Archive September 30, 2025

Is Shankland unfortunate not to be in Scotland squad?

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Sixty-eight goals in his past three seasons. Eleven goal involvements in his past 10 league games. Leading the line for the Scottish Premiership leaders.

Yet, it is another Scotland snub for Heart of Midlothian captain Lawrence Shankland.

In a fairly predictable squad selection that has not prompted too many questions from the Tartan Army, the omission of the in-form 30-year-old is certainly one of them.

When asked how close Shankland was to being included for the upcoming World Cup qualifiers against Greece and Belarus, Scotland head coach Steve Clarke said: “Always close. I know Lawrence very well, I know what he can bring.

“I just felt the forwards I had last camp did well in the camp, did well in the games and have done well for their clubs in between. I didn’t see too much reason to change.”

Hearts head coach Derek McInnes reacted by saying he was “not surprised” by the decision but believes a recall for Shankland will come if he maintains his form.

What do the numbers say?

Graphic comparing Lawrence Shankland's scoring record with other Scotland strikers

They tell us Clarke does not pick his striking options purely based on goalscoring stats.

The Scotland boss has again selected the attacking quartet of Che Adams, Lyndon Dykes, George Hirst and Kieron Bowie for next month’s qualifiers.

By Shankland’s standards, his goalscoring form took a dip last season, but he has still outscored and provided more assists than any of the four strikers selected by Clarke since the start of last term.

The levels the forwards in question have been playing at have to come into the debate, though.

Hirst was playing Premier League football with relegated Ipswich Town last season, while Torino’s Adams is a Serie A striker.

Birmingham City’s Dykes was playing in England’s third tier last term but is now back in the Championship.

Bowie, who has recently turned 23, is more viewed as a long-term option since emerging as a key player for Hibernian in recent months.

Shankland, meanwhile, turned 30 in August but has come back into goalscoring form for Premiership leaders Hearts after a challenging season last term, during which he still managed 20 goal involvements (nine goals and 11 assists).

Over his past 10 league games, he has scored eight times and set up another three. His strike against Falkirk on Saturday made him the Scottish Professional Football League’s record scorer.

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Has Shankland been given fair chance by Clarke?

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However, that form has never truly been rewarded with a run in Clarke’s side.

For some, it is difficult to imagine an Old Firm striker with Shankland’s record being denied a place in the squad.

Sure, there have been call-ups, caps – 16 of them – and three goals, but he has started just four games.

There is not just one reason for that and some of them we will never know.

What we do know is any player hoping to play in this side is trying to break into the best Scotland team in almost three decades.

That is not easy, especially when you factor in that Clarke regularly plays with just one striker, which has mostly been Adams or Dykes.

Former Southampton striker Adams, who has 10 Scotland goals in 41 caps, has been playing and scoring in the English and Italian top tiers over the past six years.

Dykes, for all his critics, has been an integral part of Clarke’s success since switching his allegiance to Scotland, scoring nine times in 44 appearances, and offers a different physical presence.

The devotion Clarke has shown to players like Dykes is something he often faces scrutiny for, but the Scotland boss does not hide his loyalty. In fact, Shankland has been a beneficiary of that.

The Hearts man had scored just once by November last season when Clarke selected him in a squad. “I’ll tell him I still love him,” the Scotland boss said with a smile on his face when questioned about his inclusion.

He has not been picked since, but his club boss says the prospect of being involved in a World Cup next summer must continue to drive the striker.

“The motivation for Lawrence, and for all players hoping to be involved with Scotland, is the World Cup,” McInnes said. “That has to be the goal.”

Related topics

  • Heart of Midlothian
  • Football
  • FIFA World Cup
  • Scotland Men’s Football Team

Myleene Klass colleague shares terror after receiving ‘unhinged’ letters at stalking trial

Katie Breathwick, a radio host, has provided proof against a alleged stalker who allegedly targeted her and her coworker Myleene Klass.

A colleague of Myleene Klass has shared the fear she felt after being targeted by an alleged stalker. Radio presenter Katie Breathwick told jurors she was left terrified by the alleged ordeal, claiming she was posted a DIY will-writing kit, binoculars, perfume and running shoes alongside “unhinged” letters.

Mrs. Breathwick informed her Classic FM colleague of Peter Windsor’s “raving” notes and presents at the trial of him, who is also accused of stalking former Hear ‘Say star Klass. She claimed that Klass should be made aware of a circumstance that might put her at risk.

Between 2020 and 2024, Windsor, 61, is accused of stalking both presenters. Klass is accused of sending him an airgun, fancy dress, and other “unwanted” presents.

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A note calling Klass a “naughty vixen” was sent by Windsor, according to the Birmingham Crown Court. Additionally, it is said that Breathwick allegedly wrote a letter to Breathwick informing him that he wanted to go paddling in a lake with the presenters while sipping champagne.

Breathwick claimed to have received more than 100 items from Windsor and that they had all been delivered to Classic FM’s central London studios on Tuesday. She was entering her evidence in the witness box while watching from a behind-the-screen monitor.

In the final few minutes of her testimony, she continued to tell the court that Windsor had sent her first correspondence when the Covid pandemic first started. She became audibly upset. The alleged stalker has been given schizophrenic treatment.

In a statement made at the court, Breathwick said, “March 2020 was the first time I ever really had a prickling instinct that this was a little different. He performed a number of push-ups and pull-ups, which had an impact on the first note.

“It was weird. It was a note of a personal nature talking about me as if he knew me.”

When Timothy Sapwell, the prosecutor, posed questions to Breathwick, who claimed the parcels initially had a “feel unhinged” feeling. She added that it appeared obvious who was the author of them wasn’t feeling well.

She continued, “Everyone was talking about mental health issues, and it became abundantly clear to me that this person was experiencing that situation and that I was the subject of those emotions. Knowing that is deeply, deeply unsettling.

Klass was also named in the handwritten notes, she later claimed, because they were “raving and unstable” and that she was concerned about it. She said, “I was aware that it was probably important that she be made aware of this.”

The court has heard Windsor had officially changed his name to Sir Peter Windsor. He is then said to have sent both his alleged victims a note which read it would be “divine to paddle with you both in Buckingham Palace Lake and get you two their brand of £60 bubbly”.

As Breathwick told the jury, “I really freaked me out. “

Breathwick claimed during her testimony that she had been instructed not to inform Klass about the packages she had received. She claimed she felt the need to, claiming that she “felt it was my duty as a woman to inform her of a circumstance that might put her in danger.”

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When defense lawyer Philip Brunt cross-examined her, Breathwick rejected claims that she had been “catastrophizing.” She explained to the jury how she perceived the packages as “dirty and malicious.” She remarked, “Being realistic in the context of all of these things is not catastrophizing.”

On Wednesday, Klass is scheduled to testify, and Windsor is expected to deny two stalking counts that have raised alarm or distress. The trial is advancing.

As tariffs hit, Americans grapple with rising bills and multiple jobs

Dallas, United States – Melinda, a teacher at a Dallas high school, has an easy way to predict if her students will have a good day.

“If they show up and they’ve had breakfast, it’s a really good day,” said Melinda, who has worked as a Texas teacher for 13 years. Her students showing up fed, she added, “is rarer than you think”.

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To help, Melinda spent about $45 per week on breakfast items and snacks during the last school year. While such practices are common among US teachers, she asked Al Jazeera not to use her real name. However, rising prices for groceries and school supplies may force her to stop, especially since Texas teachers’ salaries are not keeping up with inflation.

When Melinda went to the store in late August, the same items now cost her $56 per week. That means, over the course of a school year, she could spend $400 more for the food her students rely on.

“I’m trying to work out how to keep that in my budget, because prices are just crazy, and I like to keep it to where it’s [available to all students] so people aren’t singled out.”

Melinda’s worries are just one example of a broader problem brewing in the United States. After the administration of US President Donald Trump issued an onslaught of tariffs on countries around the world, Americans are seeing price increases creep into their lives. Rising costs of groceries, bills, rent and essential baby items are creating new burdens for people across the country, millions of whom work more than one job.

Pinching pennies

Tariffs are the rate that importers must pay to import their goods, and some economists have pointed out that it will take time for US consumers to bear the full brunt of Trump’s tariffs.

That’s no small comfort for Katie Ventre, a 37-year-old Long Island resident who oversees payroll, finances and HR for her father-in-law’s auto repair company. Her husband is the CEO of the company, and together, they’re trying to start a car rental service. Increases in grocery prices – especially the cost of fruit, eggs and milk – have been frustrating for their family, Ventre told Al Jazeera, but the auto business has been hit even harder.

“We just had the worst two months in the last eight years,” she said in early September. To pinch pennies, she said, customers are reducing the amount they spend, or delaying repairs altogether. Meanwhile, the Ventres raised their prices in an attempt to offset the cost of imported goods.

“It’s not just us,” Ventre added. “We have a towing company we work with that’s seeing a slowdown … and all our vendors are addressing [the tariffs] in their own way. Some are raising prices, some are trying to wait and see if things get better.”

Other companies aren’t waiting. The think tank Groundwork Collaborative has been tracking earnings calls and the remarks that C-suite executives have made about price increases, and in a new report, they detail how some companies are using the tariffs as cover to hike prices.

“The indirect effect of tariffs is that it gives steel producers and the mills and other fabricators … great cover for increased pricing in some cases,” Aaron Jagdfeld, CEO of the power generation products company Generac Power Systems, said on an earnings call this summer.

Among those raising prices are the security and digital products company Fortune Brands Innovations Inc, the footwear company Rocky Brands and the apparel company Hanesbrand, whose CEO, Stephen Bratspies, said the company is “seeing tariff-related disruptions creating incremental revenue opportunities in the market”.

Russell Diez-Canseco, the president and CEO of Vital Farms, put it more succinctly in a recent call to investors: “The price we’ve talked about, that is more than sufficient to cover the impact of the tariffs.”

Elsewhere, major brand names like Walmart and household goods titan Procter & Gamble are raising prices and attributing the move to the cost of tariffs. Several studies show such increases are already impacting customers’ wallets.

In a July 3 survey, nearly half of the likely voters interviewed told the Groundwork Collaborative and Data for Progress that Trump’s tariffs are having a negative impact on their monthly finances, with only 16 percent reporting a positive impact.

Back-to-school season exacerbated these issues, as prices rose on everything from shoes to essential items as simple as pencils.

“Parents are facing price increases across a number of categories when it comes to school supplies,” Sarah Dickerson, a research economist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told a local TV station. “If we look at pencils, for instance, we know the wooden pencils are imported from Brazil. We are anticipating price hikes there.”

Canary in the coal mine

Lindsay Owens, the executive director of the economic think tank Groundwork Collaborative, told Al Jazeera that fall 2025 will offer the strongest picture yet of how tariffs are affecting the US economy.

“We have long expected that some of the big price hits would drop in the fall,” said Owens, whose organisation researches how the economy impacts consumers and workers.

“Back to school season is kind of the canary in the coal mine, but we’re expecting high prices for Halloween items, for costumes, things like that that are coming in from China. We’re also expecting some of these impacts to flow through to Christmas, whether that’s price hikes on toys or even supply chain issues where there are just fewer toys available.”

Owens says rising prices and the cost of living have been the top economic issues for Americans since 2021. Now, tariffs are further influencing what Americans buy, where they buy it and, in some cases, the jobs they work or pursue.

According to recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), nearly 8.8 million Americans are working more than one job – down just slightly from the all-time high of 8.9 million in February.

Kay Alexander, a 30-year-old in Austin, is one of those Americans with multiple jobs.

Alexander lost his job in the tech industry during a round of layoffs at the beginning of 2025. He drastically cut his food spending and started looking for a cheaper apartment, which proved nearly impossible in Austin.

“Prices surge within a few months without any notice,” he said.

Shortly after the layoff, he noticed “daily essentials” such as groceries becoming more expensive. BLS data shows the cost of groceries has risen 29 percent since February 2020, while another study shows prices are up almost 3 percent from this time last year.

Alexander and his partner cut out snack foods and opted for the cheapest possible option for items like eggs and milk, which still weren’t that cheap. Plus, he added, “I can taste the difference.”

“It’s definitely shifted the way that we shop and the way that we eat,” he said of the tariffs. Even now that he has found a pair of part-time jobs and feels more comfortable dining out or going to a bar, he says he is still focused on saving “as much money as possible”.

“It’s hard to put in words the trauma of a job loss right now, when you know you might have to replace that one job with two others,” he said. “So I’m trying to save and do whatever I can to avoid that feeling.”

He has gotten used to buying lower-quality groceries, but now he feels as if his quality of life is worsening. For instance, he’s grown to like one of his part-time jobs even more than his project management work in the tech industry. But he feels drawn back to the volatile tech sector, if only to pay his higher bills.

“I really have to figure out, am I going to go to work and make sure that I can keep up with my bills, or am I going to show up for myself and make sure that I’m OK?” he said.

‘Food is discretionary’

Isabel Deniz, a 31-year-old living in Austin, Texas, agrees.

She worked in social media marketing until a layoff in late 2024, and any given month, she may be working up to six side gigs to keep up with rent and other bills.

When she was interviewed for this story, she was selling clothes on the online marketplace Poshmark, working as a theatre stagehand and cutting and stamping craft ice cubes for cocktail bars. Then, shortly after, she picked up yet another job: bail bond runner.

“I’m enjoying not being in front of a screen and actually talking to people face to face and moving my entire body around, but it’s also like, I need three of those jobs to survive,” she said, adding that all her friends are working more than one job.

“Going outside is expensive,” she said. “The second you step outside, it’s like, ‘That’ll be $20’.”

That means she is constantly examining what qualifies as a discretionary expense.

“Food is discretionary at this point, and it’s like, ‘Oh, sick, a disposable income of $42. What am I going to do with 42 bones?’” she said. “I’m worried the worst is on the way.”

Woltemade fee ‘irrelevant’ after ‘idiots’ claim – Howe

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Eddie Howe argues that it is irrelevant Karl-Heinz Rummenigge’s claim that Newcastle United were “idiots” for paying £69 million for Nick Woltemade.

In an interview with Blickpunkt Sport, the Bayern Munich supervisory board member praised Stuttgart for “finding an idiot who will pay that much money” and said, “we would have certainly not done that.”

Before Newcastle broke the club’s transfer record to sign him last month, the Bundesliga champions had previously unsuccessfully made numerous offers to sign the German striker.

Howe defended the club’s investment, avoiding the risk of a verbal altercation with Rummenigge.

The head coach of Newcastle responded, “It’s completely irrelevant.” Transfer fees are determined by market forces, not necessarily by any particular club.

“We’re very pleased to have Nick here. Because he was thrust straight into action without any notable training time with us, I believe he has made a strong start to what has been a challenging time for him.

He performed extremely well. The transfer fee is completely irrelevant, and we’re really happy to have him with us.

Since the deal was completed, Newcastle have repeatedly been criticized for their Bayern links.

The black-and-whites were a “good club but not the top tier,” according to honorary president Uli Hoeness, who suggested Newcastle’s strategy was “nothing with football” and was instead “like Monopoly these days.”

The club’s board member for sport, Max Eberl, questioned whether this was a “strategically intended transfer” or a “desperational deed.

Woltemade, 23, has two goals in his first three Premier League games and hasn’t appeared to have been affected by the comments or his price.

Howe remarked, “He’s not that kind of character.” He doesn’t necessarily overthink things, which is a huge plus. He deserves no more than what we have paid for him. On his performance in the team and his contributions to the club going forward will be evaluated.

Any football player should try to dust that off, but that would be easier said than done. He is very relaxed despite the fact that I’ve witnessed players who have been negatively impacted by the expectation or the fee. He appears to be enjoying his football and being here, which is ultimately what matters.

Woltemade opened the scoring against Arsenal at the weekend, but Gabriel and Merino’s team came from behind to win 2-1.

When they take on Union Saint-Gilloise in the Champions League on Wednesday, Howe has instructed his side to “regulate and come back stronger” from the humiliation.

Before the game in Brussels, he said, “I don’t necessarily feel that in a sense of a hangover.” It ought to be a motivating factor for me.

related subjects

  • Premier League
  • Newcastle United
  • Football

DR Congo’s ex-President Joseph Kabila sentenced to death in absentia

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Former President Joseph Kabila was sentenced to death in absentia by a military court in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

The military tribunal’s presided over the military tribunal, led by Lieutenant General Joseph Mutombo Katalayi, announced on Tuesday that Kabila had been found guilty of a number of crimes, including treason, crimes against humanity, murder, sexual assault, torture, and insurrection.

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Kabila, who presided over the country from 2001 to 2019, left in 2023 after making a recent visit to the M23 rebel-controlled region in the east of the nation.

The former president allegedly supported the Rwanda-backed M23 rebels, who this year seized significant swathes of territory in the eastern DRC, in absentia in a trial in July.

Kabila had previously called the court system “an instrument of oppression” and previously criticized the case against him.

Following the military court’s ruling, Kabila’s whereabouts were unknown at the time.

MAFS icon Emma Barnes: ‘Sarah’s utter disrespect towards Dean crossed the line’

Emma Barnes, a journalist for MAFS UK, has first-hand experience with stranger walking down the aisle. In her weekly Mirror column, she offers her insight.

My weekly MAFS column is back!

However, over the final week of Married at First Sight UK, things haven’t gotten a little heated? Six out of nine brides’ matches caused unhappiness. By the time the series is over, I’m not sure if there will be more Julia-Ruth walk-outs (currently 3: 4 on the tally, by the way). After the rioting dinner party last night, I needed to spend an hour staring at a wall.

What better way to begin than with the week’s storyline? Knowing Sarah is uncomfortable and disappointed in her experience, I’m trying to see past the edited faces she pulls. While you’re picturing going home, having no snogs after just one week, and fireworks around that table, it’s difficult to see them.

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Sarah’s disrespect for Dean and her lack of interest in getting to know him went against the grain. I overheard the phrase “I need to understand why the experts matched us, because you’re not what I asked for,” at the beginning of the dinner party.

No one deserves that because it hurts. Bravo to Davide for supporting Dean and putting a mirror up her cruel words! Because the backlash (and body-shaming back) has also been against the law, I sincerely hope that Sarah relaxes and learns if they stay another week.

A few couples are developing real legs (or abs in the case of Bec-phwoar!). I’m totally on team with Kevide and Grashley, and Maeve and Joe are adorable as a button.

Nelly, the people’s princess, will not have her heart broken if Stephen does. Of course, I’m for her. Something is telling me that these two won’t be sunshine and daisies. Perhaps it’s an ex who has cheated on him online?

The cast should be able to access social media without any restrictions in order to prevent leaks of the show. I say this is their opportunity to shine.

I enjoyed posting my daily photos and picking the backing track back in the day. They have been waiting for this for nine months! You’ll just have to keep reading as I try to stay away from gossip, but I’ve even heard some tales about grooms.

I’ve made it a habit to send late-night voice notes to the cast members to hear what they thought and to make friends.

Yes, I beg from previous seasons, but I’m not interested! I think the group is fantastic, none of the boys make me feel uneasy, and the fact that two parents have now DM me with concern or pride also demonstrates that they have strong foundations.

I’m afraid Anita and Paul might leave because of the two dinner parties this week and the commitment ceremony tonight. Hope he remembers to ask her how she feels with his post-it. In an effort to develop abs like Rebecca by Christmas, I’m going to do some sit-ups.

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