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Kiwi Beamish wins Penn Relays 1,500m crown with late kick
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Mbappe on Real Madrid bench for Clasico Copa del Rey final
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England survive France fightback to seal Women's 6 Nations slam
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Palace sweep past Villa to reach FA Cup final
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CAF appoint Moroccan Lekjaa first vice-president
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Major blast at Iran port kills 5, injures hundreds
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Rodgers vows to stay with Celtic after fourth successive Scottish title
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Ipswich relegated as Newcastle, Chelsea boost top five bids
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Canada leaders make final pitches in campaign upended by Trump
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Mullins -- Ireland's national training treasure
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US, Iran say progress in 'positive' nuclear talks
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Mullins emulates O'Brien with second successive trainer's title
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Ipswich relegated after one season in Premier League
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Just Stop Oil activist group holds final march
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Djokovic crashes to nervous Arnaldi in Madrid opener
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Syria's Kurds demand 'democratic decentralised' Syria
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Leverkusen win to delay Bayern and Kane's title party
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Buenos Aires farewells native pontiff with tears and calls to action
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Turkey's opposition says Erdogan's canal plan behind latest arrests
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Maresca hails 'nasty' Chelsea as top five bid stays alive
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Trump raises Putin doubts after Zelensky talks at pope's funeral
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Major blast at Iran port kills 4, injures hundreds
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Napoleon's sword to be sold at auction in Paris
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Iran, US discuss nuclear deal in third round of talks
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Buenos Aires farewells native pontiff with call to action
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Warholm sets hurdles world record at Diamond League, Holloway shocked
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US students 'race' sperm in reproductive health stunt
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Wikileaks founder Assange joins crowds for pope funeral
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Leader Marc Marquez claims Spanish MotoGP sprint victory
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Celtic win fourth successive Scottish Premiership title
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Jackson ends drought as Chelsea boost top five push
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Warholm sets 300m hurdles world record in Diamond League opener
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Major blast at south Iran port kills 4, injures hundreds
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Russia says retook Kursk from Ukraine with North Korean help
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Francis laid to rest as 400,000 mourn pope 'with an open heart'
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Trump, Zelensky meet on sidelines of pope's funeral
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'Shared loss': Filipino Catholics bid Pope Francis farewell
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Families unable to reunite as India-Pakistan border slams shut
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Major blast at south Iran port injures hundreds
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Foreign carmakers strive for 'China Speed' to stay in race
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Pakistan says open to neutral probe into Kashmir attack after India threats
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Hundreds of thousands at funeral mourn pope 'with an open heart'
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Quartararo sets Spanish MotoGP record to claim pole
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Hamas says open to 5-year Gaza truce, one-time hostages release
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Iran, US hold new round of high-stakes nuclear talks
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Up at dawn for front-row seat to history at Francis's funeral
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Pakistan ready to 'defend sovereignty' after India threats
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Huge crowds flock to Vatican for Pope Francis's funeral
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Xi says China must 'overcome' AI chip challenges
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Indian army says new exchange of gunfire with Pakistan

Pogacar gunning for blood and thunder in Tour of Flanders
Tadej Pogacar said on Thursday he cannot wait for this weekend's one-day Tour of Flanders race and is targeting a repeat of his 2023 win while hoping to avoid a sprint finish against champion Mathieu van der Poel.
In this epic 270km struggle through lush Flemish plains with 18 cobbled sections and 17 hills watched by a massive crowd of 750,000 fans in Belgium.
Current Tour de France, Giro d'Italia and world champion Pogacar can add another string to his bow if he wins the classic considered by purists as 'the real world championship'.
But he will have to beat Van der Poel, who trounced him in the final sprint in the last big race they met in March 22's Milan-San Remo.
"We saw it at Milan-San Remo, Mathieu is one of the best sprinters in the peloton," said the effervescent 26-year-old.
"Flanders is a very different race. But if there's a sprint, I'll do my best.
"At Flanders if I feel good, I'll have more chances to avoid such a finish. It will be tiring, very tactical. Maybe Mathieu will be more tired than me after six hours," the Slovenian said.
Pogacar said he would make the going as hard as possible and said his weakness might be that riders from the Flanders region would have an advantage.
"With the crowd creating a unique atmosphere, it's never difficult to push the pedals," Pogacar said.
"It gives you a boost of adrenaline," the three-time Tour de France winner said of the expected massive crowd.
Pogacar warned there was no way he was ruling out Wout van Aert, who is reeling from a tactical error that blew his chances of the Around Flanders race Wednesday.
"Wout seems pretty good to me. He's on the pace," Pogacar said.
"I didn't see the race but it seems they (Visma) made a mistake by being over confident.
"He'll be there on Sunday," he added.
F.Fehr--VB