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Sarasota Girls and Boys from Riverview High School Dominate at Florida 4A State Championships

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By Keith Dunlap on SwimSwam

2025 Florida High School Athletic Association 4A State Championships

  • Friday, November. 14, 2025
  • Ocala, FL
  • SCY (25 yards)
  • Results

The brilliance of Windermere junior Rylee Erisman was once again on full display at the Florida High School Athletic Association Class 4A State Championships, as broken down here when she broke Gretchen Walsh’s national high school record in the 100 free.

But in addition to Erisman, there were other fast swims.

In the team race, the Riverview Sarasota girls squad won its fifth straight state title, while the Sarasota boys team won its fifth title in six years.

Girls’ Recap

Erisman was the big story with her record-breaking performance in the 100 free. She also won the 50 free in 21.67, which was just short of her best time of 21.61 that has her ranked second in the 15-16 girls’ age group this season.

Erisman also swam anchor for the 200 medley team that broke a state record in a time of 1:38.96, producing a split of 21.51. Brynn Lavigueur (24.16), Aidyn Reese (28.66) and Lilliana Krstolic (24.63) were the other members of the team, which shattered the previous state record of 1:40.81 set in 2023 by Riverview.

In the 400 free relay, Erisman swam anchor for Windermere’s team that also set a state record, producing a split of 47.48. Krstolic (51.58), Lizzy Johnson (51.22) and Lavigueur (48.88) were the other team members for Windermere, which broke the old record of 3:19.39 set in 2023 by the South Florida HEAT.

The 200 free relay was won by Riverview Sarasota’s team of Allie Pearson, Taylor Schwenk, Sydney Hardy and Angelina Lista in a time of 1:33.58.

In addition to Erisman, Lavigueur and Schwenk also won two individual events.

Lavigueur, a senior who has committed to Texas, won the 100 back in 52.21 and the 200 IM in 1:58.23, both personal best times. They were both repeat titles.

Schwenk, a senior who is committed to NC State, swam a personal best time of 1:47.97 to win the 200 free and a personal best time of 54.54 to win the 100 fly.

In the 200 free, Schwenk beat out Wellington sophomore Veronica Mets (1:47.99) by two one-hundredths of a second.

In the 100 fly, Schwenk edged out Newsome junior Janae Sanders (54.58) by four one-hundredths of a second.

Other individual winners were West Boca Raton sophomore Ava Sedlacek in 1-meter diving (444.55 points), Riverview Sarasota senior and Harvard commit Clare Custer in the 500 free (4:;44.59), and Riverview Sarasota freshman Sydney Hardy in the 100 breast (personal best 1:03.76).

Girls Team Standings — Top 5

  1. Riverview Sarasota, 395
  2. Windermere, 305
  3. Creekside, 192
  4. Oviedo, 154
  5. Newsome, 123

Boys’ Recap

After seeing a stretch of four consecutive state titles end last year, Sarasota returned to the top, finishing 23 points better than runner-up Riverview Sarasota.

Sarasota was led by senior and Alabama commit Bogdan Zverev, who won the 200 IM in 1:45.23 and the 100 fly in 46.99, both personal best times.

In the 100 fly, Zverev outtouched runner-up and Jupiter junior Charles Howard (47.00), beating him by one one-hundredth of a second.

The other multiple event winner was Wellington senior Andreas Da Silva, who set personal best times to win the 100 free (43.72) and the 100 back (48.42).

Da Silva also anchored Wellington’s winning teams in both the 200 free and 400 free relays. The other team members in each relay were Julian Granison, Oliver Fergus and Dillon Metz.

The 200 medley relay was won by Winter Park’s team of Denzo Senekal, Ian Heysen, David Fishberg and Mason Nordquist in 1:32.14.

Other individual winners were:

  • Howard, a Michigan commit, won the 200 free in a personal best time of 1:37.16.
  • Granison won the 50 free in a time of 20.11.
  • Hagerty senior Noah Stasik captured the 1-meter diving event with 520.95 points.
  • Braddock junior Nicolas Kokidko took the 500 free in a personal best time of 4:22.98., He was also runner-up in the 200 free.
  • Heysen, a senior Virginia commit, won the 100 breast in 54.67, repeating as champion in the event. Last season, he set what remains his personal best of 53.41 in the state prelims before winning the final in 53.95.

Boys Team Standings — Top 5

  1. Sarasota, 231
  2. Riverview Sarasota, 208
  3. Winter Park, 199
  4. Wellington, 169
  5. Braddock, 145

Read the full story on SwimSwam: Riverview Sarasota Girls, Sarasota Boys Top Field At Florida 4A State Championships

How Worker Ants are Manipulated by Parasitic Ants to Kill Their Queen

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A sneaky, stealthy parasite queen can turn an ant colony against itself. Newly-mated queens of two parasitic ant species have been found to sneak into an ant colony, creep towards the resident ant queen, and spray a chemical to trigger matricide, i.e., tricking ants into slaughtering their own mother so she can take over the colony.

Matricide is a rare phenomenon in nature, seldom observed, especially among animals that receive substantial benefits from maternal care. While some insects may kill their queen under certain circumstances, these usually serve the evolutionary interests of the workers. But, in this newly discovered case, the queen elimination in Lasius flavus and Lasius japonicus species arises in a parasitic context, triggered by the invading ant queens from other species – Lasius orientalis or Lasius umbratus.

“I first learned of induced matricide – and I was so stunned that I was at a loss for words for a while,” says the study lead author, Keizo Takasuka, in an email to New Atlas.

In their new study, Takasuka and her colleagues describe an intriguing form of social parasitism in the journal Current Biology. The researchers examined the two parasitic ants, L. orientalis and L. umbratus. After mating, these queen ants started their search for a host colony, such as L. flavus and L. japonicus, and acquired the host odor through direct physical contact with a host worker.

After soaking up the host colony’s scent, the invading queen wanders unnoticed through the nest like an undercover spy to locate the resident queen. On getting closer to the resident queen, she bends her metasoma (abdomen) and sprays an unidentified fluid at the host queen. Researchers hypothesize the sprayed fluid is formic acid.

“Formic acid is a hallmark secretion of the subfamily Formicinae – the group to which Lasius belongs. Given that formicine ants actively use formic acid for various purposes, it is a parsimonious hypothesis that the sprayed fluid here is also formic acid,” Takasuka tells us.

Immediately after the spray, the host workers become agitated by the odor of the formic acid and begin attacking their own mother queen. Takasuka says that the fluid effectively turns the host queen into a perceived menace, a high-priority enemy, rather than merely raising general aggression.

The parasitic ant then repeatedly sprays the host queen every few hours. The worker ant attacks on their queen get more intense with each spray. The study recorded almost 15 sprays from the parasitic queen before the host workers killed and dismantled their mother.

Within 10 days of this matricide, the rival queen starts laying eggs and is accepted as a new queen of the colony.

“I see it just as a fascinating, brutal survival strategy,” Takasuka told us.

Takasuka says that temporary social parasitism has evolved twice within Lasius, and induced matricide appears to have evolved independently in those lineages as well. This suggests that once a parasite possesses a chemical or spraying mechanism that can trick the host workers into perceiving their own queen as an enemy, indirect queen-killing can achieve the goal of colony takeover at a lower risk than direct attack. This provides favorable conditions that preference the evolution of induced matricide.

The study was published in the journal Current Biology.

Australian visa of South African man seen at neo-Nazi rally revoked

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A South African man who was seen attending a neo-Nazi rally outside an Australian state parliament has had his visa revoked.

Matthew Gruter, who has been in Australia since 2022, took part in an anti-Jewish protest outside the New South Wales parliament organised by the National Socialist Network earlier this month.

He was seen among around 60 men clad in black, who held up a banner that said “Abolish the Jewish lobby”, Australian media report.

Australia has seen a recent rise in right-wing extremism. Its government made the Nazi salute punishable by a mandatory prison term earlier this year.

Australia’s Home Affairs Minister, Tony Burke, confirmed the cancellation of Mr Gruter’s visa, saying: “If you are on a visa, you are a guest.

“If you’re a citizen, you’re a full member of the Australian family. Like with any household, if a guest turns up to show hatred and wreck the household, they can be told it’s time to go home.”

Mr Gruter moved to Australia with his wife and works as a civil engineer, according to ABC News.

The National Socialist Network, which organised the rally on 8 November, is a well-known neo-Nazi group in Australia. Mr Gruter is a senior member of the group in New South Wales, the Sydney Morning Herald reports.

Demonstrators repeatedly chanted “blood and honour”, a slogan associated with the Hitler Youth, according to ABC News.

New South Wales Premier Chris Minns described the rally, which lasted about 20 minutes, as a “shocking display of hatred and racism and antisemitism”.

Sarah Schwartz, executive officer of the Jewish Council of Australia, told ABC News neo-Nazi groups were a threat to multiculturalism in the country and there needed to be a distinction between peaceful protests and “hateful stunts”.

“They’re acts of hate speech, and they should be considered as such,” she added.

Tokyo Adopts 4-Day Workweek to Combat ‘Death by Overwork,’ New Japanese Prime Minister Schedules 3 a.m. Meeting

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When it comes to the future of work, Japan is caught in a tug-of-war.

Tokyo officials are pushing for a four-day workweek, hoping a shorter schedule will ease the nation’s notoriously punishing work culture and curb “karoshi”—which translates to death from overwork. With birthrates falling and burnout rising, many see the shift not as a perk, but a necessity for Japan’s economic survival. 

But the country’s new prime minister, Sanae Takaichi, is signaling a very different approach. The 64-year-old drew scrutiny this month for summoning staff to a meeting at 3 a.m.—not for a national security crisis, but simply to get a jump on her appearance before parliament.

While she later acknowledged the early start “caused inconvenience” to her staff, she defended the action as necessary to address lawmakers’ questions, according to The New York Times. But it’s not the first time Takaichi has indicated her comfort with an intense work cadence.

After being elected, Takaichi said she planned to “discard the term ‘work-life balance’ for myself. I will work, work, work, work, and work.” In practice, that means Takaichi reportedly sleeps about only two hours a night—sometimes up to four—a habit she admitted to lawmakers is probably “bad” for her skin.

Still, even as Japan pushes to spur economic growth while easing workplace pressures, Takaichi insists she supports policy changes that protect workers’ health—even if she wasn’t leading by example.

“Indeed, if we can create a situation where people can properly balance childcare and caregiving responsibilities according to their wishes, and also being able to work, enjoy leisure time, and relax—that would be ideal,” Takaichi said, according to AFP.

A shortened workweek could be just around the corner

Birth rates in Japan hit record lows earlier this year, when between January and June, the country recorded some 339,000 births—about 10,000 fewer than the same period last year, according to the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare. Declining birthrates pose a major threat to consumer-facing industries in particular, which depend on growing demand.

Proponents of four-day workweeks say it could reverse the trend of declining birthrates by giving parents more time to raise families and share household responsibilities. 

According to the IMF, half of Japanese women who have fewer children report they did so in part because of the increased housework that another child would bring. The shifts in work schedules can also boost housework equity, with a four-day workweek trial conducted across six countries by 4 Day Week Global finding men spent 22% more time on childcare and 23% more time on housework.

“The upside from [four-day workweek experiments] has been less stress, less burnout, better rest, better sleep, less cost to the employee, higher levels of focus and concentration during the working hours—and in some cases, greater commitment to the organization as a result,” Peter Miscovich, global future of work leader at real-estate services company JLL, previously told Fortune.

With artificial intelligence revolutionizing the workplace in its own regard, tech experts suggest reduced work schedules may arrive sooner than expected.

“What will jobs be like?” Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates questioned Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show in February. “Should we just work like 2 or 3 days a week?”

Hamas refuses international oversight of Gaza ahead of UN decision | Latest on Israel-Palestine tensions

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Paul McCartney includes new song on vinyl version of album protesting UK AI copyright law proposal

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In February, more than 1,000 artists – including Kate Bush, Annie Lennox of Eurythmics, and Damon Albarn of Blur and The Gorillaz – released a “silent album” in protest against the UK government’s proposed changes to copyright law.

Now the album is being released on vinyl, with a bonus track –  a recording of an empty studio – from Beatles legend Sir Paul McCartney.

The LP will be available from December 8, with all profits from sales of the album donated to the charity, Help Musicians.

The bonus track marks McCartney’s latest UK copyright law-related protest. In May, over 400 artists, including McCartney, Sir Elton John and Dua LipaColdplay, and Shirley Bassey, among others, signed a letter to UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer urging his government to mandate transparency in the training of AI, and to create a licensing marketplace for AI developers and copyright holders.

February’s release of the silent album protesting the UK government’s planned changes to copyright law took aim at a proposal that would make it easier to train AI models on copyrighted work without a license.

The album, titled Is This What We Want?, featured recordings of empty studios and performance spaces, which organizers say were aimed to represent the impact on artists’ and music professionals’ livelihoods “if the government does not change course”.

The digital release in February 2025 reached No.38 in the UK album chart. The vinyl is being released by The state51 Conspiracy.

According to the press release announcing the new vinyl version of the album, under the proposals, UK copyright law “would be upended to benefit global tech giants”.

As reported in February, the government of Prime Minister Keir Starmer had proposed a plan designed to make the UK competitive in the race to develop artificial intelligence. Based on a 50-point AI Opportunities Action Plan delivered to Parliament in January, the consultation proposed – among other things – creating an “opt-out” system for using copyrighted material to train AI.

However, facing major backlash from the creative sector, the government has said this proposal is no longer its preferred option and it continues to review its approach.

Monday’s press release added that under the proposal, “AI companies would be free to use an artist’s work to train their AI models without permission or remuneration. The government’s proposed changes would require artists to proactively ‘opt-out’ from the theft of their work – reversing the very principle of copyright law”.

It added: “‘Opt-out’ models are near impossible to enforce, have yet to be proven effective anywhere else in the world, and place enormous burdens on artists, particularly emerging talent.”

“The government must commit to not handing the life’s work of the country’s musicians to AI companies for free.”

Ed Newton-Rex

Ed Newton-Rex, the organizer of the album, said: “The government must commit to not handing the life’s work of the country’s musicians to AI companies for free.

“Doing so would be hugely damaging to our world-leading creative industries, and is totally unnecessary, only benefiting overseas tech giants. It should listen to Paul McCartney and the 1,000 other musicians who took part in this album, and resist calls to legalise music theft from the big tech lobby.”

“When tech companies lobby governments to give them songs for free, it’s not so they can cure diseases, feed the hungry, or provide clean water where it is needed.”

Paul Sanders, The state51 Conspiracy

Paul Sanders, founder of The state51 Conspiracy, added: “When tech companies lobby governments to give them songs for free, it’s not so they can cure diseases, feed the hungry, or provide clean water where it is needed.

“It’s simply so they can make millions of fake songs and keep all the profits for themselves. As a company with a lifelong commitment to musicians The state51 Conspiracy was honoured to be asked to help get this message out on vinyl. All profits go to Help Musicians, which is what our politicians should be doing instead of sucking up to tech bros.”Music Business Worldwide

Ukraine to receive US liquefied natural gas through Greece

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Vital supplies of US liquefied natural gas are due to start flowing into war-ravaged Ukraine this winter via a pipeline across the Balkans.

The deal was announced after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky met Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in Athens on Sunday. Greece is working to increase the flow of American LNG to its terminals to “replace Russian gas in the region”, Mitsotakis said recently.

The European Commission plans to ban all imports of Russian gas to EU member states by the end of 2027, arguing revenue from such sales funds Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Zelensky is currently in France, where he President Emmanuel Macron signed a letter of intent to buy up to 100 Rafale jets.

Fighting continued overnight, with six people reportedly killed in Russian attacks in the Kharkiv, Kherson and Donetsk regions of Ukraine.

Russia’s military said it had taken control of three more Ukrainian villages – one each in the Kharkiv, Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions.

None of the reports could be independently verified.

Speaking earlier in Athens, Zelensky was quoted as saying that deliveries of US LNG would begin in January.

“We rebuild each time the Russians destroy but this truly requires time, much effort, equipment and, regarding gas… imports to compensate for the destruction by the Russians of our own production,” he said.

“Greece is becoming an energy security provider for your homeland,” Mitsotakis told the Ukrainian president.

Zelensky said Kyiv had allocated funds for gas imports from European partners and banks under European Commission guarantees, as well as from Ukrainian banks, to help cover imports through to March at a cost of nearly €2bn (£1.8bn; $2.3bn), according to news agency Reuters.

Since 2015, when it stopped buying Russian gas directly, Ukraine has been receiving supplies from various EU states.

The Soviet-era Trans-Balkan pipeline links Ukraine to LNG terminals in Greece via Moldova, Romania and Bulgaria.

There have been fears of an energy crisis in Ukraine this winter after sustained Russian attacks on its energy facilities, notably thermal power plants.

The UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs has issued a formal warning, saying “the approaching winter poses new risks for Ukrainians… as intensified attacks on energy networks undermine efforts to maintain warmth in homes, schools and health centres”.

The letter signed by Zelensky and Macron while visiting the Villacoublay air base near Paris sets out possible future contracts for Ukraine to acquire Rafale fighter jets “with their associated weapons”.

The letter, which is not a purchase and sales contract, also sets out deals for SAMP-T air defence systems, radar systems and drones.

On an visit to Sweden last month, Zelensky signed a letter of intent to buy between 100 and 150 Gripen fighter jets.

In France, Zelensky also went to Mont Valerien, to the west of Paris, to visit the nascent headquarters of a planned multinational force that may one day help oversee a Ukraine-Russia ceasefire.

Tens of thousands of people, most of them soldiers, have been killed or injured, and millions of civilians have fled their homes, since Russian President Vladimir Putin launched his full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

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Spain vs Turkey: World Cup 2026 Qualifier – Team Updates, Kick-off Time, and Expected Lineups | Soccer Updates

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Who: Spain vs Turkiye
What: UEFA World Cup qualifier, Group E
Where: La Cartuja Stadium in Seville, Spain
When: Tuesday at 8:45pm (19:45 GMT)

Click here to follow our live coverage.

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Unbeaten Spain (5-0-0) is guaranteed direct qualification into the FIFA World Cup 2026 if they beat Turkiye in their last Group E fixture on Tuesday in Seville.

Armed with a three-point lead – and a huge goal difference – Luis de la Fuente’s side are in a highly advantageous position to clinch a 13th consecutive appearance at football’s global showpiece.

Turkiye (4-0-1), for their part, still have a mathematical chance to steal the top spot from Spain in their Matchday 10 finale – but they will need to rain down a plethora of goals on the reigning European champions to avoid the runners-up spot.

Here is all to know about their Group E return clash:

Current Group E standings (one fixture remaining):

  • Spain – 15 points (from five matches)
  • Turkiye – 12 points (from five matches)
  • Georgia – 3 points (from five matches)
  • Bulgaria – 0 points (from five matches)

How can Spain qualify for the World Cup?

Spain currently sits at the top of their Group E with five wins out of five fixtures and have a perfect record with 15 points.

Scenario 1:

A draw or a win in their final match against Turkiye would seal their spot at the 2026 World Cup with an insurmountable lead in the group.

Scenario 2: 

A loss to Turkiye would mean both teams conclude the qualification period with 15 points from six matches – but with Spain having a vastly superior goal difference.

To finish first in Group E, Turkiye would have to pull off a stunning seven-goal victory away to Spain to pip La Roja for automatic World Cup qualification.

How can Turkiye qualify for the World Cup?

Turkiye sit in second position in Group E with 12 points – nine points clear of next-best Georgia.

Unless they can defeat Spain by seven goals, Turkiye will enter the UEFA playoff competition in March as the group runners-up.

Turkiye last took part in the World Cup finals in 2002, finishing a surprise third place in the tournament that was co-hosted by Japan and South Korea.

Spain’s Mikel Merino celebrates scoring his side’s fifth goal against Turkiye in their UEFA World Cup Qualifier Group E fixture at Konya Buyuksehir Arena, Konya, Turkiye on September 7, 2025 [Murad Sezer/Reuters]

What happened the last time Spain and Turkiye played?

Mikel Merino’s hat-trick helped Spain thrash hosts Turkiye 6-0 in their last World Cup qualifier on September 7.

The home side had no answer to Spain’s dominance, undone time and again by the visitors’ speed and finesse, with a helpless Turkish defence torn apart on every counterattack.

That loss remains Turkiye’s only defeat in Group E.

Will Lamine Yamal play for Spain?

Barcelona star forward Lamine Yamal will miss Spain’s final World Cup qualifier against Turkiye as he continues to manage an ongoing groin issue.

Yamal, 18, underwent a small procedure in Barcelona on November 10 to try and fix the problem. Doctors estimate his recovery time from the surgery at 7-10 days.

Lamine Yamal reacts.
Star forward Lamine Yamal is one of several key players missing from Spain’s final Group E fixture against Turkiye on Tuesday [File: Murad Sezer/Reuters]

Head-to-head

Spain has never lost to Turkiye in the six international fixtures they have played since 2005.

  • Spain – won 5
  • Turkiye – won 0
  • Draws – 1

Form Guide:

Spain: W-W-W-W-W (UEFA World Cup qualifiers, most recent result last)

Turkiye: W-L-W-W-W (UEFA World Cup qualifiers, most recent result last)

Spain team news

In addition to Yamal’s unavailability, Spain heads into the Turkiye fixture without other key players Dani Carvajal, Pedri and Rodri.

Dean Huijsen is also questionable with a groin issue and is likely to be a game-time decision for De la Fuente.

Mikel Oyarzabal, who has scored eight goals in his last eight international appearances, will again be the No 1 choice to lead the line for Spain on Tuesday.

Turkiye team news

The Turkish Football Federation has officially ruled out Inter Milan midfield star Hakan Calhanoglu against Spain after he picked up a wrist injury during the previous international match against Bulgaria on Saturday.

Calhanoglu, who is the top goalscorer in Italy’s top-flight Serie A this season, will likely be replaced in an attacking midfield position by Isak Vural, who has been brought into the squad.

Head coach Vincenzo Montella will almost certainly be without Galatasaray defender Kaan Ayhan, who is highly questionable after he was substituted on Saturday with a groin injury.

Midfielder Ismail Yuksek will serve a one-match ban after picking up a second yellow card in the qualifying campaign against Bulgaria.

Hakan Calhanoglu reacts.
Hakan Calhanoglu’s omission from the Turkiye side to play Spain makes their monumental task of outscoring the European champions by seven goals all the more difficult [Umit Bektas/Reuters]

Predicted starting lineups:

Spain: Simon (goalkeeper); Porro, Cubarsi, Laporte, Cucurella; Merino, Zubimendi, Ruiz; Torres, Oyarzabal, Baena

Turkiye: Cakir (goalkeeper); Celik, Demiral, Bardakci, Kadioglu; Vural, Kocu; Aydin, Guler, Yildiz; Akturkoglu

What the coaches had to say:

De la Fuente:

The Spain head coach is not taking his team’s unbeaten Group E run for granted before Tuesday’s fixture with Turkiye.

“Our aim is to qualify for the [FIFA] World Cup,” he said.

“Regardless of the results in this phase, we want to win to secure our place in the qualifiers, and that means fighting, working hard and doing things right to give ourselves the best chance of winning.

“It’s very difficult to win and we want to continue on our path, but one game at a time and one day at a time,” De la Fuente said.

“Every now and then it’s good to keep our feet on the ground. What this team is doing is very difficult, but we want to keep improving.”

Montella:

The Turkiye head coach has deployed a strong tactical game plan against Spain, but concedes his side’s chances of overtaking the European champions in the points table are slim.

“It [the fixture] won’t have much effect on the points table, but it’s important for us nonetheless,” he said. “I believe in my players.”

When and where is the FIFA World Cup 2026?

The tournament is being staged across the United States, Canada and Mexico. The first match will be played in Mexico City on June 11, while the final will be staged in New Jersey, US, on July 19.

Due to the expansion of the tournament – from 32 teams to 48 – the 39-day event is the longest in its history.

MetLife Stadium.
The MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, US, will stage the FIFA World Cup 2026 final on July 19 [File: Kena Betancur/VIEWpress via Getty Images]

Deutsche Bank changes Azimut stock rating to Hold due to regulatory concerns

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Deutsche Bank downgrades Azimut stock to Hold on regulatory issues