Author: dmitriy.vasyura@gmail.com

  • Japan’s ruling party loses majority in blow to new prime minister

    Japan’s ruling party loses majority in blow to new prime minister

    Japan's ruling party loses majority in blow to new prime minister

    The LDP-led coalition won only 215 seats instead of the required 233 for a majority. New Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba promised to implement reforms and remain in office despite the defeat.

    The coalition led by Japan's ruling Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) has lost its majority in parliament, its worst result in a decade, UNN reports citing the BBC.

    Details

    The LDP and its much smaller coalition partner Komeito together won 215 seats, less than the 233 seats needed for a majority. The party's new leader, Shigeru Ishiba, said there are no plans to expand the coalition at this stage.

    Ishiba, who called the election just days before he was sworn in as prime minister, vowed to remain in office despite the LDP's loss of its parliamentary majority.

    In his speech on Monday, he said that the party had received a "harsh sentence," adding that they would "humbly" accept it.

    "The voters have given us a harsh verdict, and we must humbly accept this result," Ishiba told national broadcaster NHK.

    "The Japanese people have expressed a strong desire for the LDP to think a little bit and become a party that acts in accordance with the will of the people," he said.

    On the eve of the election, Japanese media reported that if the LDP loses its parliamentary majority, Ishiba may resign to take over, making him Japan's shortest-serving prime minister in the postwar period.

    This is the first time the LDP has lost its parliamentary majority since 2009. Since its founding in 1955, the party has ruled the country almost uninterruptedly.

    This result came after several tumultuous years for the LDP, which witnessed a "cascade" of scandals, widespread voter apathy, and record low approval ratings.

    Earlier this year, the party's approval rating dropped below 20% following a scandal involving corruption in political fundraising.

    On Monday, Isiba promised to "carry out a fundamental reform on the issue of money and politics.

    "We need to respond to the people's criticism. This is how I will take responsibility for the election defeat," he said.

    He also promised to revive rural Japan and tackle inflation.

    Meanwhile, the largest opposition party, the Constitutional Democratic Party (CDP), has won a preliminary 148 seats, according to NHK.

    However, opposition parties have failed to unite or convince voters that they are a viable option for governance. The approval rating of the CDP, which is the main opposition party, was only 6.6% before the dissolution of the parliament.

    On Monday morning, the benchmark Nikkei 225 stock index was up about 1.5%, while the yen fell against the US dollar.

    Japan's government has changed, Shigeru Ishiba is the new prime ministerOctober 1 2024, 09:44 AM • 12255 views

  • Shanghai police have stepped up security during Halloween celebrations

    Shanghai police have stepped up security during Halloween celebrations

    Shanghai police have stepped up security during Halloween celebrations

    Shanghai authorities have increased police patrols to prevent mass Halloween celebrations in the city center. This decision was made after last year's protests, when people in costumes criticized the economy and COVID policy.

    Over the weekend, Shanghai police stepped up patrols on the streets of the city center to curb Halloween celebrations, which are considered the most international in China. This was reported by Reuters, according to UNN.

    Details

    The local administration has taken steps to avoid a repeat of last year's events, when crowds of celebrants, many in costumes criticizing economic problems and COVID-19, gathered in the city center.

    This year, the presence of law enforcement officers was noticeable, and numerous warnings about the ban on mass events reduced the number of people who decided to celebrate the holiday. Additionally, rainy weather also contributed to the decline in activity.

    How to create a Halloween mood without getting too scared: five incredible cartoonsOctober 25 2024, 05:20 PM • 16080 views

  • Premier League sack race: Ten Hag favourite, again, as Man Utd lose, again

    Premier League sack race: Ten Hag favourite, again, as Man Utd lose, again

    The second international break has been and gone, with the next one inexplicably just around the corner. That can mean only one thing. Well, it can mean lots of things. There are too many international breaks, is one such thing. But for us it’s one thing: which managers might get sacked?

    Last season was a quiet one for manager departures, with by far the biggest one of the lot only happening at the very end of the campaign after a six-month farewell tour. But it did prompt a fair bit of early summer managergeddon and does mean quite a few new or returning faces among the 20 men in the race none of them want to win.

    All hail the return of the Premier League Sack Race. Here’s a rundown of who’s likeliest to be packing their bags first and who can, for now, luxuriate in relative safety and security.

    1) Erik Ten Hag
    The brief respite of a spell in second place is over, with defeat at West Ham sending Ten Hag soaring back into top spot. Funnily enough, this was perhaps one result he actually could deny given the absurd nature of the VAR-awarded penalty that did for United at the death, but you don’t become Sack Race favourite on the back of one bad result. United have had many bad results, and the worst thing about a lot of them is Ten Hag’s apparent inability – whether genuine or in misguided attempts at self-defence – to identify them as such.

    Three draws from three in the Europa League is not, however much Ten Hag insists, evidence of anything good. Goalless draws at Crystal Palace and Aston Villa aren’t disastrous, sure, but nor are they really things to be shouting from the rooftops. And that’s before we get to the defeats, which have so often been miserable. Liverpool and Spurs have spangled a side that remains relentlessly mediocre while wearing a badge that renders such things unacceptable and unsustainable.

    It’s felt like he’s on borrowed time for a year or more now, yet still no hard evidence that an end to anyone’s misery is in the offing here.

    1) Russell Martin
    We feared it might all go a bit Vincent Kompany for Russell Martin, and four defeats from the first four was definitely a bit Burnley, as was conceding a late equaliser against Ipswich and indeed going down pretty convincingly at Bournemouth and then losing from 2-0 at home to Leicester of all teams. But the good news for the beleaguered Saints boss is that Burnley stuck with Kompany, didn’t they? Right up until he buggered off.

    Russell Martin is the next manager of Bayern Munich, is what we’re saying here.

    3) Gary O’Neil
    Seven points from a possible 57 for the Wolves manager since being (really quite ludicrously, to be fair) linked with the Man United job. A sign of just how far the tentacles of doom can stretch from that accursed football club. After signing that shiny new four-year contract in the summer O’Neil needs a win very fast with Wolves sat bottom of the table.

    The performance against Man City was enormously encouraging, while the nature of the draw at Brighton has to be a boost.

    4) Oliver Glasner
    God bless Dr Tottenham.

    5) Julen Lopetegui
    Stormed out of Wolves days before the season began a year ago and West Ham is a club that could test the patience of a saint. Really does have some of the very best attacking players outside the Big Six to work with, which hopefully reduces the potential for huffing off at the first sigin of trouble. Which is just as well, because the first sign of trouble has arrived. Giving Ipswich what for helps but getting absolutely thrashed in West Ham’s biannual cup final against Tottenham is about as sub-optimal as it gets for a West Ham manager. A win over Man United is definitely not nothing even if it isn’t remotely what it once was.

    The fact a sacking or huffing are equally acceptable in this market does make this feel like it could be a goer, given Lopetegui’s reputation. David Moyes back by Christmas? A third stint for the great man would be some magnificently mid-table Serie A behaviour from the Hammers and one we would not currently entirely rule out.

    6) Sean Dyche
    Encouraging signs abound now for Everton after that harrowing start. Dyche, for his part, appears so resolutely determined to stay and fight back whatever tides of despair are currently crashing into Goodison Park’s walls that if you didn’t know better you’d think he was positively revelling in all the adversity.

    Go ahead, take more points off him. It only makes him win 1-0 more.

    We couldn’t see Dyche as the first manager to leave at all when he first achieved favouritism here, but we also couldn’t see them losing 3-2 when cruising along at 2-0 up with five minutes to go against Bournemouth. And enjoying the experience so much that they would then immediately blew another two-goal lead against Villa. Dropping another couple of points from a winning position in a six-pointer against Leicester meant that even getting off the mark feels like a setback.

    Everton flipped the script against Crystal Palace, going 1-0 down and winning. A point against Newcastle is solid enough, especially with Anthony Gordon failing from the penalty spot, while victory at Ipswich was their first away from home since December or some such equally ludicrous thing. Snatched a late point against Fulham and it’s now nine points from the last five games for Dyche and Everton. It’s certainly something after the way those first four games went. Which was very badly indeed.

    7) Steve Cooper
    He has what is technically known as a team that is ‘sh*t’ and is clearly hoping to survive by trying to stay in games for as long as possible and see what can be pilfered. Not every team they play is going to be as naively stupid as Spurs, sure, but a lot of them are still quite stupid and most importantly it does look very much like Leicester’s best/least bad route.

    Cooper might not keep them up, but he is new in the job and it’s also hard to see how anyone else they might get would improve their chances. So it probably does have to get very bad indeed before he’s in serious trouble.

    A point at Arsenal would have been both incredible and incredibly surprising but it was not meant to be. The Gunners’ pressure finally took its toll in stoppage time to earn a deserved win. The win at Southampton from 2-0 down could be huge.

    8=) Eddie Howe
    Could absolutely go tits skyward at any moment and there are clearly key figures at Newcastle not quite seeing eye to eye, and it would be fair to say Newcastle’s performances in their first four games weren’t really performances you’d expect to yield a hugely impressive 10 points. That run of fortune came to an end at Fulham in quite emphatic style but the performance against Man City was their best of the season. Should really have beaten Everton and probably Brighton but there’s an undeniable sense of reverting to the mean for Newcastle and it’s not seeing them land where they think they should now be.

    Is Howe just leading them down a mediocrity cul-de-sac?

    8=) Ange Postecoglou
    While acknowledging that if ifs and buts were candy and nuts etc etc. we do wonder what this market might look like had Spurs not managed to twice come from behind and win against Coventry in the Carabao and Brentford in the league. The second half of last season raised more questions than answers about the long-term viability of Angeballl; an uncertain start to this campaign is only causing those questions to be asked louder, and Spurs are ever partial to a whiplash-inducing change of direction around November.

    The performance against Brentford was probably Spurs’ most convincing in the league since that 10-game run at the start of the last season, until they went to Old Trafford.

    They are obviously well capable of thrashing rubbish like Everton and West Ham when the mood takes them, but they have already p*ssed away eight points from games sensible teams would have won at Leicester and Newcastle and most of all Brighton while also falling into a comically obvious trap in another defeat to Arsenal and gift-wrapping Crystal Palace’s first win of the season. They have been a mediocre team under Postecoglou for far, far longer than they were a good one and there is a growing sense that while it’s all quite fun he might actually be building – at, it should be noted, huge expense – the most ‘Lads, it’s Tottenham’ Tottenham team yet.

    Really does feel like if Spurs are happy to go back to the good old pre-Big Six days of being an entertaining but ultimately irrelevant team who’ll have some good days and some terrible days while finishing somewhere between fifth and 10th, then Big Ange is absolutely fine. But increasingly hard to see how playing what at times amounts to wilfully stupid football stupidly ever amounts to more than that.

    10) Enzo Maresca
    Results are awkwardly not reallymatching the narrative around Chelsea, who avoided complete catastrophe against City on the opening day and have been tidy enough on the pitch since despite the neverending swirl of chaos off it. Big away wins at Wolves, West Ham, and the home dismantling of Brighton have hinted at rich potential for Maresca’s side among all the nonsense, while even in defeat at Liverpool there were encouraging signs to be seen and more still in a Cole Palmer-inspired win over Newcastle.

    11=) Marco Silva
    Fulham have spent the last couple of seasons in near invisibility in mid-table, which is very much a good thing. Rode out the loss of Alexander Mitrovic really well last season and once again be set for a year of bobbing about harmlessly enough in mid-table.

    But it’s getting to a tricky point for Silva, in a way. He’s doing a perfectly adequate job, but almost if anything too adequate for me, Clive. He’s in danger of finding that unwanted zone where he’s invisible to bigger clubs who might be on the lookout for a new manager while by far the most likely way he does get noticed is if things start going very badly rather than very well. The good news is that things are currently going very well, with Silva himself duly going all but entirely unnoticed.

    11=) Thomas Frank
    Sits quietly in the top 10 contenders for quite a lot of other jobs and does feel distinctly more likely to therefore be a very quick second manager out rather than first.

    Brentford did flirt with serious trouble for uncomfortably long periods last season, but there was never any really serious chat about binning the manager who has done so very much for them and it would need to be going really, really badly for that to change this time around, you’d think. Have started this season perfectly well, with the apparent disparity between home form (excellent) and away form (execrable) still in ‘red herring’ territory given the disparity of teams involved. Their excellent home results have come against Palace, Southampton, West Ham, Wolves and Ipswich; the superficially worrying away results at Liverpool, Man City, Tottenham and Man United.

    13=) Nuno Espirito Santo
    Forest are quite mad so rule nothing out but nine points from an unbeaten five-game start to the season is a huge buffer for a manager whose primary goal at the start of this season was the same as when he took over in the middle of the last: don’t go down. Getting three of those first nine points at Anfield doesn’t do any harm at all, either.

    The unbeaten run ended at home to Silva’s Fulham but it’s still a good time to be a Forest fan, as long as you don’t mind mainly being good away from home.

    13=) Kieran McKenna
    Ipswich spent a good chunk of the start of the summer fending off interest in their manager and a difficult start to the season on their long-awaited return to the Premier League is surely baked in. Glib and simplistic it may be, but the comparisons between Luton and Ipswich and thus Rob Edwards and McKenna are easily made. And Luton never once looked like getting rid of Edwards last season.

    Ipswich may still await their first win but there’s been nothing about them to suggest they’re going to spend the season being horribly outclassed every week either. Probably helps them that others down at the bottom of the table are finding wins equally hard to come by and with less by way of mitigation.

    13=) Andoni Iraola
    A powerful example of what beating Arsenal can do for a manager these days. Bournemouth had eight points from the first seven games, which is okay and no crisis but it’s also not brilliant. And yet that 2-0 win over the title contenders sees Iraola right out at the back of the market with the very best of the Barclays managerial elite.

    16=) Pep Guardiola
    It would be no great surprise if this is his last season at Manchester City, but it would be a huge one if he leaves for any reason before its conclusion.

    16=) Fabian Hurzeler
    Another intriguing new face in Our League, tasked with getting Brighton back to where they were a year ago before things just took a turn for the dreary in Roberto De Zerbi’s first and final full season in charge.

    They almost completely forgot how to win games in the second half of the season, which isn’t ideal, but the new manager made a quite literally perfect start in ironing out that particular wrinkle and a point at the Emirates is almost never a bad way to drop your first points of the season. Subsequent draws with Ipswich and Forest slightly more niggling, but no real drama. And getting battered by Chelsea is not as humiliating as we thought it would have been two months ago.

    Hurzeler has now also made a vital step that all managers who hope to make their way in the Barclays must: inflict hilarious embarrassment on Tottenham.

    18=) Arne Slot
    Liverpool’s home defeat to Forest stands as comfortably the most jarringly unexpected of the season to date, bringing to a shuddering halt a perfect start to the season that had got a lot of people quite understandably quite excited. The Reds have bounced back well, beating Bournemouth and Wolves and most significantly Chelsea in their first major test of the season before taking a 2-2 draw from an entertaining trip to the Emirates.

    18=) Unai Emery
    Obviously not going anywhere, despite the minor sting of not managing to land another blow on his former club in between tidy away wins to indicate Villa also have no plans on disappearing. Going 2-0 down to Everton before beating them 3-2 was just cruel, and points to a sinister and unpleasant side to the man we didn’t expect. Not cool.

    18=) Mikel Arteta
    We’re still a bit in awe of just how quickly ‘Arsenal are 90-points-per-season title contenders now’ has just been entirely accepted and normalised. It’s still barely two years since they were bottling fourth place in really quite pitiful fashion. A lot has changed.

    Could this be the season the apprentice finally gets the better of his master? Don’t know, but we are supremely confident neither of them will be the first manager out of a job. No fence-sitting for us.

  • “Chelsea will receive a record fine for yellow cards in the match against Newcastle

    “Chelsea will receive a record fine for yellow cards in the match against Newcastle

    “Chelsea will receive a record fine for yellow cards in the match against Newcastle

    “Chelsea will be fined 75 thousand pounds for six yellow cards in the match against Newcastle. This is the first team in the history of the Premier League to receive 6+ cards in three matches in a season.

    The Chelsea football team will be fined 75 thousand pounds for a record number of yellow cards in the match with Newcastle. This was reported by mirror, according to UNN.

    Details

    It is noted that this is the first team in the history of the Premier League to receive six or more yellow cards in three matches in one season.

    The match at Stamford Bridge ended in favor of the Blues thanks to goals by Cole Palmer and Nicholas Jackson. However, the game was also marked by a series of conflicts with referee Simon Hooper, during which six players, including coach Enzo Maresca, received yellow cards.

    Defender Wesley Fofana was cautioned just 11 minutes after entering the field, followed shortly by Romeo Lavia. Noni Madueke received a yellow card nine minutes later, after which Robert Sanchez and Pedro Neto were also penalized in the last ten minutes of the game. Maresca and Christopher Nkunku, who received cards in stoppage time, completed the day of warnings.

    This fine follows previous violations of the team's discipline: after the matches against Bournemouth and Nottingham Forest, where Chelsea also received six or more warnings, the club was already fined 25 thousand pounds, and later the fine increased to 50 thousand.

    Chelsea head coach did not include Mudryk in the squad for the match against LiverpoolOctober 20 2024, 03:25 PM • 22064 views

  • Head of the Center for Countering Disinformation: The enemy uses “chess” for intelligence

    Head of the Center for Countering Disinformation: The enemy uses “chess” for intelligence

    Head of the Center for Countering Disinformation: The enemy uses “chess” for intelligence

    He published a video from the “shahed's” camera, which was made public by the enemy

    Russians use "chess" to conduct intelligence. This was written by the head of the Center for Countering Disinformation (CCD) Andriy Kovalenko on his Telegram channel, UNN reports.

    "the Russians published footage from the shahed's camera. As I said earlier, the Russian Federation is now also using Shaheds as reconnaissance aircraft, and a significant number of them fly without a combat unit and are controlled remotely (smuggled Starliners, among others)," Kovalenko wrote.

    Add

    Experts from the Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise believethat the Russians may install Starlink on attack drones to improve coordination between them, in particular during an attack.

    Experts also found changes in the guidance system and coordinate system in these attack drones. Previously, there was a four-channel antenna, but now they have started using a 16-channel antenna. The electronic warfare jamming protection is equipped with an additional Russian-made unit.

    Experts also note that there have been changes in the explosive part of the "Shahed". While in Iranian-made drones it was a projectile type, in drones assembled in Russia it explodes like a small aircraft bomb.

  • Oil prices plummet after Israel’s attack on Iran

    Oil prices plummet after Israel’s attack on Iran

    Oil prices plummet after Israel's attack on Iran

    The price of Brent and WTI crude oil fell by more than 4% after Israeli strikes on Iranian military facilities. Iran's oil infrastructure remained intact as agreed with the United States.

    Oil prices suffered a significant drop at the beginning of the week after Israel's attack on Iran. This is reported by Euronews, UNN reports.

    Details

    On Monday, during trading in Asia, the price of North Sea Brent fell by more than four percent to reach $72.99 per barrel. Similarly, the price of a barrel of U.S. West Texas Intermediate also fell by four percent, settling at $68.79.

    The decline in prices came after Israel struck military targets in Iran, but left the country's oil and nuclear facilities untouched. Before the attack, Israel promised the United States that it would not strike Iran's critical infrastructure. This step caused a market reaction, as investors fear that an escalation of the conflict could affect the stability of oil supplies in the region.

    UN urgently convenes Security Council over Israeli attack on IranOctober 27 2024, 08:10 AM • 15136 views

  • NATO Secretary General to make statement on DPRK troops after meeting with South Korean delegation

    NATO Secretary General to make statement on DPRK troops after meeting with South Korean delegation

    NATO Secretary General to make statement on DPRK troops after meeting with South Korean delegation

    On October 28, the South Korean delegation will present information to NATO on the deployment of DPRK troops in Russia. After the meeting, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will hold a press conference.

    Tomorrow, the NATO Secretary General will make a statement about the DPRK troops in the terrorist country. This was reported by the press service, according to UNN.

    Details

    On October 28, a high-level delegation from South Korea will present information to the North Atlantic Council on the deployment of DPRK military units in Russia.

    Ambassadors of NATO's partner countries in the Indo-Pacific region, including Australia, Japan and New Zealand, were invited to participate in the event.

    After the meeting, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte will hold a press conference for the media.

    Recall

    Earlier, White House adviser John Kirby said that the United States does not rule out the possibility of deploying DPRK military units in the Kursk region.

    5,000 soldiers from North Korea will be transferred to kursk region by Monday – NYTOctober 26 2024, 02:12 PM • 53979 views

  • 16 Conclusions from Arsenal 2-2 Liverpool: Saka dazzles, Salah delivers, City have the last laugh

    16 Conclusions from Arsenal 2-2 Liverpool: Saka dazzles, Salah delivers, City have the last laugh

    Arsenal players share some theories with referee Anthony Taylor

    Lovely entertaining slice of top-tier Barclays at the Emirates. Arsenal and Liverpool both did an awful lot right and a few things irritatingly wrong – as did the officials – in a fine game that taught us plenty about two live and lively pretenders to Man City’s crown. Even if what it ultimately told us is that neither is likely to stop them winning a fifth straight title.

    1. Premier League football is, increasingly, a game where 22 players run around for 90 minutes and in the end Manchester City always win.

    It feels mildly irritating to make City the first port of call after this enormously entertaining 2-2 draw between Arsenal and Liverpool but there’s little doubt it is City who were the big winners from this clash between their two likeliest challengers. History tells us City are formidable front-runners and, despite failing to yet truly hit their stride this season, they now sit at its summit, a point clear of Liverpool and an already-significant five better off than the Gunners.

    2. It’s always an interesting scoreline in this kind of fixture, is 2-2. It points to a certain type of game, one where almost inevitably both teams will leave it feeling like they could have won it while knowing, if they’re honest, they could also have lost it.

    That absolutely feels like the case here. Both sides will know they’ve been in a fight with a significant direct rival after this, and neither can really feel too gloomy about dropping two points in such an all-out encounter.

    Both teams had their spells of dominance of possession and territory, both teams will point to the periods of the game where they’ll feel they could have won it. Most significantly, it nearly always felt like those periods were a result of one team playing well rather than the other necessarily doing much collectively wrong.

    3. But if there is one period of the game that will cause either side real regret, we’d suggest it would be for Arsenal in the time between their second goal and Liverpool’s second equaliser. There were mitigating factors in the apparent passivity Arsenal occasionally displayed in those moments. Liverpool, clearly, are not a team to be trifled with, and Arsenal lost the second half of their first-choice centre-back pair while Jurrien Timber – a doubtful starter all week – found it harder and harder to keep up with the pace of proceedings.

    That, though, explains why Arsenal may have been a touch more cautious and seeking primarily to defend rather than extend their lead, but it doesn’t explain how poor their attacking football was in that period. Their few forays in those first 35 minutes of the second half were too frenetic, too manic. There comes a point where the speed of an attack tips from slick and flowing to slightly unhinged and Arsenal fell the wrong side of it. They created next to nothing while 2-1 up and Liverpool’s second equaliser was far less of a surprise when it arrived than appeared likely at half-time.

    4. Let’s not pretend this was some calamity for Arsenal, though. The ‘injury-hit’ narrative was itself, well, hit by the starting XI Mikel Arteta was able to name with both Timber and most importantly Bukayo Saka in it but the finishing XI was rather more threadbare with Gabriel, Timber and Saka all departed.

    True, Liverpool actually had more players out than their ‘injury-hit’ opponents but it would be disingenuous to pretend they are of equal import. Even the absence of Alisson Becker doesn’t hit Liverpool as hard as it would most clubs given the calibre of their number-two keeper.

    5. Mikel Arteta had all but ruled Saka out of this one after he sat outs the awkward Champions League win over Shakhtar before unleashing him from the start. Classic Arsenal dark arts there, and there was certainly no hint of any injury in a mesmerising first half from the winger.

    Arteta’s reluctance to play any football whatsoever without Saka is well known and pretty understandable, but you couldn’t help but wonder while watching this sensational first-half effort full of zip and mischief whether a niggly little two-week injury lay-off might in fact have been precisely what Saka needed.

    He certainly looked fresher than he has for much of this season, and far more involved from open play than has sometimes been the case.

    6. The opening goal was an absolute beauty. Much was made in the early Super Sunday game of Cole Palmer’s goal and ‘assist for the assist’ in the opening Chelsea goal coming in front of an admiring Gianfranco Zola in the crowd. And fair enough. But Saka’s outside-of-the-boot nutmegging of Andy Robertson followed by a finish that married cool precision with searing force coming in front of Dennis Bergkamp has to be a bit of a buzz too, doesn’t it?

    It was a goal of deceptive simplicity in its execution, with Ben White’s first significant contribution on his return to centre-back being to release Saka to turn Andy Robertson inside out and give Caoimhin Kelleher no chance as the ball ripped past him. It’s absolutely no surprise to anyone now to see Saka produce this kind of brilliance, but it is precisely the kind of distinctive Saka brilliance that has been in slightly shorter supply this season.

    There are few better or more enjoyable players to watch than Saka in this mood at this level, and while he faded a touch along with his team in the second half those first 45 minutes were an absolute masterclass.

    7. These are worrying times, though, for Andy Robertson. He has been a mainstay of this brilliant Liverpool team for so long, but that is successive weekends on which he has looked wildly outmatched by his direct opponent. Noni Madueke gave him twisted blood last weekend in another high-level match and in that first half particularly today he had absolutely no answer to what was without doubt Saka operating somewhere close to his exhilarating best.

    These are tough tests for sure, but a starting Liverpool full-back should not be getting this eye-wateringly exposed by that level of match-up.

    He had to do better here for the goal, unable to slow himself down to make a meaningful attempt at a challenge as he raced desperately to try and get back in position.

    While Robertson moved too fast for his own good, there’s also no escaping the fact that Virgil van Dijk moved too slowly, ambling back when his mate was in urgent need of assistance. Not sure he could have got there anyway, but an attempt would have been nice. It certainly didn’t look great.

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    8. No doubting Virgil’s movement for the first equaliser, though. A double taste of their own medicine for Arsenal, not only conceding from a set-piece having failed to deal with the aerial prowess of <checks notes> Luis Diaz, but also falling for a little eyebrows near-post flick-on followed by a thumping headed goal that absolutely screamed Steve Bould and Tony Adams.

    But just when it seemed like it really might be Jover for Nicolas, the heroic Arsenal set-piece tactician came up with the goods once more. His brilliant strategy on this occasion was to tell Declan Rice to deliver not one but two undefendable free-kicks into the Liverpool penalty area in quick succession.

    Crucially, Mikel Merino was tasked with heading the second one beyond Kelleher and inside the far post after a second lazy leg of the afternoon from Virgil van Dijk played the entire Arsenal train onside.

    9. While we’re here, we really do have little choice but to note the absurd amount of time it took for VAR to confirm the goal. Gary Neville had it sorted out after one replay and, while we’re not saying the actual decision should have been made quite that quickly we’re still at a loss to explain why it took a full three minutes to come to a conclusion that had never really appeared in any doubt from any of the replays that were shown.

    Van Dijk’s blue boot always seemed to make him the last defender, and at no point did any Arsenal attacker – never mind an interfering one – appear to be beyond him.

    We don’t, as you may know, generally have much time for Arsenal and their conspiracy theories, and of course taking 30 seconds too long to get the right decision is better than 30 seconds too few to get the wrong one, but it was surely possible to arrive at what was a quite straightforward decision far quicker than was the case here.

    To add to the needless confusion, it was at some point during this interminable delay that a minimum of four minutes’ added time was announced. Ultimately, five added minutes were played. None of it really added up, none of it needed to take so long, and it was just the latest boring example that boringly forces us to boringly note that even when it doesn’t get things actively wrong, VAR still very often makes the game worse.

    10. After some in-depth half-time analysis in the Sky Sports studio that found some time to discuss an excellently enjoyable and event-filled game of Premier League football in between the hard-hitting analysis of new Sky series Day of the Jackal, it was time for the second half.

    Sure, we all enjoyed Roy Keane revealing to nobody’s great surprise that assassin is his dream job, but it did rather feel like another intrusion of frivolous non-football nonsense into the far more importantly world of actual football nonsense.

    Arsenal’s second-half plan involved a note more caution than they showed in the first, even before Gabriel was forced off with Yet Another Injury for the Gunners.

    At that point, their defence was in a bad way. Thomas Partey filling in at right-back and Ben White in a now-unfamiliar centre-back role were joined by the lesser-spotted Jakub Kiwior and a by now visibly wilting Timber. With a quarter-of-an-hour to play, he too made way for the precociously talented Myles Lewis-Skelly and handed over the always-simple task of keeping a lid on Mo Salah.

    11. Arsenal’s patched-up defence were indebted at this time to the efforts of Rice and Merino in front of them. The pair had combined to such devastating effect to give Arsenal the lead and fought like giants to help them preserve it.

    We’re used to seeing this kind of performance from Rice, of course, but Merino matched him. Between them they made five tackles and five interceptions, Merino edging the former 3-2 and Rice the latter.

    12. Timber himself had done a brilliant job of keeping Salah relatively quiet but was surely never expected to complete 90 minutes given he had been such a doubt to feature at all, but it clearly lifted Liverpool as they redoubled their efforts to secure the equaliser.

    That Liverpool equalised was no surprise, nor was the identity of Salah as its scorer given Arsenal’s defensive resources had been stretched beyond breaking point, but quite how the goal came about was still a surprise.

    Trent Alexander-Arnold had endured a quiet game but is one of those players whose latent threat is never far below the surface. On most afternoons, his pass to release Darwin Nunez would be comfortably the best key pass to be seen. Cole Palmer may have him covered for that particular niche title, but it was still mighty fine.

    But while it was excellent, it was hardly outside Alexander-Arnold’s standard modus operandi. What followed from Darwin Nunez absolutely was. As we all settled in and waited for him to blaze the ball into the sky, something rather strange happened. Instead of doing that, he calmly picked the correct option and squared the ball for Salah to complete the task. A brilliant counter-attacking goal, ripping Arsenal open in just a handful of seconds and even fewer touches.

    13. At the risk of getting splinters in the old backside, it would be hard to argue it wasn’t a fair outcome. While Arsenal’s reduced state was unfortunate, Liverpool had controlled if not quite dominated the second half and were value for that equaliser.

    Where Arsenal may wonder ‘What if?’ is in how much more threatening they appeared when once again forced into chasing the game after seeing their lead wiped out.

    It’s easy in hindsight and from a distance to see these things, but was there a case here for Arsenal being more rather than less attacking given the limitations they were now operating under at the back? Was Arsenal’s best course of action an 11-man version of their attempt to shut City down at the Etihad? Was there nothing at all to be said for a bit more attacking intent.

    Because when they did show it again in those closing minutes, it was once again they who appeared the likelier scorers of a winner when all logic by this stage pointed to Liverpool as the likelier victors.

    14. Two incidents in those closing stages merit attention. The first was Gabriel Jesus’ ‘disallowed goal’. The scare quotes are there because it wasn’t really a disallowed goal, and that’s very much the first thing that needs stressing. Whatever the rights or wrongs of how it played out, it’s wrong to call it that. The whistle had blown and the game stopped several seconds before Jesus thrashed the ball home after Kai Havertz had somehow run it into the post. Most importantly, while Arsenal and Peter Drury hadn’t let the referee’s whistle stop them, Kelleher and at least three-quarters of the Liverpool defence had.

    Which is, of course, why VAR couldn’t intervene and why Anthony Taylor probably shouldn’t have blown when he did. It was a flimsy-looking foul by Jakub Kiwior on Dominik Szoboszlai in a spot where, with Liverpool’s defence stretched, a decent chance was always likely to come from the Arsenal man edging that battle. Making the decision a few seconds later and allowing for VAR to cast a glance if necessary was surely the better course of action even on a weekend where VAR has been so spotty.

    15. And yes, the very last action of the game should very obviously have been an Arsenal corner, with all the obvious threat that poses. Given Arsenal have lost points to Man City and seen Man City win another couple of points at Wolves from precisely such last-gasp corners, there is undoubted reason to be aggrieved at how neither referee nor linesman – both of whom were on the right side of the pitch and with seemingly decent lines of sight – could fail to see the ball quite obviously bounce off Kostas Tsimikas’ thigh and behind.

    As a general rule, officials are wise to avoid taking players’ body language into too much account when making decisions, but when a defender makes such a concerted effort to keep such a ball in play, it’s probably a fair guess the last touch was theirs. A perplexing decision and one whose irritating wrongness is undeniably magnified by the time at which it happened.

    It’s just lucky it happened to Arsenal, and thus will be calmly accepted by their fans as a bad but unremarkable human error and not evidence of anything insanely bafflingly sinister.

    16. Even if it did ensure that once again Manchester City end the Premier League weekend laughing last and loudest.

  • Ukrainian weightlifter sets record at European Youth Championships

    Ukrainian weightlifter sets record at European Youth Championships

    Ukrainian weightlifter sets record at European Youth Championships

    Olga Ivzhenko became the U-23 European champion in the weight category of up to 55 kg. The athlete lifted 88 kg in the snatch and 104 kg in the clean and jerk, winning with a total of 192 kg.

    Ukrainian weightlifter Olha Ivzhenko won the European Youth Championships in the U-23 category under 55 kg. This was reported by the Weightlifting Federation of Ukraine, UNN reports.

    Details

    Olga won the competition in both events. She lifted 88 kg in the snatch and 104 kg in the clean and jerk.

    In total, Ivzhenko became the European champion with a combined weight of 192 kg, confirming her status as one of the best young weightlifters on the continent.

    Another Ukrainian athlete in this weight, Yulia Kovaleva, also performed well, finishing in fifth place.

    Yaroslava Maguchikh won the title of the best athlete of the year in EuropeOctober 26 2024, 08:02 PM • 29927 views

  • Outdated technologies and launch peculiarities: KFI told about the differences between Russian and North Korean ballistics

    Outdated technologies and launch peculiarities: KFI told about the differences between Russian and North Korean ballistics

    Outdated technologies and launch peculiarities: KFI told about the differences between Russian and North Korean ballistics

    KFI experts described the technical features of North Korean missiles used by Russia to attack Ukraine. They identified differences in design, materials and markings compared to Russian missiles.

    Since 2023, Russia has been using North Korean KN-23 or KN-24 aeroballistic missiles to strike Ukraine, as evidenced by research data. It was also found that missiles of this type differ from Russian ballistic missiles “Kinzhal” or “Iskander-M”. Oleksandr Vysikan, Chief Forensic Expert of the Department of Explosive Research, Artillery and Missile Weapons of Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise (Kyiv Scientific Research Institute of Forensic Expertise), told this to Suspilne, according to UNN.

    According to the expert, the difference between the metal alloy of the DPRK and Russian missile engine is very different.

    The Koreans (we are talking about the DPRK – ed.) use low-carbon (alloy – ed.), and Russian missiles use high-carbon. There are also “keyways” on the propulsion system – this is where the gargoyle is attached (a three-dimensional streamlined element on the rocket body that covers control wiring, pipelines and parts of systems – ed.), which contains cables that run from the rocket's flight control system to the tail section

    – Vysikan explained.

    He noted that the Russians also have such a design, but its structure is different.

    “What we found is typical only for a Korean missile. In addition, we reviewed the footage published by the official media of the DPRK, where their leader (Kim Jong-un – ed.) walks near these missiles, and we clearly noticed this characteristic type of structure (of the missile – ed.),” said the expert of KFI.

    He also said that one of the fragments had a serial number on it, which is not typical for such missile markings by the Russians.

    On one side, the 9-digit number of the missile is written. In this case, the first 6 digits are preserved: “321 518”. We have already seen a similar 9-digit marking. They differed only in the last three digits. We can say that this is a serial number, which indicates that North Korean missiles of the same series are used. The Russians do not have such markings on the engine installation

    – said Vysikan.

    In particular, according to him, there is also a difference in the aerodynamic rudder and the missile's launcher. The experts of KFI counted 45 bolts on it, and according to them, this is different from the Russian Daggers and Iskanders.

    “There is a distinctive difference. In Russian-made ballistic missiles, they are solid, and the shell is titanium. The base is different, where the aerodynamic surface is attached, which is also characteristic of these missiles. The drive, gearbox, and many other things are also characteristic, which points us to North Korean missiles,” says Vysikan.

    Western components were found in a North Korean missile used by Russia to attack UkraineOctober 20 2024, 04:24 PM • 43927 views

    He added that the institute's experts continue to study these missiles and other elements, and answered the question whether these weapons are more modern than Russian ones:

    “These are older technologies. They differ from the Russian ones in terms of metal structure, welding seams of control units – this is not high-tech production, it is simpler and more affordable. However, these missiles have a large one-piece warhead, but its structure is completely different from the ones we studied in the Russian Kinzhal. It differs both in terms of metal composition and explosives.

    Vysikan noted that the deviation of North Korean missiles from the initial target is large. He said that these weapons were used “a dozen times” to strike Kyiv and the region, but “KFOR does not keep statistics.” In addition, the expert added that a DPRK-made launcher is most likely to be used to launch these missiles, as Russian ones are not adapted for this purpose.

    “For example, the Iskander missile has its own devices, how it docks with the launcher, where the flight mission must be recorded. And the sizes of the missiles are different, so you need a “native” launcher,” explained Vysikan.

    Atypical signs of metal welding, markings – Oleksandr Ruvin spoke about the features of North Korean missiles used by the enemy to hit UkraineAugust 14 2024, 10:49 AM • 113535 views