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Nottingham Forest reach FA Cup quarterfinals after Sels stops Ipswich in shootout

Nottingham Forest reach FA Cup quarterfinals after Sels stops Ipswich in shootout
Nottingham Forest’s Belgian goalkeeper Matz Sels saves a penalty from Ipswich Town’s Irish midfielder Jack Taylor to win the penalty shootout during the sides' English FA Cup fifth round football match at The City Ground in Nottingham, central England, on March 3, 2025. (AFP)
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Updated 04 March 2025

Nottingham Forest reach FA Cup quarterfinals after Sels stops Ipswich in shootout

Nottingham Forest reach FA Cup quarterfinals after Sels stops Ipswich in shootout
  • The shootout followed a gripping game at City Ground that was tighter than the teams’ Premier League positions suggested
  • The home side has been the league’s surprise package and sits third on the table, above Chelsea, Manchester City and Manchester United

NOTTINGHAM, England: Goalkeeper Matz Sels was the hero for Nottingham Forest as he saved the last penalty in a shootout to take his team past Ipswich Town and into the quarterfinals of the FA Cup on Monday.

The teams were tied 1-1 after 90 minutes and extra time and the first nine takers all converted their penalties in a nail-biting finale.

Then Sels dived to his left to stop Jack Taylor’s kick and guarantee Forest a last-eight tie at Brighton.

The shootout followed a gripping game at City Ground that was tighter than the teams’ Premier League positions suggested.

The home side has been the league’s surprise package and sits third on the table, above Chelsea, Manchester City and Manchester United.

But it was Ipswich, third-to-last in the league, that took the lead eight minutes into the second half when George Hirst converted a back post header.

Forest got back on level terms when Ryan Yates met Anthony Elanga’s inviting cross from the right and headed home.

Yates had a second goal disallowed just minutes later, and Callum Hudson-Odoi hit the bar with a long-range effort seven minutes from time. Although both sides pushed forward for a winner, especially in the end-to-end half hour of extra time, it went to penalties.

“It was the only penalty I was in the right corner (for)!” Sels said. “In penalties, one of the goalkeepers is going to be the hero. I am happy. Looking forward to the weekend now.”


Oscar Piastri extends F1 championship lead after Norris breakdown at Dutch Grand Prix

Oscar Piastri extends F1 championship lead after Norris breakdown at Dutch Grand Prix
Updated 31 August 2025

Oscar Piastri extends F1 championship lead after Norris breakdown at Dutch Grand Prix

Oscar Piastri extends F1 championship lead after Norris breakdown at Dutch Grand Prix
  • Piastri led from pole to chequered flag at the Zandvoort circuit
  • Stretched his lead over Norris to 34 points in the championship race

ZANDVOORT: Oscar Piastri powered to victory at an incident-packed Dutch Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday, with home favorite Max Verstappen claiming second place as Piastri’s McLaren teammate Lando Norris suffered a dramatic breakdown late in the race.

Piastri led from pole to chequered flag at the Zandvoort circuit in a race that saw the safety car deployed three times to stretch his lead over Norris to 34 points in the championship race.

Racing Bulls’ 20-year-old French rookie Isack Hadjar finished third to become the fifth youngest podium finisher of all time.

It was Piastri’s sixth Grand Prix victory of the season and cemented the Australian’s status as the man to catch in this year’s drivers’ championship.

“I felt like I was in control of that one and just used the pace when I needed to,” said Piastri.

“If we can keep it running then that’d be great but there’s a long way to go yet and we keep doing it one race at a time,” added the Australian.

A thrilling start saw Verstappen, who started third on the grid, overtake Norris before briefly losing control of his Red Bull.

To the cheers of tens of thousands of his “Orange Army” fans, Verstappen recovered brilliantly to settle in behind Piastri, who got off to a clean start.

But the faster race pace of the McLaren quickly told and Norris passed the Dutchman on his left-hand side in lap nine to restore the one-two for the papaya team.

The big unknown in the run-up to the race had been the weather at the famously unpredictable circuit just a stone’s throw from the North Sea coast.

The first rain began to fall around lap 15 of 72 and just 10 laps later, claimed its first victim, as seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton slid his Ferrari off the track into the barriers.

“I’m so sorry guys,” said an unhurt Hamilton, who at the last Grand Prix had described himself as a “completely useless” driver who should be replaced.

The safety car deployment bunched up the field again but Piastri held off his determined teammate Norris, who in turn kept Verstappen at bay in third.

Behind the front-runners, Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc pulled off an extraordinary overtaking maneuver on George Russell from Mercedes.

With the rain stopped and most drivers on fresh tires, McLaren engineers on the Norris side of the garage told their man “let’s go get Oscar.”

Since Zandvoort returned to the Formula One circuit in 2021, the driver who started on pole has won every time, the track notoriously difficult for overtaking.

And Norris struggled to get close enough to his teammate Piastri, who kept a typically cool head to produce solid, error-free laps.

But with 18 laps to go, there was more drama as Leclerc and Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli touched wheels during an overtaking maneuver, sending the Ferrari spinning into the barriers to complete a catastrophic weekend for the scuderia.

With the cars bunched up again after the safety car, Piastri pulled out his fastest lap when it mattered to take control of the race once more.

Then with only six laps to go, Norris reported smoke in his cockpit, immediately crawling to a halt, his race over in heartbreaking fashion.

That left Piastri to hold off a last-ditch challenge by Verstappen in the closing laps to take the chequered flag.

A delighted Hadjar jumped into his team’s arms at the end of the race before climbing onto the podium for the first time.

“This was always the target since I was a kid. So this is the first step, my first podium and hopefully much more,” he said.

The Grand Prix circus next moves to Monza in Italy on September 7 when the Ferrari fans will be out in numbers, hoping for a better weekend for the team.


Swiatek survives Kalinskaya scare to reach US Open last 16

Swiatek survives Kalinskaya scare to reach US Open last 16
Updated 31 August 2025

Swiatek survives Kalinskaya scare to reach US Open last 16

Swiatek survives Kalinskaya scare to reach US Open last 16
  • World number two summons her championship resolve to beat Anna Kalinskaya 7-6(2) 6-4
  • The Pole was far from her sharpest in the scrappy, error-strewn contest

NEW YORK: Iga Swiatek’s first evening under the bright lights of Arthur Ashe Stadium nearly turned into a nightmare before the world number two summoned her championship resolve to beat Anna Kalinskaya 7-6(2) 6-4 at the US Open on Saturday.

The Wimbledon winner found herself staring down the barrel at 5-1 in the opening set of their third-round clash as Russian 29th seed Kalinskaya threatened to repeat her stunning upset victory over Swiatek in Dubai last year.

“Well, for sure it wasn’t the easy match, especially after the beginning,” a relieved Swiatek said.

“I’m happy that I came back and started playing better, because for sure I did some mistakes in the beginning of the first set that I wish didn’t happen.”

The Pole was far from her sharpest in the scrappy, error-strewn contest — nine breaks and 67 unforced errors by both players combined painted the picture of a match won through sheer bloody-mindedness rather than sublime shot-making.

Yet Swiatek steadied herself at the key moments, serving up a masterclass in mental fortitude as the 2022 US Open champion clawed her way back into contention.

She saved four set points in the first, eventually dominating the tiebreak 7-2, and broke late in the second to notch her 20th major match win of the season, drawing level with defending champion and world number one Aryna Sabalenka.

The key to her remarkable turnaround? Keeping her cool when panic might have been the natural response.

“At 5-1 or something, it’s easy to panic, and I didn’t. So that’s good,” Swiatek said.

The six-times Grand Slam champion revealed she made crucial tactical adjustments mid-match.

“I focused on, like, two technical things that I figured out might help me,” she said.

“When the ball was easier, I played too long sometimes. I wanted to keep the margins, I guess, to not make unforced errors.”

The victory propels Swiatek into the last 16 for the fifth year in succession in New York, where she will face 13th seed Ekaterina Alexandrova.


Doncic scores 39 points but Slovenia lose again at EuroBasket against France, Serbia advance

Doncic scores 39 points but Slovenia lose again at EuroBasket against France, Serbia advance
Updated 31 August 2025

Doncic scores 39 points but Slovenia lose again at EuroBasket against France, Serbia advance

Doncic scores 39 points but Slovenia lose again at EuroBasket against France, Serbia advance
  • Germany, Finland advance from Group B
  • The top four teams from each group will advance to the knockout phase in Riga, Latvia, from Sept. 6-14.

RIGA: Luka Doncic scored 39 points but Slovenia (0-2) lost again at EuroBasket after France’s deep bench proved too much for the Los Angeles Lakers star’s team on Saturday.

France’s 103-95 win came two days after Doncic had scored 34 points in Slovenia’s 105-95 defeat to co-host Poland. His outing against France put Doncic over 1,000 career points for Slovenia.

Point guard Sylvain Francisco came off the bench to lead France with 32 points in the game played in Katowice, Poland. France improved to 2-0 in Group D.

Doncic made 19 of 20 free throws, grabbed eight rebounds and had nine assists, but it wasn’t enough as Francisco helped fuel 78 points by France’s bench players, compared to just 26 from Slovenia’s.

Washington Wizards pair Bilal Coulibaly and Alex Sarr combined for 25 points to help pace France, with 12 points from Zaccharie Risacher of the Atlanta Hawks.

American-born guard Jordan Loyd led Poland with 27 points and came through in the clutch to edge Israel 66-64 to improve to 2-0.

Lloyd led Poland with 27 points, including 5-of-8 3-pointers. He scored 10 of Poland’s final 13 points, including a putback of his own shot with 13 seconds left to give his team the win.

Deni Avdija of the Portland Trailblazers had 23 points for Israel (1-1).

Also in Group D, Belgium overcame a seven-point, fourth-quarter deficit to beat Iceland 71-64 and improve to 1-1. Iceland is 0-2.

Jokic puts Serbia into knockout phase from Group A

Nikola Jokic scored 39 points, including the final two points of the game from the free-throw line, to help Serbia edge Latvia 84-80.

The Denver Nuggets star had 10 rebounds and four assists. His record points total bettered his previous best for Serbia of 32 points.

A 3-0 record in Group A ensured Serbia a spot in the knockout phase with two games remaining. Co-host Latvia fell to 1-2.

Serbia captain and Los Angeles Clippers guard Bogdan Bogdanovic missed the game with a hamstring injury.

Houston Rockets center Alperen Sengun scored all 20 of his points in the first half as Turkiye trounced Portugal 95-54 to also move on with a 3-0 record from Group A.

The group phase of 24 teams is being played in four different countries. The top four teams from each group will advance to the knockout phase in Riga, Latvia, from Sept. 6-14.

Estonia (1-2) beat Czechia (0-3) 89-75 also in Group A.

Germany, Finland advance from Group B

Sacramento Kings point guard Dennis Schroder scored 26 points as Germany beat Lithuania 107-88 and booked their spot in the knockout phase.

Orlando Magic forward Franz Wagner added 24 points and seven rebounds, and Daniel Theis chipped in with 23 points as world champions Germany improved to 3-0 in Group B.

Germany won the game from long range, hitting 19 3-pointers on 54 percent shooting, with Schroder going 5-of-10 from distance. Schroder also handed out six assists in another strong performance despite him being targeted by racial abuse from two fans, who were ejected from the stadium in Tampere, Finland.

Utah Jazz forward Lauri Markkanen put in 26 points in a 85-65 win over Montenegro (0-3) and help Finland (3-0) reach the playoffs. That came a day after Markkanen had run riot with 43 points in a rout of Britain.

Miami Heat’s Pelle Larsson scored 23 as Sweden (1-2) beat Britain (0-3) 78-59 in Group B.

Giannis rests as Greece win in Group C

Giannis Antetokounmpo sat out Greece’s 96-69 win over Cyprus, two days after the Milwaukee Bucks forward had scored 31 points in a win over Italy.

American-born Tyler Dorsey and Konstantinos Mitoglou led Greece (2-0) with 18 points each. Co-host Cyprus fell to 0-2.

Spain (1-1) rebounded from an opening loss with a 88-67 victory over Bosnia and Herzegovina (1-1). Memphis Grizzlies forward Santi Aldama lead the defending champions with 19 points.

Also in Group C, Heat forward Simone Fontecchio scored 14 to help Italy (1-1) beat Georgia (1-1) 78-62.


Chinese rookie Miranda Wang grabs three-shot LPGA lead at TPC Boston

Chinese rookie Miranda Wang grabs three-shot LPGA lead at TPC Boston
Updated 31 August 2025

Chinese rookie Miranda Wang grabs three-shot LPGA lead at TPC Boston

Chinese rookie Miranda Wang grabs three-shot LPGA lead at TPC Boston
  • Wang, a 26-year-old who helped Duke University win the prestigious NCAA US collegiate team crown in 2019, put herself in striking position for a first LPGA title in Sunday’s final round
  • Three shots behind Kim to start the third round, Wang marched up the leaderboard with a solid display on the greens

NEW YORK: Chinese rookie Miranda Wang fired a bogey-free 7-under par 65 to seize a three-shot lead on Saturday in the weather-disrupted LPGA FM Championship at TPC Boston.

Wang, a 26-year-old who helped Duke University win the prestigious NCAA US collegiate team crown in 2019, put herself in striking position for a first LPGA title in Sunday’s final round.

She piled up seven birdies on the way to a 18-under par total of 198 — three clear of 36-hole leader Kim Sei-young of South Korea and American Rose Zhang.

It was another stroke back to world No. 1 Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand and American Andrea Lee.

Wang had managed to polish off her second-round 67 on Friday night, shortly before play was suspended by darkness on a day that featured three stoppages.

Three shots behind Kim to start the third round, Wang marched up the leaderboard with a solid display on the greens.

She followed a birdie at the second with three straight birdies at six, seven and eight and rapped in another birdie putt at the par-five 12th to push her lead to three strokes.

She added birdies at 14 and 18, finishing with just 24 putts to maintain her advantage.

“I did a good job today,” Wang said. “I really want to give myself some credit. This is where all the players want to be, so it’s definitely special going into the final round being the sole leader.”

Kim and Zhang both had marathon days after completing just four holes on Friday.

Kim returned to complete a seven-under 65 and grab the lead, but she couldn’t maintain the pace and posted a one-under 71 in the third round.

She faltered early with bogeys at the second and third holes and was two-over through nine before rolling in three birdies and signing for a one-under 71 that kept her in the hunt for a 13th LPGA title and her first in nearly five years.

Her last title came at the Pelican Championship in November 2020, a month after she won her lone major title at the Women’s PGA Championship.

Zhang completed a second-round 64 and then shook off an early bogey in the third round with six birdies in a five-under 67.

“It’s been a while since I played 32 holes,” said Zhang, another US collegiate standout who has been hindered by injury this season. “I needed to grind it out a little bit. I needed to stay focused.”

Kim said the same. Irked by her early bogeys, she was delighted to come up with a closing birdie as darkness closed in on the final group.

“When I standing on the last hole it was already dark,” she said. “I have a chance to reach with the second shot, but the temperature dropped a little so it’s 10 yards short. I just laid up and then make birdie — good result.”

Jeeno had eight birdies in her seven-under 65 wile Lee had six birdies in a six-under 66 to join her on 14-under 202.

Another three players shared sixth on 203. That included Park Kum-kang, a 24-year-old South Korean ranked 340th in the world who picked up six strokes in her first seven holes on the way to an impressive eight-under 64.

She was joined by Japan’s Ayaka Furue (66) and Norway’s Celine Borge (67).


Kiros and Hassan smash records at Sydney Marathon

Kiros and Hassan smash records at Sydney Marathon
Updated 31 August 2025

Kiros and Hassan smash records at Sydney Marathon

Kiros and Hassan smash records at Sydney Marathon
  • Kiros of Ethiopia won a thrilling men’s race in two hours six minutes and six seconds to run the fastest marathon ever in Australia
  • Dutch multi-distance star Hassan was also in record-breaking form as she dominated the women’s race to win in 2:18:22
  • It was the Sydney Marathon’s first year as a major, joining a list of elite events that includes New York, London, Berlin, Boston, Tokyo and Chicago

SYDNEY: Ethiopia’s Hailemaryam Kiros and Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands have surged to record-breaking victories in the men’s and women’s races at the debut of the Sydney Marathon as a world major on Sunday.
Kiros won a thrilling men’s race in two hours six minutes and six seconds to run the fastest marathon ever in Australia, more than a minute quicker than the previous record on the hilly harborside course which attracted 35,000 competitors from around the world.
The 28-year-old Ethiopian finished 10 seconds clear of compatriot Addisu Gobena with Lesotho’s Tebello Ramakongoana third.
Kiros was part of a lead pack of seven runners and then surged off the front with Gobena to make it a duel for the remaining five kilometers. Kiros then handled better the downhill gradient to the finish line at the Sydney Opera House to claim an impressive victory on a brisk winter’s morning.
It was the Sydney Marathon’s first year as a major, joining a list of elite events that includes New York, London, Berlin, Boston, Tokyo and Chicago.

Winner Hailemaryam Kiros of Ethiopia poses for photos with second-placed compatriot Addisu Gobena Aga (L) and third-placed Tebello Ramakongoana (R) of Lesotho during the 2025 Sydney Marathon at the Opera House on August 31, 2025. (AFP) 

Hassan overcomes pain barrier
Dutch multi-distance star Hassan was also in record-breaking form as she dominated the women’s race to win in 2:18:22, almost three minutes quicker than Ethiopia’s Workenesh Edesa record time set last year.
Kenyan runner Brigid Kosgei with Edesa third in 2:22:05.
“The last five kilometers, I’m dead,” Hassan said. “I felt so good in the first 5Ks and I think I pushed too hard. I pushed really hard the last 10Ks. I was like, ‘That’s not really smart. I’m going to pay the price’, but I feel I got away with it. I’m so grateful.”
“It’s the first major marathon in Australia, in Sydney, and I’m the first one to win, so it’s big history for me.
Kenyan star finishes ninth but enthrals fans
Dual Olympic gold-medalist Eliud Kipchoge, the headline attraction in the men’s field, was warmly embraced by his competitors as he crossed the line in ninth place, more than two minutes behind, and was enthusiastically cheered by the thousands of fans along the finish-line enclosure.
Kipchoge, who won gold at the 2016 and 2020 Olympic Games, fell off the lead pack with 10 kilometers to go and couldn’t find his way back into the contention.
I’m happy to go across the finish line. I have nothing to prove,” Kipchoge said. “My mission is to bring all the people together. Let us surpass 55,000 (from 35,000 this year), actually, next year to run here.
“It’s a beautiful course. It’s a course whereby there is no other in this world.”
Scaroni, Hug score another major
The women’s and men’s wheelchair events took place in tandem with the runners and Susannah Scaroni of the United States added to her list of marathon major victories with a win in the women’s event.
A heavy favorite coming into the race, it was the 34-year-old Washington state resident’s, first major win outside of the US
“It shows that sport movement is for every human being and it makes every human being better,” Scaroni said to reporters at the finish line.
Switzerland’s Marcel Hug won the men’s event in a record time of 1:27:15, smashing by more than 11 minutes the Sydney record held by Canada’s Josh Cassidy’s from 2024.
Hug has seven Paralympic gold medals to go with 23 other major marathon victories.