- China lifts final bans on Australian red meat as trade row nears end
- EU countries to push for outdoor smoking and vaping bans
- Life demanded for killer in femicide that outraged Italy
- NATO set to hold off Ukraine invite push as Trump looms
- Biden kicks off two-day Angola visit
- Trump vows to defend US dollar hegemony, but is it under threat?
- Japan witnesses warmest autumn on record
- Vietnam court upholds death sentence for property tycoon
- Harvey Weinstein hospitalized after 'alarming' blood test: attorney
- Australia's McSweeney vows to 'show what I can do' after baptism of fire
- Vietnam property tycoon on death row awaits appeal verdict
- Trump says will 'block' Nippon Steel from taking over US Steel
- King Charles III to host emir of Qatar on UK state visit
- Dressing the Church: one of Rome's last clergyman tailors
- Asian markets mixed after US-China chip move, euro hit by France woes
- Frenchman Tricole eyeing bumper world darts clash with Humphries
- Nepal PM kicks off China visit eyeing investment deals
- Chinese plus-size influencer spreads body positivity through fashion
- Deepfakes weaponised to target Pakistan's women leaders
- Musk's $55.8 bn Tesla pay deal again rejected by US judge
- Taiwan's Lai kicks off Marshall Islands visit as China fumes
- Macron, Saudi crown prince sign strategic partnership, call for Lebanon elections
- UN chief 'alarmed' by Syria violence, calls for end to fighting
- Wallaby Petaia quits Australian rugby for NFL 'dream'
- Musk $55.8 bn Tesla pay deal again rejected by US judge
- Lebanon says nine killed in Israeli strikes on southern villages
- US lawmakers back Covid Chinese lab leak theory after two-year probe
- Atalanta on tail of Serie A leaders Napoli after seeing off Roma
- Atalanta on Serie A leaders Napoli's tail after seeing off Roma
- World Cup selection drives US sevens star Maher's move to Bristol
- Israel says hit Hezbollah targets in Lebanon
- Vietnam property tycoon on death row faces appeal verdict
- US urges push for Syria de-escalation
- Ronaldo-less Al Nassr suffer first Asian Champions League loss
- US Fed officials see inflation fight as broadly on track
- Israel strikes Lebanon after Hezbollah claims first attack since truce
- Thousands rally after Georgian PM vows 'no negotiations' with pro-EU opposition
- Amorim uncomfortable with fans' serenade at Man Utd
- Romania heads for presidential run-off after top court greenlights first round
- Turkey could benefit from rebel offensive in Syria: experts
- 18 convicted in biggest UK drugs trial
- Biden's pardon for son angers rivals - and allies
- Liverpool players prepared to 'go to war' for each other: Van Dijk
- LPGA commissioner Marcoux Samaan to step down in January
- Georgia PM vows 'no negotiations' amid mass pro-EU protests
- Suspect freed from custody over suicide capsule death in Switzerland
- Venezuela's 'Pearl of the Caribbean' loses its luster
- Paris stocks wobble, euro falls on France budget standoff
- Italy to host Davis Cup Final 8 from 2025
- Fiorentina's Bove 'alert' in hospital after collapse: club
Dressel and Ledecky give Swimming World Championships golden lustre
After three years in turbulent waters, swimming starts to regain some stability with an extra edition of its long-course world championships in Budapest starting on Saturday.
On the podium, some continuity is assured as two American 25-year-old stars Caeleb Dressel and Katie Ledecky continue their relentless pursuit of medals.
As in other sports, the Covid pandemic caused chaos with the global swimming calendar, with its world championships in odd-numbered years.
Covid delayed the 2020 Tokyo Olympics a year and the world championships, also in Japan at Fukuoka, were initially put back to this May and then to July 2023.
To fill the gaps in their schedule, and coffers, world swimming's governing body FINA wants to move the theoretical 2023 championships to January 2024 in Doha, Qatar, and has added a special edition for this year.
For these reboot championships, FINA opted to return to Hungary, where swimming is big and which hosted the event in 2017.
While these changes to swimming's rhythms, along with the fallout from the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the lingering impact of the pandemic continue to muddy the waters, Budapest promises some stellar showdowns.
- 'Felt so lost' -
Dressel could chase seven golds. Yet he told a US video interviewer Graham Bensinger that he "felt so lost" after winning five in Tokyo in part because he had not hit his target times.
"I wanted to get away from the water, but then that's also one of my safe places. So it was, again, a rock and hard place. Yeah, it was a pretty miserable couple months," he said.
Ledecky has 10 Olympic medals and 18 in the world championships.
She says she's ready for this out-of-sequence event.
"I don't feel like this snuck up on me or that it was a shorter year or anything like that," she told NBCSports.
Ledecky will enter one fewer race after deciding to drop her shortest distance, the 200m freestyle.
"I definitely have always been somebody that's valued quality of swims over quantity and medals," she told US media. "I've never set goals for a certain number of medals or certain records like that."
Ledecky should grab the first gold of the championships on the opening evening in the 400m free. The question is whether she can reclaim her world record from Ariarne Titmus, who broke it at the Australian trials in May.
Titmus, who won the 400m in Tokyo, has chosen to skip the World Championships to focus on the Commonwealth Games in Birmingham starting at the end of July.
Another Australian Emma McKeon, who won a record seven golds in Tokyo, is also heading for Birmingham where Cody Simpson, the pop star, with whom she has been romantically linked, will also be in the team.
Simpson was headed for Budapest in the 100m butterfly, until Kyle Chalmers edged him in the trials and performed a tumble turn and decided to compete in the worlds.
Chalmers, who has been linked romantically to McKeon in the past, then skipped the team announcement in protest at 'negative' coverage speculating over the motivation behind his decision.
Another Australian star, Kaylee McKeown, who won three golds in Tokyo as a 19-year-old will race in Budapest and may add an individual medley to her backstroke events.
Briton Adam Peaty, who is nursing a broken foot, is focusing on the Commonwealth Games, as is another Tokyo breaststroke champion, South African Tatjana Schoenmaker.
- Russia banned -
The Russians are simply banned.
They were third in total medals in the last worlds in Gwangju, South Korea, in 2019 with 16.
Then, competing as the Russian Olympic Committee, they won five in Tokyo.
Evgeny Rylov, who won their two Olympic golds, is effectively banned twice. He was suspended by FINA for joining Vladimir Putin on stage at a pro-war rally in Moscow.
In contrast Ukraine's top swimmer, perennial silver medallist Mykhailo Romanchuk, can expect to be in the spotlight for once.
China will be there but their form is a mystery.
Both their Tokyo individual gold medal winners, Zhang Yufei and Wang Shun are in the 45-swimmer squad, but their preparation has been shrouded by Covid restrictions.
The two selection meets in April, the Chinese National championships and the Chinese Spring Championships, were reportedly cancelled.
E.Schubert--BTB