- Schauffele birdies final hole, captures first major at PGA Championship
- McLaughlin powers to Indy 500 pole in all-Penske front row
- Monaco footballer tapes over LGBTQ badge
- Korda wins sixth LPGA title of year with win at Liberty National
- Pacers put on shooting show to down Knicks, reach NBA Eastern Conference finals
- US envoy touts 'potential' of Israel-Saudi deal in Netanyahu talks
- Dominicans vote for president in poll overshadowed by Haiti crisis
- Brest secure Champions League qualification, PSG win without Mbappe
- Mbappe absent as PSG win final Ligue 1 game
- Still exhausted after arrest, Scheffler closes with 64 at PGA
- Brest secure historic Champions League qualification
- France's Macron calls fresh emergency on New Caledonia unrest
- Taiwan swears in new president as China pressure grows
- Schauffele leads as dramatic PGA back-nine battle begins
- Biden faces silent Gaza protest at Martin Luther King Jr's college
- Ten Hag says Man Utd 'must do everything' to win FA Cup after Premier League flop
- Cannes film follows Egypt feminists on brink of adulthood
- Pep Guardiola: Man City manager addicted to winning
- Jackson wins season opener in Marrakesh with all eyes on Paris
- Things get real as imaginary friend flick 'If' tops N.America box office
- Paris seeks to boost sluggish sales for Paralympic Games
- How a French director pulled off Cannes's crazy Mexican narcos hit
- Man City make case to be ranked as England's greatest-ever team
- Hamdy gives Zamalek second CAF Confederation Cup title
- Rome champion Zverev eyes French Open but wary of Djokovic 'at his best'
- Spain recalls its ambassador to Argentina over 'insult'
- Real Sociedad reach Europa League, Cadiz relegated
- Man City's six Premier League titles in seven years 'insane': Guardiola
- Dramatic last-round showdown under way at PGA Championship
- It may take 100 points to stop Man City, says Arsenal boss Arteta
- Arteta has Arsenal primed for success despite title pain
- Klopp hails 'superpower' fans in emotional Liverpool farewell
- Intense search for Iran's President Raisi after helicopter 'accident'
- Nine dead after attacks on Mexican mayoral candidates
- Hamilton says Mercedes in 'no man's land'
- Inter held by Lazio at title party as debt deadline looms, Sassuolo down
- 'We want more than this': Arteta urges Arsenal to respond after title pain
- Five reasons why Man City won the Premier League
- Biden says Gaza protester voices 'should be heard'
- Hyderabad finish second after last IPL league match washed out
- Winning feeling never gets old for Man City 'sniper' Foden
- Man City win historic fourth straight Premier League title
- Haaland wins second Premier League Golden Boot
- Arsenal's title dreams dashed despite last-day win over Everton
- Foden fires Man City to record fourth consecutive Premier League title
- Zverev beats Jarry to claim second Rome Open title
- Imola proves McLaren are back in business predicts Norris
- Sean 'Diddy' Combs apologizes after video shows him assaulting partner
- Blue Origin flies thrill seekers to space, including oldest astronaut
- S.Africa top court to rule on Zuma election ban Monday
Dos de los caballos que se escaparon en el centro de Londres están graves
Dos de los caballos del ejército británico que sembraron el caos el miércoles en el centro de Londres, se encuentran en "estado grave", informó el jueves un viceministro de Defensa, James Cartlidge.
"Hubo cinco caballos que fueron recuperados. Tres de ellos están bien, dos de ellos lamentablemente se encuentran en un estado grave que vigilaremos", dijo Cartlidge al canal de televisión Sky News.
El incidente, en el que cuatro personas resultaron heridas, se produjo el miércoles cerca del Palacio de Buckingham, en una patrulla de un grupo de siete caballos de la Household Cavalry, unidad de élite que se ocupa entre otras cosas de la protección de la familia real y participa en diversas ceremonias.
Imágenes espectaculares, compartidas en redes sociales, mostraron a dos de estos animales, uno blanco cubierto de sangre y otro negro, galopando a gran velocidad por una avenida, adelantando a una motocicleta y chocando contra un taxi tras pasar un semáforo en rojo.
Según un portavoz del ejército, los animales se asustaron al escuchar la caída al asfalto de un trozo de hormigón transportado por una grúa y cinco de ellos huyeron al galope, arrojando al suelo a cuatro jinetes, tres de los cuales resultaron heridos, aunque sus vidas no corren peligro.
Cartlidge afirmó que es "extremadamente improbable" que eventos similares vuelvan a producirse, ya que, según el viceministro, el ejército entrena sin incidentes todos los días en el centro de Londres con casi 150 caballos.
K.Brown--BTB