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Entertainment Jun 07, 2026

The Art of Awfulness: Exhibition Celebrates World's Worst Album Covers

A traveling exhibition showcasing what are considered the world's worst album covers has become a c…
The Exhibition That Makes You Cringe and Laugh"It is like the invasion of the bunny body snatchers," says JT Thompson, the former lead singer of the 1970s US rock band Peter Rabbitt, as he looks at what is regarded as one of the world's worst record covers. The 1979 album Roadstar shows all five members of the California rock band with their faces morphed on to rabbit bodies, with Thompson emerging, like a terrible dream, smiling from a top hat.What started as a personal collection has evolved into a traveling exhibition that has become something of a phenomenon. Four years ago, the first Worst Record Covers in the World exhibition appeared in Huddersfield, and since then has been displayed at galleries and festivals across the country. Currently, it's at the Mansfield Museum and Art Gallery, with plans to appear at the Edinburgh fringe later this year.The Curator's Quest for Terrible ArtThe exhibition's curator, Steve Goldman, traces his obsession back to the Peter Rabbitt album. "I bought the rabbit album 40 years ago for 10p because it had such a bad cover," Goldman said. "It made me laugh ... I was in hysterics." After losing the album but never forgetting it, Goldman was able to track down a copy when the internet came along."When it arrived it was one of the happiest moments of my life," he said. "That evening I said to my family, 'do you know what, I think I'll start collecting crap LP covers'." Goldman's simple rule of thumb is that if it makes him laugh, he collects it.A Collection of Musical MisstepsAmong the hundreds of albums on display are notable examples of questionable artistic choices:Roadstar by Peter Rabbitt - featuring band members with rabbit bodiesOil and Vinegar by Dave McKenna/The Wilbur Little Quarter - with a naked couple and their disturbing use of what could be chardSongs for Gay Dogs by Paddy RobertsDo You Want to Touch Me by Johnny CarrollKris Jensen Sings: TortureAll My Friends Are Dead by Freddie Gage - showing the Southern Baptist evangelist kneeling at a graveGoldman's current favorite is All MyFriends Are Dead, which he bought for £110. "It is the most expensive album I've bought – £110 – but it's worth every penny," he said.The Evolution of Bad Album ArtMost of the albums in the collection are from the 1970s and 1980s, but Goldman points out that terrible album covers continue to be made. He cites Norway's Satanic Panic Attack, Handgemeng, in which the five band members have stripped naked to mournfully cuddle up on a rug. "They just look comical," said Goldman, laughing.The exhibition has become a cultural touchstone, with visitors often recognizing musicians they've worked with. Thompson, 74, visited the Mansfield show and recognized people he had worked with over the years, including Dee Snider from Twisted Sister about to gorge on a cow bone and an almost-naked Ted Nugent with Terminator-like guitar arms.The Future of Terrible Album CoversAs the exhibition continues to travel, Goldman hopes to expand the collection while maintaining its appeal to all ages. Because venues like Mansfield Museum attract many children, some of the more risque covers from Goldman's collection are excluded from display, such as Letzte Naach by the German folk singer Kingsize Dick and Let Me Touch Him by the Minister's Quartet.Visitors are encouraged to vote for their favorite worst album cover and participate in polls of more divisive works, like Prince's Lovesexy album featuring the singer reclining naked on a giant lily. "Terrible or genius?" the exhibition seems to ask."My favourite activity during exhibitions is to watch people's reactions," Goldman said. "I hope people will laugh." The exhibition continues to grow, with Goldman constantly discovering new additions to his collection of what he calls "crap LP covers" – a celebration of artistic choices that went terribly, wonderfully wrong.
#Steve Goldman #JT Thompson #Peter Rabbitt
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Sports Jun 07, 2026

French Open 2026 Final: Zverev Faces Underdog Cobolli in Roland-Garros Showdown

The French Open 2026 men's singles final features Alexander Zverev against Flavio Cobolli, with Zve…
The Final Showdown at Roland-Garros Salut à tous et bienvenue à Roland-Garros 2026 – dernier jour! The French Open men's singles final is set to feature Alexander Zverev against Flavio Cobolli, with both players having taken different paths to reach this prestigious final. Zverev's Quest for Grand Slam Glory Alexander Zverev has probably spent most of his life assuming that, at some point, he'd become a grand slam champion – let's be real, his demeanour has never hidden it. And though he lost the 2020 US Open final to Dominic Thiem from two sets up, followed by a five-set final to Carlos Alcaraz in the 2024 edition of this competition, the feeling persisted that, though he struggled to find his best game when he needed it most, his time would come. Except he then made the 2025 final in Melbourne, endured an exhibition spanking from Jannik Sinner, and something within him changed – how couldn't it? He was good, but he was significantly less good than the two best, fading as they grew, and there was no sense he could best both in a two-week major. The Opportunity of a Lifetime Which makes this fortnight the opportunity of a lifetime, Alcaraz injured and Sinner beaten by illness. The question now, though, is whether that inspires him or ratchets pressure up to such paralysing degree it prevents him from performing; neither outcome would be surprising. The Underdog's Rise: Flavio Cobolli And, though many seem to consider a final against Flavio Cobolli to be as close to as gimme as you can get, that is not really the case. Of course, Zverev is good enough to win in straight sets, but he faces an opponent who, it's been clear for several years now, has the talent to challenge the elite. His forehand is a tremendous shot, he returns superbly and moves beautifully, perhaps the quickest player on tour. But more than that, he competes like he means it and, though of course he'll be nervous, he won't freeze – partly because he doesn't carry the weight of expectation, mainly because he's just one of those many sportsfolk built differently to the rest of us, the warmth of his embrace turning fear into opportunity. He will be ready. The Cultural Significance of Sport Broadly speaking, we invented sport because we wanted to know who was the fastest, the strongest and the best. But that was a while ago now, and the behemoth we nurtured now serves an entirely different purpose: in a fragmented, atomised, divided world, sport is company and in sport is community, a real-time, real-life friend and family. If we're sad, lonely or bored, we know sport has our back, caring, nurturing and teaching with gentle omnipresence, asking nothing in return. If we're happy, in company and engaged, we know sport has our back, caring, nurturing and teaching with gentle omnipresence, asking nothing in return. Anticipation for the Final For these reasons, even the worst sport is better than the best almost everything else – and verily has the French Open 2026 been not that. Over the last fortnight, we've had bestowed upon us a succession of barely believable matches and outcomes, our days enriched and our existences affirmed by a raft of compelling stories that remind us how to feel, a joy shared across the world – so too the knowledge that we'll be talking about what we've lived for as long as we live. That is a precious, restorative elixir to carry with us … but now we want the final we and the tournament deserve. What to Expect And so will we, caring for ourselves by caring about this, the experience of being us made better by the unique captivation of Roland-Garros 2026. Chauette! On y va! Play: 3pm local, 2pm BST
#French Open #Roland-Garros #Alexander Zverev
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Business Jun 07, 2026

British Airways Boss Warns UK's High Aviation Taxes and Rail Tickets Are Stunting Economic Growth

The CEO of British Airways, Sean Doyle, warns that high aviation taxes and rail tickets are deterri…
The Impact of High Aviation Taxes on UK Tourism The cost of travel to and around the UK is keeping millions of tourists away and slowing economic growth, the boss of British Airways said, as he urged a rethink of aviation taxes. The Event Details The airline’s chief executive, Sean Doyle, said the UK had some of the highest aviation taxes in the world and was falling behind countries such as Japan, France and Germany in boosting its inbound tourism. Air passenger duty across most flights was raised by 15% in April, up to £8 a passenger on domestic flights, £15 for European departures, and up to £253 in premium economy seats on long-haul flights. The Data Analysis The UK would not hit ambitious targets for domestic tourism without making travel easier and more affordable, Doyle added. The government has set a target of welcoming 50 million international visitors to the UK by 2030, up from about 40 million tourists at present. The Impact Analysis Doyle warned that unless the affordability issue is addressed, the UK will not reach its target. He cited the high cost of travel, including aviation taxes and rail ticketing, as a major factor. “What’s the biggest challenge in the country at the minute? It’s growth. And what should policy be doing? It should be unblocking growth. If you want to promote tourism and aviation … the last thing you do to encourage that expansion is put the cost of it up,” Doyle said. The Prediction Doyle also warned that the government’s backing for Heathrow’s third runway in pursuit of economic growth could backfire if the airport developed its own scheme at the cost of airlines paying higher charges and reducing their own investments. BA and other airlines have urged the government to pursue a cheaper alternative scheme for a third runway than the current £33bn preferred option proposed by the airport.
#British Airways #Sean Doyle #UK Tourism
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Tech Jun 07, 2026

AI Boom Fuels Rise in Anti-Tech Extremism as Violent Attacks Mount

The rapid advancement of artificial intelligence is fueling a dangerous rise in anti-tech extremism…
The Rise of Anti-Tech Extremism in the AI AgeWhen a 20-year-old man from Texas was arrested earlier this year for allegedly trying to burn down OpenAI's headquarters and Sam Altman's house, authorities found an anti-AI manifesto alongside his lighter and a jug of kerosene. This incident is part of a spate of attacks that has caused alarm among researchers, the tech industry and law enforcement about the rise of anti-tech extremism.In April, an Italian "nature pilled" Instagram influencer was arrested in Rome and charged with plotting a series of anti-tech attacks that took inspiration from Ted "The Unabomber" Kaczynski. Two self-described "ecofascists" that carried out a deadly anti-Muslim attack on a mosque in San Diego last month also cited "AI slop" and JD Vance's ties to Palantir as motivations for their violence in their manifesto. An Indianapolis city councilor woke up earlier this year to gunshots being fired into his home before finding a note that read "NO DATA CENTERS".The growing public backlash to the tech industry's rapid rollout of artificial intelligence has taken many, mostly-non violent forms such as local communities organizing against datacenters and political candidates promising increased oversight. Yet at the fringes, researchers say grievances against the AI industry and its leaders are animating old violent extremist movements and fomenting new ones."AI is becoming this driver of political violence, and that's a very new phenomenon," said Jordyn Abrams, a researcher at the Program on Extremism at George Washington University.AI as a Unifying Factor for Extremist GroupsWhile much of the early public discussion around generative AI and extremism focused on how malign actors like terrorist groups could misuse products such as ChatGPT for propaganda purposes or plotting attacks, there is more recent attention given to how the AI industry as a whole can radicalize people. What motivates someone to extremist violence might not be a conversation with a chatbot, researchers say, but the society-wide disruption, narrative of existential threat and lack of accountability that has come with the AI boom.In the same way that AI has come to pervade many facets of modern life, the technology has also filtered into the way that extremists think about the world. Whether it is violent anti-government groups opposing mass surveillance, ecofascists with environmental grievances, neo-Nazi accelerationists bent on collapsing critical tech infrastructure or the man who allegedly targeted Altman's house worried about superpowerful artificial intelligence destroying humanity, AI has become a fixation across the extremist spectrum."It really transcends these left-right dichotomies," said Yannick Veilleux-Lepage, an associate professor at the Royal Military College of Canada. "We're seeing a lot of different groups, a lot of different ideologies being framed through a lens of anti-AI."The Unprecedented Speed of AI TransformationThe modern anti-tech movement has a long lineage. Periods of technological change are historically accompanied by backlash from the people most affected, with researchers often pointing to the early 19th-century luddite rebellion of British textile workers smashing automated knitting machines as they demanded more labor rights. The next 200 years brought waves of violent labor disputes and political violence that accompanied tech's market disruptions, uneven accumulation of wealth and disenfranchisement of workers.In the 1990s, there was cultural pushback against the rise of the personal computer and the fear of how it would disrupt society. Common complaints included fears of replacing human workers, environmental harm and crumbling healthy social structures."Haven't you heard? It wants your job. It peddles you smut. It corrupts your kids. It's cold, sterile, inhuman. Suddenly, it's okay to hate your computer," read a New York Magazine cover story from 1995 on the "New Luddites".The same year as New York Magazine ran its cover story, the Washington Post and the New York Times published the Unabomber's anti-tech manifesto, a 35,000-word screed against industrial society that has proliferated online in the years since and become the closest thing that anti-tech extremism has to a foundational text.What separates anti-AI extremism from these previous waves of tech backlash, researchers say, is partly the speed and scale of how AI is bringing about economic, social and political change."Not only are these whole-of-society changes and not only are they really disruptive, they're happening really quickly," Veilleux-Lepage said. "There isn't time for people to build resilience or to inoculate themselves from these changes".The AI industry's longstanding talking points – that the technology will revolutionize the world, if not end it – also lend themselves to a radicalizing narrative that AI poses an existential threat and must be stopped at all costs. When Veilleux-LePage gives talks to policymakers about anti-tech extremism, one of his slides simply features a series of quotes from CEOs."In order to radicalize people, you don't actually need to have theorists or ideologues that are calling people to violence against AI, because the tech CEOs are doing a pretty good case," Veilleux-LePage said.Corporate Response and Security ConcernsAltman has often framed the changes AI will bring as something that may be difficult, but is ultimately both positive – above all, he describes the change as inevitable."I expect some really bad stuff to happen because of the technology which also has happened with previous technologies," Altman said on venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz's podcast last year.While tech CEOs are publicly optimistic about the resilience of society and the change that AI will bring about, it is also clear that they are privately concerned with the threat of political violence. Spending on personal security for executives has ballooned over the past five years amid incidents such as the killing of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, while tech leaders such as Elon Musk now pour millions into their own protection. SpaceX revealed in its IPO filing earlier this year that it paid $4m last year to Musk's private security firm, double what it had spent only two years before.There are signs over the past year that the AI industry is shifting its rhetoric as it grapples with widespread public distrust. Altman claimed last month that AI would probably not lead to the "jobs apocalypse" that he once discussed, even as companies like Meta lay off tens of thousands of workers. OpenAI and Anthropic have meanwhile both announced funds and thinktanks this year aimed at helping civil institutions adapt to AI, with OpenAI's non-profit organization committing $250m to grants for programs that help workers navigate AI upheaval.Major AI firms are hiring national security, intelligence, and weapons experts to monitor threats and misuse of their technology, including some with a background in extremism and counter-terrorism research. OpenAI's head of intelligence previously worked as one of the foremost academic experts on the Islamic State and wrote a book on the group's belief that it was bringing about the apocalypse. OpenAI and Anthropic did not respond to requests for interviews with their intelligence or security experts.The Accountability Gap and Future RisksThe closing off of legitimate avenues to address public opposition to AI, as well as the feeling that the technology is being forced upon society, is creating what researchers describe as a gap in accountability that can further incentivize terrorism and political violence.Donald Trump, in alignment with tech leaders, issued an executive order last year attempting to block any state-level legislation that would rein in AI development and has said that nothing will slow down the US in the global AI race. Tech billionaires are also pouring millions of dollars into lobbying and political spending in an attempt to prevent regulation of AI."When authorities are too busy, or just don't care enough, to regulate and take action, then people affected are going to take action," said Mauro Lubrano, a lecturer at the University of Bath and author of Stop the Machines: The Rise of Anti-Technology Extremism.Federal law enforcement documents acquired by Wired and the Intercept show that US authorities are increasingly monitoring anti-tech movements, while authorities have declared they will aggressively prosecute violent attacks. Following the attempted arson at Altman's house earlier this year, authorities vowed that "the FBI will not tolerate threats against our nation's innovation leaders".Yet researchers warn that authorities risk conflating the nationwide protests and calls for increased regulation of AI with more fringe, anti-tech extremist views, which is both inaccurate and counterproductive. Programs aimed at mass surveillance and attempts to silence nonviolent anti-AI movements will inevitably backfire, Lubrano says, further pushing people to the violent fringes if they feel their legitimate grievances aren't being addressed."We have this opportunity to be proactive in this while avoiding mistakes that we've made in the past when responding to other forms of extremism," Lubrano said. "Something tells me that we're not off to a great start".
#AI #OpenAI #Sam Altman
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Entertainment Jun 07, 2026

The Beatles' Final Tour: When Music Evolution Outgrew Live Performance

The Beatles played their last official concert in 1966 at Candlestick Park, marking a pivotal momen…
The Final Curtain: A Pivotal Moment in Music HistoryThe Beatles' last official concert on August 29, 1966, at Candlestick Park in San Francisco marked more than just the end of a touring era—it symbolized a fundamental shift in how music would be created and experienced. As Jim Marshall's photographs capture, the band was already feeling nostalgic for what they were leaving behind, even as they stood on the precipice of their most innovative period.The Creative Divide: Studio Innovation vs. Live PerformanceTwo months before their final show, the Beatles had completed recording "Revolver," an album that would push the boundaries of popular music. Yet during their final tour, they performed none of these groundbreaking tracks. The complexity of songs like "Eleanor Rigby" and "Tomorrow Never Knows" simply couldn't be replicated in a live setting with their four-piece band configuration.This creative divide reveals a crucial moment in music history. Until the Beatles, recordings were essentially documentation of live performances. Their first album, "Please Please Me," captured songs honed on stages in Hamburg and Liverpool. By 1966, however, the Beatles had come to see the studio as a creative platform in its own right—a place where experimentation with sounds and techniques could create something entirely new.The Changing Landscape of Live MusicWhile the Beatles were pioneering studio techniques, other artists were revolutionizing the live concert experience. Bob Dylan and the Rolling Stones were developing what we now recognize as the modern rock gig—longer performances, more artistic expression, and a direct connection with audiences that extended beyond simple entertainment.The Beatles' live shows, by contrast, remained stuck in the past. Their 1966 concert format resembled a package-tour variety show, with five or six acts and the Beatles appearing last for a breathless half-hour set before saying goodnight. This disconnect between their recorded work and live performances became increasingly unsustainable as their studio work grew more ambitious.The Legacy of the Final TourThe Beatles' decision to stop touring wasn't merely a practical response to the challenges of performing complex music live—it reflected a deeper artistic evolution. By focusing on studio innovation, they paved the way for future artists who would similarly embrace recording technology as an integral part of the creative process.Ironically, this decision that seemed to separate them from their audience would ultimately transform how musicians connected with fans. The studio innovations pioneered by the Beatles during this period would influence generations of artists, creating new possibilities for musical expression that continue to resonate today.The End of an Era and the Birth of a New Musical LanguageThe Beatles' final tour marked not just the end of an era for the band, but a turning point for popular music as a whole. As they transitioned from live performers to studio innovators, they helped create a new musical language that would define the decades to come.The photographs from this period, capturing the band at this transitional moment, serve as a visual document of one of music history's most significant transformations. They show a group on the cusp of their most creative period, already looking back with nostalgia at the live performances that had made them global superstars, while simultaneously embracing the future possibilities that studio recording would unlock.
#The Beatles #Revolver #Candlestick Park
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Sports Jun 07, 2026

Football Saved Me: Sarah Rhind's Journey from Addiction to Purpose

Sarah Rhind, a former heroin addict turned football goalkeeper and charity coordinator, credits foo…
The Power of Football in RecoverySarah Rhind, a 42-year-old goalkeeper and Street Soccer charity coordinator, has a powerful message about how football saved her from heroin addiction. In her recently published autobiography, "Scars Under The Jersey," Rhind details her journey through addiction, recovery, and the transformative role football played in her life. "I can wholeheartedly say that without it I wouldn't be in the position that I'm in now – if I was even lucky enough to still be here," she states emphatically.From Participant to Coordinator: Football as LifelineWhat makes Rhind's story particularly striking is her journey from participant to coordinator at Street Soccer, a charity that provides free sessions for at-risk and socially disadvantaged people. Before working for the organization, Rhind was a participant who relied on the weekly sessions to stay clean. "There were times where I'd come through a really rough weekend, struggling with thoughts of using and relapsing but hadn't done it," she recalls. "There were many times where the reason was literally: 'If I use, I can't go to football on Tuesday.'"Mental Health and the Pitch: A Sanctuary from NoiseRhind describes football as a sanctuary from the "mental noise" that consumed her life. "My mind is 24/7 from the minute I wake up to the minute I go to sleep at night; it's 20 tabs open and they're all about different things," she explains. "When I'm on the pitch and playing football the focus is just on that, because that was most important. It's like a transition happens. I get my boots on and step on to the pitch and I find it is the only place that I am able to leave the mental noise."Breaking Barriers: Women's Football and InclusionNow representing Scotland at international events like the Homeless World Cup (2015) and playing in the Scottish top flight with Hamilton Academical, Rhind is passionate about creating opportunities for women in football. She notes that women of her age have "missed out so much" compared with younger generations benefiting from the growth of the women's game. "I hear all the time: 'I'm not fit enough, not strong enough, I can't play football,'" she says. "When did society become so about having to be really good at something that you can't just try it or to have fun with it?"The Healing Power of StorytellingWriting her autobiography was a cathartic experience for Rhind, who found the process to be "an incredible platform for healing." She particularly struggled with documenting moments of suicidal thoughts, noting that "it had taken me a couple of weeks to actually be able to write a sentence out about being suicidal." The act of writing, however, became therapeutic. "I just wrote it and I remember it so clearly: I just sat and looked at that sentence and realised what a powerful form of therapy that process had been," she reflects.A New Chapter: Continuing the JourneyFor Rhind, recovery is an ongoing process. "Life is hard and that's always going to be the case; things are going to keep happening," she acknowledges. "But, hopefully, I can keep building my toolbox of coping mechanisms for dealing with those things when they come, and keep talking." Through her work with Street Soccer and sharing her story, Rhind continues to help others find their path through darkness, using football as both a literal and metaphorical lifeline.
#Sarah Rhind #Street Soccer #Football Recovery
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Sports Jun 07, 2026

Luis de la Fuente: The Teacher Behind Spain's Football Revolution

Luis de la Fuente, Spain's national team coach, reflects on his journey from teaching youth footbal…
The Lead: Spain's Coaching Philosophy Finally Gains Recognition As Spain prepares for the World Cup, national team coach Luis de la Fuente reflects on the journey that took him from teaching in the Spanish federation's classrooms to leading his country to European Championship glory. The coach who never played for the senior national team has overseen a generation of Spanish football that has produced some of the world's most successful coaches and players. The Coaching Classroom: Where Spain's Football Leaders Are Born On the ground floor of the Spanish football federation's headquarters in Las Rozas are two classrooms covered with photos of everyone who has played for la selección. More than 800 men are there, but Luis de la Fuente's picture is missing—his international playing career only took him as far as the under-21s. This is where he taught; it is also, he says, where he learned, his pupils not alone in going on to big things. De la Fuente spent three years teaching at the federation from 2017, while also coaching Spain's under-19s and under-21s. He taught two subjects on the federation's Uefa pro licence coaching course: the evolution of football and team building. In his classes sat future coaching greats including Lionel Scaloni, Xabi Alonso, Xavi Hernández, and Raúl—names that would go on to shape football at the highest levels. The Global Impact of Spanish Coaches From Spain it was not only Fabián Ruiz, David Raya and Martín Zubimendi who were in Budapest recently but also the managers: Luis Enrique, De la Fuente's predecessor, and Mikel Arteta. The week before, Unai Emery lifted the Europa League. Pep Guardiola bade farewell as perhaps the most influential coach the Premier League has had. And Xabi Alonso has been appointed at Chelsea, Andoni Iraola at Liverpool. "This is a process that goes back a long time; at last it seems people are starting to appreciate it," De la Fuente says. "That appreciation should have happened ages ago. With trophies, it becomes more visible but the development, the way it is structured and conducted, the work done by coaching schools at regional and national federations, was always an example to everyone." The Philosophy of Teaching Football "It would be easy to now say Scaloni stood out but it is true that there were some who had something a bit different," De la Fuente reflects. "That restlessness, how they would challenge you: 'I don't see it.' Scaloni debated everything, argued. We're similar too, a parallel in our paths. He starts at the under-20s, then made his way into the senior squad and won it all. He had to, we both did: it was win, win, win, win, because if we hadn't..." Within six years teacher and pupil would be European and South American champions respectively. Those successes should have brought a class reunion at the Finalissima in Qatar but war forced postponement. "Two don't play if one doesn't want to; we were mad keen to play," De la Fuente says. "It was a pity. I don't think politics will be a problem this summer: football is something that can bring people together of all creeds, ideologies, races and religions." The Future: Spain's World Cup Ambitions "Who would have thought it?" De la Fuente asks, reflecting on his journey to the senior national team. His first big senior job came past 60, having worked in Spain's youth structure for a decade. Scaloni, 40 when thrust into the seniors, hadn't worked at a club. "Life provides these moments. And nothing was given to us for free. It's all through work, work and more work..." "In the end, sporting success is fleeting. But I remember my teachers... So when I had the chance to work at the RFEF [federation], I thought: it's my job to shape people." With Spain heading to the World Cup as one of the favorites, De la Fuente's philosophy of developing both players and coaches continues to bear fruit on the world stage.
#Luis de la Fuente #Spain football #Lionel Scaloni
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Sports Jun 07, 2026

Teenage Sensation Antonelli Claims Monaco Pole in Stunning Mercedes Display

Teenage sensation Kimi Antonelli defied expectations by securing pole position for the Monaco Grand…
The Monaco MasterclassFormula One racing sensation Kimi Antonelli made a mockery of suggestions that the Monaco Grand Prix would stall his incredible start to the season by producing a stunning qualifying lap to stick his Mercedes on pole position. The 19-year-old championship leader edged out Red Bull's Max Verstappen by just 0.043 seconds to become the first Italian since Jarno Trulli in 2004 to take pole position in the principality.The Magic Lap That Secured HistoryThe qualifying battle lived up to expectations, with provisional pole changing hands several times before Antonelli snatched it with his final lap on Saturday. "It was one of those laps that we call a magic lap. I was able to put it all together. It was such a close qualifying with Max," Antonelli, who clocked 1:12.051 (1 minute and 12.051 seconds) to claim his fourth pole in six races this season, said.Championship Standings and Team PerformanceAntonelli is the youngest driver to lead the championship, having won the last four races, but the unique nature of Monaco's twisting circuit, full of slow corners, was supposed to take away the Mercedes power advantage. Ferrari had been strongly tipped as race favourites but had to be content with the second row on Sunday's grid, with Lewis Hamilton third quickest, 0.228 seconds slower, and local favourite Charles Leclerc, winner of the race in 2024, fourth.Shattering Monaco ExpectationsAntonelli's performance has significantly altered the dynamics of the championship race. Ferrari dominated Friday's two practice sessions, with Hamilton and Leclerc first and second in both, although Antonelli was quickest in Saturday's final practice. "Congrats to Kimi. Mega, mega job. Having your first pole here is so special," three-time Monaco champion Hamilton, who is yet to win a race for Ferrari, said. "It was tough for us. We were looking so strong in practice, and we barely changed anything, but the car was drastically different once we got to qualifying for some reason."Race Day PredictionsWith the Monaco circuit being notoriously difficult to overtake on, Antonelli now has a golden chance to continue his dream start to the season by emulating Trulli, who converted his pole into a victory in his Renault in 2004. Of the last 22 Monaco Grands Prix, only six have been won by a driver who did not start on pole, such is the extreme difficulty of overtaking on the narrow, twisty circuit. "If you would have told me yesterday I would be on the front row, I would have taken it," Verstappen said, acknowledging the challenge ahead.
#Kimi Antonelli #Mercedes #Monaco Grand Prix
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World Wide Jun 07, 2026

Why Chinese President Xi Jinping's Visit to North Korea Matters

Chinese President Xi Jinping's visit to North Korea is significant as it marks a rare trip abroad f…
The Significance of Xi Jinping's Visit Chinese President Xi Jinping's meeting with North Korea's Kim Jong Un in Pyongyang on Sunday is significant for one reason: it's a rare trip abroad for Xi. The two men met in Beijing just a year ago, but Xi's travel has been limited in recent years. China's Changing Relationship with North Korea Traditionally, Beijing played the role of senior partner in the China-North Korea relationship, with North Korea heavily dependent on China for as much as 95 percent of its trade. However, that dynamic has been changing since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine, with North Korea providing Russia with critical weapons, artillery, and manpower. The Data Behind the Relationship North Korea may have received between $580m and $1.5bn of the $14.4bn paid by Moscow in the form of 'goods' China shares a mutual defence treaty with North Korea, but is wary of North Korea acquiring new military technology The Impact on Regional Security Xi's visit comes amid concerns about North Korea's growing military ties with Russia and its impact on regional security. North Korea has carried out eight missile launches since the start of the year, and has unveiled a new AI-guided tactical cruise missile. The Future of North Korea-China Relations Xi's trip may also be aimed at smoothing over relations with South Korea, which has been critical of North Korea's military actions. The visit could play a constructive role in addressing issues related to the Korean Peninsula, including a possible meeting between Kim and Trump later in the year.
#Xi Jinping #Kim Jong Un #North Korea
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