WHAT’S HOT NOW

Social bar 300×250

Business

Search This Blog

Theme images by kelvinjay. Powered by Blogger.
  • ()

Native banner

Social bar

" });

Banner 300×250

Social bar

" });

Banner 300×250

" });

Gervonta Davis knocks out Frank Martin; Benavidez tops Gvozdyk in unanimous decision

 

Gervonta Davis knocks out Frank Martin; Benavidez tops Gvozdyk in unanimous decision



Post-fight quotes from David Benavidez

()

From Premier Boxing Champions, some comments from Phoenix's David Benavidez after his win over Oleksandr Gvozdyk (translated from Spanish):(

)

"I went up a division and I won every round, dominating an ex-world champion who was also an Olympian," Benavidez said. "I hurt him a couple of times, but I didn't throw as many combinations because my hand started to hurt in the third round. I had torn my right ligament four weeks ago, and I hurt my left hand during my training camp. I'm proud of myself, despite a cut three weeks ago I stayed with it to give the fans who came to see me a good fight.

I'm excited for what is to come in this (light heavyweight) division."()

Gervonta Davis knockouts out Frank Martin

Gervonta "Tank" Davis turned things around in his fight in the seventh round, and in the eighth finished his fight against Frank Martin with an upper-cut for a knockout. Davis held onto his WBA lightweight belt.

The upper-cut with the left hand stunned Martin, the Davis finished with another left hand to improve to 30-0.

Martin did damage early, but couldn't avoid Davis' devastating punches.( )

Phoenix's David Benavidez wins light heavyweight debut, remains undefeated

David Benavidez is the current king of boxing in Phoenix, even though he now calls Miami home and has lived in Las Vegas and Seattle over the past few years.

The 27-year-old who was born and raised in the Valley of the Sun cruised to a 12-round, unanimous decision win over Ukraine's Oleksandr Gvozdyk to capture the WBC World interim light heavyweight championship. He's 29-0 and was never seriously threatened against Gvozdyk.

Benavidez won on the scorecards, 116-112, 117-111 and 119-109. He took some shots later in the fight but got the job done effectively.( )

"I think it's a 7 out of 10. Oleksandr's a great fighter," Benavidez said in his post-fight interview, assessing his performance.

Benavidez suffered a cut over his left eye two weeks ago, and it resurfaced in the fight. But it didn't affect him.

Puro Phoeniquera!" he spoke into a microphone, giving a shoutout to his hometown.

Benavidez immediately heads to the front of the line to fight for the undisputed light heavyweight title. It could happen within a year, if he doesn't land the much-anticipated fight against Canelo Alvarez before that.( )

Eight rounds in, David Benavidez winning fight vs. Oleksandr Gvozdyk

A graphic popped up during the fight that said Benavidez has landed almost twice as many punches, percentage-wise. That's indicative of how his bout with Oleksandr Gvozdyk is going. He's defended himself well, dodged counter-punches well and keeps working the body.

READ MORE 



Wild horses return to Kazakh plain after centuries

 

Wild horses return to Kazakh plain after centuries

Endangered wild horses have returned to the Golden Steppe of Kazakhstan for the first time in at least 200 years after decades-long efforts.

The airlifts of seven Przewalski's Horses from Europe to the Central Asian country took place in early June in an operation run by Prague Zoo.

Researchers told the BBC that the horses are already doing well two weeks in: roaming around the plains and even beginning the mating process.()

Zoo officials say it's a triumph of generations of conservation work.

"This is an endangered species returning to their ancestral lands, a species which went extinct in the wild in the 1960s, last seen in Mongolia...so it's just marvellous... a miracle," said Filip Mašek, a spokesman for Prague Zoo.

While the horses have been slowly reintroduced to Mongolia and China in recent decades, this operation marks the first time they are back in Kazakhstan.()

The Przewalski's Horse is the last wild horse species on the planet, named after Russian explorer Nikolai Przewalski who was the first to identify the horse for the European science community.

The species originated millennia ago from the steppes of Central Asia and was taken by researchers to Europe and North America in the 19th and 20th Centuries, where populations were established in zoos.

Some of them ended up in zoos in Munich and Prague - it's their descendants that have now been reintroduced in Kazakhstan.(

)

Cultural artefacts show people in the country's north were riding and using the horses for food at least 2,000 years before records of domesticated horses in Europe.

But by the time of Przewalski's "discovery" in 1879, the horses could only be found in a small section of western Mongolia. Competition with humans and livestock, along with changes in the environment led to them dying out.

Recognising the threat, international efforts were made after World War Two to save the animals. Prague Zoo was entrusted with the "international studship" of the breed.( )

It introduced the first contingent back into Kazakhstan last week- a group consisting of one stallion and six mares. It aims to bring in at least 40 more over the next five years.

"This is an event of historical import," said the zoo's director Miroslav Bobek in a statement.

"The seven horses that we transported here by two Czech Army planes represent the first individuals of this species in central Kazakhstan in hundreds of years."

Przewalski's horse has long been considered the one true remaining wild horse species- as species such as the American mustang and Australian brumby are feral horses descended from domesticated animals.( )

The Przewalski's horse is shorter and stockier than modern domesticated horses and their genetic differences show that neither species are ancestors of the other.

Prague Zoo, which has spent the past decade and a half introducing the horses back to Central Asia, mainly in Mongolia, said the Kazakhstan operations had been in the plans since 2022 after signing a deal with the local government.

Last week saw the culmination of years of work. Prague Zoo selected horses from different programmes around Europe and put them together in the same zoo in Berlin - Tierpark Berlin - for several months to become acquainted before their journey.( )

That then kicked off in early June, with military 


Przewalski's horse has long been considered the one true remaining wild horse species- as species such as the American mustang and Australian brumby are feral horses descended from domesticated animals.( )

The Przewalski's horse is shorter and stockier than modern domesticated horses and their genetic differences show that neither species are ancestors of the other.

Prague Zoo, which has spent the past decade and a half introducing the horses back to Central Asia, mainly in Mongolia, said the Kazakhstan operations had been in the plans since 2022 after signing a deal with the local government.( )

Last week saw the culmination of years of work. Prague Zoo selected horses from different programmes around Europe and put them together in the same zoo in Berlin - Tierpark Berlin - for several months to become acquainted before their journey.

That then kicked off in early June, with military aeroplanes flying the standing horses in two groups on a 6,000km-route that included stopovers in Turkey and Azerbaijan.


(READ MORE) 


Blues v Brumbies result: Bully boy Blues blitz Brumbies to storm into Super Rugby Pacific final

 

Blues v Brumbies result: Bully boy Blues blitz Brumbies to storm into Super Rugby Pacific final



Unless you are fully loaded, fully equipped, to consistently challenge the menacing Blues forward pack, don’t bother turning up to Eden Park.()

The Blues, as they marched into their second Super Rugby final in three years with consummate ease, delivered another clear illustration of their brutal blueprint to crush the Brumbies 34-20 and prolong Australia’s wretched playoff run in New Zealand.()

One moment in the second half summed up Cotter’s hardline mantra. Replacement halfback Taufa Funaki tried an audacious backwards chip kick that backfired to turnover possession.(

)

The Blues were leading by 14 points but Cotter was unimpressed – letting out a spray from the coaching box. Such adventure was not in the playbook.

The Brumbies, riding a seven-game winning run, arrived with hope of upsetting the odds. Yet it was immediately evident they would suffer the same fate as 18 of their counterparts to lose finals matches on this side of the ditch.( )

That not one Australian team have managed to win a playoff match in New Zealand underlines one of Super Rugby’s glaring issues.

Such concerns are irrelevant for the Blues, though.

Cotter’s Blues won’t win any beauty pageant prizes. No one in Auckland’s long-suffering rugby region will care, though, if this team break their 21-year drought for a fully fledged Super Rugby crown.( )

With an extra day’s rest before next week’s finale the Blues have the benefit of sitting back to watch the Hurricanes and Chiefs take lumps out of each other in Wellington on Saturday to earn the right to join them and contest this year’s title.

A Chiefs upset would allow the Blues to return to Eden Park, where they have won their past 15 matches in a row, next week.( )

Should the Hurricanes ride their compelling campaign to defeat the Chiefs for the third time this year, they will retain home advantage for the decider.

READ MORE.... 

Burn foundation co-founder Rebecca Grossman sentenced to prison in crash that killed 2 boys

 

Burn foundation co-founder Rebecca Grossman sentenced to prison in crash that killed 2 boys





Grossman Burn Foundation co-founder Rebecca Grossman was sentenced to 15 years to life in prison Monday for her conviction on second-degree murder and other charges stemming from a crash that killed two young boys in Westlake Village.

( )

Prosecutors had asked Superior Court Judge Joseph Brandolino to sentence Grossman, who will turn 61 on Friday, to a longer term of 34 years to life in state prison for the September 2020 deaths of Mark and Jacob Iskander, ages 11 and 8. The young boys were in a marked crosswalk with their family in the community northwest of Los Angeles when they were struck by Grossman's white Mercedes-Benz SUV.

Defense attorneys were asking for a sentence of either probation or the lower state prison term of just over 12 years on the less serious vehicular manslaughter charges.

( )

Grossman, wearing a brown jumpsuit, shook her head and cried during the sentencing hearing as victim impact statements were delivered in court. A judge asked that the statements, usually delivered by family members, friends and others who knew the victims, remain short because there was a long list of speakers.

Speakers included Mark and Jacob's mother, uncle, grandmother, teachers, a pastor and neighbors who shared stories about the boys.



Prosecutors said Grossman will be eligible for parole in about nine years. Her attorneys have 60 days to appeal.

( )

Grossman was convicted Feb. 23 of two counts each of second-degree murder and vehicular manslaughter with gross negligence and one count of hit-and-run driving. The judge ordered her to be taken into custody minutes after the jury's verdict, rejecting a request by one of her trial attorneys to allow her to remain free on $2 million bond while awaiting sentencing.

In a typed letter to the judge, Grossman wrote, "I am not a murderer, and I ask you to recognize that true fact. My pain, my recognition of the pain the Iskanders suffer, and the pain I watch my family endure, are punishments that I already suffer and will for the rest of my life. Please consider this suffering when you consider what more punishment to impose on me in this case.

"As God is my witness, I did not see anyone or anything in the road. I swear to you, I would have driven my car into a tree to avoid hitting two little boys."

( )

She wrote that the tragedy haunts were every day.

"I can only imagine the pain that (the boys' parents) Nancy and Karim Iskander feel minute by minute," she wrote. "I will carry my pain for the rest of my life."

Grossman wrote that she left roses at the scene of the crash.

She has maintained that she was not driving under the influence of alcohol, impaired or racing.

"From the very beginning, the facts have been distorted and misrepresented, turning the tragic accident into murder and me into a cold-blooded killer," she wrote in the letter to the judge. "The voices demanding vengeance and retribution are reacting to the tragic loss of Mark and Jacob, but they do not fairly describe me or who I am. I am not a murderer."

( )

Deputy District Attorneys Ryan Gould, Jamie Castro and Habib Balian wrote in their sentencing memorandum that Grossman's actions since the night of the crash show a lack of remorse and "narcissistic superiority that leads to only one conclusion, that she is undeserving of any leniency."

"She has blamed the victims, arguing that they were out of the crosswalk, jetted out in front of her car, and that their mother was careless in walking with her children across the street when it was starting to get dark outside," prosecutors said in the memo.

They also said she blamed ex-boyfriend, former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Scott Erickson, prosecutors said. She claimed that he hit the children first, but prosecutors said there is no evidence to support that claim.

Prosecutors said Grossman was driving a high speeds, was impaired and had both alcohol and valium in her system. Evidence at trial suggested she was traveling 73 to 81 mph in a 45 mph seconds before the crash, prosecutors said.

( )

Grossman did not return to the crash, which triggered the SUV's airbag, scene or offer medical aid to the boy, prosecutors said. They said the SUV's engine stopped about a quarter-mile from the intersection.

In their sentencing brief, her new defense attorneys James Spertus and Samuel Josephs countered that the crash was a terrible accident.

"Ms. Grossman is responsible for causing the accident, but the offense conduct does not warrant a life sentence or the type of lengthy prison term reserved for the most callous, heinous crimes, they wrote in the brief.

The defense attorneys wrote in their motion that the judge could impose probation with a suspended state prison sentence. The

READ MORE 


iOS 18 makes iPhone more personal, capable, and intelligent than ever

 

iOS 18 makes iPhone more personal, capable, and intelligent than ever


The release introduces all-new customization options, the biggest-ever redesign of Photos, powerful updates for staying connected, and Apple Intelligence, the personal intelligence system


CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA Apple today previewed iOS 18, a major release that features more customization options, the biggest redesign ever of the Photos app, new ways for users to manage their inbox in Mail, Messages over satellite, and so much more. Users will be able to arrange apps and widgets in any open space on the Home Screen, customize the buttons at the bottom of the Lock Screen, and quickly(1
2) access more controls in Control Center. Photo libraries are automatically organized in a new single view in Photos, and helpful new collections keep favorites easily accessible. Mail simplifies the inbox by sorting email into categories using on-device intelligence, and all-new text effects come to iMessage. Powered by the same groundbreaking technology as existing iPhone satellite capabilities, users can now communicate over satellite in the Messages app when a cellular or Wi-Fi connection isn’t available.1
( )
iOS 18 also introduces Apple Intelligence, the personal intelligence system for iPhone, iPad, and Mac that combines the power of generative models with personal context to deliver intelligence that’s incredibly useful and relevant.2 Built with privacy from the ground up, Apple Intelligence is deeply integrated into iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia. It harnesses the power of Apple silicon to understand and create language and images, take action across apps, and draw from personal context, to simplify and accelerate everyday tasks.
( )
“We are thrilled to introduce iOS 18. It is a huge release with incredible features, including new levels of customization and capability, a redesigned Photos app, and powerful ways to stay connected with Messages. There are so many benefits for everyone,” said Craig Federighi, Apple’s senior vice president of Software Engineering. “This release also marks the beginning of a tremendously exciting new era of personal intelligence with Apple Intelligence delivering intuitive, powerful, and instantly useful experiences that will transform the iPhone experience, all with privacy at the core. We can’t wait for users to experience it.”
( )

New Levels of Customization and Capability

iPhone users have new ways to customize the Home Screen, Lock Screen, and Control Center. Users can now arrange apps and widgets in any open space on the Home Screen, including placing them right above the dock for easy access or perfectly framing a wallpaper. App icons and widgets can take on a new look with a dark or tinted effect, and users can make them appear larger to create the experience that is perfect for them.

South Africa hold on to beat Bangladesh by four runs in thriller


South Africa hold on to beat Bangladesh by four runs in thriller



South Africa are top of Group D with three wins from three. The rest is up for grabs. No other team has more than one win. Bangladesh are probably favourites because they have already beaten Sri Lanka, but the Netherlands and even Nepal might fancy they are in with a shout.
()

South Africa captain Aiden Markram: "I think it got pretty nerve racking in the final over and it can make you mentally tired. Sometimes when you get on the right side it makes for good entertainment.

"Fortunately that ball could've gone anywhere and if that catch was missed it would've been a different conversation. Luckily we got on the right side of victory.

"It all depends on the situation and where you want to drag the game out or use players to attack and take wickets. The seamers were bowling really well and we wanted to drag the game out.

"It was fantastic for Klaasen and Miller to get some runs and the two of them were a great partnership."

( )

'A match we should have won'published at 19:22 10 June

Bangladesh captain Najmul Hossain Shanto: "I think this is a match we should have won. Last couple of overs they bowled well, it can happen in cricket.

"I think Rishad is very good. He's worked very hard and is showing our skills. We've struggled with leg-spin the last 10-15 years, we've got lucky.

"Thanks to all the supporters, I hope they come to the West Indies as well."

( )

'It'll be good confidence for the boys'published at 19:21 10 Ju

Player of the match Heinrich Klaasen: "It was not a nice one to watch, it was good that the boys got it over the line.

"The wicket is not too great for strokeplay. David showed us how to bat on this wicket in the last match and we applied that today. We were about 10 runs short.

"Luckily we've got experience in the changing room. We had to play with less of a one-day mindset today.

"It'll be good confidence for the boys, we've had three pressurised games now."

( )

And here's the wording from the playing conditions...

"If following a Player Review request, an original decision of Out is changed to Not out, then the ball is still deemed to have become dead when the original decision was made. The batting side, while benefiting from the reversal of the dismissal, shall not benefit from any runs that may subsequently have accrued from the delivery had the on-field umpire originally made a Not out decision, other than any No ball penalty."

READ MORE.....