Archive January 30, 2026

‘Never much’ between Armagh and Galway – McGeeney

Armagh boss Kieran McGeeney is expecting Galway to visit the Athletic Grounds looking to “lay down a marker” in Saturday’s Division One clash between the 2024 All-Ireland finalists [17:00 GMT].

The Orchard County opened their league campaign with an eye-catching 12-point win over Monaghan at Clones, scoring 1-27 with 11 different players registering scores.

In contrast, Galway were beaten 3-18 to 2-18 at home by Connacht rivals Mayo in their opener.

Saturday’s game is a repeat of McGeeney’s crowning victory as manager of his native county when they beat the Tribesmen in the 2024 All-Ireland final to bring Sam Maguire back to Armagh for only the second time.

“It’ll be a tough game too, games between ourselves and Galway, there’s never much between us, it’s always a point either way and they’ll be coming to the Athletic Grounds to lay down a marker. We know what’s in front of us,” said McGeeney.

McKay unlikely to feature

Early points on the board, especially from an away fixture, will aid the Orchard cause as every county strives to secure their place in the top tier for next season.

The turnaround between league and championship will be quicker for Armagh as they will face neighbours Tyrone in the preliminary round of the Ulster Championship.

“I don’t know if there’s much freedom, it’s Galway next and they’re going to be hungry for points, so every game counts, and score difference counts too as we found out in the past to our detriment,” McGeeney continued.

“Galway are always a big game. I’m sure they’ll bring plenty as well. Every game you play in Division One, everybody knows my feelings on it, I think it should be expanded and not reduced.”

McGeeney also confirmed that Armagh are likely to be without full-back Aaron McKay against Galway after he was withdrawn before the throw-in last weekend.

“Aaron hurt his hand, so we’re hoping it’ll only be a couple of weeks.

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Zelenskyy seeks 50,000 Russian ‘losses’ a month to win the Ukraine war

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy says he plans to increase his armed forces’ lethality as part of a strategy to disarm Moscow and turn a deadlocked negotiating table.

“The task of Ukrainian units is to ensure a level of destruction of the occupier at which Russian losses exceed the number of reinforcements they can send to their forces each month,” he told military personnel on Monday.

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“We are talking about 50,000 Russian losses per month, this is the optimal level,” he said.

Video analysis, Zelenskyy recently said, showed 35,000 confirmed kills in December 2025, up from 30,000 in November and 26,000 in October. But on Monday, he clarified that the 35,000 were “killed and badly wounded occupiers”, who would not be returning to the battlefield.

His commander in chief, Oleksandr Syrskii, conservatively estimated “more than 33,000” confirmed kills in December.

Ukraine believes it has killed or maimed 1.2 million Russians since Russia’s full-scale invasion in 2022.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies recently estimated that Russia had suffered 1.2mn casualties, including at least 325,000 deaths, and Ukraine up to 600,000 casualties, with as many as 140,000 deaths.

Al Jazeera cannot confirm casualty estimates from either side.

The war is currently stalemated, with Russia struggling to make meaningful territorial gains.

Russia held just more than a quarter of Ukraine a month into its full-scale war, in March 2022, according to geolocated footage.

The following month, Ukraine pushed Russian forces back from a string of northern cities – Kyiv, Kharkiv, Sumy and Chernihiv – leaving Russia in possession of one-fifth of the country.

In August and September 2022, then-ground forces commander Syrskii masterminded a campaign to push Russian forces east of the Oskil River in the northern Kharkiv region, and Russia itself withdrew east of the Dnipro River in the southern region of Kherson, leaving it with 17.8 percent of the country.

In the last three years, Russia increased that number to 19.3 percent.

For almost six months, Russia has struggled to seize two towns it has almost surrounded with 150,000 troops in Ukraine’s eastern Donetsk region.

“In Pokrovsk and Myrnohrad, the Ukrainian Defence Forces continue to contain the enemy, which is trying to infiltrate the northern districts of both cities in small groups,” Syrskii said last week.

Russia claimed it had captured the northern city of Kupiansk last month, but Russian military reporters say Ukrainian forces have retaken control of the town and surrounded the Russian assault force within it.

The engine of war

Zelenskyy’s strategy involves increasing domestic drone production and honing the skills of drone operators, because drones now hit 80 percent of targets on the battlefield.

“In just the past year alone, 819,737 targets were hit – hit by drones. And we clearly record every single hit,” he said on Monday.

The military has instituted a point system, rewarding drone operators for the number and precision of their hits.

That reflects a system put in place in April 2024, offering financial rewards to ground troops for destroying Russian battlefield equipment, culminating in $23,000 for capturing a battle tank.

Zelenskyy appointed Mykhailo Fedorov as defence minister this month, who previously served as digital transformation minister and deputy prime minister for innovation, education, science and technology.

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Last week, Fedorov began to appoint his advisers. They include Serhiy Sternenko, who last year created Ukraine’s largest non-state supplier of military drones, to step up drone production. Fedorov’s former deputy at the digital transformation ministry, Valeriya Ionan, was put in charge of international collaborations, thanks to her experience with Silicon Valley giants like Google and Cisco. Fedorov also appointed Serhiy Beskrestnov as technological adviser. Beskrestnov is an expert on Russian drone and electronic warfare innovation.

Russian assaults pound Ukraine

Zelenskyy’s war aims stem in part from the fact that Russia refuses to give up its campaign to seize more of Ukraine.

Despite US President Donald Trump’s efforts to bring about a ceasefire, talks remain deadlocked over the future of Donetsk.

Russia’s worst attack against Ukrainian cities and energy facilities last week came on Saturday, involving 375 drones and 21 missiles, as Russian, US and Ukrainian delegations were negotiating a ceasefire in Abu Dhabi.

The strike left 1.2 million homes without power nationwide, including 6,000 in Kyiv.

Energy Minister Denys Shmyhal said 800,000 homes in Kyiv were still without power following three previous strikes this month. “Constant enemy attacks unfortunately keep the situation from being stabilised,” he wrote on social media.

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Zelenskyy told Ukrainians in an evening video address that electricity supply problems were still widespread in Kyiv, Kryvyi Rih, Dnipro and in the Chernihiv and Sumy regions.

“We are scaling up assistance points and warming centers,” he said, adding that 174 [crews] were working to fix the damage in Kyiv alone. Shmyal said 710,000 people were still without power in Kyiv.

A Czech grassroots initiative fundraised $6m to buy hundreds of electric generators for Ukrainian households. On Friday, the European Commission said it was sending 447 generators to Ukraine.

On Wednesday, Russian drones killed three people. Two of them were a young couple in Kyiv killed when a drone struck their apartment building. Rescuers found only their four-year-old daughter alive.

“When I carried her out, the girl started crying very hard, and then she began to shake violently,” said Marian Kushnir, a journalist who was a neighbour of the couple.

At least five more people died when a drone struck a passenger train in the northern Kharkiv region, and two children and a pregnant woman were wounded when 50 drones rained down on the southern port of Odesa.

Talks in Abu Dhabi ended without a ceasefire. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov had said before they began that Russia was not willing to compromise on any of its territorial demands.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said talks were focusing on the nub of disagreement between the two sides, which is Ukraine’s refusal to hand over the remaining one-fifth of Donetsk that Moscow does not control.

Talks are scheduled to continue in Abu Dhabi on Sunday, officials said.

Unvarnished truth from Zelenskyy

In a scathing speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Zelenskyy accused his European allies of “wait-hoping” the Russian threat would disappear after almost four years of war in Ukraine.

“Europe relies only on the belief that if danger comes, NATO will act. But no one has really seen the Alliance in action. If Putin decides to take Lithuania or strike Poland, who will respond?” Zelenskyy asked.

US President Donald Trump’s threat to take Greenland by force on January 17, he said, revealed Europe’s lack of readiness when seven Nordic countries sent 40 soldiers to the island.

“If you send 30 or 40 soldiers to Greenland – what is that for? What message does it send? What’s the message to [Russian President Vladimir] Putin? To China? And even more importantly, what message does it send to Denmark – the most important – your close ally?”

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In contrast, said Zelenskyy, Trump was willing to seize Russian tankers selling sanctioned oil, and put Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro on drug charges, while Putin, an indicted war criminal, remained free. “No security guarantees work without the US,” he said.

NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte echoed those sentiments in a speech to the European Parliament on Monday [January 26].

Panama court rules Chinese control of canal ports unconstitutional

Panama’s Supreme Court has ruled that the contracts under which a Chinese company operates ports on the Panama Canal are unconstitutional.

The decision regarding the facilities run by Hong Kong-based CK Hutchison was announced late on Thursday. It comes one year after United States President Donald Trump threatened to seize control of the crucial passageway, claiming it was effectively under Chinese control and therefore a security threat.

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The court ruled that the laws and acts underpinning the concession contracts between the state and the Panama Ports Company (PPC) for the development, construction, operation and management of the two port terminals violated the country’s constitution.

The CK Hutchison subsidiary has held the contracts, which allow it to operate the container ports of Balboa on the Pacific side of the Panama Canal and Cristobal on the Atlantic side, since the 1990s.

The arrangement was automatically renewed in 2021, handing PPC a licence for another 25 years.

epa12662602 A cargo ship leaves a lock on the Panama Canal in Panama City, Panama, 19 January 2026. Official data showed that Panama’s Monthly Economic Activity Index grew 4.37 percent year-on-year in November, supported by sectors including transportation, construction and finance. EPA/Carlos Lemos
The Panama Canal was the first target of Trump’s aggressive push for US dominance over the Western Hemisphere when he returned to the White House [File: EPA]

However, as he returned to the White House at the start of 2025, Trump was quick to push Panama to curb Chinese influence and boost US control of the strategic canal, which the US built but handed to Panama in 1999. The waterway carries an estimated 5 percent of global maritime trade.

The lawsuit to cancel PPC’s contracts was brought before the Panamanian court last year, based on allegations that the contracts were based on unconstitutional laws and that the Hong Kong company was not paying proper taxes.

An audit of the firm was also launched and found accounting errors and other irregularities that have reportedly cost Panama about $300m since the concession was extended, and an estimated $1.2bn during the original 25-year contract.

The ruling could force Panama to restructure the legal framework needed to hold port operations contracts and potentially require new tenders to operate the terminals.

PPC has denied all allegations and was also swift to reject the court’s decision.

“The new ruling … lacks legal basis and jeopardizes not only PPC and its contract, but also the well-being and stability of thousands of Panamanian families who depend directly and indirectly on port activity,” the company said in a statement.

China was also quick to comment. A foreign ministry spokesman said: “The Chinese side will take all necessary measures to resolutely safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese companies.”

After Trump issued his threat last year to take control of the canal, CK Hutchison announced a proposed sale of dozens of ports worldwide, including the Panamanian terminals, to a consortium led by US investment company BlackRock, a deal valued at nearly $23bn.

However, the deal appeared to stall due to objections from the Chinese government.

Trump’s bullish approach to Panama has been repeated regarding several other nations, including Venezuela and Greenland.

Threats of economic and military action have been issued, and the Trump administration has openly declared that it demands hegemony over the Americas.

The NFL’s ‘Queen’s Gambit’ who helped create $1.5bn worth of talent

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When you think of the NFL’s biggest names, not many are players in the offensive line.

It’s an unfashionable position, yet these players hold one of the most important roles in the team and are often unsung heroes in Super Bowl-winning sides.

Duane Manyweather has made a name for himself as a ‘super coach’ for the position, having nurtured stars who have gone on to make career earnings north of $1.5bn (£1.1bn).

Those players include New England Patriots offensive tackle Will Campbell, picked fourth in the NFL Draft in April and now set to make his Super Bowl debut next week.

What makes Manyweather’s coaching so successful? Well he compares his thought process to Anya Taylor-Joy’s character in the Netflix hit The Queen’s Gambit. She is cast as a talented female chess player, who could envision future moves on the board in real time.

Creating stars since 2018

Manyweather, better known as Duke, is the world’s leading independent offensive line coach and has worked with some of the top O-line players in the NFL.

The 39-year-old set up his own company in January 2018 with the sole intention of elevating the standard of offensive line players at all levels of the sport.

But he also works with a small group of personally selected talents from US colleges in preparation for each year’s draft, when the 32 NFL teams select the best young players in the country.

The fact that the Patriots took Campbell with the fourth pick this year, and that eight offensive linemen were taken in the 32-pick first round, shows the value NFL teams put on the position.

Describing how he knew he had a talent for coaching the position, Manyweather said: “The way my brain started to process the game, I knew it was different from the start because I would see things on TV and on the film that other people did not.”

As a player, Manyweather played Division Two college football for Humboldt State University in California, but it is his career as a coach that has made him a name.

“Since 2018, we have had 75 players drafted,” Manyweather explains.

“We’ve had 15 first-round picks. We’ve had 45 top-100 picks in the NFL draft and then we’ve had another 14 undrafted free agents make rosters. That’s just since 2018. So pretty great success rate for guys that enter my college programme.

“I take normally only 14 to 15 guys a year, so it’s a pretty strong hit rate in that regard.

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Why is offensive line so important?

Duane Manyweather during an OL Masterminds coaching sessionDuane Manyweather

The offensive line is usually made up of a centre, two guards and two tackles, and their job is to block the opposition’s defensive players, and to protect their own quarterback.

Effectively, they are the difference between a quarterback making a pass or getting tackled.

What sets Manyweather apart from the rest is his unique combination of playing as an offensive lineman in college himself, as well as his degree in history and kinesiology.

He quickly realised that he had a knack for spotting where players were going wrong, both technically and physically.

Returning to his chess analogy, he says: “I think a lot of times it would frustrate my coaches because I was seeing things in like 4D.

“I wasn’t the biggest guy, but I was strong. I wasn’t the most athletic guy, but I moved with confidence. I knew exactly where I was going, what the angles I needed to be. I knew what everybody was supposed to do on the field.”

Manyweather’s passion for both American football and the offensive line position led to him setting up his business alongside Philadelphia Eagles tackle Lane Johnson.

He now holds yearly summits in Frisco, Texas, which are attended by the sport’s best players and coaches, as well as general managers and other non-playing staff.

Lane Johnson looks onGetty Images

Trip to Nottingham and European tour hopes

Manyweather has now reduced his OL Masterminds summit capacity to 200 in order to make it more personal, and he even brought it to the UK in October to help grow the sport across Europe.

The long-term plan is to make it a regular European tour, owing to the sport’s growth in the continent.

“We’re seeing year on year kids coming in younger but bigger, more physical, more athletic,” says Andrew Watts, tackle for Great Britain Lions’ men’s team, who attended the camp in Nottingham.

“It used to be the days that if you were a big kid in your year group you’d go and play rugby. Well, now they’ve got alternative sports that they can do as well.

“They’ve got an opportunity to come and play American football. We’re seeing kids that are looking up to the NFL and seeing the American college system and that being their target.”

With players and coaches in one of the sport’s undervalued positions together for two days, the possibilities from Manyweather’s camp both in and out of the classroom are wide-ranging.

“There’s professional leagues in Europe, but it’s still an amateur sport in the UK,” adds Great Britain’s under-17s head coach Mike Davies, who also works as the offensive co-ordinator for Coventry Phoenix.

“It may be that some of the contacts that are made here lead to coaching opportunities overseas or playing opportunities overseas as well. The networking aspect of this is huge.”

As well as his yearly summits and coaching with NFL veterans including Lane Johnson, Creed Humphrey and 2025 first-round draft pick Tyler Booker, Manyweather will hope to make his summits in the UK a regular event rather than a one-off.

“It really puts into perspective the work that you’re doing and that teams value it,” he says.

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Mavericks teenager Flagg breaks 46-year NBA record

Dallas Mavericks’ Cooper Flagg became the first teenager to score 49 points in an NBA game as they lost 123-121 against the Charlotte Hornets at American Airlines Center.

The 19-year-old beat Clifford Robinson’s previous record of 45 points set in 1980 when playing for the New Jersey Nets against the Detroit Pistons.

Flagg, making his 43rd appearance of the season, also became the youngest player to score at least 40 points and 10 rebounds.

The Hornets’ Kon Knueppel, who was room-mates with Flagg at Duke University, also posted impressive numbers.

The 20-year-old scored a career-high 34 points and was successful with eight of his 12 three-pointer attempts – setting a rookie record for Charlotte.

Their combined 83 points was the highest of any opposing rookies in more than 50 years, and they were the first pair of opposing rookies from the same college to each score 30-plus points in the same game.

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Trump says speaking to Iran amid rising war fears

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President Donald Trump says he is speaking to Iran’s leadership amid a significant US military build-up in the Middle East, as regional leaders push for diplomacy to avoid a new conflict.