
-
Cleveland cruise to record 16th straight win, Boston clinch
-
Sabalenka routs Keys, books Indian Wells title clash with teen Andreeva
-
Cuba suffers fourth nationwide blackout in five months
-
Piastri tops final Melbourne practice ahead of Russell
-
Sabalenka crushes Keys to reach Indian Wells final
-
Residents flee new wave of violence in Haiti capital
-
Starmer to host coalition call as he says Putin 'not serious about peace'
-
New nationwide blackout hits Cuba, officials say
-
Advantage France in three-way fight for Six Nations crown
-
Bangladeshi women alarmed by emboldened Islamists
-
Unification Church faces dissolution in Japan
-
Teen Andreeva topples defending champ Swiatek to reach Indian Wells final
-
Slot eyes first Liverpool trophy against Newcastle in League Cup final
-
Formula One boss to visit Thailand for talks on Bangkok race
-
Former Meta employee barred from promoting explosive memoir
-
Thomas ties course record with 62 as Lee, Bhatia lead Players
-
England boss Tuchel wants to 'earn right' to sing national anthem
-
Guardiola hits back at Capello over 'arrogant' jibe
-
Van Dijk won't 'panic' over Liverpool future
-
Alcaraz expects tough test from Draper in Indian Wells semi-finals
-
Injured Neymar out of Brazil World Cup qualifiers
-
Former Australia rugby captain Elsom handed two-year jail sentence
-
Trump blasts foes and media in speech at 'Department of Injustice'
-
Meta strives to stifle ex-employee memoir
-
US Congress clears key hurdle in bid to avert govt shutdown
-
Captain of ship in North Sea crash charged with manslaughter
-
Sean 'Diddy' Combs pleads not guilty to new indictment
-
Marc Marquez on top in Argentina MotoGP practice
-
Putin, Maduro vow to boost ties in wake of Trump sanctions
-
Sherratt says Wales need 'fresh' coach as Six Nations stint ends against England
-
New Canada PM Carney says Canada will never be part of US
-
Putin calls on Ukraine troops in Russian region to 'surrender'
-
Itoje urges England to 'take game to Wales' in Six Nations finale
-
Ebola-infected monkeys cured with a pill, raising hopes for humans: study
-
Mexicans seek answers after bones, shoes found at cartel camp
-
Triumphant Pedersen finds cold comfort on shivering 'Race to the Sun'
-
Greenland party leaders call Trump's behaviour 'unacceptable'
-
United G7 warns Russia to back Ukraine truce
-
Inothewayurthinkin beats Galopin Des Champs to win Cheltenham Gold Cup
-
Sebastian Coe criticises IOC election process
-
Israel PM, security agency fight it out in public
-
Courtois returns from Belgium exile for Nations League duty
-
Dupont absence 'changes nothing' for Alldritt before France's Six Nations decider
-
Russia 'committed crimes against humanity' in Ukraine: UN probe
-
Trump hails 'productive' truce talks with Russia, urges Putin to spare Ukrainians
-
Hundreds of Olympians call on IOC candidates to make climate top priority
-
Florence cathedral closed as Italy's Tuscany on flood alert
-
Mark Carney: Canada's new PM charted unusual path to power
-
Arteta 'proud' of Lewis-Skelly's England call-up
-
Mark Carney sworn in as Canada PM

Fernandes hits back at Ratcliffe over 'overpaid' jibe
Manchester United captain Bruno Fernandes said it is not the players' fault for the contracts signed off by the club as he hit back at claims by co-owner Jim Ratcliffe that some are "overpaid".
Fernandes was singled out for praise by Ratcliffe, who also said some of the United squad were "not good enough" in a range of media interviews this week.
The United captain led by example by scoring a hat-trick in Thursday's 4-1 win over Real Sociedad to book a place in the quarter-finals of the Europa League.
And he defended his team-mates after Ratcliffe singled out the signings of Casemiro, Rasmus Hojlund and Andre Onana as examples of expensive deals made before he arrived at the club, which United are still paying for.
"We can't relax at this club. You know that there's a big standard, a big attention that you get from the media, from everywhere," said Fernandes.
"It's not nice to hear certain things, obviously. I don't think that any player likes to hear criticism or things that are talked about to you, that you're not good enough or you're overpaid or whatever.
"Everyone has their own contract. The club agrees to do the contracts at the time you come here or at the time you do a new contract or whatever and it's about yourself, proving that you can be important for the club."
The Europa League is United's only hope of salvaging a miserable season so far.
Ruben Amorim's men sit 13th in the Premier League and are out of both domestic cup competitions.
Fernandes revealed he had the chance to leave Old Trafford last summer but reiterated his desire to win more trophies as captain.
"I sat with the club because I had an offer to leave," he added. "We talked about the possibility of me leaving the club or staying.
"They said what they wanted from me. I just asked if they still see me as part of the future of the club or not. I spoke at the time with (former manager, Erik) Ten Hag also.
"He was very clear with me, the club was very clear with me, that they thought I would be a big part of this rebuild. I thought that we could be successful."
Despite Fernandes' return of 15 goals this season as United's stand-out performer, he has still received criticism from one of his predecessors as the club's captain.
Roy Keane claimed the 30-year-old "not a fighter" and that "talent is not enough" in a recent media appearance.
Fernandes said the former Irish midfielder, who won 13 major trophies at United, is someone he "massively respects" and is hoping to change Keane's mind.
"What I'm doing on the pitch to try to change his mind or trying to do something that he probably sees as a good thing," added Fernandes.
"Obviously, I do it in my own way, I don't want to copy anyone.
"I try to be the best captain that I can for my team-mates, I try to help everyone in the best way I can and the best way I know."
V.Fontes--PC