Ansu Fati showcased his potential as the 17-year-old scored for Barcelona in their 2-0 win over Leganes, a result that took them five points clear of Real Madrid.
Playing at an empty Nou Camp for the first time since the coronavirus outbreak, goals from Fati and Lionel Messi gave Barca the three points and kept the pressure on Real, who play Valencia on Thursday night.
Fati, still only 17, became the second-youngest player ever to five La Liga goals when he fired home three minutes before the break.
The teenager has a long way to go until he catches up with Messi, though, and the Argentinian scored his 26th goal of the campaign in all competitions from the penalty spot in the second half.
How Fati lit up deserted Nou Camp…
In eerie surroundings at one of the great football stadiums, the club placed banners and mosaics in the stands to honour those affected by coronavirus, whilst on the pitch the players stood silent for a minute at kick-off as music by local musicians was played through the speakers.
Barcelona restarted their campaign last week with a routine 4-0 win over Real Mallorca and were perhaps overconfident early on as Leganes had the two best chances in the first 15 minutes.
Clement Lenglet managed to clear an effort off the line from Miguel Angel Guerrero before the same player was denied by the outside of the post from a tight angle. However, whilst always dominating possession, Barcelona always carried a huge threat and eventually took control and opened the scoring through Fati’s low shot from inside the area on 42 minutes.
Image: Ansu Fati is congratulated by his teammates
Antoine Griezmann, who cut a frustrated figure, had a goal disallowed on 64 minutes after VAR determined that Nelson Semedo was offside in the build-up to the Frenchman finding the net.
Messi danced his way through half the Leganes team minutes later – a run which was ended by a foul inside the area from Jonathan Silva. The referee pointed to the spot and Messi duly obliged to score his 629th goal for Barcelona.
What’s next?
Up next for Barcelona, it’s Sevilla on Friday evening (kick-off 9pm).
Meanwhile, Leganes play Real Mallorca, also on Friday (kick-off 6.30pm).
Federal prosecutors in California have charged Steven Carrillo, a supporter of the far-right “Boogaloo†movement, with the murder of federal protective security officer Dave Underwood during a May 29 anti-racism protest in Oakland.
Federal leaders initially suggested antifa, a loosely organized group of anti-fascist activists, was behind the killing. “This antifa violent activity has to stop,†White House national security adviser Robert O’Brien said May 31, referring to Underwood’s death.Â
But Carrillo, who was charged last week in the killing of a Santa Cruz, California, police deputy, has ties to the right-wing movement that has shown up, sometimes heavily armed, to anti-racism protests around the country in recent weeks.Â
According to the new charges, Carrillo shot at Underwood and his partner, who was wounded in the attack, from the window of a white van as they guarded the Oakland Federal Building. Federal prosecutors also charged 30-year-old Robert Alvin Justus Jr. with aiding and abetting Carrillo’s attack in Oakland, accusing him of functioning as a getaway driver. Justus Jr. told the FBI that he had met Carrillo on Facebook and arranged to drive together to Oakland for the Black Lives Matter protests, with Carrillo picking him up in the white van and the two driving around the city prior to the attack. Justus Jr. claimed Carrillo dropped him off after the killing and told him to remain silent.
Underwood’s death launched an eight-day search that ended with Carrillo allegedly killing another law enforcement officer during a shootout with authorities after his van full of weapons and bomb-making materials was spotted on June 6 in Santa Cruz.Â
Carrillo, 32, was charged last week on 19 counts related to the attack in Santa Cruz. He is accused of using an AR-15-style rifle to kill Deputy Sgt. Damon Gutzwiller and injure another deputy as they approached his hideout. After reportedly hijacking a car to attempt an escape, a wounded Carrillo wrote slogans related to the Boogaloo movement in his own blood on the hood of the stolen car before his arrest.
The Boogaloo is a far-right, anti-government extremist movement with its roots in internet culture and message boards. Its central ideology revolves around the idea of a coming civil war or violent uprising against the government, but it is also a somewhat amorphous community that includes groups such as militias, white supremacists, Second Amendment advocates and online trolls. Some of its adherents have also recently been arrested at protests or charged in terrorism plots, creating growing concern over its capability for violence.Â
The Boogaloo movement, which is seeped in the irony and self-reference of online groups, has embraced symbols such as Hawaiian shirts and igloos along with its extremist rhetoric and military-style gear. After Carrillo was arrested, prosecutors say law enforcement searched a white van he used in the attacks and found a ballistic vest with patches sewn onto it, including an igloo and Hawaiian print.
The movement has gained increasing attention through the presence of the so-called Boogaloo Bois at nationwide anti-racism rallies as they look to co-opt the demonstrations to further their own goals. Federal prosecutors in Nevada charged three Boogaloo supporters with terrorism offenses earlier this month, detailing a plot to incite mass violence at a Black Lives Matter rally and use firebombs to create chaos. Earlier this year, police also shot and killed a neo-Nazi connected to the movement who had plotted to blow up a hospital.
On Tuesday, Assistant Attorney General for National Security John C. Demers condemned Carrillo’s attack and described the killings as extremist attacks.Â
“Indiscriminate targeting of law enforcement officers by those motivated by violent extremism of any stripe is contrary to our nation’s values and undermines the powerful message of peaceful protesters,†Demers said.
Facebook has been a common gathering place for Boogaloo movement supporters, and groups have proliferated on its platform. Although the platform has attempted to curb their activity ― such as banning the use of “boogaloo†when used in connection to violence ― members have largely found workarounds. The movement’s symbols of igloos and Hawaiian shirts resulted from altering Boogaloo to the similar sounding “big igloo†or “big luau,†evading Facebook’s gesture at controlling the spread of the extremist movement.
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Some may describe Bayern Munich’s latest Bundesliga triumph as “boring†or “sad.â€
Those were the exact words used by Arsenal goalkeeper Bernd Leno – previously of Bayer Leverkusen – on the Steil podcast (via Metro) following Bayern’s emphatic 4-2 win against Leno’s former side on June 6.
It may not be exciting for neutrals or Bundesliga fans, but there have been opportunities to knock Bayern off its perch.
Niko Kovac’s appointment as coach in the summer of 2018 was as uninspiring as the Bundesliga title race. But that decision reinvigorated the fight atop the table.
Borussia Dortmund was six points clear of Bayern at the winter break of the 2018-19 season. Then, as has often been the case for Lucien Favre-coached teams, Dortmund failed to win matches against the likes of Eintracht Frankfurt, Hoffenheim, Nurnberg and Augsburg from February to March.
Those nine dropped points from Feb. 2 to March 1 proved decisive, and Bayern won the league in 2018-19 by just two points.
Even as Kovac was sacked last November, there was a glimmer of hope that Dortmund, Leverkusen, RB Leipzig or Borussia Monchengladbach could finally end Bayern’s dominance.
That didn’t happen, thanks to Hansi Flick.
Bayern’s starting lineup in their title-clinching win over Werder Bremen on Tuesday only features one summer signing in right-back Benjamin Pavard. That’s truly astonishing considering the likes of Dietmar Hamann wrote that his former club needed “five or six†new players in a column for Sky Germany in March 2019.
Veteran wingers Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben walked out the door, as did defender Mats Hummels, who was sold back to Dortmund. The “five or six†referenced by Hamann eventually followed.
Pavard, Michael Cuisance and Lucas Hernandez — signed for a club-record €80 million ($122 million) — were the primary permanent transfers. Philippe Coutinho and Ivan Perisic joined on loan, but have accumulated only 18 starts under Flick, be it through injury or tactical reasons. Hernandez also missed time due to a ruptured ankle ligament.
But those injuries were a blessing in disguise for Bayern. David Alaba played across the back line without any hitches. He partnered Jerome Boateng in the centre of defence, who was once thought to be past his best but ended up reclaiming his form of old.
Then there is Thomas Müller, who has registered a record-tying 20 Bundesliga assists this season. Like Boateng, Müller was exiled by Germany coach Joachim Löw, but had Euro 2020 been played this summer, there would’ve been a strong argument to include both players in the final squad.
Kingsley Coman seems to have shaken off his recurring injury problems. His pace, off-the-ball movement and eye for goal helped Bayern come from behind to defeat Leverkusen.
Serge Gnabry was integral to that victory, too, along with several others. The German international has racked up a solid 12 goals and 10 assists this season, surpassing his single-season highs in both categories.
But perhaps the shining example of Bayern’s resurgence is Alphonso Davies. The 19-year-old Canadian was playing for the club’s reserves as recently as November. Yet, until this past weekend against Gladbach, Davies had started 27 straight matches under Flick, the only player to do so.
Considering he had minimal experience at left-back, it’s all the more astonishing how rapidly Davies has grown in the position.
That’s also a testament to Flick’s tactical revolution at the club. He’s highlighted every player’s best attributes and masked their weaknesses, Davies included.
Davies’ influence and areas of improvement have been repeatedly highlighted, but even those defensive deficiencies are slowly eroding.
“[Speed’s] a factor in my game that I use very well but I think over the years going forward with this team I will definitely learn more about better positioning so it doesn’t look like I’m out of position just running back as fast as I can to catch up,†Davies said after Bayern’s win over Dortmund on May 26.
Flick’s high-pressing system certainly benefits Davies. He can push forward regularly thanks to Pavard’s more reserved positioning at right-back, plus one of Joshua Kimmich or Thiago sits back to ensure there are always three or four players to defend counter-attacks.
Because the high press limits the back line’s work, it behooves Davies to roam forward. No other team has attempted more pressures in the attacking third than Bayern, per FBRef.com, so the Bavarians are regularly attempting to recover possession close to goal, thus easing the burden on the defenders.
Flick’s tweaks have also showcased Davies as one of the top pressing full-backs in the Bundesliga this season, as the statistical radar below from StatsBomb highlights.
Alphonso Davies’ statistical radar for Bayern Munich in the Bundesliga this season. (via StatsBomb)
The competition will be fierce next season at the back. Hernandez, provided he stays at the club amid interest from Paris Saint-Germain, can play left-back or centre-back, as can Alaba. Boateng’s renaissance will give him confidence of staying this summer, while Niklas Süle will be hoping that he can recover from his ACL tear to reclaim a spot at centre-back for himself.
Davies has the upper hand given his familiarity of Flick’s system and how vital he is to the team’s build-up, but for the first time since the Pep Guardiola years, Bayern has the depth in quality to continue ruling the Bundesliga.
Jordan’s King Abdullah met virtually with several key lawmakers today, including Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., to reiterate his opposition to “any unilateral measure to annex lands in the West Bank†as laid out under President Donald Trump’s peace plan.
“At meetings held via conference calls with US Congressional leaders and committees, attended by His Royal Highness Crown Prince Al Hussein bin Abdullah II, King Abdullah stressed the importance of establishing an independent, sovereign and viable Palestinian state on the 4 June 1967 lines, with East Jerusalem as its capital,†the Jordanian Royal Court said in a readout.
In addition to McConnell, the king spoke with lawmakers on the Senate Armed Services Committee as well as the Senate and House foreign aid panels.
Why it matters: Abdullah recently refused a phone call with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu because of his push to annex Israeli settlements in the West Bank as well as the entire Jordan Valley. While Netanyahu had hoped to move forward with annexation in July, he said Monday that the Trump administration wanted the prime minister’s rival Blue and White coalition partners on board first.Â
And in the United States, even pro-Israel Democrats have come out against annexation. Twenty-eight Senate Democrats as well as eight Democratic candidates trying to unseat Senate Republicans in battleground states have come out against annexation. House Middle East panel Chairman Ted Deutch, D-Fla., led four of his colleagues in a letter to Netanyahu warning against annexation Monday. The Democratic opposition intensified after the powerful American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) greenlit the pushback last week, so long as the criticism stops there.
What’s next: Although Jordan usually enjoys robust bipartisan support in Congress, conservative Republicans who support the Trump peace plan are pushing Amman to extradite a convicted terrorist to the United States by threatening to end the aid-dependent country’s $1.5 billion in American military and economic assistance. A key State Department official implied this week that the aid could be on the chopping block unless Jordan extradites Ahlam al-Tamimi per a law Congress passed in December. Tamimi helped kill 15 people, including two Americans, in a 2001 bomb attack in Israel.
Know more: Congressional Correspondent Bryant Harris has the story on how pro-Israel Democrats have ramped up their criticism of annexation following the AIPAC greenlight as well the State Department’s potential push to use foreign aid as leverage to secure Tamimi’s extradition from Jordan.
The press conference in Brasilia came hours after the FDA announced its decision, saying hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine are unlikely to be effective in treating Covid-19 based on the latest scientific evidence.
“The studies referenced by the FDA today cannot be used as examples for Brazil or for the rest of the world,” Mayra Pinheiro, a Health Ministry official said during the press conference.
“Our duty is to save lives with the only medication that has been proven clinical evidence to work and which has shown good results in various circumstances in Brazil.”
Hydroxychloroquine had been frequently touted by US President Donald Trump, who claimed to be taking it himself as a preventative measure, despite pleas from scientists to let studies decide if the treatment worked or not.
Research around the world subsequently cast doubt on its effectiveness, and the FDA ultimately determined that the drugs do not meet “the statutory criteria” for emergency use authorization
But Pinheiro on Tuesday dismissed the studies cited by the FDA, claiming that the “quality of their methodology is terrible.”
She also said, without presenting any evidence, that coronavirus cases in Brazil had gone down since May 20, when the Health Ministry approved new guidelines allowing the use of chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine for all patients displaying mild, moderate and severe Covid-19 symptoms if both doctor and patient agree on the use of the drugs.
The Brazilian Society of Pediatrics issued guidance last month, advising hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine only be prescribed to children during controlled clinical trials and with the consent of an adult. There isn’t enough data to prove hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine were safe or efficient for children and teens, the group said.
The World Health Organization is still reviewing the use of hydroxychloroquine in its Solidarity Trial, a multi-country clinical study of Covid-19 treatment options. But a trial in the United Kingdom, called the Recovery Trial, recently announced plans to stop using hydroxychloroquine in its study due to there being “no evidence of benefit,” according to the researchers.
Brazil has suffered the second most-deadly coronavirus outbreak in the world, while its populist leader Jair Bolsonaro has frequently downplayed the severity of Covid-19 and has criticized lockdown measures.
The Trump administration sued the former national security adviser John R. Bolton on Tuesday to stop the publication of his highly anticipated memoir about his time in the White House, saying it contained classified information that would compromise national security if it became public.
The book, “The Room Where It Happened,†is set for release on June 23. Administration officials have repeatedly warned Mr. Bolton against publishing the book.
Mr. Bolton “had negotiated a book deal allegedly worth about $2 million and had drafted a 500-plus-page manuscript rife with classified information, which he proposed to release to the world,†the Justice Department said in a lawsuit against Mr. Bolton filed in federal court in Washington.
Mr. Bolton’s lawyer, Charles Cooper, has said that his client acted in good faith and that the Trump administration is abusing a standard review process to prevent Mr. Bolton from revealing information that is merely embarrassing to President Trump, but not a threat to national security.
On Monday, Mr. Trump accused Mr. Bolton of violating policies related to classified information by moving ahead with the book.
But the book has already been printed and bound and has shipped to warehouses, which could make it more difficult for the administration to stop Mr. Bolton’s account from becoming public.
Mr. Bolton submitted the manuscript to the administration for review in January. At the time, the impeachment inquiry was underway into whether Mr. Trump’s dealings with Ukraine constituted an abuse of power.
Democrats asked Mr. Bolton to testify voluntarily in the House impeachment inquiry, but he declined, and they never sought a subpoena, fearing a protracted court fight. Mr. Bolton offered to testify in the impeachment trial in the Senate, where Republicans control the majority. They declined to call him.
One critical account from the book emerged during the trial, when The New York Times reported that Mr. Bolton, in his manuscript, said that Mr. Trump directly tied military aid to Ukraine to his desire for investigations he sought to undermine a political rival, former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. Mr. Bolton made clear, in a statement released this week, that the book contained other explosive details.
The government’s system for reviewing books and other material by former officials was created to ensure that classified and other sensitive information remained secret. Officials must agree to submit any works to the review process in order to obtain a security clearance.
A group of former national security officials said last year in a lawsuit that the pre-publication review process for books and articles unjustifiably restricted their rights to free speech and due process.
They claimed that the review system, which is governed by several ambiguous policies, gives reviewing officials too much discretionary power over what is published and allows them to quickly clear reviews for former officials who write positively about the government.
Paderborn relegated following defeat to Union Berlin, Villarreal stay on track for Europa League berth
Last Updated: 16/06/20 10:49pm
Borussia Monchengladbach’s Ibrahima Traore and Lars Stindl celebrate
A first-half brace from striker Jonas Hofmann and a second-half strike by Lars Stindl gave Champions League-chasing Borussia Monchengladbach a comfortable 3-0 win over hapless VfL Wolfsburg, lifting them to fourth in the Bundesliga on Tuesday.
Hofmann latched onto a beautiful angled pass from Breel Embolo to fire his first in the 11th minute, and he made it two on the half-hour mark, collecting a lay-off from Matthias Ginter before guiding the ball past the keeper.
Wolfsburg had plenty of possession but their sloppy passing was often punished, and Stindl was able to exploit a mistake in the middle of the field to start a counterattack that he finished himself to make it 3-0 in the 65th minute.
Elsewhere, Paderborn were consigned to relegation after they were beaten 1-0 at Union Berlin.
Hertha Berlin‘s faint hopes of securing a Europa League place next season were all but ended following a 2-1 defeat at Freiburg.
Meanwhile, Arminia Bielefeld secured promotion to the Bundesliga next season after rivals Hamburg SV stumbled to a 1-1 draw against VfL Osnabrueck. The result guaranteed Bielefeld a top-two finish with three games left to play.
La Liga: Bacca keeps Villarreal in contention
Carlos Bacca makes no mistake from close range to put Villarreal ahead
Villarreal kept alive their hopes of claiming a Europa League qualifying berth after a first-half goal by striker Carlos Bacca gave them a 1-0 home win over struggling Mallorca in La Liga.
The result lifted Villarreal two places to seventh on 44 points from 29 games, two behind sixth-placed Atletico Madrid who have a game in hand. Mallorca stayed 18th on 25 points as the defeat dented their hopes of avoiding relegation.
Elsewhere, relegation-threatened Espanyol secured a heroic 0-0 draw at Champions League-chasing Getafe on Tuesday after playing most of the La Liga match with 10 men.
Espanyol were almost immediately on the back foot when defender Bernardo Espinosa was dismissed in the 16th minute for appearing to elbow an opponent while waiting for a cross.
Espanyol could even have taken the lead later in the first half when Jonathan Calleri combined with Chinese forward Wu Lei but could only fire straight at goalkeeper David Soria.
The point took Espanyol off the bottom of the table and into 19th place on 24 points, two points from the safety zone. Getafe remain fifth on 47 as they again missed out on the chance to move into the top four having lost 2-1 at Granada last Friday.
Sky Sports will show 64 live Premier League games when the season resumes. In addition to the 39 matches already scheduled to be broadcast exclusively live on Sky Sports before the coronavirus interruption, 25 more matches will be available on both Sky Sports Premier League and Sky’s free-to-air Pick channel, allowing the whole nation to be part of the return of live sport.
Fairfax County Police tweeted Monday that they found a 65-pound alligator snapping turtle near a pond in a residential area of Alexandria, Virginia — a suburb of Washington.
The majestic creature was eventually named “Lord Fairfax.â€
According to local police, its animal control division got a call about “a large turtle†attempting to collect taxes from peasants. “Much to their surprise,†they found the massive baby dinosaur instead.Â
Recently, our Animal Protection Police received a call about a large turtle in a residential area of Alexandria. Much to their surprise, it was a 65 lb alligator snapping turtle! Learn more at: https://t.co/RtHz4aJ5qP#FCPDpic.twitter.com/qgYFRmUyMS
— Fairfax County Police (@FairfaxCountyPD) June 15, 2020
Officials at the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries said in a Facebook post last week that because the turtle is not native to the area, it was likely raised in captivity and was released into “the wild by well-meaning pet owners.†Alligator snapping turtles can be found in river drainages that flow into the Gulf of Mexico and have been spotted in the Florida panhandle, Georgia and East Texas.
Local authorities emphasized that the turtle was pretty lucky to be found. Due to its domestic upbringing, the reptilian overlord “would have most likely experienced a slow death†due freezing or starvation. The post also notes that Lord Fairfax has found a new home at The Virginia Zoo, where it will hopefully be able to reign over lesser critters that lack proper British titles.
Once photos of Lord Fairfax’s aristocratic splendor were shared on Twitter, users were quick to pledge their allegiance.
And, although the turtle’s size seems pretty colossal, experts said Lord F. is a “youngster†and could end up weighing 200 pounds.Â
According to National Geographic, adult, male alligator snapping turtles typically weigh 175 pounds but could tip the scales at 220. And they put on this weight by utilizing a truly unique hunting technique.
“Its tongue sports a bright-red, worm-shaped piece of flesh that, when displayed by a motionless turtle on a river bottom, draws curious fish or frogs close enough to be snatched.â€
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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration sued former national security adviser John Bolton on Tuesday to block the publication of a book that the White House says contains classified information.
The suit in Washington’s federal court follows warnings from President Donald Trump that Bolton could face a “criminal problem†if he doesn’t halt plans to publish the book. The administration has also said the former adviser did not complete a pre-publication review to ensure that the manuscript did not contain classified material.
Bolton’s attorney, Chuck Cooper, has said Bolton worked for months with classification specialists to avoid releasing classified material. He has accused the White House of using national security information as a pretext to censor Bolton.
“I get a lot of DMs from people sending racist things their classmates have said online, things people have said in livestreams, on Snapchat stories,†she said. “If I have their Instagram or Snapchat, I’ll post that along with their racist behavior because I believe in having productive conversations. My aim is not to send people to bully these people; it’s to send people to go educate and inform them about what they’re saying and how they’re wrong.â€
But often, the result is a social media pile-on: harassment, doxxing, cancellation. Brynna Barry, 16, a student at a Catholic day school in Jacksonville, Fla., learned this firsthand.
After posting some advocacy on Instagram and TikTok for the Blue Lives Matter movement, Ms. Barry, whose father is a police officer, was met with vicious harassment. Her posts spread across her peers’ Instagram feeds, and “my own friends were commenting that I was racist, that they can’t support me,†she said. “Things travel fast. I’m nervous about my address getting leaked.â€
Bigotry on Video
For students who have been on the receiving end of racial slurs for years, these Instagram accounts can feel like the only theater of justice they have. Jayden York, 18, a recent graduate of Bowie High School, decided to share a Snapchat post his former girlfriend had made, posting it on his own Snapchat. In it, she used the N-word as she stated that she would “never date†a black person again.
“Within 30 minutes it had 1,000 views, and it blew up on Twitter,†he said. “At first I was like, she deserved it. She just doesn’t understand the stuff we have to go through. I thought I’d put her on blast so she got a little taste of what we have to go through.â€
Solange Dzeketey, 15, a black student at Pacific Ridge School in Carlsbad, Calif., said that she understands the feeling of wanting justice for having to endure a lifetime of discrimination. She follows one account called Exposing Ignorance on Instagram and has seen students from surrounding high schools exposed for bigoted behavior. But because she trusts her school’s administration, she has shied away from outing peers on social media.
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