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South Africa have ‘belief’ to pull off ‘amazing’ victory

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South Africa’s players have “massive belief” they can pull off a sensational victory in the World Test Championship final, says batter David Bedingham.

Australia initially put themselves in a strong position on day two, dismissing the Proteas for 138 in response to their own first-innings total of 212.

But South Africa roared back into the contest in the second half of the day as Australia collapsed to 144-8 – a lead of 218 – to leave the match on a knife edge.

Australia captain Pat Cummins said the contest is “50-50” in terms of who will emerge as victor.

And Bedingham, who top scored for South Africa in their first innings with 45, said his side will not be daunted but instead relish an “amazing chance” to secure a famous win at the home of cricket.

“We’re all very, very excited about the opportunity to win. It could go either way,” Bedingham said.

“When they started batting in their second innings, I think we would have definitely taken 144-8.

“So we are very confident and I think there’s a massive belief in this team.”

If Australia fail to add any more runs on day three South Africa would still be facing the fifth-highest Test run chase in Lord’s history.

Bedingham believes a positive approach from his side’s batters will be the best way to take on the challenge when they get the opportunity to bat on day three.

“I think we definitely showed more intent today. I think that will probably be the way we go about it,” he added.

How Australia spectacularly collapsed

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Australia lost five batters for just 29 runs – their fourth biggest collapse between the third and seventh wicket – to blow open the World Test Championship final.

Here’s how it happened:

17.5 overs – Labuschagne c Verreynne b Jansen 22 (Aus 44-3) – Labuschagne plays a loose drive and edges behind to wicketkeeper Verreynne.

18.5 overs – Smith lbw b Ngidi 13 (Aus 48-4) – South Africa successfully review an lbw against Smith, who plays across the line and is struck on his back pad in line with off stump.

22.6 overs – Webster lbw b Ngidi 9 (Aus 64-5) – A wide delivery angles back in, beats Webster’s inside edge and hits his back leg in front of middle stump.

23.4 overs – Head b Mulder 9 (Aus 66-6) – Mulder pitches the ball outside off and gets it to nip back past Head’s inside edge and into off stump.

‘Tricky’ pitch and ‘disciplined’ bowling behind Aussie struggles

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Australia skipper Cummins put his side’s collapse down to a “tricky” Lord’s pitch, and “disciplined” bowling from South Africa.

Lungi Ngidi and Kagiso Rabada picked up 3-35 and 3-44 respectively while Marco Jansen and Wiaan Mulder also claimed one apiece.

Cummins said: “I think it’s a mixture of the wicket still doing a little bit. It feels like just when it’s not doing anything, one ball will suddenly seam quite drastically.

“Both teams are kind of just hanging in that good length area, pretty tight line. I think the fast bowling from South Africa looked pretty tricky and the wicket has got enough in it to make it even more tricky.”

Cummins, who reached 300 Test wickets after he took 6-28, said any runs his side can eke out for their last two wickets could be vital.

“I am so happy we got 200. Hopefully we get another 20 or 30 in the morning,” he added.

“I think they’d give us a few more options to bowl, you know. A few more aggressive fields and those kind of things.

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Brighton sign 18-year-old Kostoulas in £29.8m deal

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Brighton have signed 18-year-old forward Charalampos Kostoulas for £29.78m (35m euros) from Greek side Olympiakos.

The teenager has signed a five-year contract that will start on 1 July.

The deal represents by some distance the highest fee ever received by a Greek club, beating the £16.6m Wolves paid to sign Daniel Podence from Olympiakos in 2020.

Brighton manager Fabian Hurzeler said: “He wants to play in the Premier League and we are excited about what he can bring to the team.

“He will give us different attacking options and we’re looking forward to helping him adapt to his new environment.”

Should an add-on of £1.7m for Kostoulas be paid during his time at Brighton, it would make the transfer a record deal for a Greek player – topping the £30.63m Napoli paid Roma for Kostas Manolas in 2019.

Greece Under-21 international Kostoulas made his first-team debut in 2024, having come through Olympiakos’ academy.

Kostoulas was a regular starter as Olympiakos won the prestigious UEFA Youth League in 2024, beating Inter Milan and Bayern Munich on their way to the final, where they defeated AC Milan.

Kostoulas is guided by an ex-basketball coach

Greek agent Giorgos Panou is credited with launching the career of superstar Milwaukee Bucks basketball player Giannis Antetokounmpo and is now doing the same in football with Brighton’s new striker Kostoulas.

Just as he spotted Antetokounmpo, then a second division Greek basketball player in 2013, he noticed Kostoulas, nicknamed ‘Babis’, aged 15.

When asked how the two talents compare, Panou replied: “I felt the same way when I first saw Babis playing three years ago in an under-19s game, aged 15, to how I felt when I first saw Giannis.

“I got the feeling immediately that he is cold-blooded, immense talent, with great body language and ready to take on older, bigger guys without feeling pressure. I saw a potential to grow.”

Chelsea were credited with interest in Kostoulas in the past, while Brighton are believed to have beaten some of the biggest clubs in Germany to his signature. So why move to the south coast? The answer is, perhaps, unsurprising.

“They won the family and myself with how they talk, negotiate, give all the tools to thrive and have a good track record of developing similar young talents,” Panou said.

“So we feel very comfortable, and I’m really sure that Babis will adapt really fast in this environment. It was a no-brainer for me.”

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‘A gamble for Frank – but Dane has earned Spurs chance’

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Thomas Frank has a reputation within football as a manager who detects problems and finds solutions. Now he must solve the seemingly never-ending puzzle that is Tottenham Hotspur.

The dysfunctional nature of Spurs was graphically illustrated by chairman Daniel Levy’s decision to follow his long-term habit of sacking managers who do not win trophies by sacking the one who finally did.

Ange Postecoglou may have ended the club’s 17-year wait for success by winning the Europa League, but that was still not enough for Levy after a 17th-place finish in the Premier League.

Into this conundrum walks 51-year-old Frank – the charismatic and warm Dane who will swap the structure and stability of Brentford for the precarious, unwieldy beast that is Spurs.

It is a move laced with risk for Frank, because this is Spurs and his chairman will be Levy, but it is one his naturally confident nature will embrace and is a step up in profile his impressive work at Brentford has earned.

Frank has been hugely successful in establishing the Bees in the Premier League while playing high-intensity, entertaining football – catching the eye of hard-to-please Levy.

Other managers regularly speak in admiring tones about Frank’s work, with the belief being that eventually he would leave Brentford to take on a high-pressure, high-profile job. Even six-time Premier League winner Pep Guardiola said it was “just a question of time”.

The time is now.

The Champions League awaits, and so does a mission to revive Spurs as a Premier League force.

What is clear is they have turned to a man whose career remains on an upwards curve.

Frank’s playing career may have only taken in the Danish amateur game – he even spent time working in a kindergarten – but he progressed successfully as a coach through the Denmark national youth teams to Brondby, before joining Brentford as an assistant in 2016, then succeeding Dean Smith as head coach two years later when Smith moved to Aston Villa.

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In each of Frank’s four seasons leading Brentford in the Premier League, doubts were expressed about their ability to survive. They have not only defied those grim predictions, but have nearly always done it with comfort.

In 2021-22 Brentford finished 13th, before climbing to ninth the following year.

The season that brought most concern was 2023-24, when the Bees finished 16th. In mitigation, that was the campaign during which main striker Ivan Toney served an eight-month ban for breaching Football Association betting rules, not returning to action until late January.

In a further demonstration of Frank’s talents, even when Toney signed for Al-Ahli in the Saudi Pro League after playing for England at Euro 2024, Brentford were able to regroup and finish 10th with a progressive attacking style centred on attacking duo Bryan Mbeumo and Yoane Wissa.

Frank’s Brentford hit a rich attacking seam as Mbeumo, who looks set to follow the coach out of the exit door, scored 20 goals and had seven assists in the Premier League, and Wissa had 19 goals and four assists.

Former Liverpool midfielder Jan Molby knows his countryman well, watching Brentford regularly in his role as a main Premier League football analyst in Denmark.

Molby told BBC Sport: “He sees problems and solves problems. It’s a great strength for any manager to have.

“There have been a couple of seasons when people have thought Brentford would struggle that year, but they didn’t. He kept finding new solutions.

“Who would have thought after losing Ivan Toney he would be able to produce a pair like he has done this season, with Bryan Mbeumo and Yoane Wissa?

“Thomas has earned the right and he’s got what it takes. I think it’s a really exciting appointment for Spurs.”

Molby also believes Frank’s character and man-management style will help him overcome any early obstacles with players hurt by Postecoglou’s sacking, and with fans looking for signs of how he measures up to the task.

“I just have this feeling that for all those things people might be worried about – his career in Denmark, never having managed a club like this – the players will like him,” Molby said.

“They will like the clarity. They will like his personality, his honesty. He is a very good man-manager. I think he’ll be absolutely fine. In the end, it boils down to what he does on the pitch, but I think he’s got all the tools to do the job.

“His big strength is he’s very clear with the players. He will say: ‘This is what I expect and if we all get that we’ll be OK.’

Spurs chairman Daniel Levy hugs Ange Postecoglou after the Europa League final - but the club later sacked the Australian bossGetty Images

There is a particular reason Molby believes Frank will be the ideal fit for Spurs.

“I see a squad ready to play Thomas Frank football,” Molby said.

“It is about putting the opposition under pressure at every given opportunity. The one thing you don’t want to do as a team is defend. He likes to put the opposition under pressure.

“That is in open play, set-pieces. He makes no bones about his use of long throw-ins. Put teams under pressure. Play long. Play quick. He is adaptable tactically as well.”

Frank has tailored Brentford’s style so they are not quite as reliant on set-pieces. Excluding penalties, 33.3% of their goals came from set plays in 2021-22, followed by 31%, 19.6% and 21.2% in the subsequent three seasons.

Frank’s lap of honour with his players around Brentford’s Gtech Community Stadium, often when one of the Premier League’s elite names had been defeated, became a familiar sight – his common touch often leading him to acknowledge faces in the crowd with whom he became familiar.

He also strikes the balance between the pressures of the top flight and enjoying his victories, often talking about his “few glasses of red” when basking in the afterglow of a win.

It might be harder to employ the personal touch at one of the game’s aspiring superpowers in a magnificent 60,000-capacity stadium, but anyone who has been in close proximity to Frank would see a genuine people person as well as a shrewd football strategist.

There is unquestionably an element of a gamble in leaving the comfort zone and sound structure of Brentford under owner Matthew Benham and director of football Phil Giles. Levy-led Spurs are a very different specimen.

When Postecoglou was sacked, the Australian left as the man who delivered long-awaited silverware, with many players upset and a large portion of support torn over whether he should have been given a third season.

“No doubt there is risk,” said Molby. “As much as people look at the season Spurs have had, they have just picked up a trophy after 17 years. Players have come out and spoken about their respect for Ange Postecoglou.

“Often, you take over at a club where the previous manager has been run out of town, but that’s not quite been the case at Spurs. Even though they had a poor Premier League season, it was still maybe 50/50 whether Spurs wanted to keep Ange, so he needs to hit the ground running.

“I think Thomas is pragmatic enough to do what he feels is needed, whereas Ange was maybe a little bit stubborn.

“The big question is whether that is enough. What is enough for Spurs? Ange won a European trophy but it didn’t save him. I would suggest top five – but that is a big ask after where they finished last season.”

Frank has, however, has served his apprenticeship, moving through the managerial gears in Denmark then England.

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Young Nigerians Must See Themselves As Participants Not Spectators In Democracy — Uzodimma

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Imo State Governor, Hope Uzodimma, has called on the youth to actively participate in Nigeria’s political development and future, rather than seeing themselves as spectators.

Uzodimma made the call at the Democracy Day lecture organised in commemoration of June 12 in Abuja on Thursday.

He said democracy does not rely on institutions alone—but requires the active participation of citizens — people who will vote, ask questions, and write and engage.

“Young Nigerians must see themselves as part of this system. They must see themselves as participants, not mere spectators. You inherited the right earned in 1993.

“You must also inherit the responsibilities they are there. Change comes from active participation, not docility. There is also the matter of political will,” he said.

READ ALSO: It’s A Pleasure To See Opposition In Disarray, Tinubu Says

According to him, no constitution or system, no matter how perfect, can enforce itself or resist manipulation without principled actors.

The governor said, “At critical moments, leaders must choose a direction. Not every choice will be popular, but it must always be defensible in terms of public interest and national stability.

“We have had that kind of leadership now. We have this leadership under President Bola Ahmed Tinubu, one that understands the difference between strength and stubbornness, one that can hold institutions accountable without weakening them, one that listens, not just reacts, one that is answerable to the people.

“That is the spirit behind the renewed hope agenda. The removal of full subsidies, though challenging, has opened up competition in the downstream sector, helping to stabilise prices and redirect public funds towards infrastructure and education.”

Uzodimma, who is also the Chairman of the Progressive Governors’ Forum, stated that the Nigerian Education Loan Fund was expanding access to higher education, ensuring that no willing student was denied the opportunity due to poverty.

He said, “These efforts are the signs of a government serious about translating governance into the outcomes where progress can be seen, felt, and sustained. As we commemorate June 12, let us not reduce it to mere history.

“Today, the road ahead requires commitment. Institutions must be built to survive transitions. Political actors must agree on basic rules. The press must remain independent.

“The courts must act without fear, and citizens must stay involved beyond election day. This is how democracy becomes routine, not in ceremony, but in culture, not in grand declarations, but in consistent practice.”

The governor further said that June 12 earned its place in Nigeria’s political history when Nigerians chose who should lead them.

“It represents a point in our national journey when the people made a clear choice and the system responded in disagreement.

“In recognising June 12, the APC-led government did more than declare a public holiday. It corrected the record. It restored the name of Chief MKO Abiola to its rightful place in our political and democratic history,” he said.

Jury Dispute Triggers Mistrial On Harvey Weinstein Rape Charge

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The judge in the Harvey Weinstein sex crimes retrial declared a mistrial on the outstanding rape charge against the movie producer Thursday, after the jury foreperson refused to return to deliberate the case amid a jury room feud.

In front of packed press and public benches in the 13th-floor New York courtroom, Judge Curtis Farber dismissed jurors who had been unable to reach a verdict on the charge that Weinstein raped Jessica Mann.

“Deliberations became heated to such a degree I am obligated to declare a mistrial on the one count on which you didn’t reach a verdict,” Farber declared from the wood-paneled bench, wearing a robe and reading glasses.

READ ALSO: Harvey Weinstein Found Guilty Of Sexual Assault After Retrial

Former Hollywood film producer Harvey Weinstein appears in Manhattan criminal court during his rape and sexual assault re-trial in New York on June 10, 2025. (Photo by Michael Nagle / POOL / AFP)

Weinstein’s lawyer Arthur Aidala had forcefully argued that a crime had been committed against one of the jurors, but the judge dismissed the claim.

On Wednesday, the jury convicted Weinstein for sexual assault on Miriam Haley, and acquitted the fallen movie mogul for allegedly sexually assaulting Kaja Sokola. The defense vowed to appeal.

The prosecutor brushed off the defense’s claim that a retrial on the charge of raping Mann would exert unfair pressure on the alleged victim. “We will proceed to trial and that is what justice would be in this case,” Nicole Blumberg said.

Outside court, Aidala alleged that two jurors had indicated to his team that the panel had considered the cases of rapper Sean “P Diddy” Combs and convicted child sex abuser R. Kelly in their discussions.

“(If) they say, ‘Well, look at R Kelly. Look what’s going on across the street with P Diddy’… That’s not what you can do, and that’s what we just heard happen,” said the sharp-suited attorney.

(FILES) US producer-musician Sean “Diddy” Combs (Photo by ANGELA WEISS / AFP)

Combs is on trial at a nearby courthouse for alleged racketeering and other crimes, and the publicity of that case has largely eclipsed Weinstein’s retrial.

Weinstein, 73 and wheelchair-bound by ill-health, is already in jail for a 16-year term after he was convicted in a separate California case of raping a European actress more than a decade ago.

Proceedings in New York have been dogged by personal issues between jurors, two of whom have privately complained to the judge about fellow panelists.

The foreman had told judge Farber he could not continue after facing threats.

“One other juror made comments to the effect ‘I’ll meet you outside one day’,” the judge said Wednesday quoting the foreman, adding there was yelling between jurors.

After Weinstein’s lawyer demanded a mistrial over the jury rupture, Weinstein himself addressed the court Wednesday, deploying a commanding voice reminiscent of his Hollywood heyday.

‘Threats, violence, intimidation’

Harvey Weinstein (C) arrives at Manhattan Criminal Court for a hearing on October 11, 2018 in New York City. (TIMOTHY A. CLARY / AFP)

“We’ve heard threats, violence, intimidation — this is not right for me… the person who is on trial here,” he said.

The Oscar-winner’s conviction on the Haley charge is a vindication for Haley whose complaint in part led to the initial guilty verdict in 2020.

That landmark case helped spur the “MeToo” movement that saw an outpouring of allegations from prominent women who were abused by men.

Weinstein underwent a spectacular fall from his position at the top of the world of Hollywood and show business in 2017 when allegations against him exploded into public.

The movement upended the film industry, exposing systemic exploitation of young women seeking to work in entertainment, and provoking a reckoning on how to end the toxic culture.

More than 80 women accused Weinstein of sexual misconduct in the wake of the global backlash against men abusing positions of power.