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Archive April 30, 2025

Planning lodged for new Cricket Ireland stadium

Ireland – Sport

Planning and digital renders for a new stadium and high performance centre for Cricket Ireland in Dublin have been lodged by Ireland – Sport.

The high performance center of the sport would be located in a two-story pavilion with a seating capacity of 4, 240 and a floodlit stadium, among other things.

A suggestion for an additional 7, 760 non-permanent seats, which would increase the capacity for specific events to 12, 000, has also been made.

The Irish government granted funding for the construction of a new stadium in August, and the project is scheduled to be finished in 2028.

The development of a new stadium, according to Cricket Ireland’s CEO Warren Deutrom, will allow Ireland to “host the world’s top teams on an annual basis,” including hosting the 2030 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup with England and Scotland.

Officials from Cricket Ireland’s nations’ visits to the Hagley Oval in Christchurch, New Zealand, and Hampshire’s Utilita Bowl in Southampton are said to have taken inspiration from the design of the new facility.

The stadium will be based at the Ireland – Sport campus in Blanchardstown, which is in the north west outskirts of Dublin.

The football team’s headquarters are already located on the campus, along with Aquatics Ireland, the high performance facility for Irish rugby, and the Irish Olympic and Special Olympics complex.

For international matches, Ireland’s senior men’s and women’s teams play on the grounds of Malahide, Clontarf, Stormont, and Bready.

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From Rooney to relegation – why Plymouth are on brink of drop

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So after two seasons in the Championship, Plymouth Argyle are all but certain to be heading back to League One.

Despite a flurry of positive results in recent weeks, the Pilgrims will return to the third tier unless they can thrash title-chasing Leeds United by as many as 13 goals on the final day of the season and hope Luton Town and Hull City lose.

But while this season has not been successful, it has been full of stories.

Rooney optimism quickly evaporates

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“I actually sold it to her that this is the Monaco of England,” joked Rooney when asked how he persuaded his wife Coleen that taking the Plymouth job was the right move for his career.

It was a light-hearted moment from the most high-profile head coach the Pilgrims had ever appointed.

As a former England captain, and ex-record goalscorer for the Three Lions, Rooney had done it all as a player with Manchester United, but the jury was very much out on his coaching abilities.

A spell at Derby County had seen the club relegated to League One, although huge financial problems at the club absolved Rooney of much blame, before an uneventful spell with Major League Soccer side DC United in the United States.

Then came a torrid time at Birmingham City in 2023.

Rooney was brought in by the club’s new American owners to play attacking football, but his spell saw Blues drop from the Championship play-off places to the relegation zone after just two wins in 15 games in charge.

“I kept a pretty open mind. I raised an eyebrow and I said to myself ‘I hope it works’,” said BBC Sport journalist Drew Savage, who commentates on Argyle matches for BBC Radio Devon.

“I’d been trying to interest my colleagues at BBC Sport at a national level in Plymouth Argyle for all my career and they very rarely listened.

“In those six months when Rooney was manager, I had more conversations in the office around Argyle and my colleagues who do sport for BBC Breakfast and BBC News were far more open to mentioning Plymouth than ever before.

“So I totally get what he brought to the table in terms of exposure, of just putting us on on the map.

Wayne Rooney has his head in his handsGetty Images

Rooney’s first test was a trip to Sheffield Wednesday – a club Argyle had pipped to the League One title just 15 months earlier and who had, like Plymouth, avoided relegation the previous May.

He opted for an attacking line-up, but it quickly, and spectacularly, backfired as they lost 4-0.

Plymouth had just one half-hearted attempt on target and saw Wednesday have 31 efforts at goal, 11 of which were on target, in the morale-sapping loss.

“Pre-season had been decent, it kind of came out of nowhere,” said Savage.

“We maybe hadn’t played strong enough sides but I certainly wasn’t expecting a 4-0 defeat.

“It was a problem that would become perpetual – in far too many games teams could just play through the middle of us.

“Something that did become a pattern was Rooney blamed the players. He also later admitted maybe he’d played too many of the new signings.

Things improved a bit as they won three and drew two more of their next eight league games, but then the slump kicked in.

Rooney would win just one of his next 14 games as the Pilgrims tumbled to the foot of the table.

By the time he mutually agreed to part ways with Argyle on 31 December, he had seen his side fail to score in 11 of his 23 league games in charge and concede three or more goals in eight of those matches.

Among the horror shows Argyle fans will want to forget were the 6-1 loss at Norwich, where Rooney said Plymouth’s under-18s team could have defended better, a 3-0 loss at Leeds, where his side did not have an attempt at goal, and a 5-0 drubbing at then bottom-of-the-table Cardiff City having gone down to 10 men.

“When Rooney came he tried to play a certain style,” explained former Argyle defender Brian McGlinchey, who works as a summariser for BBC Radio Devon.

“It was a lot of attacking play through the lines, and sometimes I felt that maybe some of the players didn’t have the ability to play that type of style and a lot of teams had worked Argyle out.

Rooney out, Muslic in, Liverpool beaten

Miron Muslic applauds the Home Park fansRex Features

Having appointed a head coach everyone had heard of, Argyle went completely the other way and got someone in that nobody had a clue about.

Step forward Miron Muslic.

The Bosnia-born Austrian may not have had the profile of Rooney, but he did at least have successful managerial experience having guided Belgian side Cercle Bruges to a Europa Conference League place.

His reign began slowly with a 1-1 draw with Oxford United and a 1-0 home loss to Queens Park Rangers before his side were outclassed 5-0 at home by Burnley, the Clarets scoring four times in the final 15 minutes of a five-goal first half.

But then came the resurgence.

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“Just to be there that day was an amazing thing I’ll remember for ever,” said Savage of the famous Sunday in February when Argyle knocked Liverpool out of the FA Cup.

Plymouth had already beaten Premier League side Brentford in the third round under perennial caretaker manager Kevin Nancekivell and injured captain Joe Edwards.

But under Muslic they put in arguably the most memorable performance of this season’s competition beating a Liverpool side who were clear at the top of the Premier League, in the last 16 of the Champions League and Carabao Cup finalists, 1-0 for one of Home Park’s most famous days.

“Any Liverpool team on paper should pretty much beat any Plymouth Argyle team on paper,” Savage said of the win against the Reds, who had rested several of their star players.

“But the Home Park crowd has played such a role in so many of the results we have had, and they tend to be results against teams we’re not expecting to beat.”

The crucial point of the season came in the first half of March.

It started well – having beaten Liverpool, Argyle got a third top-flight side in the FA Cup and came away from their fifth round tie against reigning Premier League champions Manchester City with a creditable 3-1 defeat.

But then it all went wrong.

They had a run of four ‘winnable’ games but lost to relegation rivals Hull City and Derby County, and were beaten 3-0 by Sheffield Wednesday – although a first away league win of the season at Portsmouth in the middle of the run salvaged some survival hopes.

But while good wins over Norwich City and Sheffield United further increased fans’ optimism, Argyle never got out of the drop zone.

“The new manager came in and realised that he had to go a lot more resilient, defensive, harder to beat,” explained McGlinchey, who saw Argyle move to three central defenders and a more compact and direct style of play

“They’ve got there to a certain degree, they’ve become a bit more dogged, nowhere near as on the front foot as much.

Why did it all go wrong?

Plymouth Argyle players look upset after conceding a goalRex Features

It is simplistic to say that Argyle were poor at both ends of the field – but the statistics do not lie.

They have conceded more goals than any other side in the Championship, while a recent flurry of eight goals in the past four games has seen them become the highest-scoring side in the bottom third of the table – but it was too little too late.

The lack of another striker was key – with Muhamed Tijani out for most of the season with hamstring issues, and Ryan Hardie’s patchy injury record over the Christmas and New Year period, goals were hard to come by.

“I still maintain that Argyle have not replaced Niall Ennis,” Savage said.

“In the League One-winning season, when the goals from Hardie dried up towards the end, Ennis was in the side and scoring goals.

“Argyle have failed to land anybody else who’s capable of consistently shouldering that burden.

“Tijani got injured and we’ve taken a while to work out exactly how to get the best out of Mustapha Bundu.

“But if we’d signed a striker, capable of scoring goals in the January window then we would probably be in a better position than we are now.”

Argyle head coach Muslic feels his side simply ran out of time to change course.

Having won four of their past six games they gave themselves a chance until Luton’s late heroics over Coventry on Saturday left them effectively down.

“We are empty. We are heartbroken, but we will get up again,” Muslic said.

“It was a massive, massive challenge and I think we took this challenge with courage, with enthusiasm, with positivity, with a completely different structure, different set up and we simply ran out of games.

Better placed to bounce straight back?

Plymouth Argyle celebrate winning the League One title in 2023Getty Images

Despite being back in League One, Argyle are probably in a stronger position financially then when they were promoted.

They have benefitted from two years of the Championship’s bigger television deal and have invested in infrastructure, such as a new training ground and improvements at Home Park.

Owner Simon Hallett has said he is close to selling a stake in the club to new investors, which could further bolster their coffers.

Last month, he said he was confident the budget available to Argyle if they were to go down would be “considerably in excess” of the one in their 101-point title-winning season in 2022-23.

“Our success off the pitch has enabled us to diversify and grow revenues to record levels,” he said.

“Should we be relegated, returns on our investments position us well to remain financially strong in League One with the ability to fund a highly competitive first-team squad.”

But who will play for the club is another matter.

Argyle twice broke their transfer record in January to sign Ghanaian forward Michael Baidoo and Ukraine defender Maksym Talovierov.

While Talovierov has been a hit at centre-back, Baidoo has struggled, failing to score or provide an assist and rarely featuring in the past few months.

Both have international aspirations which might be difficult playing in League One, while the likes of forward Hardie, wing-back Bali Mumba and goalkeeper Conor Hazard could all attract interest from other Championship sides over the summer.

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UK joins US air strikes on Houthi rebel sites in Yemen

Joint airstrikes by American and British forces have been conducted near Yemen’s capital Sanaa, allegedly targeting what British authorities claim are Houthi armed group drone factories.

The UK offered a detailed justification for the start of the strike on Wednesday morning, in contrast to the US, which only provided a few details about the hundreds of strikes it has carried out since March 15 when it first launched its renewed campaign.

The British Ministry of Defence claims that the strikes, which took place overnight, took place 24 kilometers (15 miles) south of Sanaa and hit buildings that had been identified by UK intelligence as being used to manufacture drones.

No details were given, but the ministry claimed the operation was intended to reduce casualties for civilians.

The US has not yet made a comment on the joint operation, despite having repeatedly attacked Houthi targets in the past month.

As long as they continue to target shipping in the Red Sea, US President Donald Trump ordered the military to launch “decisive and powerful” strikes on the Houthis in mid-March.

The strikes have “killed Houthi fighters and leaders… and degrading their capabilities,” according to the Pentagon, which have hit more than 1, 000 targets across Yemen since then.

However, more people are concerned about casualties in the military.

68 people were killed when a recent US strike hit a detention facility housing African migrants, according to Houthi-affiliated media.

In addition, Sanaa-based rights organization Mwatana for Human Rights claims to have found hundreds of additional civilian casualties in recent US attacks.

Yemeni civilians have been the targets of arbitrary and disproportionate attacks by warring parties for more than ten years, according to Mwatana chairwoman Radhya al-Mutawakel.

They now find themselves potential targets of US forces’ attacks, she continued, “at a time when they were hoping to see an end to this bloody chapter of their lives.”

The Pentagon is aware of claims of civilian casualties from the strike from Monday, according to an unnamed US defense official who spoke to Reuters.

‘Disrespectful’ dad criticised as Pacers beat Bucks

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After the pair had a heated exchange following the Indiana Pacers’ series-clinching victory, Milwaukee Bucks power forward Giannis Antetokounmpo criticized Tyrese Haliburton’s “disrespectful” father.

With a 119-118 victory over the Bucks, the Pacers won their way to the NBA play-off semi-finals.

With 1.3 seconds left, Haliburton scored the winning layup, and following the buzzer, fans entered the court to celebrate.

What he thought was a Pacers fan approached Antetokounmpo, a two-time NBA most valuable player, and made fun of him with a towel with Haliburton’s face on it.

According to what transpired, Haliburton’s father was the fan.

Antetokounmpo remarked, “I think it’s important to be humble in victory.”

“At that point, I assumed it was a fan before realizing it was Tyrese’s father.”

Tyrese is a formidable competitor, I think. His father is standing next to me and saying, “This is what we do,” before showing me a towel with his son’s face on it. We accomplish this. That is very disrespectful in my opinion.

Antetokounmpo has been offered an apology from Haliburton, who claims he was unaware of his father’s actions at the time.

“I didn’t realize it until I returned to the locker room where I was hanging out,” Haliburton said.

We talked about it a little bit. I disagree with what transpired there.

Endangering Bucks’ Championship hopes

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The Bucks’ hopes of winning their first Championship since 2021 are now over with the defeat.

With 40 more minutes left in the fifth game, the Pacers forced two crucial turnovers in the closing 17 seconds.

The Pacers’ eight-point run ended with Haliburton’s winning lay-up, which ended the game in their favor.

Celtics advance to the semi-finals

Jayson Tatum celebrates Getty Images

The Boston Celtics, the reigning champions, won the series by beating the Orlando Magic 116-89 to seal a 4-1 victory.

Jayson Tatum top scored with 35 points, 10 assists, and 8 rebounds.

Paolo Banchero, a Magic forward, was forced to sit out after his fifth foul, giving the Magic a four-point lead in the third quarter.

The series definitely swung, it said. Mosley remarked, “It definitely swung the game.”

Paolo received the foul and was only visible when he elbowed Paolo in the face or pushed back into the face. That completely changed the game.

In the third quarter, your best player commits his fifth foul. It’s challenging to come back from that experience.

In the following round, the Celtics will face either the Detroit Pistons or the New York Knicks.

With a 106-103 victory in game five, the Pistons extended their best-of-seven series lead to 3-2.

In other games, the Denver Nuggets defeated the LA Clippers 131-115 to extend their 3-2 series lead.

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Trump’s tariffs: How much of a typical US household is made in America?

Fruits

Tropical fruits like bananas (one percent domestically grown), pineapples (10 percent), and avocados (10 percent) are primarily imported from countries like Ecuador, Costa Rica, and Mexico, while the majority of apples (95 percent) and oranges (80 percent) are grown domestically, particularly in the US states of Washington, California, and Florida.

Vegetables

Similar to corn (99%), potatoes (95%), pumpkins (95%), and beans (88%), mostly grown in the US, particularly in states like Iowa, Idaho, Illinois, and Nebraska.

Iowa and Illinois lead in corn and soybean production, while Idaho excels in potatoes, two of these states are renowned for their extensive agricultural output. Only one-third of the tomatoes consumed in the US are domesticated, with Mexico accounting for the majority of the production.

Staples

Although some rice and specialty grains are imported, the majority of the country’s staple products, such as sugar (70%) and wheat (80-90%), are produced in the US.

Meats

The majority of meat is raised in the US, particularly in Texas, Nebraska, Kansas, Georgia, and Arkansas, which are known for their large-scale livestock farming operations, especially beef (90%), and poultry (95%), respectively. In the US, eggs and cheese are primarily produced there (95%), and cheese is a major product.

At least two-thirds of the seafood consumed in the US is imported from countries like China, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Canada, while the rest is produced either wild-caught or farmed.

Drinks

Because of the climate’s prohibitive cultivation, only about 1% of the tea and coffee consumed in the US are domestically grown. Tea is primarily imported from China, India, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Brazil, Colombia, Vietnam, and Ethiopia, while tea is also imported from China, India, Sri Lanka, and Kenya.

The majority of soda is produced domestically, or 90%. The US market is dominated by major players like Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, and Keurig Dr Pepper, each with its own number of factories.


Room in the living room

Vietnam celebrates 50 years since end of war with US

In Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam celebrated the end of its war with the United States by hosting a grand military parade that included thousands of Vietnamese and sang patriotic songs.

The country’s reunification took place on April 30, 1975, when communist-led North Vietnam seized Saigon, the country’s capital, and gave its new name, Ho Chi Minh City, in honor of its founding leader, on April 30.

As fighter jets and helicopters carrying red flags flew overhead, a lotus-shaped float carrying a portrait of Ho Chi Minh was close to the start of the show.

On April 30, 2025, a parade in Ho Chi Minh City will mark the 50th anniversary of Saigon’s defeat and the end of the Vietnam War. [Nhac Nguyen/AFP]

According to Al Jazeera’s Tony Cheng, who was reporting from the city, thousands of people stayed overnight in the streets to get the best view of the parade, which was both a day of mournful reflection and a day of celebration.

Veteran, 75, Tran Van Truong, who had traveled from the capital, Hanoi, to see the parade, said, “I am proud of having contributed to the liberation of the south.”

Truong told the AFP news agency, “But what’s gone is gone is gone, I have no hatred for those on the other side of the battle.” We should “raise our hands to applaud the war’s conclusion.”

Vietnam
On April 30, 2025, a parade in Ho Chi Minh City honors the 50th anniversary of the end of the Vietnam War.

More than 300 soldiers from China, Laos, and Cambodia also took part in the event for the first time.

According to state media, more than 300,000 Chinese soldiers participated in the bloody conflict, providing essential anti-aircraft defense support and providing logistics and supplies.

According to Zach Abuza, a professor at the National War College in Washington with a focus on Southeast Asian politics, “Hanoi is signaling to China that they recognize its historical contribution.” They can also use this as a signal that “Don’t think our foreign policy is leaning in favor of Americans.”

US ties have a problem,

Vietnam and the US have diplomatic ties dating back 30 years.

Vietnam’s relationship with the US became the most effective diplomatic relationship it can have with any nation, and it also has the same level of relations as China and Russia.

However, President Donald Trump’s heavy tariffs and the cancellation of significant foreign aid, which have had an impact on Vietnam’s efforts to end war, have caused the relationship with Washington to deteriorate.

Existing weapons and unexploded ammunition are still a threat to lives in the countryside as a result of Agent Orange contamination. Due to the administration’s extensive cuts to USAID, those projects’ future is now in jeopardy.

Vietnam
(Bottom L-R) President Luong Cuong, President of Vietnam, Hun Sen, President of Cambodia, Hun Sen, and Vietnam’s Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh attend celebrations in Ho Chi Minh City on April 30, 2025.