Football – In humble Spanish suburb, wonderkid Lamine Yamal embodies hope

Football – In humble Spanish suburb, wonderkid Lamine Yamal embodies hope
A man walks past a graffiti depicting Lamine Yamal in Rocafonda, the neighborhood where Spain’s forward grew up, in Mataro, 35km from Barcelona, on July 11, 2024. Every time he scores a goal, Lamine Yamal usually signs the number 304 with his hands. It is the postal code of the humble Catalan neighborhood where he spent part of his childhood, Rocafonda, which is now very excited about his success and for finally being in the news for good reasons. (AFP)
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Updated 15 July 2024
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Football – In humble Spanish suburb, wonderkid Lamine Yamal embodies hope

Football – In humble Spanish suburb, wonderkid Lamine Yamal embodies hope
  • Lamine Yamal was born in Spain from a Moroccan father and an Equatorial Guinea mother, joined Barcelona’s academy when he was six and moved to live in the city aged 11

MATARO: In the working-class, multi-ethnic Barcelona suburb where Lamine Yamal grew up, the stunning rise of Spain’s football wonderkid in the European Championship generates both intense pride and hope.

The Barcelona winger, who turns 17 on Saturday, celebrates his goals gesturing 304 with his fingers in a nod to the 08304 postal code of the Rocafonda neighborhood, in the coastal city of Mataro, where he grew up and where his father and grandmother live.

“My son is like any other kid. He has fought for a dream and has had the opportunity to achieve it,” said his jubilant father, Mounir Nasraoui, 38, dressed with Lamine Yamal’s Spanish national jersey at a local bar where people took selfies and embraced him.

He forecasts Spain will beat England 3-0 in Sunday’s Euro 2024 final in Berlin, which he will attend.

The El Cordobes bar, with a framed signed jersey of Lamine Yamal hung on a wall, witnessed the family’s early financial struggles.

Nasraoui would be given his coffee for free so he could instead use his money for a train ride to take his son for training at Barcelona’s academy, said the bar’s owner Juan Carlos Serrano.

“This jersey is the pride of the neighborhood, man!,” said Serrano.

“Lamine is the prototype of a kid who has had to work hard, who has been a good student and just graduated from secondary school,” he added. “For this reason, he is a mirror for children.”

Rocafonda is among Mataro’s neighborhoods with the lowest household income and most residents were born outside the Catalonia region and Spain, primarily in Morocco.

Lamine Yamal was born in Spain from a Moroccan father and an Equatorial Guinea mother, who lives in a nearby town. He joined Barcelona’s academy when he was six and moved to live in the city aged 11, his father said.

On Tuesday, he became the youngest player to score in a World Cup or Euros with a sublime 25-meter strike against France.

He also lifted Rocafonda’s self-esteem.

“People used to be ashamed of saying they are from here. This is a very humble neighborhood where people make 1,000 euros a month,” said 28 year-old Sufian, born from Moroccan parents. “Now people that are not even from Rocafonda or Mataro, say: I am from 304!.”

At Rocafonda’s asphalt pitch where Yamal used to play football, young people from Moroccan and Senegalese origin say they dream of following in his footsteps, echoing the humble neighborhoods where other stars grew up such as Argentina’s Lionel Messi and France’s Kylian Mbappe.

Lamine Yamal, who is Black, also represents how Spain has become more ethnically diverse in recent decades due to migration from Africa and Latin America.

His success also comes at a significant political moment. Spain’s far-right party Vox, with a strong anti-migration rhetoric, on Thursday announced it would break five regional government coalitions with the center-right People’s Party over disagreements on the shelter policy for under-18 migrants.

“Lamine’s goal (on Tuesday) was not only a goal, it also sent the message that racism is over and that we are all the same,” said Sufian.


Djokovic targets Slam record at US Open, Sinner under cloud

Djokovic targets Slam record at US Open, Sinner under cloud
Updated 22 August 2024
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Djokovic targets Slam record at US Open, Sinner under cloud

Djokovic targets Slam record at US Open, Sinner under cloud
  • The final major of the year comes at a critical time for Djokovic
  • His tearful victory in Paris allowed him to become only the fifth player to complete a career Golden Slam of all four majors and Olympic gold

NEW YORK: Novak Djokovic, fired up by his emotional Olympic Games triumph, targets new Grand Slam records at the US Open from Monday as title rival Jannik Sinner arrives in New York dogged by questions over two positive drugs tests.

Defending champion Djokovic can become the oldest Open era champion at the tournament if he secures a fifth title, a record he would share with Jimmy Connors, Pete Sampras and Roger Federer.

The 37-year-old would also move to 25 Grand Slam triumphs, taking him clear of the 24 he currently shares with Margaret Court.

The final major of the year comes at a critical time for Djokovic.

This year he was succeeded as Australian Open champion by Sinner who also relieved him of his world number one ranking.

Carlos Alcaraz took his French Open title with the Spanish crowd-pleaser then sweeping Djokovic off court in a one-sided Wimbledon final.

However, Djokovic, returned to the clay courts of Roland Garros to stun Alcaraz in the Olympic final.

His tearful victory in Paris allowed him to become only the fifth player to complete a career Golden Slam of all four majors and Olympic gold.

The victory also silenced the increasing number of doubters who had written off the Serb as a spent force in a new era where Sinner, 23, and 21-year-old Alcaraz are steadily moving center stage.

Djokovic, who underwent surgery on his right knee in June, described his Olympic victory as his “biggest sporting success.”

It was also the 99th title of his professional career.

“At the age of 37 and facing a 21-year-old who is probably the best player in the world right now, winning Roland Garros and Wimbledon back-to-back, I can say that this is probably the biggest sporting success I have ever had,” insisted Djokovic.

Sinner arrives at the final Slam of the season having captured the Cincinnati Masters title.

However, that triumph was quickly overshadowed when it emerged he had been cleared of any wrongdoing after twice testing positive for a banned substance earlier in the season.

Sinner tested positive for clostebol, an anabolic agent prohibited at all times by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA).

But he escaped a lengthy ban after officials accepted his explanation that the substance had entered his system as a result of contamination from a support team member.

“I will now put this challenging and deeply unfortunate period behind me,” said Sinner.

The green light for him to continue playing was blasted as “ridiculous” by Australian player Nick Kyrgios.

Alcaraz, who won his first major at the US Open in 2022, was badly bruised by his defeat to Djokovic in the Olympic final.

He broke down in tears on court before admitting he felt he had “let Spain down.”

His buildup to New York wasn’t helped by a second round exit in Cincinnati to Gael Monfils in a match which saw the usually composed Alcaraz smash his racquet on court.

He described the defeat as the “worst match” of his career.

In the women’s singles at the US Open, Coco Gauff is the defending champion but the 20-year-old has endured a worrying dip in form in recent weeks.

A stormy exit from the Olympics in the third round was followed by early losses in Toronto and Cincinnati.

No woman has successfully defended her US Open title since Serena Williams in 2014.

Five-time major winner and world No. 1 Iga Swiatek, the 2022 champion in New York, made the Cincinnati semifinals where she was defeated by Aryna Sabalenka.

Sabalenka, the Australian Open champion, was runner-up to Gauff at the US Open last year, losing from a set up in the final.


Five things to watch as F1 returns for Dutch Grand Prix

Five things to watch as F1 returns for Dutch Grand Prix
Updated 22 August 2024
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Five things to watch as F1 returns for Dutch Grand Prix

Five things to watch as F1 returns for Dutch Grand Prix
  • With 10 races to go, the championship is finely poised with Max Verstappen looking nervously over his shoulder at the chasing pack
  • The three-time champion has been unstoppable in recent years
  • The 26-year-old Dutchman has also been untouchable on his home track since Zandvoort returned to the Grand Prix circuit

ZANDVOORT, Netherlands: After a month off for the summer break, Formula One is back as fans, drivers, and teams descend on the seaside resort of Zandvoort for Sunday’s Dutch Grand Prix.

With 10 races to go, the championship is finely poised with Max Verstappen looking nervously over his shoulder at the chasing pack and competitors lining up to dethrone his Red Bull team from the constructors’ crown.

Here are the five talking points in the paddock ahead of the Dutch Grand Prix.

The biggest question is whether home favorite Verstappen can re-establish his dominance in front of his adoring Orange Army of fans.

The three-time champion has been unstoppable in recent years and cruised to last season’s title with a staggering 19 Grand Prix victories.

The 26-year-old Dutchman has also been untouchable on his home track since Zandvoort returned to the Grand Prix circuit, winning in 2021, 2022 and 2023.

Following last season’s procession, Verstappen looked to be picking up where he left off, winning seven out of the first 10 races for a healthy championship lead.

But he hasn’t taken the chequered flag since Spain in June, a “lean spell” of four races he hasn’t experienced since 2020.

He still enjoys a 78-point lead over his nearest rival, Lando Norris from McLaren, but he will be keen to reassert himself to quash any pretenders to his crown.

Verstappen himself appeared relaxed about it, telling the team podcast before the break: “I honestly don’t care about the records — when I’m sitting on the beach drinking gin and tonic I don’t care about that, so I’ll be fine!“

The main pretender to that crowd, 24-year-old British driver Norris, is enjoying a breakthrough year in a car that is much more competitive this season.

Norris secured a long-awaited maiden Grand Prix victory in Miami, holding off Verstappen and finally burying the cruel online nickname of “Lando NoWins.”

The McLaren renaissance reached new heights with a first Grand Prix win for Oscar Piastri in Hungary in July, with the team securing a 1-2 on the podium for the first time since 2021.

The constructor’s championship is even tighter than the drivers’ race, Red Bull sitting just 42 points ahead of McLaren, with Ferrari only 21 points further back in third.

Much of this is down to a disappointing season from Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez, who has suffered a dramatic loss of form.

Since the Miami Grand Prix in early May, he has registered no higher than eighth, twice failing to finish and trailing in 17th at Silverstone in July.

In the uncompromising world of Formula One, this has inevitably led to speculation over whether he can retain his seat.

Red Bull have publicly stated their support for the Mexican but Perez will want a podium place at Zandvoort to impress famously ruthless team principal Christian Horner.

“I know what we can extract from the car in the coming weeks and we will do our best to maximize the second half of 2024,” said Perez before the race.

Perez’s position is not the only question mark heading into the Dutch Grand Prix as the mercato rumor mill goes into overdrive.

Since seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton announced a surprise switch to Ferrari for next season, speculation over his Mercedes spot has been at fever pitch.

Team principal Toto Wolff has promised an announcement “in the summer” and would love to bring Verstappen himself to the Silver Arrows.

At just 17, junior driver Andrea Kimi Antonelli has been mentioned as a possible candidate to join George Russell but Wolff suggested he might still be too young.

Carlos Sainz, who will be replaced by Hamilton at Ferrari, announced last month he would sign for Williams amid what he said was an “exceptionally complex” drivers’ market.

Regardless of Verstappen’s race fortunes, expect the traditional “sea of orange” from his fanatical Dutch fans at the Zandvoort track, a stone’s throw from the beach.

Like the famous Silverstone, the track was opened in 1948 and welcomed its first Grand Prix in 1952 with races periodically staged there until 1985 when it was shelved.

Zandvoort enjoyed a triumphant comeback in 2021, undulating through the Dutch dunes along its 4.2 kilometers (2.6 miles) circuit length.

The drivers will complete 72 laps in around two hours. A sudden downpour stopped last year’s race and while Sunday’s forecast is set fair, unpredictable Dutch seaside weather could yet play a role.


Duplantis clears 6.15 meters in first pole vault event since world record at Paris Olympics

Duplantis clears 6.15 meters in first pole vault event since world record at Paris Olympics
Updated 22 August 2024
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Duplantis clears 6.15 meters in first pole vault event since world record at Paris Olympics

Duplantis clears 6.15 meters in first pole vault event since world record at Paris Olympics
  • The athlete known as “Mondo” was like a rock star in the 80,000-seat Stade de France two weeks ago, soaring over the bar at 6.25 meters (20 feet, 6 inches) to break the world record for the ninth time
  • The 24-year-old Duplantis got the same adulation in a more intimate setting Wednesday, competing in a pop-up venue circled by 5,000 fans next to the lake in Lausanne

LAUSANNE, Switzerland: Armand Duplantis was just excellent instead of record-breaking on Wednesday in his first pole vault competition since that stunning show at the Paris Olympics.

Duplantis cleared 6.15 meters on his third and final attempt despite strong gusts of wind blowing in off Lake Geneva as the sun set on a balmy 24 Celsius (75 Fahrenheit) evening.

“I need perfect conditions if I’m going to be able to jump the world record again this year,” Duplantis told reporters.

The athlete known as “Mondo” was like a rock star in the 80,000-seat Stade de France two weeks ago, soaring over the bar at 6.25 meters (20 feet, 6 inches) to break the world record for the ninth time.

The 24-year-old Duplantis got the same adulation in a more intimate setting Wednesday, competing in a pop-up venue circled by 5,000 fans next to the lake in Lausanne, the home city of the International Olympic Committee.

“It was really good today, really amazing energy and atmosphere,” Duplantis said. “You get such a cool connection with the crowd when they are so close to you.”

He cleared 6.00 with ease on his first attempt after taking a pause to let the breeze pass.

The less-than-ideal conditions meant there was no attempt at a 10th world record leap of the American-born Swede’s standout career.

“It was just that tiny bit of headwind,” he said. “I just didn’t have enough speed on the runway.”

Still, it was a best mark for the storied Athletissima meeting and an appetizer for the full Diamond League meeting on Thursday featuring a host of Olympic medalists.

The view, at least, was world-leading in this track and field season.

Duplantis, his fellow vaulters and their fans — who could watch for free circling the specially created venue in a public square — looked out across the sun-splashed lake to snow-capped mountains in the French Alps.

Dozens of fans pulled out their mobile phones to film the star attraction when he entered the competition with the bar set at 5.62. That was cleared with ease, as was 5.82 and 5.92.

“You get to put a face on the people and you see how passionate they are,” Duplantis said of the city-center event some meet promoters stage to bring the sport closer to fans. “I see how excited they are that I’m here and they want me to jump high. They’re pushing for it.”

No other competitor got above 5.92, the best height cleared by runner-up Sam Kendricks, the Olympic silver medalist from the US.


Wyndham Clark gets a Colorado homecoming at the BMW Championship

Wyndham Clark gets a Colorado homecoming at the BMW Championship
Updated 22 August 2024
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Wyndham Clark gets a Colorado homecoming at the BMW Championship

Wyndham Clark gets a Colorado homecoming at the BMW Championship
  • Clark: To be back here playing in front of my home crowd is pretty special
  • A popular question this time of the year is who should get player of the year

CASTLE ROCK, Colorado: Wyndham Clark is feeling more pressure than usual at the BMW Championship.

Hometown events are not all that unusual on the PGA Tour — Max Homa and Collin Morikawa in Los Angeles, Xander Schauffele in San Diego — but they are rare in Clark’s hometown of Denver.

“I grew up coming to this place and always dreamt of playing this tournament,” Clark said at Castle Pines. “When they stopped playing here, it was kind of a stab to the heart for me because it was so fun coming out and watching it. To be back here playing in front of my home crowd is pretty special.”

Clark had an unusual start in the game at a place called Mountain View Range, which since has been replaced by office buildings. He was 3 years old and full of energy. His father was out of town, and his mother was busy with Clark’s sister and newborn brother.

“She was like, ‘I’ve just got to get Wyndham out of the house.’ So she started driving thinking she was going to go to some fun play area and then saw the golf course that was pretty close to our house.”

She pulled in, thinking it would be a distraction.

“I ended up hitting two buckets of balls for like two, three hours and just loved it,” Clark said. “I just was fascinated with hitting the golf ball.”

Clark, the US Open champion last year, had been in a summer lull until he rallied at the Olympics — partly motivated by chatter than Bryson DeChambeau should have been there instead — for a 65-65 weekend.

He shot 64 on Sunday at the TPC Southwind to tie for seventh in the PGA Tour postseason opener. And now he finally gets a crack at Castle Pines, which last hosted the best players at The International in 2006.

“It’s amazing to see where I started at a local muni and then go into the college ranks and being here, it’s pretty awesome,” he said. “It’s always fun coming home because I can see where my roots were and keep me grounded.”

Matters of money

Xander Schauffele is curious why athletes in other sports are celebrated for the contracts they receive, and golf gets negative publicity when it comes to players’ earnings. Money in golf has been a big topic since the arrival of Saudi-funded LIV Golf and the PGA Tour’s response by raising purses to include 11 tournaments that pay $20 million or more.

Scottie Scheffler leads the money list at just over $29 million. Schauffele, a double major winner this year whose consistently high finishes rival Scheffler, is at $17.6 million.

“If you look at how much the 10th-best player in the world has made, it’s not going to sniff how much Scottie has made. That just shows you how well Scottie has played in these big tournaments,” he said.

Shane Lowry is at No. 10 with $5.7 million.

“You look at the No. 1 quarterback, he’s getting $60 million and then the No. 10 quarterback is getting 52 (million),” he said. “Obviously, there’s way more money in football with TV and everything that’s surrounding it. It’s hard to compare the one versus one because Scottie has just been that much more elite. And I think he deserves everything that he’s getting.”

The vote

A popular question this time of the year is who should get player of the year. It’s hard to beat the season Scheffler has had — a major, Players Championship, four signature events and an Olympic golf medal — but Schauffele counters with two majors.

Since the PGA Tour player of the year award began in 1990, the only double major champion not to win the award was Nick Faldo in 1990 because he wasn’t a PGA Tour member.

Players have expressed different opinions on whose year they would rather have. How they vote won’t be determined until sometime in September. Of course, that assumes they vote.

One player who won’t be voting? Scheffler. He doesn’t keep track of how often he has voted, but said, “I don’t think I’ve voted for myself.”

“Maybe I haven’t voted in the past couple years when I felt like I had a chance to win,” he said. “I think maybe I didn’t vote then because I don’t think I’d vote for myself. But just thinking of what I would do this year, I think since I’m in the running I probably would just refrain from voting. I think it would be a bit weird to vote for myself.”

Welcome back to Castle Pines

Only two players from the 50-man field have played at Castle Pines. Just don’t get the idea Adam Scott or Jason Day has any advantage.

Scott played in 2000, just two weeks after he turned 20. He was making his debut at a regular PGA Tour event. Having just turned pro, he had played four times on the European Tour and in the British Open. He received a sponsor exemption.

Day was 18.

“I do remember the elevation change after 1,” Day said. “I do remember 6 — a little bit of 6. I know they changed that. I do remember 7. I know they lengthened that, as well. But some of the other holes are all fuzzy. Eighteen years is a long time.”

His other memory was out of left field.

“I do remember walking up these steps thinking David Toms has an amazing haircut,” Day said. “He had a visor on one time and there was not one bit of hair out of place. I was walking right behind him.”


De Silva and Rathnayake star in Sri Lanka revival against England

De Silva and Rathnayake star in Sri Lanka revival against England
Updated 22 August 2024
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De Silva and Rathnayake star in Sri Lanka revival against England

De Silva and Rathnayake star in Sri Lanka revival against England

MANCHESTER, United Kingdom: Dhananjaya de Silva and debutant fast bowler Milan Rathnayake both made fine fifties as Sri Lanka recovered from a dramatic top-order collapse on Wednesday’s opening day of the first Test against England at Old Trafford.
Sri Lanka were in dire straits at 6-3 after skipper De Silva won the toss, losing their first three wickets for no runs in 10 balls.
Yet they recovered to 236 all out, De Silva top-scoring with 74 and tailender Rathnayake, with only his third first-class fifty, close behind in making 72.
The pair checked England’s progress during an eighth-wicket partnership of 63, with no other Sri Lanka batsman making more than Kusal Mendis’s 24.
“The captain wanted me to stay in there and support him,” number 9 Rathnayake, speaking via a translator, told reporters after stumps. “That’s what I did and when he got out, then I played my natural game.”
Chris Woakes struck twice in an over on his way to 3-32 in 11 overs.
De Silva’s impressive innings ended when he turned a quicker ball from off-spinner Shoaib Bashir straight to Dan Lawrence at leg slip, with the 20-year-old taking 3-55 in 23 overs.
Ben Duckett and Lawrence, recalled in place of the injured Zak Crawley, guided England to 22-0 before bad light ended play for the day at 5:52 p.m. (1652 GMT).
“I think it’s a good day,” Woakes, now the leader of England’s attack following James Anderson’s retirement, told Sky Sports.
“When you bowl on day one on a Test surface like that, to be batting at the end of the day I think you’re really happy.
“It would have been nice to bowl them out earlier than what they got, but with the bad light we couldn’t bring our quick guys on to mop up the tail.”
Sri Lanka’s initial collapse ensured a dream start for stand-in England captain Ollie Pope, leading his country for the first time after Ben Stokes was ruled out with a torn hamstring.
The tourists came into their first Test in England in eight years on the back of just a solitary warm-up fixture — a defeat by the second-string England Lions — and it was soon clear some of their batsmen could have done with more time in the middle.
Sri Lanka’s collapse began in the sixth over when Dimuth Karunaratne top-edged a hook off fast bowler Gus Atkinson to wicketkeeper Jamie Smith.
Woakes then took two wickets in the next over, with Nishan Madushka, the other opener, driving loosely at an outswinger and edging to Joe Root at first slip as he fell for four.
Five balls later, Angelo Mathews was lbw for a duck playing no shot to a Woakes delivery that nipped back off the pitch.
Mendis, by contrast, could do little else than glove a superb 93 mph (150 km/h) delivery from express quick Mark Wood that reared up from short of a length to second slip.
De Silva, however, pulled Atkinson for a commanding four and completed an impressively quick fifty off just 56 balls.
He was reprieved on 65, when Smith missed a tough stumping chance off Bashir, but was out soon afterwards to leave Sri Lanka 176-8.
Nevertheless the 28-year-old Rathnayake, undaunted by the loss of his skipper, went to a 96-ball fifty in style when the left-handed batsman launched Bashir for a straight six that also took Sri Lanka past 200.
Bashir though had his revenge when Rathnayake drove him to Woakes at mid-on.
Before play started there was a minute’s applause in honor of Graham Thorpe, the former England batsman and assistant coach, with both teams, as well as the match officials, wearing black armbands in his honor.
Thorpe died aged 55 earlier this month after being hit by a train. His wife Amanda confirmed he had taken his own life having suffered from depression for several years.