Nothing says drama like red and black – and Superman villain María Gabriela de Faría knows it. Right: Viktoria and Woods “Stardust” tunic top, $450.
Soft lilacs and pale pinks grab all the attention in spring, but if you’re taking inspiration from budding gardens, go straight to the classic red rose. The colour’s traffic-light appeal will stop observers in their tracks, particularly when unexpected design details catch a light, evening breeze. Let a tunic do double duty as a dress on top of micro-shorts or pants. Blooming marvellous. Viktoria and Woods “Stardust” tunic top$450.
Jewel heist
Sophie Turner sparkles in Louis Vuitton. Right: Louis Vuitton necklace print T-shirt, $1700.
Raid the jewellery box this spring without having to worry about tricky clasps or matching metals. At Louis Vuitton, creative director Nicolas Ghesquière used prints of jewels to catch the light and add luxury to classic staples. Make a gem-strewn T-shirt, worn beneath a suit, the backdrop for an evening event or wear in the daytime with white capri pants or bootleg jeans. Louis Vuitton necklace print T-shirt$1700.
Brown town
A newly blond Nicholas Hoult is fully browned off in New York. Right: Venroy silk shirt, $240.
It’s time to give last season’s knitted polo-shirt some well-deserved time off. A softly structured short-sleeve shirt adds definition and structure to spring ensembles while still acknowledging the heat. Layer with a statement white singlet or a seasonal essential, or button up for Sunday lunch. Any colour will do, but if you wear on-trend chocolate, you’re less likely to be mistaken for a waiter or off-duty accountant. Venroy silk shirt$240.
Nip, tuck
David Corenswet strikes a pose. Right: Charlton pleated pants, $395.
If you’re feeling the pump from the gym, a monochrome moment in a singlet and jeans will make an impression, but we suggest easing up on the flexing and covering up with a white T-shirt or polo shirt. Tailored pants in stone, cream or even stark white are your most versatile item this spring, punching above their weight in the office, backyard or bar. Wherever you are, keep the look modern by maintaining the crispness of your pleats. Charlton pleated pants$395.
Double trouble
Joe Locke steps out in classic black and white. Right: Aquila “Mensa” loafers, $269.
For some men, evening footwear runs the gamut of black work shoes and white sneakers with few stops of interest in between. This spring, merge your interests with the retro combination of black and white, offering greater versatility in your wardrobe. Wear a two-tone loafer with a white outfit to avoid looking bottom-heavy or with black tailoring to avoid looking too corporate. Aquila “Mensa” loafers$269.
Tied and true
Pedro Pascal makes old-world glamour new again. Right: Dolce & Gabbana silk scarf with micro design, $525.
Now that bow ties and even shirts are no longer compulsory for evening events, let a casually knotted silk scarf demonstrate respect for the host without compromising your natural flair. Advanced style-setters can use a tie knot for added interest. Not ready to break with tradition? The right scarf looks just as good with a shirt. Dolce & Gabbana silk scarf with micro design$525.
Slim shady
Isaac Ordonez deflecting some media glare at a Netflix premiere. Right: LeSpecs “Neptune” sunglasses in gold tortoiseshell, $79.
Classic ’80s silhouettes are pushing graphic ‘90s sunnies’ styles out of the picture. Supercharge your frame game by wearing the softened square shape in a professorial tortoiseshell. LeSpecs “Neptune” sunglasses in gold tortoiseshell$79.
The Indian Medical Association (IMA) launched a 24-hour strike at 8 am on Thursday. Despite all IMA-registered hospitals being shut across the state, healthcare services were not massively hampered, as emergency services were available at government hospitals. Doctors are protesting against the Maharashtra Medical Council (MMC) permitting the registration of homoeopaths who complete the Certificate Course in Modern Pharmacology to prescribe modern medicine.
“Till late Thursday evening, we had only received a letter from the government stating that the matter was still in the courts and asking us to call off our strike. However, we asked that if the matter was sub judice, why was the order mentioning the registration of homoeopathy practitioners and permitting them to practise modern medicine passed by the government,” said Dr Santosh Kadam, state president, IMA.
Meanwhile, doctors in four major civic-run hospitals told mid-day that healthcare services were unhampered on Thursday, as resident and senior resident doctors provided medical assistance in emergency wards. “My peers working at IMA-registered hospitals and private clinics participated in the strike while keeping just one or two doctors in rotation for emergency services. Those like us working in BMC hospitals continued providing services in rotation at casualty wards,” said Dr Smriti Khule, a senior resident at a major civic hospital.
Dr Sanket Trivedi, resident doctor at Sion Hospital, said, “The aim is to safeguard patients from a wrong course of treatment. So, if we stop providing services altogether, the purpose won’t be served. But, yes, this token strike was necessary, and we hope that the government understands our reasons.”
Meanwhile, patients observed that the number of doctors present in the civic hospitals was visibly less. “Generally, during morning hours, there are many doctors in the OPD wards. But today, there were few of them.
Services are anyway slower in government hospitals due to the patient load. So, we did not see a huge difference there,” said Sadiq Ansari, who was visiting KEM Hospital with his pregnant wife for her routine sonography.
The IMA has hinted at a more rigorous strike after one week. “We will wait for another seven days for the government to rethink its decision. Otherwise, we will intensify our strike,” said Dr Kadam.
“I’M THE ONE that made him go after Canelo,” Carl Washington says some three months before the biggest fight of the year. And maybe the last battle of its kind. He’s talking about Terence Crawford, whom he calls Bud. Washington is especially excited since it’s the sort of fight Crawford has sought for years. A pathway to prove how great he is. And who better to do that against than the modern day face of the sport: Saul “Canelo” Álvarez?
If anyone would know who Crawford needed to fight, it’s Washington. He’s the one who runs a boxing gym in downtown Omaha. The one who almost 30 years ago asked a school-age boy who lived in the house behind his, if he wanted to box. That was Bud.
“I said, ‘You know what your dream fight would be?’” Washington continues. “‘Canelo. Then you and your grandkids can retire.’”
As Washington talks, young boxers slowly fill his gym, CW Boxing Club, for another day’s workout. A few are professionals but most are amateurs. In the same way all of them dream of becoming boxing world champions, they all say being from Nebraska makes it easier for them to be overlooked.
“How was Crawford as a young boxer?” I ask.
“Bud was a mean little kid,” Washington says.
He tells a story of the first time Crawford stepped in the ring and became so angry and frustrated from being punched that tears of anger flooded his eyes. He tore his gloves off, wanting to fight bareknuckle against his opponent. “Bud just started wailing on him, didn’t want to stop,” Washington remembers. “It happened in that corner over there,” he says while pointing at a ring where boxers have begun to warm up.
“I told everybody he was gonna be a world champion,” Washington says.
Crawford, who has his own gym in north Omaha, has long stopped training here, but CW Boxing Club is where it all began. Where, for the longest time, few outside Omaha even knew his name. Back then, managers and promoters told Crawford if he wanted the best for his career, he’d have to leave this place. Not only did he stay, but he surrounded himself with mostly people who also started here. And for years, all of them have waited for a fight like this.
For most of Crawford’s career, the politics of prizefighting kept him from big fights. He was caught in between the cold wars promoters have among themselves. Crawford’s unique talent was evident; a fighter with supreme intelligence who was also athletic enough to switch from orthodox to southpaw in the middle of rounds. But without opportunities to fight the best, it was difficult to prove how truly special he was. In the Canelo bout, he finally had an opportunity, at age 37, to take part in the kind of fight he’d been waiting for. He’d won titles as junior welterweight and welterweight, but this was a superfight, a battle between athletes that before it even began felt like a battle between legends.
“Let me show you something,” Washington tells me.
I follow him as he walks through a maze of walls that, just like everything in his gym, he has built with his own hands. He turns a corner, takes a few steps then stops to stare at something else he has built.
“I call this his historical wall,” Washington says, staring at what looks like a secular shrine to Crawford, the prizefighter who made it out of here. It’s photographs and newspaper clippings from when he was an amateur and a young professional. It includes a framed sheet of paper that’s labeled “Team Crawford.” Beneath it are the small portrait photos of nine men with Crawford at the top. Each is accompanied by a single sentence explaining how many years they were also at CW Boxing Gym.
Washington built it to show everyone what’s possible. The oldest photo of Crawford is from when he was just a kid and learning to box. Young Crawford stands in a fighter’s pose, his right hand ready to jab while his left one is ready to attack. He’s wearing a white tank top that’s nearly slipping off his left shoulder and boxing gloves too big for his hands. His eyes look both innocent and intense.
Washington has two copies of that photo. One hangs in the gym he has run for nearly a half-century. The other copy is kept inside the Washington family Bible. It’s the King James version, the cover is black and worn from daily reading. Though no one in the family knows exactly when they got it, they know it’s older than the photograph it protects.
“I always knew he would be a world champion,” Washington says again.
“CAN WE TURN OFF the air conditioner?” Canelo asks in Spanish.
He stands in the middle of a boxing ring at UFC GYM in Reno, Nevada, looking up at a vent blowing cold air through his red hair. He has phrased it as a polite question but everyone knows it’s more of a demand. It’s three weeks till fight night. The biggest fight of the year. The most watched fight of his career.
For the past dozen years, Canelo has been the face of prizefighting. Grown from a teenager marketed as Mexico’s next great fighter to a global brand, his name sells everything from tacos to luxury menswear. His business manager, Richard Schaefer, is certain Canelo will soon be a billionaire.
“Thank you,” Canelo says to no one in particular when he feels the air conditioner go off.
“This ring is smaller,” Eddy Reynoso, his trainer, says.
“Yes,” Canelo answers as he begins to warm up.
Just as he can’t risk catching a cold, he can’t risk pulling a muscle. If his fight against Crawford — called everything from the “Fight of the Century” to “Once In A Lifetime” — is postponed, it will jeopardize hundreds of millions of dollars. It will risk one of the handful of fights Canelo has left in him.
“They just put it up,” Canelo says of the ring.
It sits atop the space usually reserved for group classes, inside the gym that’s closed to its members because Canelo’s here. “We deeply apologize for the inconvenience,” a paper taped to the gym’s glass door reads.
When Canelo starts to skip rope, the 40 or so people in the gym watch. When he moves from one corner of the ring to the other, everyone’s eyes and cameras follow. It’s the same when he moves to the heavy bag and when he’s done and walks back to the locker room in a sweat-stained shirt.
“I’ll be right back,” he says. “I’m just going to change into a clean shirt.”
Canelo has reached a level of fame impossible to escape. It’s why he goes by a single name. It’s also why for the past two years, he has moved his training camp about an hour from here, up in Sierra Nevada mountains. The elevation helps his lungs but more importantly, the isolation gets rid of some distractions that come from being the sun at the center of prizefighting’s sometimes treacherous universe.
Canelo’s Mexican heritage plays no small role in that. The “boxing is dead” stereotype has always been wrong. It’s more that, in this country, boxing has largely become a Latino — mostly Mexican — sport.
“This will be among the most important fights I’ve had,” Canelo tells me. He has returned from the locker room wearing a purple-colored shirt with the “No Boxing No Life” logo that’s part of his brand. “I think it’ll be my biggest.”
Beyond that, outside the ring, it will be his most important and biggest fight because it will stream to Netflix’s more than 300 million-plus global subscribers, and if nothing else, that increases the spectacle. It will be Canelo’s most important and biggest fight because despite the disadvantages he’ll face, Crawford can win.
The most important and the biggest. Because as he moves toward the end of his career, nothing hurts Canelo as an individual, prizefighter and brand, more than losing.
THERE’S A HISTORICAL MARKER on Reno’s E. 4th Street, about a 10-minute drive from where Canelo held his media workout. A couple of blocks north of the Truckee River, it’s surrounded by cheap motels and mechanic shops. To stand there on a hot late afternoon in late August, is to stand on the site of maybe the country’s most important prizefight. On July 4, 1910, Jack Johnson, boxing’s first Black heavyweight champion, faced Jim Jeffries. Their fight was filled with racial tension in a country still trying to find itself in the remnants of its Gilded Age that brought immense wealth for a few and extreme poverty for many others.
The fight was in Reno because the Governor of California said San Francisco couldn’t host it. Prizefighting corrupted public morals, he argued. He also worried what might happen if Johnson won. If the Fight of the Century took place in California, he encouraged the Attorney General to arrest anyone involved.
Reno had a station on the Southern Pacific Railroad, and because the mining industry was struggling, politicians figured prizefighting would help Nevada’s economy.
In boxing’s infancy, prizefights were held in secret locations — in brothels and backrooms of bars, in middle-of-nowhere fields, and sometimes in the dried riverbanks of the U.S. and Mexico border. All of that changed with the 1897 fight between James J. Corbett and Bob Fitzsimmons. About a half-hour’s drive from Reno, there’s a historical marker for that fight too. It’s next to a leaky sprinkler box in the parking lot between the Carson City jail and the sheriff’s office.
With two weeks to prepare for Johnson-Jeffries, a wooden amphitheater was quickly built. On the day of the fight, more than 20,000 people witnessed what area newspapers called The Fight of the Century. It took place in a middle point between where the country was and where it was going. Nearly six years before, Theodore Roosevelt won a second presidential term and further involved the country in global politics. Six years after it, the U.S. surpassed the British Empire as the world’s largest economic power. The country was in the early phases of what would evolve into the American Century. It embraced the optimism that came with viewing itself as exceptional and having unmatched cultural, economic and political power across the world.
Under the hot Nevada sun, Johnson beat Jeffries to a bloody mess. In the 15th round, Jeffries, the undefeated favorite who’d never been knocked down, fell to the floor several times. The crowd, most of whom were there to see Jeffries win and reestablish a white man as boxing’s heavyweight champion, began to yell for the fight’s end. When the inevitable was near, Jeffries’ corner ran into the ring to stop the beating. “No Jack, don’t hit him anymore,” Jeffries’ manager yelled.
The Fight of the Century ended, and fans exited the arena in stunned silence. A source of Black pride and defiance against racial oppression, Johnson’s win was described by the Reno Evening Gazette as “the scene of the greatest tragedy the roped arena has ever known.” Soon after it ended, from the West Coast to East Coast and every place in between, the country’s first national race riot began, but that label is incorrect. It was white on Black violence as payback for Johnson’s win.
In Walla Walla, Washington, a Black man was thrown to the floor and kicked in the head and body. In Omaha, two Black men were shot inside a pool hall after an argument over the fight. In New York, a Black man was hanged from a light post. And there were many others. At least 20 people were killed and hundreds more injured. There was even a rumor that Johnson had been shot while riding the train out of town.
The wooden amphitheater has long been destroyed along with most of the surrounding buildings. The last of the 20,000 people who attended the fight died decades ago. Among the last physical reminders is a plot of land with a historical marker that’s beaten and bruised. It has been written on, scratched, and smudged with ink. Only half of the letters are visible in what used to read “The Fight of the Century.”
Today, the place that was once the center of the world’s attention is a scrap yard.
“WE AMERICANS ARE UNHAPPY.”
That was Henry R. Luce’s opening sentence for his editorial published in the Feb. 17, 1941 issue of Life magazine.
“We are not happy about America. We are not happy about ourselves in relation to America. We are nervous — or gloomy — or apathetic. As we look out at the rest of the world we are confused; we don’t know what to do.”
With that began Luce’s 6,500-word plea to his readers. As the co-founder of Time and Life magazines, and founder of Fortune and Sports Illustrated magazines, he used his powerful media empire to persuade. With World War II ongoing and the U.S. not fully involved yet, Luce wanted his readers — powerful politicians, businessmen and industrialists among them — to embrace a future in which the U.S. was the global power.
“The 20th Century is the American Century,” he wrote. For that to work, Luce said there had to be a worldwide devotion “to great American ideals.” That meant free economic determinism and a world in which the U.S. was a good Samaritan, in part by sharing its engineers, doctors, teachers, and even entertainers. It was the sort of claim to power that included American technology, arts, and sports.
The American Century.
Just over seven months after Luce’s editorial, Joe Louis, boxing’s second Black heavyweight champion was on the cover of Time magazine. Except for presidential speeches, nothing drew larger crowds to the radio than fights.
“AGUA,” John “Juanito” Ornelas says.
He’s trying to catch his breath in the suffocating heat so his voice sounds like a whisper. And since he’s wearing boxing gloves and his hands are useless except to fight, it also sounds as if he’s begging for water. Over the sounds of his own heavy breathing, Gilbert Roybal, his trainer, can’t hear Ornelas.
“Agua,” the prizefighter repeats, this time louder.
“The news said this is the hottest weekend of the summer,” Roybal says as he gives his fighter a squirt from a water bottle and then unties his gloves.
In any other setting, that’d be great news. It’s the long Labor Day weekend and there are plenty of beaches nearby. But inside Dynamite Boxing Club — in Chula Vista, behind a bar with a payday loan and liquor store nearby — it feels like a world removed from the San Diego area’s natural beauty. Instead of a Pacific Ocean breeze, three floor fans are set at their highest speed, pointed toward the gym doors kept open by an orange traffic cone and a sledgehammer with a 35-inch handle. Instead of the sweet coconut and vanilla smell of sunscreen, the pungent stench of sweat fills the air.
“We’re doing it the hard way, and we wouldn’t want it any other way,” Roybal says. He and Ornelas take pride in knowing they’ve earned everything they have in this cruel business. For every boxer like Canelo or Crawford who earn millions, there are thousands who work full time just to afford to fight. Ornelas fights in the shadows of hotel ballrooms and small conventions halls, inside forgettable casinos in the middle of nowhere. Roybal practically has to beg sponsors for boxing gloves. They dream of fighting in a place like Las Vegas. On a night like Canelo-Crawford.
“We’re going to shock the world,” Ornelas says, talking of their upcoming fight against Mohammed Alakel. It’ll be the first bout streamed on Netflix as part of the Canelo-Crawford undercard.
“I started boxing to honor my brother,” Ornelas says while sitting on the ring apron. “He was a professional boxer. He was 10-1-1 when he got murdered in Tijuana.”
Before he died, his brother, Pablo Armenta, would tell Ornelas about his boxing dreams. Ornelas listened as his older brother spoke of how he studied videos of past and present world champions and dreamed of becoming one of them. About wanting to fight on the biggest stages beneath Las Vegas’ blinding lights.
“I’m trying to do what he always envisioned,” he says. “This was always his dream.”
THERE’S A BUILDING in the part of Las Vegas where the lights don’t shine as bright and the artists write on walls. “Johnny Tocco’s Boxing Gym” the sign says even though it has been closed to the public for about three years. Its windows are boarded shut and “Home of the World Champions” written above the entrance has begun to peel off. The mural of all the famous boxers who have trained there — Sonny Liston, Marvin Hagler and Mike Tyson among them — has begun to fade. And next to the door that once opened for fighters, someone has placed a sign asking if you’ve sinned today.
There’s another building, about a mile and a half away, in the part of Las Vegas where the beautiful people play. It’s a luxury resort and casino, the tallest occupiable building on The Strip, and at its very top it says “Fontainebleau.” It’s one of the newer buildings there, on top of the land that used to be the Algiers Hotel and what was first the Thunderbird, then the Silverbird, then El Rancho Hotel and Casino. Those closed, were imploded, and after the smoke and rubble cleared, Fontainebleau Las Vegas was built for $3.7 billion.
The first building is where yesterday’s prizefighters used to train. They aren’t there anymore. The second one is where — at least for one week –you see the prizefighters of today. More at home in the first than the second, most of them look out of place, except for one.
CANELO STEPS OUT of the suicide doors of a black Rolls-Royce that has a thin red strip running along its side. He brushes his hands down his torso to straighten the white suit he wears without a shirt. He shakes hands with important people in suits much more conservative than his. They’re the moneymen who make the fights happen. Their names are unknown to most but their faces hover in the background, reflecting off the dark sunglasses Canelo wears as he thanks them. He walks to the side entrance of the Fontainebleau Las Vegas.
“Viva Mexico, cab—-s!” a man yells in Spanish from inside the south lobby of the hotel and casino hosting fight week for Canelo-Crawford. The crowd begins to cheer while Mexican flags wave from the second floor. Because he has been the other guy during this fight promotion, Crawford got the opposite reaction when he made his entrance 50 minutes earlier. His few supporters yelling, “And the new…!” were quickly drowned out by Canelo’s fans.
“I love each and every one of you all,” Crawford told the booing crowd, “but come Saturday, y’all gonna be crying.” He said it with a smile and confidence particular to someone who has never lost a professional fight and are sure they never will.
“Ca-ne-lo! Ca-ne-lo!” the crowd cheers as the Mexican boxer walks down the red carpet. As the week progresses toward Saturday and Mexican Independence Day weekend, there is a growing excitement as casinos, hotels and sidewalks will become more crowded. Among the gathered are the old prizefighters; they’re still remembered and called “Champ.”
Canelo’s face, name, logo and brand is everywhere. In the airport, on T-shirts worn by those who’ve traveled hours to get here, and on the biggest screens that illuminate the city in the Mojave Desert. The history of prizefighting is the history of searching for saviors. And not for the first time, the sport seems unsure whether it wants to crown champions or stage spectacles.
Sometimes, the biggest fights are a mix of both and feel like a holiday. James J. Corbett, the champion of Irish descent, fought Bob Fitzsimmons on St. Patrick’s Day in 1897. Jim Jeffries, who was made out to be the “Great White Hope” lost to Jack Johnson on July 4 in 1910. And some of the most anticipated fights of this century, including Canelo’s fights, happened over the holidays of Cinco de Mayo and Mexican Independence Day.
“Me-xi-co! Me-xi-co!” the crowd chants.
Canelo walks through the cameras flashes as hands reach out to touch him. Inside the Fontainebleau it feels like a different world than the old building just a mile and a half away. This is where the tourists come and over there is where the locals live and say the streets feel dead. Tourism is down and that has affected the local economy. The city of blinding lights has one of the country’s highest unemployment rates. Some economists warn that what’s happening in Las Vegas could be an early sign of an upcoming decline across the country.
Inside the Fontainebleau, which always smells of perfume and has a grand chandelier with thousands of crystal bowties, that concern feels exaggerated. But standing outside the old building that has become another of prizefighting’s skeletons, it feels right, as if something has broken. Like Canelo versus Crawford might be the last big fight at the end of the American Century.
“IT SEEMS LIKE you’ve seen more important fights than anyone,” I say to Jerry Izenberg as he shows me around his home office. Its walls are covered with framed photographs, mementos and awards from three-quarters of a century of work.
“I missed Cain and Abel,” he says in his usual humor and thick New Jersey accent that hasn’t faded in the 18 years since he has lived just outside of Las Vegas. “My camel died on the way to the arena,” he adds.
At 95, he often jokes about his age. The term feels like from another time and place, but for 74 of those years, he has been what he calls a newspaperman, most of them for The Newark Star-Ledger (now known as NJ.com) in New Jersey. And as he leans on his walker, taking careful steps around his office, he talks of the sport he has watched and covered for most of his life.
The prizefight that turned him into a fan was the 1938 rematch between Joe Louis and Max Schmeling. It was also called the Fight of the Century, and 7-year-old Jerry listened to it on the radio.
“It was more than a fight, it was a historical event,” Izenberg explains. Louis, who’d become the greatest boxer of his era, versus Schmeling, the German world champion used by Nazi propaganda as proof of Aryan supremacy. It was the first time many white Americans openly cheered for a Black man. As soon as Louis beat Schmeling, radios across Germany went dead. About 14 months later, it was the start of World War II. “Since he lost the fight, Hitler sent him to Crete as a paratrooper,” Izenberg says of Schmeling.
Since then, Izenberg has seen and covered all of the big fights. Muhammad Ali versus Joe Frazier, Roberto Duran versus “Sugar” Ray Leonard, Marvin Hagler versus Tommy Hearns, Mike Tyson versus Evander Holyfield, Floyd Mayweather Jr. versus Oscar De La Hoya.
The last of the so-called Fight of the Century that Izenberg covered in person was Manny Pacquiao versus Floyd Mayweather Jr. At 4.6 million buys, it was the highest-selling pay-per-view in boxing history. The fight was uneventful partly because of Pacquiao’s injured shoulder. When it was over, several class-action lawsuits were filed because of it, alleging fraud by claiming organizers knew Pacquiao was injured. But with so much money at stake, the fight went on. That month, May 2015, Nevada’s casinos made over a billion dollars from gambling.
Izenberg tells stories about the old and broken prizefighters who became his friends once the cruelest sport got rid of them. How Louis had to join the circus to make money — at one point even fighting a kangaroo — and still died broke, with Schmeling paying for his funeral. He calls Muhammad Ali one of the best friends he has ever had, says it hurt to watch him wither away from Parkinson’s disease. He tells me Sonny Liston died mysteriously as a lonely and forgotten man living in Las Vegas. How back when it was easier for him to get around, Izenberg would visit Liston’s grave in a noisy cemetery next to the Las Vegas airport.
“You ever miss being at the fights?” I ask.
“I miss being anywhere,” Izenberg answers.
A younger version of himself would have been at the Canelo-Crawford weigh-ins, talking to boxers and their people, then getting dinner before the big fight. But instead of being there, he’ll eat dinner at home with his wife and watch the fight from his couch.
After the fight, Izenberg will write his column the way he has done for decades. Though he retired some 18 years ago, he continues to work. “I’m the columnist emeritus. I write when I want to,” he says. Apart from those columns, he has written 15 books and has a 16th on the way.
“My last book will be the death of American sports. It’s greed,” he explains. “Greed and stupidity and fraud and television making people into what they want. It’s just …”
He stops midsentence as if remembering how things used to be. How newspapermen like him once had as much access as they wanted because it was one of the only ways for boxers to sell themselves and their fights. How the biggest of those fights commanded the entire country’s attention. Standing among all of those memories on his office walls, perhaps he’s even thinking of how he’s one of the last links to an era of prizefighting that doesn’t exist anymore.
“It’s…” Izenberg continues before he stops again. Another second of his long life passes by.
“Nothing is like it was.”
ON THE EARLY EVENING of boxing’s biggest event of the year, two boxers fight inside Allegiant Stadium. The doors have been opened for hours, but the stadium is mostly empty. Crawford and Canelo are a few hours off. Fighting out of the red corner is Mohammed Alakel. Juanito Ornelas was supposed to be in the blue corner, but he isn’t there.
“It’s a dirty business,” Ornelas says.
Instead of preparing for what he thought was the opportunity of his life this week, he was in Temecula working construction. “I got a call saying, ‘We’ve had a change of plan,’” he explains.
“What the f—?” Ornelas said.
A lawyer told him he could sue the promoter but that would ruin his career. Or he could just take the money they offered him to be replaced. (There has been no official word from TKO.)
“I took the money,” Ornelas explains. It was nothing compared to what he really wanted. To fight in Las Vegas for himself, his family, and the memory of his brother. “What else could I do?” he asks. His voice is a mix of anger, confusion and hurt. “I’m not fighting and I’ve been away from my family and I wasn’t working. I needed compensation for that s—.”
It all feels especially cruel; getting a taste of prizefighting at the highest level then, just as he was savoring its flavor, getting it ripped from his mouth. He thought he’d gotten the opportunity of a lifetime only to discover he — the most working class of boxers — was completely replaceable.
On the day of the fight, Ornelas wandered around Las Vegas. It was the last place he wanted to be. He was there with his friends and family who had made travel plans to see him fight. Some of them wore fight shirts that had Ornelas’ name on the back.
Alakel beat Travis Kent Crawford (no relation to Terence), the man who replaced Ornelas, in a unanimous decision in a lightweight bout. Ornelas didn’t watch. But he imagined himself in that ring. Imagined the millions watching from home.
THE WORLD’S TECHNOLOGICAL advancements can be traced alongside how the biggest fights have been broadcast and consumed. The 1897 fight between Corbett and Fitzsimmons was captured on film. The original recording, using a camera called the Veriscope, was over two hours long and is considered the first ever feature film.
It played for five weeks in New York City, four in Boston and nine more in Chicago. Then Buffalo, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh before it moved west to San Francisco and Portland. It later played in London. Now, only about 20 minutes of the original film exists. What remains is part of the National Film Registry.
Before that film, anyone who wanted to know the results of important fights had to either stand outside a place that had a telegram to hear them shouted out or wait to read it in the newspaper. After that film, anyone who wanted to see those results, paid to watch it in a theater.
The film attracted those who normally wouldn’t attend a prizefight and gave the moneymen and prizefighters a new way to make money. With their faces in theaters, some boxers became celebrities. The biggest among them would even tour the country as stage actors in between fights. In his book, “Fight Pictures,” Dan Streible says because of his presence on screen, Jack Johnson was essentially “the first Black movie star.” That changed with The Fight of the Century.
Soon after Johnson beat Jeffries, there were renewed calls to ban the sport and theaters canceled showings of their fight. Two years later, in what law professor Barak Y. Orbach calls “one of the most disturbing waves of movie censorship in American history,” Congress passed the Sims Act. The transportation of prizefighting films across state lines was outlawed.
After film, came radio. On July 2, 1921, eight months after the country’s first commercial station began, Jack Dempsey versus Georges Carpentier — also called The Fight of the Century — was the first big prizefight to be broadcast. This was a month before professional baseball was broadcast on the radio. In Dempsey, prizefighting had a star, even bigger than Babe Ruth during the 1920s. He was the first athlete on the cover of Time magazine.
From telegrams to newspapers, then from film to radio, from television to closed-circuit broadcasts then on to pay-per-view. During their times, each of them were the height of media and technological advancement.
In 2018, streaming became part of this progression with Canelo as its face. He signed a $365 million contract with the streaming platform DAZN. At the time, it was the largest contract for a professional athlete.
CANELO STANDS in the red corner, Crawford in the blue. There’s nothing in sports like the anticipation before the opening bell. Butterflies charge against stomach walls, palms feel slippery and the chest begins to tighten. For months, the boxers and the moneymen have been building to this moment.
It has been press tours and media workouts from Saudi Arabia to New York to Nevada. It has been the Netflix documentary team following each camp for months. All the music, and lights, and pictures with celebrities who want to be close to this. Even the spectacle of the ring walks are done. All of that gets stripped away. The bell rings and we’re left with two men fighting.
There’s a moment in all fights when you can see the boxers fully understand who their opponent is. For Crawford, that moment came in the middle rounds. That’s when Canelo’s size, power and strength — which were supposed his advantages — were something Crawford could feel, rather than something he could only imagine by studying film.
What Crawford found was that Canelo’s size wasn’t insurmountable. After fighting parts of the first few rounds on his backfoot, as the fight progressed, Crawford started becoming more aggressive. If Canelo’s power and strength were there, they weren’t enough of a deterrent. Not when the punches to the face came slow enough for Crawford to protect himself.
“He’s gonna come with the wide s—,” Brian McIntyre told Crawford in his corner at the end of the eighth round. McIntyre, whom everyone calls BoMac, is Crawford’s trainer. On that framed piece of printed paper Carl Washington keeps inside his gym, BoMac’s name is listed just beneath Crawford. “He go wide, you go to the body,” BoMac continued. Crawford’s corner could see Canelo was getting frustrated and losing composure. That he’d become more aggressive at the expense of his technique.
As the fight progressed and Crawford asserted himself, Canelo’s frustrations showed more. He reacted to some punches with a look of disbelief. He saw them coming and reacted the way he’d always done — rolling his head and shoulders away — but somehow, they still landed. It was confusing because it was never supposed to be this way.
Yes, he knew Crawford was a dangerous opponent, but no more than some of the others he’d met before, especially not when he was fighting outside his weight class. Crawford was supposed to be more of a placeholder. The name of an opponent slotted between Canelo’s Cinco de Mayo fights for 2025 and 2026. He was supposed to be someone who’d wilt under Canelo’s power, both inside and outside the ring. Someone, who like many of Canelo’s opponents, looked more thankful for the opportunity and money that came from fighting him than anything else.
And yet, toward the end of the fight, as Crawford punished the face of boxing, it had morphed away from the pageantry and show that comes from events like these. Until now, it had been a promise between a great fighter and a loyal fan base that he would represent them and carry their flag. A reason to watch surrounded by family and friends because if this was one of the few places we got a chance to show how great we can be, then I suppose we’ll just have to take pride in fighting. But then it turned into something primitive and simple. Now it was something closer to the hopes of someone like Carl Washington, or the desire that comes from the pursuit of dreams greater than just your own, like with Juanito Ornelas.
The best of all prizefights feel bigger than that. They represent ideas about the most prodigious of our powers, as nations and people and culture and communities. They call us because they feel like light and heat unto themselves.
Crawford began to dominate. To control that violent space between his torso and Canelo’s. To slip the jab and land his glove to the face. Crawford began to realize there was nothing Canelo could do to hurt him. Once that happened, it became what all great fights are: a struggle to defend what mattered most to Crawford and take away what mattered most to Canelo. It became a story in which Canelo failed to continue being what he’d been so far and Crawford transformed into the very thing that for years only he and a few around him could see. That if all things were even close to equal, there wasn’t a man in the world who could beat Crawford.
“Breathe, breathe,” Reynoso instructed Canelo right before the final round. It’s difficult to know if his calm voice came from not trying to panic or from being as surprised as everyone who watched in Allegiant Stadium and around the world. Because even Crawford’s supporters would admit, it wasn’t supposed to look this easy.
“Throw with all your power,” Reynoso urged.
By the start of the 12th round, it was too late.
MORE THAN ANY OTHER SPORT, prizefighting lends itself to conspiratorial thinking. It’s the structure of the sport and its dependence on those it sees as its savior. It’s the moneymen in the background and all they can lose. It’s the promoters and sponsors and even the state where these fights happen. From Uber drivers to the invisible workers who clean up after everyone, from those who sell bootlegged T-shirts of Canelo’s brand to the tour guides at the Hoover Dam, from those who sell sex and drugs to those who perform magic that bridges how things are and how they appear, it’s good business for everyone whenever a superfight is in town.
This side of prizefighting is so prominent, there’s an entire genre of film dedicated to it. Storylines of the boxer who never got the shot he needed or the one who got it and then it was taken away. The boxer who was supposed to win but then was robbed by judges or the boxer who had it all and then it was gone. All of it symbolic of the struggles of life. That there are a few who get all the breaks and benefit from the inequities, while all the others feel as if their break will never come.
Will Crawford get robbed? At the end of the fight, that was the only question that remained. In a just world, the winner was clear. But then again, in a just world, the circumstances aren’t there for prizefighting to exist.
TERENCE CRAWFORD is on one knee, near the center of the ring. His face looks down toward the canvas and his right hand is pressed against his brow to cover his eyes. Around him is the team he has had his entire career, just about all of them started in that boxing gym in downtown Omaha. And because few things show the spectacle of a prizefight better than when he’s there, Michael Buffer’s voice is heard across every part of the stadium and in the homes of those watching around the world.
“The winner, by unanimous decision,” Buffer says. “The fighting pride of Omaha, Nebraska, USA. And new! …”
Crawford’s body shakes slightly as there’s a controlled chaos all around him. Inside the ring, it’s the producing men who tell everyone where to stand so their cameramen can show it to millions around the globe. It’s the moneymen and the cornermen from each side, Canelo’s is much quieter than they expected. Outside the ring, it’s the biggest crowd that has ever been inside Allegiant Stadium — 70,482. Even more people than when it hosted the Super Bowl less than two years ago. From the stands, small sections begin to yell where they come from. “Omaha! Omaha!” And for the first time all week, those voices and cheers from Crawford’s people aren’t drowned out by all the others.
“Give me some f—ing room y’all, damn!” BoMac yells from inside the ring as cameras start to move in on him and his fighter, and away from Canelo.
Crawford had come from the shadows of the forgotten, flyover country, and won. His place in boxing history had changed within an hour of real time. He’d reached that place where if he never fought again, people would remember his name long after he was gone. The story became how even if he wasn’t the face, Crawford had just done the sort of things only a small handful of fighting men have ever done. He’d done the remarkable. He had every disadvantage and still won.
When Crawford returns to his feet, his eyes are wet and red and there’s a look of strain across his face. It looks like part anger and part relief. Anger that it took this long for others to see what he always knew. That he was better than not just Canelo, but everyone he’s ever fought. Relief that he was right. Just as being a prizefighter is having to convince yourself you can’t be beat. Sometimes what’s required is to keep working, even when no cameras are watching, toward something that might not come.
With all eyes on him now, as he becomes the spectacle, Crawford takes a few deep breaths and exhales. Then, the best fighter of his generation — the best since Mayweather retired and the only man in this era to be undisputed champion in three different weight classes — is covered with the title belts he just won. There’s not much of an expression on his face. No moment of surprise, because unlike most people watching, he always expected this.
“SOMETIMES YOU TRY and your body can’t go,” Canelo says.
He speaks in English at the postfight news conference a couple of hours after he lost. A few years ago, he began speaking the language because it was good for the brand. Canelo growing his English proficiency in public had the added effect of making him more human. Few can relate to someone who can have just about anything, but everyone knows what it’s like to struggle at something.
“That’s my frustration,” Canelo continues. He’s processing how for the first time in over 14 years, he isn’t a world champion. He sits between Richard Schaefer and Eddy Reynoso who looks like someone who has been smoking cigarettes for hours outside a hospital emergency room. The entire mood of the news conference is somber. All three of them sitting behind an empty table where his title belts would be.
“My body can’t go anymore,” Canelo says again as if he’s talking to himself more than anyone else. All it takes is the reflexes to slow a fraction of a second for an opponent’s punch to connect and your own punches to miss. That fraction of a second is the difference between a win and a loss. A blink of the eye, and it’s gone.
As Canelo speaks of the body that has made him powerful and wealthy, he sounds as if he has been forced — beaten, really — into contemplating his own mortality. As the face of boxing, he was in a space few fighters ever occupy. But now he has arrived in that same harsh place where all who’ve ever fought get to. Even before this loss, he knew the end was near. But a few hours ago, he thought he’d have a greater say when it was done. Now, talking out of a beaten face, it all feels different.
“Right now, I just want to enjoy my family,” Canelo says. Besides that, he isn’t sure what comes next. He’ll take a few weeks off, then gather with his team to discuss the future. They’ll talk of what comes next for a 35-year-old who feels betrayed by his body.
TO WALK THE STREETS of Las Vegas on a Sunday morning after a big fight, is to see the invisible people cleaning up after those who check out of their hotels with their swollen eyes, smell of alcohol and return to where they’re from. It’s to see a new group of tourists turnover because there’s always something that comes next. And since the Raiders will play on “Monday Night Football,” there’s no sign of Canelo versus Crawford outside of Allegiant Stadium. Just as there aren’t any on the hotel and casino neon signs that are impossible to miss.
By Sunday morning, you can see Canelo has started to fade away. His face, name, logo and brand are no longer as omnipresent as they were the day before. It was always going to end this way because with or without Canelo, the machine continues. It reminds you that if even Canelo is this easily replaceable, then the ruthlessness of prizefighting is an inextricable part of this country.
For the moment, Crawford’s face is more visible than ever before. In the span of a day, he went from someone who most thought had too many disadvantages to win, to someone whose name is mentioned among the best who have ever fought. But he’ll turn 38 in a few days. His shot was too long in coming. He probably won’t become the face of the sport. He might never fight another superfight. He’ll have this night. This feeling the morning after. But soon.
Prizefighting will have to find and attach itself to someone else.
<img src='https://news.cgtn.com/news/2025-09-14/Wang-Yi-China-Europe-should-make-right-choices-amid-greatest-changes-1GEx0lO7cKA/img/545fb57f19de4506959a6cf0e5b9f91e/545fb57f19de4506959a6cf0e5b9f91e.png' alt='Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and Tanja Fajon, deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Slovenia, hold a joint press conference in Ljubljana, Slovenia, September 13, 2025. /Chinese Foreign Ministry '
China is willing to work with European countries, including Slovenia, to inject more stability and stronger positive energy into the international situation and create a brighter future for the world, China’s top diplomat said in Ljubljana on Saturday.
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi made the remarks after talks with Tanja Fajon, deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Slovenia.
Wang, also a member of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, said that the talks between the two sides were comprehensive and in-depth, with broad consensus reached.
He said that China was among the first countries to establish diplomatic relations with Slovenia and a consistent tradition of China’s diplomacy is that all countries, big or small, are equal.
For more than 30 years, no matter how the international situation has changed, China has maintained the continuity and stability of its foreign policy. Wang said that China has always treated Slovenia as an equal, fostering friendship, cooperation and mutual benefit, which sets an example of how countries of different sizes and social systems can coexist in harmony.
He said time has fully proved that China and Slovenia are trustworthy friends and partners to each other.
The Chinese foreign minister added that China is willing to work with Slovenia to continuously strengthen practical cooperation in various fields, bring more benefits to the two peoples and write a new chapter of the China-Slovenia friendship.
This year marks the 80th anniversary of the victory of the World Anti-Fascist War. Globally, the Chinese people’s resistance against aggression began the earliest and lasted the longest, with 35 million military and civilian casualties.
Wang said that the Chinese people defeated Japanese militarism on the main battlefield in Asia and prevented them from joining forces with the fascist forces in Europe, making an important contribution to the ultimate victory of World War II. He added that all should remember history and honor the martyrs in order to cherish peace and open up the future.
Noting the international situation is characterized by intertwined chaos and continuous conflicts at present, Wang said China and Europe should be friends rather than rivals and should cooperate rather than confront each other.
Making the right choices amid the greatest changes in a century demonstrates the responsibilities that both sides should fulfill towards history and the people, Wang added.
On the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations (UN) and in the face of the continuous emergence of global challenges and the ever-worsening governance deficit, China has proposed the Global Governance Initiative in response to the call of the UN and the aspirations of all countries.
China’s intentions are transparent and sincere, as it seeks neither to start all over again nor to replace any other country, Wang said. He added that instead, China aims to work with all responsible countries globally to improve global governance through reform, adapt it to the requirements of the new era, truly safeguard the UN Charter, effectively practice multilateralism and better promote human development and progress.
This is an inherent part of China’s fulfillment of its duties as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, Wang said, adding that it is believed that this goal is precisely what Europe expects and is in line with Europe’s interests.
China is a responsible major country and also a country with the best record on peace and security issues, Wang noted, adding that war cannot solve problems and sanctions will only complicate them. China does not participate in or plan wars and what China does is to encourage peace talks and promote political settlement of hotspot issues through dialogue, Wang said.
The most important thing at present is to promote multilateralism, strengthen multilateral mechanisms and jointly safeguard the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, the top Chinese diplomat said.
My heart beats like I’ve already had three giant vanilla-flavoured coffees. Why is my chest tightening? Have I forgotten to take off my ill-fitting, padded underwire bra? Tears start smudging my clumpy mascara. I’m short of breath. Have I been running? Wait, I don’t run. Where is this panic coming from?
Then I work out why I’m overwhelmed. I’ve just realised that today is the deadline to hand in my HSC artwork. But why has no one told me? How did I miss this very important date, one I’ve been working towards for my whole life?
“Despite teenagers doing everything on their laptops at school, they have to write their answers using a pen and paper!”Credit: Getty Images
This panicked nightmare has recurred throughout my life adult life. At 55, I’m still time-travelling back to my acne-covered teens. Sure, I know other people’s dreams/nightmares are boring to hear about, but the HSC nightmare is so common it’s worth sharing.
You see, I’m far from the only person with exam flashbacks. There’s a good chance you’ve had them, too, because of the muscle memory of anxiety that looms over final examsthis absurd system we still subject our young people to. It’s as outdated as the microwave-sized computers my friends and I used in my high school’s “computer lab”.
All we learnt on those computers was how to change the colour of the screen. And all the HSC is teaching students is how to memorise information and then regurgitate it to answer exam questions. And despite teenagers doing everything on their laptops at school, they have to write their answers using a pen and paper! Where is the sense in that? And don’t get me started on the wording of the questions; a recent English paper had my brain, with its smug Master’s degree, going into meltdown.
“Mum, I don’t like school!” Allegra told us after her first day at kindergarten. “The teacher is bossy, the bell is irritating and sitting on the mat is boring.”
Jessica Rowe
Perhaps you detect a slightly shrill tone, verging on a rant. You’re right. I’m fed up with a system that values marks over emotional intelligence, a system that works only for kids who learn in a particular way and are able to memorise information. What about all the other young people with different learning styles, those who are neurodivergent and those creative souls whose talent and ability don’t fit neatly onto a bell curve?
Our eldest daughter is about to embark on her final school exams. Getting to this point has been a lesson in courage and resilience for all of us. “Mum, I don’t like school!” Allegra told us after her first day at kindergarten. “The teacher is bossy, the bell is irritating and sitting on the mat is boring.”
That view hasn’t changed much over the past 13 years. I marvel at how she has managed to keep showing up, day after day, year after year, despite a curriculum that diminishes her sense of self and magical way of thinking.
Cab drivers in Mumbai and other parts of Maharashtra working with Ola, Uber, and other aggregators have threatened to storm the Azad Maidan on September 30, the day Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be in the city, to press for their various demands. The demands include fare parity, a cap on commissions, faster implementation of the Maharashtra Aggregator Policy, and a ban on bike taxis.
A few protesters, who reached the Azad Maidan on Thursday, said they will take a vow not to vote for the Mahayuti government if the demands are not fulfilled, even as the transport department issued an ultimatum to cab aggregators to enforce the discussed fare parity rates by Thursday (September 18).
“We will come with our families from across the state and protest at Azad Maidan in Mumbai. Despite repeated written and verbal assurances to the state’s joint transport commissioner to follow the government rates, cab aggregator companies have not implemented any rates on their mobile application to date,” Maharashtra Kamgar Sabha president Keshav Nana Kshirsagar, who is spearheading the agitation, told mid-day.
The state transport department had held a meeting with aggregators and drivers in July, during which it presented the companies with the issues raised by the drivers. In the meeting, the aggregators agreed to address the issue, including the implementation of government rates and drivers getting 80 per cent of the fare revenue.
Following their meeting, an ultimatum was issued by the transport department to Ola, Uber, and other cab aggregators to enforce agreed-upon fare parity rates by the deadline, which ended Thursday (September 18).
“The transport department had given us assurance on September 16, and the regulations were issued by the government officials many times before that. But companies have not been yielding to the demands. We had a meeting of cab, rickshaw, and taxi drivers working with aggregator companies at Azad Maidan this morning, and it was decided that if we do not get our due rates before September 30 and the closure of bike taxi services, we will storm Azad Maidan and take an oath to vote against the Mahayuti alliance,” he added.
Viewed through the prism of Gio Reyna, is it a Fluch oder Segen (blessing or curse) that his new circumstances at Borussia Mönchengladbach have immediately taken on a new dimension?
We genuinely can’t say just a few days on from the unsurprising departure of Gerardo Seoane, who became the second Bundesliga coach to be removed from his position already this season after Erik ten Hag down the road at Bayer Leverkusen. The Swiss tactician was on decidedly shaky ground going into Sunday’s ill-fated 4-0 home Packung (thrashing) at the hands of Werder Bremen.
Too many negatives had piled up for sporting chief Roland Virkus and the club’s other decision makers to gloss over. Now it’s no wins in ten league matches going back to last season, not a single goal in five top-flight games and the knowledge that after pushing strongly for Europe, die Fohlen (the foals) could barely get past trotting mode during a miserable Endspurt (final phase) last term that saw them fall to a disappointing tenth. The football was generally flaccid and uninspiring.
Here in Germany, it is sporting directors and their staff, not coaches, who plan squad compositions and sign players. So Virkus and his team were responsible for the acquisition of Reyna, and you can understand why it was an attractive move for both parties.
The United States international needed a new stage to kickstart his career, and it helps your life and football needs when you can move from one Borussia to another, making a fairly short hop along the Autobahn with the added bonus that a close American friend — Joe Scally — is firmly ensconced in the Niederrhein (lower Rhine). Gladbach, philosophically, are a team for a Spielmacher (playmaker) They’ve already had another player in this mold for more than a year in Austrian craftsman Kevin Stöger. No matter that he is left footed & Reyna the opposite, the point is they feel they can afford someone perhaps a bit one dimensional with an eye for a pass.
So far, so good for Reyna. But here’s the danger: Will Virkus himself survive if bad results and iffy performances continue to bedevil Gladbach? I suspect not. A new sporting director could mean a new Spielidee (way of playing).
Then you have the coaching part of the equation. Virkus has handed the reins on a short-term basis to an internal figure in Eugen Polanski, someone strongly identified with the club going back to his youth days.
Polanski, promoted from coaching the under-23s, will get the chance to prove himself, but the fixture list facing him is brutal: an emboldened Leverkusen on Sunday followed by Eintracht Frankfurt and then SC Freiburg. Virkus says they’ll also simultaneously assess the market and names such as Italian-American Pellegrino Matarazzo, former Borussia Dortmund coach Edin Terzic and ex-Union Berlin tactician Urs Fischer have been bandied about.
If it were the latter, for instance, Reyna would have to try to thrive in a system featuring five across the back and a very low block. Not necessarily the optimal fit.
Terzic he knows from BVB and vice-versa, and it’s matter of record that Terzic viewed the American as more of an impact substitute candidate than a starter. Reyna didn’t help himself either by not making a strong enough case in his rare outings from the beginning. I particularly recall him underwhelming against Werder Bremen in 2022 when handed a gilt-edged chance.
Matarazzo might seem like someone who would be, on the face of it, more sympathetic to Reyna, but although half American, his job would not be to become preoccupied with the needs of a national team not part of his remit. This is a results-dependent basis for all concerned and sentiment plays little part.
Polanski to me is initially good news for Reyna. As an internal appointment, Polanski knows why Reyna was signed from Dortmund and by whom. He also knows this is a limited Mönchengladbach squad and Reyna is one of the few brights lights, in potential terms anyway.
Scally, who didn’t start in Seoane’s final match in charge, may well return for the Leverkusen visit. Although the two Americans have been good pals for many years, the two are footballing oppositions.
Scally is the athletic-but-unspectacular counterpoint to Reyna’s flair and finesse, but Scally knows who he is and what he’s good at as well as where he has to improve.
Although relatively young at 22, both need to know that they must urgently take on leadership roles at a club without a credible Achse (hierarchy). It’s a time to be grown up, and besides, World Cup places should serve as the ultimate motivation.
Things should improve for the team as a whole in a few weeks when captain and catalyst Tim Kleindienst returns after a knee injury, and it will be intriguing to see if Reyna can forge a productive understanding with one of the top strikers in German football, but the American midfielder must also show he has matured to the point of having improved his work gegen den Ball (against the ball). A playmaker is one thing, a luxury player is something a team in the Abstiegszone (relegation zone) can’t afford.
The time is now for Reyna to write a new chapter in his story and help a club that desperately needs his inspiration and creativity. But just saying that isn’t the same as doing it.
<img src='https://news.cgtn.com/news/2025-09-14/Romania-Poland-scramble-aircraft-as-drones-strike-Ukraine-1GEAFAv83qU/img/77a733e08b8f478794f41859b06d37f7/77a733e08b8f478794f41859b06d37f7.png' alt='Territorial defense officers clean up debris from the destroyed roof of a house after drones struck in Poland, September 11, 2025. /VCG'
Romania became the latest NATO member state to report a drone incursion into its airspace Saturday, as Poland scrambled aircraft in response to drone strikes just over the border in Ukraine.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned that Russia was deliberately expanding its drone operations, and that the West needed to respond with tougher sanctions and closer defense cooperation.
U.S. President Donald Trump said he was ready to impose major sanctions on Russia once all NATO members did the same and stopped buying Russian oil.
Romania’s defense ministry said Saturday that the country’s airspace had been breached by a drone during an attack on infrastructure in neighboring Ukraine.
The country scrambled two F-16 fighter jets late on Saturday to monitor the situation following the strikes, said a defense ministry statement. The jets “detected a drone in national airspace” and tracked it until “it disappeared from the radar” near the Romanian village of Chilia Veche, it added.
Also on Saturday, Poland announced it had deployed helicopters and aircraft alongside NATO allies as Russian drones struck Ukraine near its border. Because of the drone threat, “Polish and allied aircraft are operating in our airspace, and ground-based air defence and radar reconnaissance systems have reached their highest level of alert,” the country’s military command posted in a statement on X.
Russia rejected accusations from Poland, the EU, and NATO that it had launched the drones.
Zelenskyy’s warning
While Russia denies targeting Poland, several European countries, including France, Germany and Sweden, have stepped up their support for defending Polish airspace in response.
“The Russian military knows exactly where their drones are headed and how long they can operate in the air,” said Zelenskyy. The latest drone incursions were “an obvious expansion of the war by Russia,” he added.
What was needed in response, Zelenskyy argued, were fresh sanctions against Russia and a strengthened collective defense system. “Do not wait for dozens of ‘Shaheds’ and ballistic missiles before finally making decisions,” he warned, referring to the Iranian-designed Shahed drones Russia is using.
‘Stop buying Russian oil’
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Saturday expressed concern at the drone incursion into Polish airspace earlier in the week. “If it turns out to have been deliberate, then obviously it will be… highly escalatory,” he told reporters in Washington.
Trump’s suggestion on Thursday that the incident might have happened by “mistake” was dismissed by Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk. On Saturday, Trump returned to the issue of sanctions against Russia, putting the ball back in the court of his NATO allies. “I am ready to do major Sanctions on Russia when all NATO Nations have agreed, and started, to do the same thing, and when all NATO Nations STOP BUYING OIL FROM RUSSIA,” he said in a Truth Social platform post.
In Russia, officials reported that a Ukrainian drone struck one of the country’s largest oil refining complexes, located about 1,400 kilometers from the front line in Ukraine. The attack sparked a fire and caused minor damage at the facility, which belongs to the Russian oil company Bashneft and sits on the outskirts of the central city of Ufa.
A source in Ukraine’s GUR military intelligence agency claimed responsibility for the strike. Since Moscow launched its full-scale military offensive against Ukraine in February 2022, Kyiv has targeted Russian refineries in an effort to curb the Kremlin’s ability to finance the war through its fossil fuel industry.
Shaw, whose main outdoor living space is his largely indigenous front garden, says there is more to be gained than lost from having people able to look in. “You get to know the neighbours who walk past every day, you get to know the dogs and you also get to look out at other people’s gardens and trees,” he says.
Peter Shaw’s Anglesea front garden feels like it spreads onto the street.Credit: Claire Takacs
Bowman agrees. “It gives people a sense of community and reduces loneliness. It also creates a nice place to be in,” she says.
The residents of McElhone Place (or Cat Alley as it’s better known) in Sydney, are old hands at this. For about 50 years they have been turning their inner-city laneway into a beguiling green pocket that has garnered a wide following. With no private front garden space, the residents grow trees, shrubs, herbs, climbers, everything, in containers on the footpath. The resulting ribbons of vegetation are narrow but abundant and transform this pedestrian-only laneway into a haven for everyone.
It is a lesson for anyone living in a high-density area with a small front garden. While fences were never an option for McElhone Place, this laneway highlights the benefits of having greenery for all to enjoy.
Bowman says, putting up “a big, bold, privacy fence” only makes small front gardens feel tinier. High, non-see-through fences also block light and reduce airflow. She says more informal boundary markers that you can see through – and sometimes even walk through – help make gardens feel more attractive and welcoming.
Contrary to what you might expect, Bowman says this approach does not create security issues. She says gardens that feel part of the streetscape have an added layer of security because the neighbourhood takes an interest in them. “Big fences and floodlights create more places to hide,” she says.
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For one project, Bowman marked out the front boundary line with widely spaced upright sleepers and no gate. For another she used rocks that double as public seating, beside which there is a sign announcing to passers-by that they are welcome to sit down.
That particular garden received a love letter from an especially ardent fan, but Bowman says all of these open, engage-with-the-street spaces attract strong followings. “They bring neighbours together and spark more communication.” They also inspire other people to try similar things themselves.
Peter Shaw says he likes the idea that the people who share his Anglesea garden – by peering over his gate or through his informal stick fence – might be inspired to try something similar at their place.
He encourages those in coastal areas – and who don’t have a pet like he does – to do away with the fence entirely. He says a variety of plants can be “staggered” across the front to provide areas of screening instead. “You can have some shrubs at chest height and one might be allowed to go up a bit. Or you might want sparse dwarf eucalypts that you can look through. Think about what you want your plants to do,” he says.
“The big idea is not to see the street as something to be frightened of. Borrow the streetscape and add to it. Start a sharing trend in your street.”
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Congress leader Vijay Wadettiwar on Friday alleged the Maharashtra government`s recent GR on Maratha quota has harmed the interests of OBCs, and accused it of spreading hatred between communities, reported the PTI.
Wadettiwar also attacked minister and senior Ajit Pawar-led NCP leader Chhagan Bhujbal, alleging that he was indulging in “hypocrisy” over the Other Backward Classes (OBC) quota issue, and asked him to clarify his stand.
On September 2, the Devendra Fadnavis dispensation issued a government resolution (GR) on implementing the Hyderabad gazetteer, which will allow eligible members of the Maratha community to apply for Kunbi caste certificates.
The decision triggered restlessness among the OBC community members, who are opposing the possible inclusion of Marathas in the OBC category for reservation purposes.
Talking to reporters, Wadettiwar said the Mahayuti government`s decision has reignited the Maratha-OBC conflict in Marathwada.
“Students are being removed from schools, hatred is spreading between communities. This government has no vision for development. It only thrives on caste politics and is pushing Maharashtra into a pit,” the Congress Legislature Party (CLP) chief said, according to the PTI.
“Who will revoke this anti-OBC decision and when? The government must answer,” he demanded.
The government had issued the GR in response to activist Manoj Jarange`s five-day-long hunger strike in Mumbai.
Wadettiwar said that senior ministers and OBC sub-committee members Chhagan Bhujbal and Pankaja Munde should clearly state in the official meetings the stand they project outside.
He criticised Chhagan Bhujbal, saying that if he was asking people not to support those who backed the agitation of Jarange Patil, then the government itself should be toppled as it had issued the GR that has adversely impacted OBC reservations, as per the PTI.
“On the one hand Bhujbal praises the chief minister, while on the other, he criticises him. This is hypocrisy. If the government claims OBC reservations are not being affected, then let it convene a meeting of all leaders. We will present the proof of how the OBCs are being harmed,” he said, the news agency reported.
Bhujbal has been objecting to the inclusion of Marathas in the OBC category.
Wadettiwar also hit out at BJP MLA Gopichand Padalkar for his alleged derogatory remarks made recently against senior NCP (SP) leader Jayant Patil and his parents.
“Padalkar`s criticism amounted to abusing one`s parents. Criticise political leaders if you want, but dragging their parents is unacceptable. This has never happened in Maharashtra`s politics. Under whose instructions is Padalkar speaking? Who is backing him?” Wadettiwar asked.