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British Retailer Surging in America’s Thriving Sneaker Market

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The U.S. sneaker market continues to boom and one British retailer wants a much bigger piece of that pie.

JD Sports Fashion currently has nearly 400 stores in North America bearing its name, with plans to reach 800 by opening new stores and continuing to convert stores from the Finish Line chain it bought a few years ago. The company also owns several other sports apparel chains in the U.S. under different banners. All told, JD’s various chains bring in nearly $6 billion a year stateside, making it one of the largest sports gear retailers in the country.

But that is just a small sliver of the opportunity that JD CEO Régis Schultz sees for the Manchester, England-based retailer. The $24 billion sneaker market now represents about 60% of the U.S. footwear market, double the share from a decade ago, as running shoes replace Oxfords in many offices. And Schultz sees no end to the running shoe boom.

“As soon as you start wearing sneakers, you don’t go back to formal shoes,” he told me in an on-stage interview at the National Retail Federation conference earlier this month in New York. 

Since the beginning of the decade, JD has also built its presence in different corners of the U.S. through acquisitions. In 2024, it bought Hibbitt, a large sports retailer focused on the South with stores in smaller retail markets. It has also bought a West Coast chain focused on the Hispanic market called Shoe Palace, and a more urban one called DLTR.

“We see a lot more potential in the U.S.” said Schultz. “We have invested in our stores and they have a lot of energy and theater.”

The group’s most recent results, published a week after the NRF interview, back this emphasis on the U.S. Over the holiday period of November and December, comparable sales in North America rose 1.5%, while falling in the U.K. and continental Europe. 

“JD’s brand awareness continues to grow in the US,” Schultz said in a statement published with the financial results, “and, building on this momentum, we have decided to increase our marketing initiatives in North America.”

JD seems to be thriving even as competitors struggle—which could be reason for optimism, but also caution. The travails in recent years of Foot Locker, during which it bled market share and closed hundreds of stores, have created opportunities for JD to step in. But Foot Locker, bought by Dick’s Sporting Goods last year, is now part of a much larger, extremely well-run retailer—and it’s a better-known brand in the US, so there are no guarantees that this market share will remain JD’s for the taking. 

To set itself up for success in this competitive market, Schultz has invested in stores, and given employees more training on buying and merchandising the products it sells. “You need to have a point of view,” he said, emphasizing that store buyers should think outside the box to become tastemakers. “Our big wake-up call was that buyers used to be very lazy.” 

Schultz recalled Nike CEO Elliott Hill calling him shortly after Hill returned to the company in 2024. “You know the consumer better than we know them,” he recalls Hill saying. “Please give us your insights.” Nike represents more than 40% of JD’s revenue.

For now, Schultz sees JD’s lane in the U.S. as running shoes from top brands such as Nike, Hoka, New Balance, Adidas and On Running, along with some apparel. 

“I’ve learned in my career that less is more,” Schultz said. “If you try to do too many things, you end up doing nothing.”

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

European Junior Championships Finalist Belis Sakar Vows to Attend Arizona State University in 2026

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Fitter and Faster Swim Camps is the proud sponsor of SwimSwam’s College Recruiting Channel and all commitment news. For many, swimming in college is a lifelong dream that is pursued with dedication and determination. Fitter and Faster is proud to honor these athletes and those who supported them on their journey.

Turkish World Juniors Qualifier Belis Sakar has committed to Arizona State University for the fall of 2026.

I’m so excited to announce my verbal commitment to continue my academic and athletic career at Arizona State University! I want to thank my family, coaches and friends for their endless support. Finally a huge thanks to Coach Alex and Coach Herbie for giving me this amazing opportunity. I can’t wait to be part of this incredible team!! Go Sun Devils!! 😈 🔱

Sakar is a native of Istanbul, Turkey, and represented her home nation at the World Aquatics Junior Championships (LCM) this past August. She competed in both the 400 IM and 400 free at those championships, placing 23rd in the 400 free (4:25.05) and 21st in the 400 IM (4:56.64).

A month earlier, Sakar raced at the LEN European Junior Championships (LCM), where she finished 6th overall in 400 IM in 4:49.88. In addition to that 400 IM performance, she placed 18th in the 800 free (8:57.27), and 25th in the 400 free (4:22.31).

Sakar holds a best 400 IM long course time of 4:45.62 from the Turkish Open Age and Juniors Championship in 2022. At those same championships, she clocked her fastest ever 200 IM in 2:18.52.

In August, Sakar notched more best times at the Turkish Youth-Junior and Open Age Championships (LCM), setting a pair of distance freestyle bests with her 8:47.58 in the 800 free and 16:42.40 in the 1500 free.

Sakar’s Best Times Converted to SCY:

Event LCM SCY Conversion
400 Free 4:18.02
800 Free 8:47.58
1500 Free 16:42.40 16:22.74 (1650 Free)
200 IM 2:18.52 2:01.90
400 IM 4:45.62 4:11.54
200 Fly 2:12.76 1:57.08

Sakar joins a Sun Devil women’s team coming off of a 2025 Big 12 Swimming and Diving Championship title last season.

Based on Sakar’s conversions, she would have placed 2nd in the 1650 free, 3rd in the 400 IM, and 6th overall in the 500 free at those championships last season.

Sakar’s conversions make her an immediate contender in a conference that the Sun Devils have asserted their dominance in.

The addition of Sakar will complement the already-talented roster the Sun Devil women possess in her events. Alexa Reyna, currently a junior in Tempe, won the 500 last season at Big 12s and finished 2nd in the 1650 will have one year of overlap with Sakar.

Sonia Vaishnani, the reigning 400 IM Big 12 champion, will also have one year of training alongside Sakar.

Sakar will fill in for fellow Turkish swimmer Deniz Ertan, who last season won the 1650 free and finished 2nd in the 400 IM for the Sun Devils, and will have graduated.

The projected success of Sakar is measured purely by her conversions, but Arizona State’s success in her primary events last season suggests plenty of potential for her to be atop the conference and compete nationally for years to come.

Sakar joins Monica Leydar, Olivia Colombo, Rowynn Biffart, Lilly Jane Allison, Ellie Chalupsky, Riley Christensen, Haddie Vohs, Maya Hetland, and Alyssa Albertyn in the Sun Devil women’s 2026 recruiting class.

If you have a commitment to report, please send an email with a photo (landscape, or horizontal, looks best) and a quote to [email protected].

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Sabalenka defeats rising star Jovic to advance to Australian Open semifinals | Tennis News

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World number one continues her march for a third Australian Open title with a 6-3, 6-0 win over American teen sensation Jovic.

Aryna Sabalenka has handed 18-year-old ‍American Iva ‍Jovic a comprehensive 6-3, 6-0 defeat in the quarterfinals of the Australian Open to remain on course for her third title at Melbourne Park.

The world number one, champion in 2023 ​and 2024 and runner-up last year, made quick work of the teen tennis sensation at a sweltering Melbourne Park on Tuesday.

Sabalenka will now meet ‍either Coco Gauff or Elina Svitolina for a place in Saturday’s title match.

“These teenagers have been testing me in the last couple of ‍rounds,” said ⁠Sabalenka, who defeated 19-year-old Canadian Victoria Mboko in the previous round.

“Don’t look at the score, it wasn’t easy at all. She played incredible tennis, pushed me to one step better level. It was a tough battle.”

Sabalenka made a blistering start, racing into a 3-0 lead ​in the opener, and Jovic was ‌made to work by the Belarusian to hold her serve in the fourth game to gain a foothold in the set.

The teenager, appearing in her ‌first Grand Slam quarterfinal, used her speed around the court to frustrate her more ‌experienced opponent, although Sabalenka eventually closed ⁠out the first set in less than an hour.

The 27-year-old was even more dominant in the second set, firing a cross-court winner beyond ‌Jovic to break serve in the opening game.

That put the four-time Grand Slam champion firmly in command, and she would ‍go on to convert another pair of break points to move ominously into the last four.

Sabalenka said she would not stop until she has got the trophy in the bag in Melbourne.

“I think [for] every player, when they get to the tournament, it’s trophy or nothing,” she said. “The mentality is the same, and it’s always in the back of your mind that obviously you want to win it.”

“But I’m trying to shift my focus on the right things and taking it step by step and just trying my best in each match, each point, each game, each set.”

Sabalenka’s match was played under an open roof on Rod Laver Arena in 38C (100F) heat, but it was not a worry for the world number one.

On a 10-match win streak after victory at the lead-up Brisbane International, she called her second-set performance “amazing”.

“I knew that I have to step in and show the level and the class,” she said.

“I think it really helped me kind of just go for my shots and help me to trust my game.”

Iva Jovic was unable to battle past the world number one [David Gray/AFP]

Defeat brought an end to a breakthrough tournament for Jovic, the youngest player in the women’s top 100 and seeded 29.

She stunned the seventh seed and two-time Grand Slam finalist Jasmine Paolini and blitzed past experienced Yulia Putintseva for the loss of just one game to announce herself to the world.

But Sabalenka was a bridge too far.

“I think Aryna played very well. I could have done some things differently, but that’s tennis,” she said after the loss.

“I think it’s amazing what she’s done for herself in her career.

“It’s very inspiring,” she added of the four-time Grand Slam winner.

“I think the way she’s been able to use all the negative things – I know her story quite well.

“All the negative things that have happened to her on court and in her personal life as well, and turned them into motivation and fuel to be better, is amazing.

“I hope to get more chances to play against her, and she was very nice at the end of the match as well.”

Meta to test premium subscription models for Instagram, Facebook, and WhatsApp

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Technology giant Meta is to trial premium subscriptions for Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp users in the coming months.

The new offerings would give access to features including expanded artificial intelligence (AI) capabilities.

Under the plan, access to the platforms’ core services would remain free to use.

The firm also plans to test subscriptions for features, such as its Vibes video generation app, which the firm says “can bring your ideas to life with new AI visual creation tools”.

Meta announced Vibes in September as part of the latest version of the Meta AI app.

It also aims to use Manus, a Chinese-founded AI firm it bought in December for a reported $2bn (£1.46bn), in its subscription plans, according to TechCrunch, which first reported the story.

The company will also continue to offer standalone Manus subscriptions to businesses.

At the time, Meta said the deal would help improve its own AI by giving people access to “agents” – tools which can do complex things with minimal user interaction such as planning trips or making presentations.

“Manus’s exceptional talent will join Meta’s team to deliver general-purpose agents across our consumer and business products, including Meta AI,” it said in a blog post.

Based in Singapore after relocating from China, Manus has sought to set itself apart from rival AI developers with what it claims can be a “truly autonomous” agent.

Unlike many chatbots which need to be repeatedly asked for things before a user can get their desired response, Manus says its service can plan, execute and complete tasks independently in accordance with instructions.

Client Challenge: Overcoming Obstacles for Success

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Client Challenge



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Hezbollah reports TV presenter’s death in Israeli strike in southern Lebanon

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A Lebanese minister condemns the latest Israeli killing and calls on the international community to ‘take action’.

A television presenter who worked for Lebanon’s Al-Manar TV station has been killed in an Israeli attack on the southern Lebanese city of Tyre, according to the Lebanese armed group Hezbollah.

The killing on Monday of presenter Ali Nour al-Din, who worked for the Hezbollah-affiliated Al-Manar, portends “the danger of Israel’s extended escalations [in Lebanon] to include the media community”, Hezbollah said in a statement.

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Al-Manar TV confirmed that the attack in Tyre killed al-Din, “who previously worked at Al-Manar channel as a presenter of religious programmes”.

Al-Din also served as the main preacher in Al-Hawsh, in the suburbs of Tyre, Hezbollah said, calling his killing a “treacherous assassination”.

Lebanese Minister of Information Paul Morcos condemned the Israeli strike, saying on social media that such attacks were “sparing neither journalistic nor media crews”.

“We declare our solidarity and condolences to the media family, and call on the international community to fully assume its responsibilities and take urgent action to put an end to these violations and ensure the protection of media professionals in Lebanon,” the minister said.

Prior to al-Din’s killing on Monday, at least six Lebanese journalists had been killed in Israeli attacks on Lebanon since 2023, according to a tally by the Committee to Protect Journalists. Other monitors put the death toll of Lebanese journalists at 10.

Earlier on Monday, Lebanon’s Ministry of Health said in a statement that one person was killed in an Israeli air strike in Tyre, although it did not immediately announce the name of the victim. The ministry added that a separate Israeli strike killed two other people in Kfar Rumman near the city of Nabatieh.

The Israeli military later admitted to the killing of al-Din, whom it referred to as a Hezbollah member, and said it struck two other people in the Nabatieh areas of southern Lebanon.

Israel and Hezbollah agreed to a US-brokered ceasefire in 2024 to end more than a year of fighting, which saw Israel carry out air strikes across Lebanon that severely weakened the armed group.

Despite the ceasefire, Israel has kept up regular attacks on targets in Lebanon and has maintained troops in five locations in southern Lebanon.

Since the ceasefire, Israeli strikes have killed more than 350 people in Lebanon, according to the AFP news agency, while Lebanese authorities have been facing growing pressure from the United States and Israel to disarm Hezbollah.

On Monday, Hezbollah called on supporters to gather in its strongholds across Lebanon to express support for its ally Iran, which the group said was facing “American-Zionist sabotage and threats”.

The call came as a US aircraft carrier strike group arrived in the Middle East and US President Donald Trump continued to threaten Tehran with an attack.

In a televised address to supporters, Hezbollah chief Naim Qassem warned that any attack on Tehran would also be an attack on Hezbollah, adding that any new war on Iran would ignite the region.

Qassem also warned against any attempt to assassinate Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, adding that Hezbollah considered such a threat “directed at us as well”.

Tehran has warned the US that an attack would be met with a “regret-inducing response” that could affect the entire Middle East region.

Eos Energy’s Chief Customer Officer Kroeker Sells $802,000 Worth of Shares

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Eos Energy CCO Kroeker sells $802,000 in shares

French MPs pass initial law to prohibit social media for those under 15 years old

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France’s National Assembly has backed a bill that would ban social media access for under-15s, a proposal supported by President Emmanuel Macron.

Lawmakers in the lower house on Monday agreed key elements of the bill, before voting 116-23 in its favour. Next, the bill will go to the upper house, the Senate, for approval.

If it is passed, young teenagers would not be able to use networks such as Snapchat, Instagram and TikTok.

The French move is part of a growing trend of restricting social networks for children, triggered by increasing evidence of the damage they can cause to mental health. A similar law was passed in Australia late last year.

After the National Assembly passed the bill in an overnight session from Monday to Tuesday, Macron called it a “major step”.

Writing on social media, he called for the government to accelerate the next steps, “so that this ban takes effect as early as next school year”. The new school year begins on 1 September in France.

“Our children’s brains are not for sale,” he wrote.

Laure Miller, an MP behind the bill, told Le Monde: “With this law we will set down a clear limit in society.”

“We are saying something very simple: social networks are not harmless,” she added.

“These networks promised to bring people together. They pulled them apart. They promised to inform. They saturated us with information. They promised to entertain. They shut people away.”

Last month, Macron said:We cannot leave the mental and emotional health of our children in the hands of people whose sole purpose is to make money out of them.”

Under the new text, the state media regulator would draw up a list of social media networks that are deemed harmful. These would be simply banned for under 15-year-olds.

A separate list of supposedly less harmful sites would be accessible, but only with explicit parental approval.

Another clause would ban the use of mobile telephones in senior schools (lycées). The ban is already in effect in junior and middle schools.

If the law is passed, France will need to agree on the mechanism for age-verification. A system is already in place that requires over 18 year-olds to prove their age when accessing online pornography.

In Europe, Denmark, Greece, Spain and Ireland are also considering following the Australian example. Earlier this month, the UK government launched a consultation on banning social media for under 16s.

The basis of the proposed French law is a text drawn up late last year by Miller, who chaired a parliamentary committee enquiry into the psychological effects of TikTok and other networks.

Separately, the government was told to draw up its own legislation, after Macron decided to make the issue a centrepiece of his last year in office.

The president has been sidelined from domestic politics since the Assembly elections which he called in 2024 resulted in a hung parliament.

The social media ban has been a rare chance to court public favour.

For a time the cause risked falling victim to bickering between Macron and his one-time prime minister Gabriel Attal (Miller is an MP from Attal’s party). But in the end the government appears to have rallied behind the Miller bill.

The bill is expected to pass before the upper house, the Senate, in the next month. Macron said he had asked the government of Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu to use a fast-track procedure to get the legislation on the books by September.

Without resort to the fast-track (which permits a single reading as opposed to two in each of the two houses), the law would have little chance of getting past the legislative backlog created by Lecornu’s difficulties in passing a budget.

The bill has already had to be redrafted to take account of questions raised by the Council of State, the body which previews draft legislation to ensure it conforms with French and European law.

A 2023 law which proposed a similar ban on social media for young teenagers proved inoperable after courts decided it broke European law.

Stealth fighters join Carrier strike group in Mideast as Trump considers Iran strike, with Air Force jets and cargo planes en route.

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The aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and three accompanying warships have arrived in the Middle East, bringing a renewed potential that President Donald Trump could opt to order airstrikes on Iran over its crackdown on protesters.

The carrier, along with three destroyers, “is currently deployed to the Middle East to promote regional security and stability,” U.S. Central Command said Monday on social media.

The strike group was in the Indian Ocean, Central Command said, and not in the Arabian Sea, which borders Iran. It will bring thousands of additional service members to the region, which has not had a U.S. aircraft carrier since the USS Gerald R. Ford was ordered in October to sail to the Caribbean as part of a pressure campaign on then-Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro.

Trump told reporters last week that the ships were sent to the region “just in case.” “We have a massive fleet heading in that direction, and maybe we won’t have to use it,” he said.

Trump earlier had threatened military action if Iran carried out mass executions of prisoners or killed peaceful demonstrators during a crackdown on protests that began in late December. At least 5,973 people have been killed and more than 41,800 detained, according to activists. The official Iranian death toll is far lower, at 3,117 dead.

More recently, Trump appeared to have backed away from possible action, claiming Iran halted the hangings of 800 detained protesters. He has not elaborated on the source of the claim, which Iran’s top prosecutor called “completely false.”

However, Trump appears to be keeping his options open. On Thursday aboard Air Force One, he said his threatened military action would make last year’s U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear sites “look like peanuts” if the government proceeded with planned executions of some protesters.

The aircraft carrier hosts multiple squadrons of aircraft, including F-35 Lightning II fighter jets and F/A-18 Super Hornet fighter jets. Meanwhile, the destroyers bring with them hundreds of missiles, which could include dozens of Tomahawk land attack cruise missiles.

In addition to the aircraft carrier and its hardware, the U.S. military said the Air Force F-15E Strike Eagle fighter jet now has a presence in the region.

Analysts who follow flight-tracking data have noticed dozens of U.S. military cargo planes also heading to the region.

The activity is similar to last year when the U.S. moved in air defense hardware, including a Patriot missile system, in anticipation of an Iranian counterattack following the bombing of three key nuclear sites. Iran launched over a dozen missiles at Al Udeid Air Base days after the strikes.

This story was originally featured on Fortune.com

Canada’s Prime Minister Carney reveals multibillion-dollar plan to reduce food prices | Inflation Update

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Carney has been under pressure from the opposition to lower prices of food and other essentials for lower-income people.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced a multibillion-dollar package as part of a series of measures aimed at lowering the costs of food and other essentials for low-income families.

On Monday, Carney announced a five-year 25 percent boost to the Goods and Services Tax (GST) credit that starts this year.

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The GST credit, which is being renamed the Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit, will provide additional, significant support for more than 12 million Canadians, Carney said in a statement.

The government will also provide a one-time top-up equivalent to a 50 percent increase this year to eligible residents.

“We’re bringing in new measures to lower costs and make sure Canadians have the support they need now,” Carney said.

The measures would cost the government 3.1 billion Canadian dollars ($2.26bn) in the first year and between 1.3 billion Canadian dollars ($950m) and 1.8 billion Canadian dollars ($1.3bn) in each of the following four years, he told reporters at a news conference, according to the Reuters news agency.

While overall consumer price inflation in Canada has eased and came in at 2.4 percent for December, “food price inflation remains high due to global and domestic factors, including supply chain disruptions, higher US tariffs from the trade war and climate change/extreme weather”, Tony Stillo, director of Canada Economics at Oxford Economics, told Al Jazeera.

The government is also setting aside 500 million Canadian dollars ($365m) from the Strategic Response Fund to help businesses address the costs of supply chain disruptions without passing those costs on to Canadians, and will create a 150 million Canadian dollar ($110m) Food Security Fund under the existing Regional Tariff Response Initiative for small and medium enterprises and the organisations that support them.

Changing landscape

“The global landscape is rapidly changing, leaving economies, businesses, and workers under a cloud of uncertainty. In response, Canada’s new government is focused on what we can control: building a stronger economy to make life more affordable for Canadians,” Carney said.

The new measures were unveiled on the day Parliament resumes after its winter break.

Opposition parties have urged Carney to reduce prices of daily goods, especially as sections of the economy have come under pressure from United States President Donald Trump, who has slapped 35 percent tariffs on the country as well as separate tariffs on steel, aluminium and lumber, leading to job losses in those sectors.

Over the weekend, Trump escalated his threats and said he would impose a 100 percent tariff on Canada if it makes a trade deal with China. Carney has been working on diversifying Canada’s exports away from the US, its biggest trading partner and to which nearly 80 percent of its exports went last year, including by increasing business with other markets like China.