Injured Cacace out of Ford fight in Riyadh

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Due to a back injury, Belfast’s Anthony Cacace was forced to withdraw from his fight with Raymond Ford, who was previously the world featherweight champion.

On the 16th of August, Moses Itauma and Dillian Whyte’s heavyweight fight in Saudia Arabia was scheduled to face Cacace, the 26-year-old New Jersey southpaw.

The 36-year-old, however, injured his back during training and forced him to withdraw from the 12-round super-weight contest.

We wish Anto well in his recovery and anticipate seeing him make another appearance in the ring later this year, according to Queensberry Promotions.

Cacace would now have had a chance to become one of the 130-pound division’s biggest forces after the fight.

Five months later, he defeated Josh Warrington in a non-title contest at Wembley to win the IBF title in a shock eighth-round stoppage victory over Joe Cordina before claiming the title with a shock eighth-round victory over Joe Cordina.

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From playing for Roma to SW19 last eight – Cobolli aims to stun Djokovic

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Wimbledon 2025

Dates: 30 June-13 July Venue: All England Club

Every day Flavio Cobolli watches videos of his idol Novak Djokovic.

He is looking for tips, nuggets of information and small details that might just give him an advantage over his opponent.

But the Italian 22nd seed will now be analysing Djokovic’s footage for another reason – looking for tiny cracks in his game that can be exploited when he faces him in the Wimbledon quarter-final on Centre Court on Wednesday, the biggest match of his career.

Cobolli beat veteran Marin Cilic in the fourth round to set up a meeting with 24-time Grand Slam champion Djokovic.

“I will be on one of the biggest stages in the world, this is the best court in the world,” he said.

Roma’s academy and ‘hating grass’

For Cobolli, it was not always going to be tennis.

As a child he spent five years in the academies of his beloved football club Roma, where he played as a right-back.

Aged 14 he decided that was not for him and chose tennis, preferring the solo nature of the sport.

But his love for Roma remains. He attends matches when he can and still prefers to watch football over tennis on TV.

He has a tattoo on his chest with the words ‘sei tu l’unica mia sposa, sei tu l’unico mio amor’ which translates as ‘you are my only wife, you are my only love’ – a famous quote from club legend Daniele de Rossi.

Many of his good friends include the players he came through the academy with – Arsenal defender Riccardo Calafiori and Fiorentina midfielder Edoardo Bove, who collapsed on the pitch during a Serie A match last year.

Cobolli was at that match and immediately broke down in tears when the incident occurred.

Bove has since surprised Cobolli by attending the final of the Hamburg Open earlier this year, where Cobolli beat Andrey Rublev in straight sets to win the title.

Flavio Cobolli celebrates his fourth-round win at Wimbledon with his family on court twoGetty Images

It is somewhat ironic that as a footballer Cobolli “hated playing on grass” as a junior.

But his run at the All England Club – his best at a Grand Slam – has seen him grow in confidence on the surface.

After his fourth-round win on Monday, Cobolli immediately ran to his family to hug them and celebrate while his father – who is also his coach – stood in floods of tears.

Stefano Cobolli was a tennis player himself and peaked at 238 in the rankings while he also played in the Wimbledon qualifiers in 2004.

Stefano admits that he is the emotional one in the partnership, while Cobolli is “always smiling”, just like he was as a child.

“When I lost the match I cried or stayed angry for days,” he said.

Djokovic asks son for key to unlocking Cobolli

Those who have followed Cobolli’s rise over the past 12 months will not be surprised to see him making a maiden appearance in the last eight of a Grand Slam.

He won his first ATP Tour title this year in Romania and followed that up with victory in Hamburg.

Until facing Cilic, he had not dropped a set at SW19 and has secured comprehensive victories in all four of his matches.

But against Djokovic the challenge is far more daunting. And the 24-time Grand Slam champion has been doing some analysing of his own.

The 36-year-old said his son has been asking players at the All England Club to sign his hat and even managed to hit with Cobolli.

“They hit a few days ago. They played some points,” said Djokovic.

“He’s over the moon. Obviously, he loves tennis. He has everyone’s signature, except mine. But that’s okay, I’ll accept that.

“I’ll have a conversation with my son and see what he has noticed in the game of Cobolli.”

On the court, Cobolli’s varied shot selection and athletic movement has entertained the Wimbledon crowds.

But Djokovic said he has been surprised to see Cobolli’s results on grass, with his game not necessarily suited to the surface.

“He’s a very talented player,” he said.

“One of the youngsters coming up. He’s a big fighter. We get along well. We practise whenever we can.

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All you need to know about 2025 Scottish Open

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2025 Scottish Open

Venue: Renaissance Club, East Lothian Dates: 10-13 July

The guttural roar that marked Bob MacIntyre’s emotional Scottish Open win 12 months ago has just about dissipated – so who will be the big noise this time?

Home hero MacIntyre returns to the Renaissance Club to defend the cherished title – “the one I wanted” – after delivering a brilliant finish to edge out Adam Scott by a shot and become the tournament’s first Scottish winner in 25 years.

MacIntyre will never tire of watching his winning 22ft birdie putt “over and over again” and is adamant last year’s triumph hasn’t diluted his determination to lift the trophy again.

“Again, I’m coming here to win the Scottish Open,” says the 28-year-old on the eve of the 2025 edition. “It’s the biggest golf tournament outside of the major championships for me.

“I want to keep this trophy every year until I stop playing. I hope if I don’t win it, a Scottish player wins it. It’s just a special, special golf tournament with an unbelievable field.”

The Oban left-hander has some serious form on this East Lothian layout – he was pipped to glory by Rory McIlroy’s birdie-birdie finale in 2023 – and is buoyed by his best major performance, a runners-up spot at last month’s US Open.

Who is playing?

You’d be hard pressed to find a better field outside a major.

And how about Scottie Scheffler, MacIntyre and Adam Scott for a superstar grouping for the first two rounds? Expect huge crowds to follow this trio.

World number one Scheffler heads a cast list packed with superstar talent and featuring eight of the top 10 in the rankings.

Chief among them is McIlroy, three months on from memorably completing the career Grand Slam with a dramatic Masters triumph.

The Northern Irishman tees it up alongside fellow former winner and current Open champion Xander Schauffele, plus Ryder Cup team-mate Viktor Hovland on Thursday and Friday.

New US Open champion JJ Spaun will bid to improve on his only previous Scottish Open appearance – finishing six over in 2022 – while England’s Tommy Fleetwood was runner-up here in 2020 and has a happy knack of contending for the title.

Can Fleetwood banish the heartbreak of his recent Travelers Championship near miss as he pursues a first PGA Tour title?

Why is Scottish Open a big deal?

Prestige, prize fund and links practice are all key factors.

Now in its fourth year as a PGA Tour and DP World Tour co-sanctioned event, the Scottish Open doesn’t lack financial heft, boasting a total purse of of $9m (£6.6m) – around $1.5m (£1.1m) of which goes to the winner.

Its pulling power is further enhanced by its slot in the calendar the week before The Open, which this year takes place at Royal Portrush in Northern Ireland.

Players converge on the Scottish Open for vital links preparation and it paid off handsomely last year for Schauffele, who followed his tied 15th-place finish by lifting the Claret Jug seven days later at Royal Troon.

Little wonder that the Scottish Open has “become a staple” in the 31-year-old American’s schedule.

“I wish I could have come over here and played earlier in the year to be honest, just from a mental standpoint,” Schauffele says.

What about the course & weather?

The par-70 Renaissance Club, opened in 2007, has staged the Scottish Open for the past six years.

The course record is 61 and was equalled last year by Richard Mansell in the final round, helping the Englishman bag a spot in The Open.

Austria’s Bernd Wiesberger clearly likes this track – he shares the 18-hole milestone (with Mansell and Byeong Hun An) and the 72-hole record of 262 (with reigning champ MacIntyre).

Links golf always provides a fascinating test and the world’s best could be confronted by baked fairways this week as the notoriously erratic Scottish summer delivers a welcome sunny spell.

Anything else?

This is the final event of The Open qualifying series, meaning three places at Royal Portrush are up for grabs for those not already exempt.

Among the hopefuls is one of the six-strong Scottish contingent, Connor Syme, fresh from his first DP World Tour title, a “monkey-off-the-back” achievement.

Syme made his Open debut at Royal Portrush in 2019 and craves a return after missing out on Royal Troon by one shot last year.

“It would be awesome to go back,” says the Scot. “This is obviously such a massive tournament and that’s the dangling carrot too.

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Archer to play first Test in more than four years

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Jofra Archer, who was chosen to play for England against India at Lord’s on Thursday, will play his first Test match in more than four years.

With the series tied at 1-1, the 30-year-old’s inclusion makes the England team’s only change for the crucial third Test.

Chris Woakes and Brydon Carse both showed signs of fatigue in their respective heavy defeats at Edgbaston, but Josh Tongue replaces Archer.

Mark Wood, a pace bowler, and Archer trained at Lord’s the same day that his place was chosen for the England XI was confirmed as they continued their recovery from a knee injury.

Wood was anticipated to miss the entire five-match series against India, but the Durham native is hoping to play the final Test there. The intriguing possibility of Archer and Wood playing in the same XI, which has only been done once in Test cricket, comes up.

Archer has taken 42 wickets in 13 previous Tests, but he has struggled with back and elbow injuries since his most recent one, which was against India in 2021. Since Archer last appeared in his final Test, England has played 53. Between caps, there will be 1, 595 days.

Archer’s future involvement in Test cricket seemed highly uncertain at the time, and there were instances where his entire career was in doubt.

Ben Duckett, Zak Crawley, Ollie Pope, Joe Root, Harry Brook, Ben Stokes (captain), Jamie Smith, Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse, Jofra Archer, Shoaib Bashir, are England’s starting Test XI.

A comeback at Lord’s, one of Archer’s two most memorable appearances in his first year of 2019, is the culmination of that plan.

In England’s heart-wrenching World Cup victory over New Zealand, Archer bowled the super over, and he then made his Test debut against Australia a few weeks later.

With his electrifying spell, falling and concussing Australian run-machine Steve Smith, he immediately had an impact.

Archer’s return has asymmetry, but there are still risks associated with it. In Sussex’s two-weeklong trip to Durham, he only played one top-notch match before the third Test. He won one wicket with 18 overs.

Although Archer’s inclusion was anticipated, it may surprise England to have made no further adjustments to their pace attack.

Woakes, 36, has a stellar Lord’s record despite only taking three wickets in the series. He has taken 32 wickets on this field on average for under 13 in seven previous Tests.

Carse appeared to be struggling with a foot issue that forced him to leave the beginning of the year, but he has since been passed fit.

No place is left for Jamie Overton or Sam Cook. As he recovers from a hamstring injury, gus Atkinson is also a member of the squad.

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Top European rights court says Russia broke international law in Ukraine

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The highest human rights court in Europe has determined that Russia violated Ukrainian law for the first time since the full-scale invasion of 2022.

The European Court of Human Rights’ (ECHR) judges also ruled on Wednesday that Russia was responsible for Malaysia Airlines Flight 17’s fatal accident, marking the first time an international court had formally identified Moscow as the perpetrator of the tragedy that killed 298 people.

The Strasbourg court has heard four cases brought by Ukraine and the Netherlands against Russia that cover a wide range of alleged human rights violations since the start of the conflict, including the MH17-bombing and the kidnapping of Ukrainian children.

Any choice will largely be symbolic. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the court’s governing body expelled it in 2022. The complaint was brought before the court.

The MH17 disaster’s victims’ families regard this decision as a significant step in their 11-year legal battle.

A Russian-made Buk missile fired from an area of separatist rebel-controlled eastern Ukraine on July 17, 2014, shot down the Boeing 777 as it was taking off from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur. 196 Dutch nationals were among the 298 passengers and crew who died.

Russia was found to be responsible for the disaster by the UN’s aviation agency in May.

Russia used a record number of drones to attack Ukraine overnight, prompting the court’s decision, which comes shortly after Donald Trump pledged to send more defensive weapons to Kyiv and said he was thinking about imposing severe sanctions on Moscow.

German Chancellor Friedrich Merz stated on Wednesday that Kyiv’s fight against Russian aggression has come to an end.

Why the future of AI may be open (and Chinese)

The global tech sector has been shocked by the release of DeepSeek’s R1, China’s potent new open-source AI model. It was offered for free and without any royalty fees, disrupting financial markets, and reversing Silicon Valley’s tightly regulated business model, which has long been criticized for its dominance of artificial intelligence.

DeepSeek’s open-source release is widely regarded as a key factor in the US’s trillion-dollar tech sell-off, which raises significant investor concern about China’s expanding competitiveness and the commodification of AI. R1 has irked investors and altered global AI geopolitics, earning itself the title “China’s answer” to OpenAI’s GPT4.

Reports show that using Nvidia’s H800 chips, R1’s compute costs were less than $6 million. This indicates a significantly more cost-effective model than proprietary counterparts, even though full development costs are still unnamed. It suggests that R1 might have been constructed for as little as OpenAI’s GPT4 costs, which are rumored to have been in the hundreds of millions. Due to its cost effectiveness and open access, DeepSeek’s business model is distinctly disruptive.

Chinese companies like Alibaba are releasing the Qwen3 Embedding series freely, and Mistral AI from France (with LLM as the first reason) is a step up. If the US doesn’t adopt open-source strategies, it could lose ground. After all, the early internet giants, like Google and Facebook, used free, user-centric services (like Gmail and Maps) to promote adoption before making money.

Giving away time-saving tools seems counterintuitive in a field where secrecy is common and models frequently locked up tightly. Even so, OpenAI, who was a pioneer with GPT4, now appears cautious. The $500 billion Stargate Project, which was established to avert AI leadership, has received strong support from CEO Sam Altman. With the launch of a new shopping feature, the practical expansion beyond ChatGPT has been slow. Innovation has not yet been pushed by US rivals (Google Gemini, Meta Llama, and Anthropic Claude).

Initial US dominance was fueled by incremental gains, which were aided by export restrictions on Nvidia chips and other technology that slowed China’s advance. Jensen Huang of Nvidia warned that these restrictions might have a negative impact, causing China’s chip industry to be slammed and ultimately weakened US control.

China’s strategic workaround is legal, scalable, and collaborative across all at once. It resembles how external developers create Android’s success. Similar to the Google Play model, Chinese companies now use open-source ecosystems to refine and scale models without having to pay any upfront costs.

Yann LeCun, Meta’s lead AI scientist, described DeepSeek’s rise as an open-source triumph, not just China’s ascendancy over the US. The geopolitical stakes are still present: Free access undermines the monetisation of proprietary models. Commercial models lose market share if open-source achieves parity.

Both speed and scale are China’s industrial strengths. By saturated the market with affordable, capable models, it exerts pressure on rivals until only the most popular, widely used model remains valuable, which is then monetized via data, advertising, or premium add-ons, a strategy well-tested by Google and Facebook.

US investors are aware of this for a reason. Systemic concern is at play in the reported $1 trillion decline following DeepSeek’s release. Open-sourcing is another component of a national industrial strategy for China: it uses “AI for good” to subvert, dominate, and claim benevolent intent.

If US technology is freely available, global rivals, including Chinese companies, can repurpose and surpass it. It might also be the opposite.

China also has its limitations. How open-source models trained in that environment can adapt to the demands of global content posed by its stringent internet censorship regime? RedNote (Xiaohongshu), a Chinese social media app that recently attracted a lot of Americans fleeing a potential TikTok ban, has already seen this. Although the cross-cultural exchange has been largely positive, tensions have grown, particularly in Taiwan and Xinjiang, where content is being moderated and censored for sensitive topics.

Chinese AI models may suffer from these limitations as they attempt to win over foreign customers for legitimacy and credibility.

China can compete in open-source AI without having access to cutting-edge US chips, changing the way the world uses AI. Leaders in the US have begun to acknowledge that long-term AI dominance depends not just on proprietary control but also on adoption, accessibility, and innovation at scale, from Elon Musk’s Grok-1 to OpenAI’s evolving stance.

In the end, China’s strategy of reshaping the global playing field requires using the principles of openness and decentralization to reshape the landscape. This may not be the case with guarding models behind closed doors.

The greatest irony is that China’s so-called “socialist AI” strategy may lead to the next era of US tech dominance.