Archive July 31, 2025

Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,253

On Thursday, July 31, 2018, this is how things are going.

Fighting

  • At least four people have been killed in a Russian drone attack in Kiev, according to the Ground Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine’s Telegram. A garage cooperative was hit by the debris from fallen Russian drones, which caused a gas pipe to ignite in a three-story residential complex.
  • Three service members were killed and 18 others were hurt in a Tuesday Russian missile attack on a Ukrainian military training facility, according to Ukraine’s ground forces’ announcement on Telegram.
  • According to a Facebook post from the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, Russian forces attacked Ukrainian emergency service workers who had just started a fire in the city of Orikhiv in the Zaporizhia region of southern Ukraine. No injuries were reported.
  • An air force officer with the rank of major has been detained by Ukraine’s domestic security agency on suspicion of spying for Russia by leaked information and suggesting strike strategies for the famed, Western-donated F-16 and Mirage 2000 fighter jets.

International Cooperation

  • Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the president of Ukraine, stated that he approved fundamental principles for a significant-scale American nuclear agreement. In his evening video address to the nation, Zelenskyy said, “These are large-scale agreements, which I discussed with President [Donald] Trump, and I hope very much that we will be able to implement them all,” without giving further details.
  • The Italian government announced that it had called the Russian ambassador to protest the presence of Italian President Sergio Mattarella on a list of Western leaders who had been accused of spreading anti-Russian sentiment.
    Moscow claimed that Russia had long-standing economic immunity and that it is continuing to monitor President Trump’s most recent threat to impose sanctions on the nation if Ukraine does not end its war with Ukraine within days.

Economy

  • According to officials and growers, a significant locust invasion is threatening sunflower and other crops in the southern regions of Ukraine, largely as a result of the conflict against Russia’s invasion, which makes it impossible to apply conventional pest control techniques near the front lines.

Ex-NBA player Arenas arrested over illegal poker ring

Former NBA star Gilbert Arenas has been arrested and charged with allegedly running an illegal, high-stakes poker ring out of his home in the Los Angeles area.

Mr Arenas, 43, is charged along with five other defendants, including one Israeli man who prosecutors claim is a “suspected organized crime figure”.

Prosecutors have charged him with three federal crimes, including operating an illegal gambling business and making false statements to investigators.

Prosecutors used his nickname, “Agent Zero” which he acquired during his time as an All-Star point guard – in charging documents unsealed on Wednesday.

According to the indictment, between September 2021 to July 2022 Mr Arenas rented out his mansion in Encino to be used for illegal poker games.

Prosecutors say he directed his co-defendants to prepare the home for games, and to collect a “rake” – money taken from each pot which goes to the organisers.

Co-defendant Yevgeni Gershman, who officials label a “suspected organized crime figure from Israel”, was allegedly responsible for hiring young women to “serve drinks, provide massages and offer companionship” to players, in exchange for tips.

In return, the women were charged a “tax”, prosecutors say. Chefs, valets, and armed security guards were also allegedly hired by the defendants.

Mr Gershman is also facing separate charges of immigration and marriage fraud.

They are charged alongside Evgenni Tourevski, 48, Allan Austria, 52, Yarin Cohen, 27, and Ievgen Krachun, 43.

Mr Arenas made the NBA All-Star team three times, and played 11 seasons in the league. Throughout his career he played for the Golden State Warriors, Washington Wizards, Orlando Magic and Memphis Grizzlies. More recently, he has hosted a podcast, Gil’s Arena, where he and other former players discuss basketball.

The indictment adds that Mr Arenas falsely claimed to know nothing about gambling in his home, and filed a petition to get the money back that was seized by federal agents during a raid on 20 July, 2022.

His trial is scheduled for 23 September. If convicted of all three charges, he faces up to 15 years in prison.

Under California law, a poker match becomes illegal if someone running the game takes a house cut, or fee.

This is not his first time facing legal issues. In January 2010, he was charged with illegal gun possession after drawing a firearm during a card game in the Washington DC Wizards locker room.

In China’s shadow, Taiwan is building a drone army to repel an invasion

Three sea drones skimmed across Su’ao Bay off Taiwan’s rugged northeast coast on a bright morning last month.

The tiny “stealth” Carbon Voyager 1, fast-moving Black Tide I, and explosives-carrying Sea Shark 800 were the highlight of an expo for companies vying to help Taiwan build up a maritime drone force.

In the event that Beijing’s forces attempt to invade the self-ruled island, which Beijing has threatened to annex with force, drones could be crucial in repelling China.

Su’ao is just 60km (37 miles) from Fulong, one of the so-called “red beaches” identified by defence experts as potential landing sites for the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) due to their unique topography.

Whereas Russia sent tanks across land borders to launch its war on Ukraine in 2022, a Chinese invasion of Taiwan would involve Beijing sending vessels across the 180-km- (112-mile-) wide Taiwan Strait.

On June 17, 2025, a SeaShark 800 sea drone developed by Thunder Tiger is exhibited at a sea drone expo in Yilan, Taiwan [Anne Wang/Reuters]

While the Taiwan Strait’s choppy waters and Taiwan’s mountainous geography and shallow beaches pose formidable challenges to an amphibious invasion, technological advances and a decades-long modernisation campaign by the PLA have steadily chipped away at the island’s natural defences.

Taiwan’s defense strategy has steadily changed in response to a significantly larger and more powerful adversary, making an invasion too costly for Beijing to take into account.

Drones, from sea craft to single-use suicide weapons and high-altitude intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) vehicles, are a key element of Taipei’s so-called “porcupine strategy”.

“It doesn’t mean that we need to build one drone for their one drone”, Chen Kuan-ting, a lawmaker from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party who sits on the legislature’s foreign affairs and defence committee, told Al Jazeera.

Taiwan can maintain its advantage through “disruptive innovations,” Chen said.

“We have to encourage startups to find something cheaper and something that would fit the terrain of Taiwan. He claimed that this is advantageous for us.

Taiwan is no stranger to high-tech manufacturing.

The East Asian democracy is the world’s top chipmaker, thanks to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), which produces about 90 percent of the most advanced semiconductors, but it also excels at making everything from wind turbines to screws and fasteners for the aerospace industry.

Taiwan’s government launched the “Drone National Team” initiative in 2022 to create a local drone industry capable of preventing a Chinese invasion and maintaining production during a wartime conflict.

While Taiwan’s defence sector has been developing drones since the 1990s, Taiwanese manufacturers have long struggled to compete with the low prices offered by Chinese manufacturers, particularly Shenzhen-based DJI, which holds a more than 70 percent share of the global market.

The use of drone warfare by Kyiv to outlast Moscow has only strengthened the belief in Taipei that unmanned vehicles could be the key to fending off its much larger military foe in the conflict in Ukraine.

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Under Taipei’s drone strategy, the Ministry of National Defence and state-owned National Chung-Shan Institute of Science and Technology, which organised June’s drone expo, are tasked with partnering with contractors to produce military-grade drones.

Under a parallel initiative, the Ministry of Economic Affairs is coordinating a program to help the private sector build and sell “dual-use” drones, which serve commercial as well as military purposes, for both the local and overseas markets.

William Lai Ching-te, president of Taiwan, has endorsed Taiwan’s designation as an “Asian hub” for drone manufacturing and technology.

For Taiwan, the bid to become a drone powerhouse is a race against time.

By 2027, according to US Indo-Pacific Command commander US Admiral Philip Davidson, who predicts the PLA will be able to invade Taiwan.

Despite the pressing need for a formidable drone force, Taiwan’s progress at building up its domestic industry has been uneven at best, experts say, with the problems beginning with overly modest targets that do not match the scale of the threat.

Taiwan has set a target for local industry to produce 15, 000 dual-use drones a month by 2028, while the Defence Ministry has ordered 700 military-grade unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and 3, 422 dual-use drones from local manufacturers, according to figures from the government-backed Research Institute for Democracy, Society, and Emerging Technology (DSET).

Additionally, Taiwan set a new goal of acquiring another 47, 000 drones over the next four years by ordering roughly 1, 000 UAVs from the US in 2024.

The newer procurement figures have yet to be accounted for in the national budget, which means they are subject to possible change.

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Defense experts believe that despite the larger targets, the numbers, especially those of military-grade UAVs, are subpar in comparison to contemporary warfare.

During the opening volleys of a conflict with China, Taipei and Beijing would be expected to “churn through thousands of UAVs on a daily, if not hourly, basis”, according to an April report by the US Naval Institute.

The report estimated that Taiwan’s recent purchase of 291 Altius-600M UAVs, 685 Switchblade loitering munitions, and 4 MQ-9B drones – part of a $21bn backlog in military orders with the US government – would sustain just four to five volleys against the PLA.

Peter Mattis, president of the US-based Jamestown Foundation, stated at a DSET summit on supply chain resilience in Taipei last month that Taiwan needed to think more deeply about how to meet its training and stockpile requirements.

“Maybe it’s appropriate to be thinking about hundreds]of drones] while you’re trying to test things out, but we need to be burning through those, running them through their paces, so that we know when we do scale … we’re actually getting something that can stand the test”, Mattis said.

The Kyiv-based Center for Army, Conversion and Disarmament Studies’ Asia Pacific section director Yurii Poita noted that Ukraine intends to produce 200, 000 tons of ammunition each month by 2025, which is “the same volume as Taiwan wants to [produce] over the course of one year.

Ukrainian brigades burn through 50 to 100 first-person view drones (FPV) – which give the pilot a real-time view of the battlefield – each day, Poita told Al Jazeera.

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Taiwan needs to be prepared to pivot and adapt as it builds its arsenal, including by paying attention to developments in Russia and Ukraine, said Misha Lu, a drone expert at the Taiwanese startup Tron Future.

According to Lu, “drones have already evolved in Ukraine and Russia beyond the realm of reconnaissance and strikes.”

“In Taiwan’s case, military drone applications have not been so diverse yet.

Simply put, the Taiwanese military needs to move quickly to understand the importance of anti-drone technology in its training and planning for defense, Lu said.

Still, experts disagree about where exactly Taiwan should be placing its focus, given the wide variety of drone types and its limited resources.

While a lot of attention has been paid to stopping PLA from landing on Taiwan, there has not been enough discussion of what would happen next, said Lorenz Meier, the founder and CEO of the drone software company Auterion, who argues that Taipei’s drone strategy should take advantage of Taiwan’s unique geography.

The Central Mountain Range divides Taiwan into its parts, with the majority of its towns and cities on the west coast, which are mostly made of low-rise concrete structures built to withstand earthquakes.

About 60 percent of the island is covered in dense evergreen subtropical forest.

Right now, I’m in favor of pushing USV, and it also sends a message to China. This is important, “Meier told Al Jazeera on the sidelines of the Su’ao Bay drone expo, where Auterion signed a partnership with the NCSIST.

” But at the same time, there needs to be, eventually, conversation around the defence strategy, and the fact that we’re not talking about a realistic urban combat scenario shows that there is work to be done.

Meier continued, “I’ve never heard the government talk about using the hills in a significant way.”

“If you retreat a force into the jungle, and if you launch drones out of the hills, that is going to be hell to sit at the beach”.

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According to Alexander Huang, the chairman of Taiwan’s Council on Strategic and Wargaming Studies and a Kuomintang ally, Taipei’s strategy has focused on developing an arsenal to the detriment of considering how to deploy it in a conflict.

“A smart way is for Taiwan to go is to review the specifics of the Taiwan contingency and Taiwan theatre and figure out the operational tempo of the People’s Liberation Army and come up with a kind of drone development strategy with Taiwanese characteristics, rather than just copying the Ukraine model or following the advice of the Pentagon”, Huang told Al Jazeera.

Taiwan’s Defence Ministry did not reply to Al Jazeera’s requests for comment.

According to Jason Wang, the COO of ingeniSPACE, a geospatial intelligence company with offices in Taiwan, some of Taipei’s shortsightedness is due to its lack of recent combat experience.

“Taiwan can produce any hardware that you could possibly imagine and do it cheaply. The hardware is not the key to modern warfare. It’s about putting the brains in the drones to give the warfighter options on the battlefield”, Wang told Al Jazeera.

“Understanding the role that different drones play on the battlefield, the logistics necessary to get them there, and the speed of violence necessary to stop your adversary is what Taiwanese manufacturers have a hard time mastering”, Wang added.

“Political will, not capability, determines how well a country will win on the battlefield.”

Taiwan has for decades dealt with Chinese aggression in the form of “grey-zone” tactics – low-grade activity occupying the space between peace and conflict – but has not fought a military battle with Beijing since the 1958 Taiwan Strait crisis.

Since the Communist Party’s (ROC) government lost the Chinese Civil War to communist forces in the 1940s, Taipei and Beijing have been at odds.

In 1949, ROC leader Chiang Kai-shek retreated to Taiwan, an erstwhile Japanese colony, pledging to one day return to the mainland.

Chiang Kai Shek 1963
Taiwanese President Chiang Kai-shek is seated in the garden of his Shihlin residence, in Taipei, Taiwan, in May 1963]AP]

Taiwan is now recognized by just 11 nations, including the Holy See, after losing numerous allies during the Cold War, including the US in 1979.

Its diplomatic isolation means it cannot officially engage with neighbouring militaries or UN peacekeeping missions.

Without making any announcement, unofficial joint military exercises with Taiwan’s principal security guarantor, the US, were conducted to avert China’s anger.

For the same reason, while the US has pledged to provide Taiwan with the means to defend itself, successive governments in Washington have stopped short of saying whether it would directly intervene in a conflict.

Taiwan’s military, a symbol of state repression during four decades of martial law that lasted until 1987, has undergone significant investment and modernisation in recent years.

According to Michael Hunzeker, an associate professor at George Mason University’s Schar School of Policy and Government, the military underwent a period of neglect until the Democratic Progress Party’s election in 2016 in the wake of Taiwan’s transition to democracy in the early 1990s.

The DPP saw the military largely as a “tool of authoritarian oppression”, Hunzeker told Al Jazeera, while the opposition KMT did not want to build up military power because it was seeking rapprochement with Beijing.

Taiwan’s military spending dramatically increased under Tsai and Lai’s leadership.

In 2025, Taiwan’s cabinet allocated defence spending equal to 2.45 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) – up from spending equivalent to 1.82 percent of GDP in 2016 – a budget that was later scaled down by the opposition-controlled legislature.

Lai has said he ultimately wants to raise spending this year to 3 percent of GDP, though his plans face opposition from the KMT.

Taiwan’s forces are still dwarfed by China’s military, which is the largest in terms of personnel.

China’s military ranked 3rd in the 2025 Global Firepower Index, which measures the defence capabilities of global militaries, far ahead of Taiwan’s military at 22nd.

Regular large-scale military exercises in the Taiwan Strait, including drone drills, have been conducted by the PLA since 2022.

China does not have an embassy in Taipei, but its embassies in Washington, DC and Tokyo did not respond to requests for comment.

Taiwanese drone makers say that access to real-world and timely battlefield intelligence will be essential to designing the best drones for Taiwan and potential clients overseas.

Our biggest weakness is that we must adapt to the constantly changing conditions on the battlefield. We need to know the conditions to adapt software”, Gene Su, general manager of Taiwanese toymaker-turned-drone manufacturer Thunder Tiger, told Al Jazeera.

“We need to work with people on the front lines of Europe and in the US to ensure that we understand their needs before they adapt the software.”

Taiwanese manufacturers are also aware of the challenge they face from their commercial competitors.

China is skilled at both making drones and conducting “electronic warfare” capable of jamming enemy drones and misleading anti-drone systems, said Sunny Cheung, a Washington-based DSET fellow and analyst at the Jamestown Foundation.

According to Cheung, “all]drone makers [share the same concerns that the Chinese anti-drone and electronic warfare capabilities are very good, so they are unsure whether Taiwanese drones can infiltrate and conduct military operations in a real-time combat scenario,” according to Cheung, referring to an informal survey of CEOs at Taiwan’s largest commercial and military companies.

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Taipei has been moving to address some of these potential vulnerabilities.

Wellington Koo, the first civilian to hold the position in a ten years, recently announced that the military would add UAVs and USVs to the navy in addition to its already existing one.

Observers such as the DSET say establishing a UAV/USV task force this year to “facilitate a more coordinated approach” to procurement, subsidies, budgeting, and research and development is another step in the right direction, but other logistical and economic challenges remain.

Much of Taiwan’s drone strategy depends on its companies finding overseas partners to help drive demand for drones and build up the supply chain.

Taiwanese businesses are currently collaborating with customers in Japan, Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic, and other countries who want to axe China from their supply chains.

For now, export figures remain low, although the industry is gaining momentum.

Taiwan exported 3, 473 drones in 2024, and 3, 426 drones in just the first quarter of 2025, from exporting just 290 in 2023.

The program’s Achilles heel, according to experts, may lie in supply chain bottlenecks and the financial risks facing would-be drone makers.

Some would-be drone makers fear a similar fate as US company Skydio, which was sanctioned by China in 2024 for selling drones to Taiwan, according to Hong-Lun Tiunn, a DSET non-resident fellow and co-author of the June report.

To help address their concerns, Tiunn and his DSET coworker Fang claimed that the government should provide manufacturers with more financial incentives.

“As a private company, their first priority is to make a profit”, Fang told AL Jazeera. Are they going to suffer the consequences of the Chinese government and lose all of their clients?

Chia-yu Chang, business development manager at Taiwanese drone designer Avilon Group, voiced similar concerns.

“It’s not just supporting drone companies, they need to support the entire ecosystem in order to have a Taiwanese drone brand. However, according to Chang, “I believe there are still many stages that need to be fixed.”

Chang said private companies are also struggling to completely remove China from their supply chains.

The majority of commercial businesses, or the majority of the industry, are concerned with data or security issues, but the military would prefer that the drone’s entire system have no Chinese components, she said.

“Honestly, nobody can do that”.

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A Black Tide unmanned surface vehicle, developed by Lungteh Shipbuilding company, is seen at a sea drone expo in Yilan, Taiwan, on June 17, 2025]Ann Wang/Reuters]

Many of the components and raw materials used to manufacture UAV batteries are dependent on China.

The island is similarly dependent on imports to meet its demand for GPS modules, flight control and positioning software, sensors, cameras, and secure communication chips, according to the DSET report.

Despite Taipei’s close ties to Washington, some technologies, like thermal imaging, are also subject to US export restrictions.

Often, these imports are more expensive than Chinese-made parts, even if they are from friendly countries, according to the DSET, with a single component like an SDR video transmission chip costing as much as 10 times the price offered by DJI.

In response to questions about its supply chain, the NCSIST said Taiwan is working towards self-sufficiency.

Due to Taiwan’s relatively late start in the development of the defense industry, key components like high-power engines, precision navigation systems, and advanced sensors still rely on foreign markets, according to the NCSIST.

“However, NCSIST is addressing this by developing critical indigenous technologies (eg, flight control computers, EO equipment, radar), gradually reducing reliance on foreign suppliers”, it said.

Taiwan needs to move quickly, observers claim as the years pass to 2027.

“This is our war. This is not somebody else’s war”, the KMT’s Huang said, adding that there is a “question mark” over whether Taiwan can implement an effective drone strategy.

Brown University strikes $50m deal to end Trump administration pressure

In a bid to reclaim frozen federal funding, Brown University is now the third Ivy League campus to do so.

The agreement, which was made public on Wednesday, is the most recent instance of a top US school bargaining with the president and agreeing to his demands.

Brown will receive $ 50 million over ten years to improve Rhode Island’s workforce development programs as part of the deal. Additionally, it will commit to supporting its neighborhood’s Jewish community and restricting transgender students’ acceptance.

The Trump administration’s decision to withhold federal funding from prestigious universities in an effort to combat anti-Semitism and “woke” ideology has sparked a wider campaign.

Despite the administration’s claims that its actions are politically motivated and out of step with reality, opponents claim that many administrators feel as though they have no choice but to accept the pressures of funding.

The University of Pennsylvania and Columbia University both signed separate agreements with Trump earlier this month.

Trump’s position on transgender athletes was respected by Columbia, but the University of Pennsylvania agreed to do so in exchange for paying a $200 million settlement.

Similar to how his administration handled Brown, his administration cut funds and began investigations into both schools.

Brown President Christina Paxson asserted in a statement that the agreement protects the institution’s academic independence.

She made a point about the government’s right to control Brown’s curriculum and speech content.

According to Paxson, “maintenance of the University’s discussions with the government was remaining true to our academic mission, our core values, and who we are as a Brown community.”

The controversial Columbia University agreement also has a number of similarities to the controversial agreement, including measures to stop alleged anti-Semitism following widespread protests against Israel’s occupation of Gaza.

Advocates have accused the Trump administration of purposefully demeaning the demonstrations to silence pro-Palestine voices.

According to the new agreement, Brown will need to “support a vibrant Jewish community, research and education about Israel, and a robust Program in Judaic Studies.”

To maintain a welcoming campus climate, including for Jewish faculty and students, it will also need to conduct a survey.

The agreement also addresses Trump’s other priorities, including his opposition to having transgender athletes play sports teams and campus housing that reflect their gender identities.

On January 20, Trump signed an executive order mandating that only the male and female sexes would be recognized, completely rejecting transgender identity.

The president has also tried to stop diversity initiatives, claiming that they are inherently discriminatory.

The school agreed to provide a trove of data on the race, grades, and standardized test scores of students who applied and were accepted to the university for a “comprehensive audit” in his government’s agreement with Brown.

Brown is also prohibited from using any “proxy for racial admission,” such as personal statements or “diversity narratives,” in the agreement.

However, Brown evaded a request from Columbia that an independent monitor be appointed to check compliance with the agreement.

Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the agreement demonstrated how successfully the Trump administration had “reversed the decades-long woke-capture of our nation’s higher education institutions.”

The Trump administration will pay the $50 million in unpaid federal grant costs as part of the deal, despite Brown’s commitment to invest $50 million in workforce development in Rhode Island.

The Trump administration’s projected withholding of the school’s nearly $ 510 million in grants and research funding.

Administrators reportedly said this week that they were willing to spend up to $500 million to reach a deal, but the president is still locked in a standoff with Harvard University.

Geri Horner poses with the Lionesses at Oasis gig as they celebrate Euros victory

Geri Horner and three of the Lionesses were among those present at Wembley Stadium in London tonight as part of the Oasis’ performance.

Geri Horner was among the celebrities at an Oasis gig at Wembley Stadium this week(Image: Alan Chapman/Dave Benett/Getty Images)

The Oasis reunion tour continued tonight with another gig at Wembley Stadium, with several celebrities among the fans in the crowd at the venue. Geri Horner shared that she had met three of the Lionesses whilst at the show this evening.

Geri, 52, celebrated the success of the England women’s national football team following their victory in the Euro 2025 final just days ago. She took a photo alongside three players at the concert in London and teased that they are now “home” after becoming champions in Switzerland.

They are the latest celebrities to attend the Oasis Live ’25 Tour. Tom Cruise, Ricky Gervais, Lewis Capaldi, Dua Lipa and Goldie were all in the crowd for their gig at the stadium on Saturday. It comes after it was teased that Tom should consider working on a film project about the Gallaghers.

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Alex Greenwood, Hannah Hampton, Geri Horner and Alessia Russo in the audience for an Oasis reunion gig at Wembley Stadium in July 2025.
Geri Horner (centre left) posed with footballers Alex Greenwood (left), Hannah Hampton (centre right) and Alessia Russo (right) at Oasis’ Wembley Stadium gig on Wednesday night(Image: gerihalliwellhorner/Instagram)

Geri posed for a photo with Alex Greenwood, 31, Hannah Hampton, 24, and Alessia Russo, 26, whilst at the concert this evening. The trio stood beside the author inside the stadium, with Hannah and Alessia sporting Oasis jackets.

The photo was shared by Geri on Instagram. Celebrating the football team having become European champions, she wrote alongside it: “They’re Home!” She included an emoji that depicted the national flag of England and tagged the three professional footballers in the caption too.

In the comments section, some fans expressed excitement with the image. Amazing is what one person wrote. “All legends,” another said. While a third follower responded to the earlier this evening’s “Girl Power personified” post on the platform.

“Have the best time,” someone else commented on her post about watching Liam Gallagher and Noel Gallagher in concert. Another person responded to Geri: “That’s girl power!” Other fans reacted to the post with heart emojis.

Tonight, Alex shared footage from the concert on the platform. The video showed the views from Alex’s seat way up in the stadium, and it showed Oasis performing Don’t Look Back in Anger while the audience sang along.

Geri’s attendance comes after her former Spice Girls bandmate Melanie Brown, 50, watched Oasis in Manchester earlier this month. Mel was joined by her husband Rory McPhee, 37, whom she had married just a week prior.

The newlyweds were at Heaton Park for the second of Oasis’ five gigs at the venue. They attended the concert with her eldest child Phoenix Brown, 26, and Mel’s cousin Christian Cooke, 37, who is a close pal of her husband Rory.

At the time, Mel and her family shared material from the performance. The couple was spotted singing along with Phoenix and Christian in the crowd while she was seated on Rory’s shoulders while the band performed Wonderwall.

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Valiant but vulnerable – how Rangers escaped heat of Athens with hope

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Russell Martin’s side finally got what they wanted on a blisteringly hot Athens night when Rangers had at times been desperately valiant and desperately vulnerable.

Panathinaikos was eliminated from the Champions League second round qualifier when the draw appeared to be the riskiest of the first step in the league phase, and Rangers drew their luck from Glasgow to Greece.

The character displayed by a team in the early stages of the new head coach’s overhaul was admired as they drew 1-1 on the night and advanced 3-1 on aggregate, despite some Greek wastefulness and Jack Butland heroics being to blame for their passage to the next round.

While other aspects of their game would have been troubling, Martin had instructed his players to be resilient in the face of the Panathinaikos onslaught.

“We will improve,” After the game, Martin predicted that the group would benefit greatly from this. His current task is to improve the quality of the character his team has demonstrated in these two testing encounters.

Russell Martin thrives on the training ground, according to former Rangers goalkeeper Cammy Bell, who spoke on BBC Sportsound.

“The better they will get, the longer he has with his players.

That’s how a team is built, according to the saying.

Djeidi Gassama’s second stunning and crucial goal in as many games will make headlines.

The hosts had only jumped out to the front on the night when VAR realized Filip Duricic was blocking Butland. There was still time to overhaul Rangers’ shrinking aggregate lead, and the dam had finally been burst.

However, Gassama appeared three minutes after starting that game and seven minutes later to slash a vicious shot into the post to halt the hosts’ momentum.

Few, though, could have captured the spirit of the Rangers team more than John Souttar, who stood tall in the defense when the Greeks were threatening to split the team.

According to Sudtar, “That’s how you build a team, surviving those difficult moments,”

It demonstrates our mentality, it says. There will be times when things won’t go our way. We can thank Butland because he was once more outstanding.

The play seems to be not really working, according to the statement.

The two legs’ recurring theme was that the ball wasn’t looked after. Rangers players frequently gave up possession cheaply in the first two legs of both legs.

Although they were fortunate not to face Panathinaikos, such sloppiness must be eliminated as they advance through the qualifying rounds and, as they hope, the Champions League league phase.

Former Rangers striker Peter Lovenkrands on Sportsound: “If Gassama hadn’t scored then, I think Rangers could have potentially conceded the game because they were already dominating the entire area at that time.”

“Rangers don’t really have time,” he says. Right now, the play seems to be lagging behind. Before the following round, that needs to be cleaned up.

Rangers will face Czech side Viktoria Plzen in the following round. Another challenging test that Martin’s side must take better of.

If Rangers play like they’ve done over the two ties, they’re going to make it difficult for themselves, said former Rangers midfielder Andy Halliday, who said “you would anticipate them to be weaker opponents than Panathinaikos.”

“Rangers are still developing, and their performance will undoubtedly improve.”

related subjects

  • Scottish Premiership
  • Rangers
  • Scottish Football
  • UEFA Champions League