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India Kashmir crackdown sparks anger as Pakistan tensions escalate
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Russia says claims over annexed Ukraine regions key to peace
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Austrian climber dies on Nepal mountain
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Fires rage 2 days after Iran port blast killed 46
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Palestinian official tells ICJ Israel using aid blockage as 'weapon of war'
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France arrests 25 in police raids after prison attacks
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Kim Kardashian's next star turn is in a Paris courtroom
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Syria group says military chief arrested in UAE
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Anger in Indian Kashmir at demolitions and detentions
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Italy bank merger wave heats up as Mediobanca eyes Banca Generali
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Putin critic Johann Wadephul, Germany's incoming foreign minister
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Cardinals expected to pick conclave date to elect new pope
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French mosque murder suspect arrested in Italy
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China says on 'right side of history' in trade standoff with US
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Stock markets mostly rise as investors eye trade talks
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Fires rage 2 days after Iran port blast killed 40
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Yemen's Huthi rebel media says 68 killed in US strikes on migrant centre
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Man rescued from Mount Fuji twice in one week: reports
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Canada votes for new government to take on Trump
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Top UN court to open hearings on Israel's aid obligation to Palestinians
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Philippines denies 'irresponsible' Chinese report on disputed reef
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T'Wolves win to push Lakers to brink, Celtics, Knicks and Pacers win
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Myanmar marks month of misery since historic quake
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South Korea's SK Telecom begins SIM card replacement after data breach
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Women's flag football explodes in US as 2028 Olympics beckon
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Suspect charged with murder in Canada car attack that killed 11
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Trial begins in Paris over 2016 gunpoint robbery of Kim Kardashian
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Trump thinks Zelensky ready to give up Crimea to Russia
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North Korea confirms troop deployment to Russia's Kursk
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Romania presidential election re-run under Trump shadow
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Asian markets mixed as investors eye trade talks
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T'Wolves push Lakers to brink of elimination, Celtics and Knicks win
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Suspect charged with murder in Canada car attack that left 11 dead
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Smart driving new front in China car wars despite fatal crash
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Cardinals set to pick conclave date to elect new pope
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Miami's unbeaten MLS run ends after Dallas comeback
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After 100 days in office, Trump voters still back US president
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US anti-disinformation guardrails fall in Trump's first 100 days
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Dick Barnett, two-time NBA champ with Knicks, dies at 88
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PSG hope to have Dembele firing for Arsenal Champions League showdown
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Arteta faces Champions League showdown with mentor Luis Enrique
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Niemann wins LIV Mexico City to secure US Open berth
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Novak and Griffin win PGA pairs event for first tour titles
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Inter Miami unbeaten MLS run ends after Dallas comeback
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Japan's Saigo wins playoff for LPGA Chevron title and first major win

Women's flag football explodes in US as 2028 Olympics beckon
Flag football, a non-contact version of American football, is spreading like wildfire among US girls drawn by the prospect of its inclusion in the 2028 Olympics, its popularity even sparking plans for a professional league.
"It's the youth version of pickleball, the fastest growing adult sport," says Michael Colt, comparing flag football to the racquet sport that's all the rage among the over-30s. "It's crazy."
Colt, 44, coaches the Staten Island Giants, last year's under-18 US champions.
Since he co-founded the club in 2019, its youth teams have earned a host of national titles and sent several players to the national team.
Colt said it had been "a struggle" early on to gain recognition and find backing.
"We fought for everything," he said. "We were kind of always pushed to the side, like this wasn't serious.
"And I see that about the sport to this day, when you're asking the difference in the sport. In the beginning, nobody really wanted to coach girls."
The Giants' trajectory mirrors that of the sport as a whole. Developed as an alternative to collision prone tackle football, girls' and women's flag was relatively unknown six years ago.
Yet particpation reached close to 270,000 girls aged six to 17 in 2024, according to the USA Football, which oversees US teams in tackle and flag football -- and Colt's Giants club has the financial backing of the NFL's New York Giants.
Even as the NFL throws its impressive weight behind the game, the scope of flag football can still come as a surprise to the uninitiated, especially the opportunity it provides for gridiron-loving girls.
When 14-year-old Brielle Caetano talks about flag, which she has been playing since kindergarten, people "are very in shock".
"And (then) I tell them you can get a (university) scholarship from that," Caetano added. "They're definitely in shock."
"Football has always been considered a boy's sport," noted 16-year-old Annie Falcone of the familiar high-contact game whose pinnacle is the NFL. "But flag football has grown so much for women of all ages."
In flag football, most often played in a five-on-five format, an offensive player is "tackled" by pulling one of two "flags" worn on a belt around the hips.
No blocking is allowed, further reducing the risk of injury in a game that focuses on running and throwing skills.
"It's just incredible to me how fast flag overall is growing, but really led by girls and women," said Scott Hallenbeck, USA Football's chief executive officer.
"In my probably 30-plus years of being involved in sports, I've never seen a discipline of a sport scale (up) as fast as we're seeing flag."
Hallenbeck said a lot of credit for that growth goes to the NFL, which is pushing to develop the game.
That includes at the youth level, with the NFL organizing its own national flag tournament for boys and girls in July this year, with sponsors and a TV broadcasting contract.
- Fandom, opportunities -
While the NFL is the most-watched pro league in the United States, it has struggled to expand the game outside US borders.
The NBA has become a global phenomenon, and elite basketball leagues prosper outside the USA. But tackle football has found a foothold in just a few other countries such as Germany and Mexico.
Hallenbeck said flag football could be an international game-changer.
"(They are) really pushing flag to help grow fandom and opportunities around the world and then obviously putting a lot of emphasis around it here in this country," he said.
Gaining inclusion at the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics is a key part of that campaign, and is already having an effect.
"It's a source of motivation for me and for the girls right now," Falcone said.
The NFL is already looking beyond the Games, and is "exploring very aggressively now an opportunity to create a professional flag league for both men and women, obviously two different leagues," NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in February.
"They're trying to gather sponsors," said Colt. "I definitely think it's going to be a professional sport by 2032."
W.Huber--VB