Cleveland after the game. But he never showed up at the park the next day.
Broaca made history, becoming the first Yankee to “jump the club” in Jacob Ruppert’s tenure as the team owner (he bought the team in 1914).
McCarthy didn’t hide his anger from the press corps.
“This might cost him a share of his World Series cut?” a reporter asked McCarthy.
“Might?” said McCarthy. “He’s lost that already.”
Neil A. Hawley Staff Photographer
A public spectacle
In news stories about Broaca’s disappearance, reporters weren’t afraid to throw some subjective color into their copy, calling Broaca “moody and aloof” and saying, “He has few friends.”
Days went by, and the Yankees had no answers as to Broaca’s whereabouts.
Worse, his wife of less than a year, who was eight months pregnant when he left the Yankees, claimed she hadn’t heard from him either.
Two months later, a newspaper account said Cordelia Broaca had filed for divorce, citing cruel and unusual punishment. Their son, John Jr., was just 5 weeks old at the time.
Out of money, she had to leave their home, and she and her son moved in with her mother.
The Yankees, who won the World Series again in 1937, showed their agitation with Broaca by voting a $1,000 World Series share to his wife.
“It was the right thing to do,” McCarthy said. “That’s no way to treat your wife.”
Broaca eventually resurfaced, but things only got worse from there.
The divorce proceeding became a public spectacle on Cape Cod. According to the New York Mirror, Cordelia Broaca claimed her husband began “beating” her a month into their marriage. She said her husband was “cheap” and would have fits of rage, many times over her spending.
She said one evening her husband chased her out of the house to a potato field in her underwear, where neighbors heard her screaming before finding her shivering.
Perhaps the most telling comment attributed to Broaca came during the deposition, before the divorce trial.
Cordelia Broaca said her husband told her, “(I’d) rather cut my throat or put a bullet in my head” before giving his ex-wife a penny.
A career cut short
A former heavyweight champ at Yale, Broaca tried professional boxing when he was out of baseball in 1938. But his boxing career never really got off the ground.
That was also the year that Broaca lost his father, whom he had hoped to repay for all of his help getting him through college.
Later in 1938, the Yankees made overtures about bringing Broaca back. But he wanted the Yankees to reimburse him for medical expenses and questioned their treatment of his arm.
When he was reinstated by the commissioner after the 1938 season, it was clear his next baseball home would be elsewhere. He hoped the Yankees would deal him to the Red Sox. Instead, they sold him to the Indians.
Other than the fact that Broaca got to play with a baseball legend, 20-year-old pitcher Bob Feller, the 1939 season didn’t live up to its billing. Broaca was primarily a reliever, pitching only 46 innings over 22 outings. The Indians finished 87-67, 24 games behind the Yankees.
“I remember Johnny had those heavy lenses on his glasses,” Feller recently recalled of Broaca. “We had a few laughs together. He was a little bit strange, a little weird at times, hard to figure. He sort of kept to himself.”
Broaca was sold to the New York Giants at the beginning of the 1940 season, but never pitched in a game for them and was released two months later.
His baseball career over, he moved back to his native Lawrence, and all of the controversy stopped.
Upon his return, he is believed to have worked at Tyer Rubber in Andover as warehouse worker.
Then in January 1943, he was drafted by the U.S. Army during World War II and sent to Fort Devens and later Camp Beale in Sacramento, Calif. He never served overseas, probably because of his age (33) and his poor eyesight. He was honorably discharged on Sept. 24, 1945.
He again returned to Lawrence, where for the next 40 years he basically lived the life of a recluse.
Always alone
Tony Fusco said it happened two or three times a day on this particular job site.
Broaca, then about 50 years old, would stop digging a trench. He’d stand up straight, adjust his glasses, and lean on the top of his shovel with one arm. And then he’d just stare off into the sky.
“It would always last about 45 seconds to a minute. Then he would just go back to work,” recalled Fusco, then a teenager working summers for the Laborers Union Local 175. “I always wondered what he was daydreaming about. I wondered if he was thinking back about a baseball game.”
Broaca joined Local 175 in 1949, and was a member until his death in 1985. His job was helping with the grunt work on job sites — moving or setting bricks for the bricklayers, mixing mortar, cleaning up work areas, landscaping or digging trenches.
There was an unwritten rule among the union guys of Local 175. Don’t ask Broaca about baseball.
“You just didn’t ask,” Fusco said. “It would never come up. I can’t explain it. But everyone respected Johnny enough to leave him alone.”
One thing Broaca was famous for over the last four decades of his life was walking.
While he owned a Hudson to get him around to jobs that were more than a few miles away, he would walk everywhere in the city. Almost everybody who lived near downtown Lawrence had a story about seeing him out for a stroll. And he was always alone.
“I can’t tell you how many times I saw Johnny carrying groceries on Essex Street or walking down Union Street,” Musumeci said.
Broaca also made it a point to watch youth baseball and adult softball games in the city, particularly at Hayden-Schofield on Lawrence Street.
“He would always stand in the same spot,” said Varitimos, his niece. “It was over the third base side of the stands. He would just sit there quietly and watch. He would always be alone.”
When Broaca died, it was Varitimos and her father who went to clean out his apartment.
“We were hoping he had lots of baseball memorabilia, things he might have saved from his baseball career,” Varitimos said. “But there was nothing. The walls were empty. He didn’t save anything.”
Varitimos said they did find a neatly stacked pile of cashed checks to Broaca’s former wife. He saved all of the support payments he made.
They also found a pile of opened envelopes.
“He had a lot of letters from fans who sent him baseball cards to sign,” Varitimos said. “Unfortunately, he left them in a big pile and probably didn’t send any back, which is too bad, considering most of them were probably from kids.”
Neil A. Hawley Staff Photographer
‘He quit on life’
It was a phone call Varitimos dreaded, but knew she had to make.
It was a few days after Broaca’s funeral. She called Broaca’s son, Peter, in Western Massachusetts to inform him of his father’s death.
“He was sort of like, ‘What do you want from me?,’” recalled Varitimos. “I told him that we thought he’d want to know and that there were some things that he might want to have, like the (1936) World Series ring. He also had some money in the bank and some stocks.”
Peter came to Methuen, had dinner with the family, and tried to soak it all in. He took the World Series ring, which usually remains in a safe deposit box.
“It was a little strange,” Peter Broaca said. “The fact is, he never tried to get a hold of me. I only lived in Boston, the South End. Maybe at some point I could have reached out to him. It just never happened.”
Peter, now 72, said there were times when he was growing up that he would ask his mother about his once-famous father.
“To be honest, it wasn’t discussed too much,” he said.
John J Broaca
Staff Photographer
Peter said his mom remarried when he was in the third grade. The family eventually moved to Boston so his stepfather could find work.
Even though he never knew his father, in some ways, Peter was a chip off the old block.
He is almost the same exact size his dad was — 5 feet 11 inches tall and 180 pounds. He also played baseball and was a practice player for the basketball team at Boston University.
One of Peter’s first jobs was as the associate head coach/freshman coach at the University of Massachusetts, where he coached Julius Erving, Rick Pitino and Al Skinner.
He went on to become a successful Division 3 men’s basketball head coach, putting in 24 years between Coast Guard Academy and Western New England College. For the last 12 years, he’s been an assistant at Springfield College, also teaching physical education at an alternative middle school in Holyoke. In 2009, he was inducted into the New England Basketball Hall of Fame.
Peter is divorced and the father of two daughters. They never met their grandfather.
“It’s sad. I don’t know what to say other than that,” Peter said.
That sentiment is echoed by others who knew Johnny Broaca.
“He could have done some great things with his life, but he chose not to,” his niece, Varitimos, said. “I can’t really understand that.”
Neither can the 87-year-old Musumeci, who tears up when he talks about his former idol.
“Johnny was the best teacher of baseball that I ever had,” he said. “He taught me how to pitch. I remember clearly he told me to never quit. When things are tough, you have to hang in there.
“Why am I upset? Because Johnny Broaca quit on life. And that makes me very mad.”
Angie Beaulieu/Staff photo. Gravestone of John P. and Anna C. Broaca, parents of John J. Broaca. 05/12/10 Angie Beaulieu/Staff photo. Gravestone of John P. and Anna C. Broaca, parents of John J. Broaca. 05/12/10
Moments later on her official website, the Grammy-winner and Texas native posted a clip of a new song that sounds like a departure from her most recent dance-centric album “Renaissance,” with a guitar strumming along to a tune about the card game Texas hold ‘em.
“Act II” and the date March 29 was listed on her site.
The ad spot, titled “Can’t B Broken,” featured “Veep” actor Tony Hale challenging Beyoncé to break the cellular service company’s 5G capabilities, and she accepted the challenge in glorious fashion.
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Beyoncé proceeds to go to great lengths to prove Hale wrong.
She is seen causing a scene at a lemonade stand in a nod to her hit 2016 album “Lemonade,” introducing a robotic version of herself called “Beyoncé-AI” and even a Beyoncé Barbie, aptly named “Barb-Bey.”
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With that kind of an exit, if anybody can break Verizon … It’s Beyoncé.