New Zealand 29, Italy 11
LATAM crypto update: Crypto.com’s Visa card, Nubank Brazil launches crypto exchange tool, and Milei’s concerns
How to design the perfect space for socializing – expert tips from interior designersPittsburgh's Punchline celebrates 20th anniversary of 'Action' album with hometown show
Video montages from Minnesota United’s social media accounts this week shared receipts of national pundits’ low predictions for the Loons in 2024. ADVERTISEMENT Since MNUFC has advanced to Sunday’s Western Conference semifinals, the club took the opportunity to blast its doubters. That’s a thick glossing over of recent history. The actions of the Loons’ ownership group and front office in late 2023 and early 2024 — after the firing manager Adrian Heath — didn’t scream of a club’s urgency to win at a high level this season. Actions speak louder than words. CEO Shari Ballard was willing to wait for new chief soccer officer Khaled El-Ahmad to wrap up his job at English club Barnsley before coming to Minnesota. After missing the MLS Cup playoffs in 2023, Ballard said last November: “We’re not building this by January,” a reference to the start of preseason. ADVERTISEMENT El-Ahmad, in turn, showed patience in his head coach hire, and Eric Ramsay didn’t arrive until the 2024 regular season was three games old. Into late April, the club took zero big swings on new player additions via the primary transfer window. When MLS All-Star midfielder Emanuel Reynoso returned to Minnesota in May after yet another AWOL stint in Argentina, El-Ahmad wasn’t willing to fast track the playmaker back onto the field. El-Ahmad soon transferred Reynoso to Club Tijuana in Mexico for a discounted fee, and in the process, proved a bigger point that club culture is more important than having Reynoso help stack three points in matches. Then the Loons’ summer slide down the standings put their record at 8-10-6 on July 17. There was nothing but patience expressed from Ramsay and El-Ahmad, who pointed to the abundance of player absences for international duties and injuries. Their lack of stress belied a 1.29 points-per-game pace that would have been lucky to sneak into the ninth and final place in the playoff field. There was no win-now directive to feel as if they had fallen behind. MNUFC’s 6-1-1 finish to the regular season and eventual sixth seed in the West — followed by the two wins in penalty kicks to beat third-seeded Real Salt Lake in the first round of the playoffs — had been boosted by El-Ahmad making a handful of additions in the summer transfer window and Ramsay’s ability to implement his tactics and get buy-in from players. ADVERTISEMENT But making the final eight playoff teams in MLS? “There is, of course, a level of satisfaction, but I think it’s difficult to do that until you know how everything pans out,” Ramsay said days before the Loons play at second-seeded Los Angeles Galaxy on Sunday night. “I’ve tried not to think too much beyond the upcoming game and sort of take the balance of the season as a whole once that’s done. But I don’t think anyone can deny that relative to the circumstances and the expectations that we’ve had a really good year and sort of anything from this point onwards set against what was talked about prior to the season would, of course, be a bonus.” ADVERTISEMENT Even if the Loons lose Sunday, the 2024 season can still be chalked up as a success. That’s primarily true because this wasn’t supposed to be the year. It might not even be the year before the year. El-Ahmad’s attempted maneuvering before the close of the summer transfer window showed he wanted to bring in a defensive midfielder, but in the end was unable or unwilling to make it happen at that point. Again, no urgency in this being a make-or-break season. The Loons have been successful this season despite not spending very much. MNUFC has the 25th largest salary spend ($14.7 million) out of 29 teams in the league. Underperforming forward Teemu Pukki is the club’s highest-paid player at $3.5 million, and that 25 percent of the salary budget is expected to come off the books within the next year. This will allow El-Ahmad future opportunities to improve the roster, and the ownership should give him the latitude beyond reinvesting just that amount that money. Defensive midfielder appears to be a primary target again this winter. ADVERTISEMENT The ongoing roster remake has made the Loons more youthful, with players heading into their prime years. Striker Kelvin Yeboah was the biggest summer addition, and the 24-year-old Designated Player hit the ground running with seven goals in 709 minutes to finish the regular season. Another reason this season is already a success is MNUFC has formed a clear identity to carry into 2025. Since his first day on the job, Ramsay has instilled a defensive focus, which produced a club-record shutout streak to end the regular season. Ramsay has gotten players to be willing to switch positions when needs are a must and attackers have bought in to help defend. ADVERTISEMENT While Ramsay can see the overall success when he takes a step back, he’s pushing forward into Sunday’s match. “That’s not to say that I don’t feel nor expect us to go another step beyond because, if I look at our form at the moment, I do feel we’re a good matchup for anyone in the league,” Ramsay said Tuesday. “There’s absolutely no way that we’re going into this game feeling as though it’s David against Goliath, and we’re huge underdogs, and you’ve got a 20 percent chance of winning the game. That’s just not how we look at it. So I’m trying to, again, balance those two perspectives.” ______________________________________________________ This story was written by one of our partner news agencies. Forum Communications Company uses content from agencies such as Reuters, Kaiser Health News, Tribune News Service and others to provide a wider range of news to our readers. Learn more about the news services FCC uses here .1 Uranium Stock to Invest in the Nuclear Energy Renaissance
A range of independent TDs are contemplating the prospect of entering Ireland’s next coalition government as Fianna Fail and Fine Gael consider ways to secure a solid majority. Three long days of counting in the General Election finished late on Monday night when the final two seats were declared in the constituency of Cavan-Monaghan. Fianna Fail was the clear winner of the election, securing 48 of the Dail parliament’s 174 seats. Sinn Fein took 39 and Fine Gael 38. Labour and the Social Democrats both won 11 seats; People Before Profit-Solidarity took three; Aontu secured two; and the Green Party retained only one of its 12 seats. Independents and others accounted for 21 seats. The return of a Fianna Fail/Fine Gael-led coalition is now highly likely. However, their combined seat total of 86 leaves them just short of the 88 needed for a majority in the Dail. While the two centrist parties that have dominated Irish politics for a century could look to strike a deal with one of the Dail’s smaller centre-left parties, such as the Social Democrats or Labour, a more straightforward route to a majority could be achieved by securing the support of several independent TDs. For Fianna Fail leader Micheal Martin and current taoiseach and Fine Gael leader Simon Harris, wooing like-minded independents would be likely to involve fewer policy concessions, and financial commitments, than would be required to convince another party to join the government benches. Longford-Westmeath independent TD Kevin “Boxer” Moran, who served in a Fine Gael-led minority government between 2017 and 2020, expressed his willingness to listen to offers to join the new coalition in Dublin. “Look, my door’s open,” he told RTE. “Someone knocks, I’m always there to open it.” Marian Harkin, an independent TD for Sligo-Leitrim, expressed her desire to participate in government as she noted that Fianna Fail and Fine Gael were within “shouting distance” of an overall majority. “That means they will be looking for support, and I certainly will be one of those people who will be speaking to them and talking to them and negotiating with them, and I’m looking forward to doing that, because that was the reason that I ran in the first place,” she said. Meanwhile, the Social Democrats and Irish Labour Party both appear cautious about the prospect of an alliance with Fianna Fail and Fine Gael. They will no doubt be mindful of the experience of the Green Party, the junior partner in the last mandate. The Greens experienced near wipeout in the election, retaining only one of their 12 seats. Sinn Fein appears to currently have no realistic route to government, given Fianna Fail and Fine Gael’s ongoing refusal to share power with the party. Despite the odds being stacked against her party, Sinn Fein president Mary Lou McDonald contacted the leaders of the Social Democrats and Labour on Monday to discuss options. Earlier, Fianna Fail deputy leader and outgoing Finance Minister Jack Chambers predicted that a new coalition government would not be in place before Christmas. Mr Chambers said planned talks about forming an administration required “time and space” to ensure that any new government will be “coherent and stable”. After an inconclusive outcome to the 2020 election, it took five months for Fianna Fail, Fine Gael and the Greens to strike the last coalition deal. Mr Chambers said he did not believe it would take that long this time, as he noted the Covid-19 pandemic was a factor in 2020, but he also made clear it would not be a swift process. He said he agreed with analysis that there was no prospect of a deal before Christmas. “I don’t expect a government to be formed in mid-December, when the Dail is due to meet on December 18, probably a Ceann Comhairle (speaker) can be elected, and there’ll have to be time and space taken to make sure we can form a coherent, stable government,” he told RTE. “I don’t think it should take five months like it did the last time – Covid obviously complicated that. But I think all political parties need to take the time to see what’s possible and try and form a stable government for the Irish people.” Fine Gael minister of state Peter Burke said members of his parliamentary party would have to meet to consider their options before giving Mr Harris a mandate to negotiate a new programme for government with Fianna Fail. “It’s important that we have a strong, stable, viable government, whatever form that may be, to ensure that we can meet the challenges of our society, meet the challenges in terms of the economic changes that are potentially going to happen,” he told RTE. Despite being set to emerge with the most seats, it has not been all good news for Fianna Fail. The party’s outgoing Health Minister Stephen Donnelly became one of the biggest casualties of the election when he lost his seat in Wicklow in the early hours of Monday morning. Mr Donnelly was always predicted to face a fight in the constituency after boundary changes saw it reduced from five to four seats. If it is to be a reprise of the Fianna Fail/Fine Gael governing partnership of the last mandate, one of the major questions is around the position of taoiseach and whether the parties will once again take turns to hold the Irish premiership during the lifetime of the new government. The outcome in 2020 saw the parties enter a coalition on the basis that the holder of the premier position would be exchanged midway through the term. Fianna Fail leader Mr Martin took the role for the first half of the mandate, with Leo Varadkar taking over in December 2022. Current Fine Gael leader Mr Harris succeeded Mr Varadkar as taoiseach when he resigned from the role earlier this year. However, this time Fianna Fail has significantly increased its seat lead over Fine Gael, compared with the last election when there were only three seats between the parties. The size of the disparity in party numbers is likely to draw focus on the rotating taoiseach arrangement, raising questions as to whether it will be re-run in the next coalition and, if it is, on what terms. On Sunday, Simon Coveney, a former deputy leader of Fine Gael, said a coalition that did not repeat the rotating taoiseach arrangement in some fashion would be a “difficult proposition” for his party. Meanwhile, Fine Gael minister Paschal Donohoe said he would be making the case for Mr Harris to have another opportunity to serve as taoiseach. On Monday, Mr Chambers said while his party would expect to lead the government it would approach the issue of rotating the taoiseach’s role on the basis of “mutual respect” with Fine Gael. “I think the context of discussions and negotiations will be driven by mutual respect, and that’s the glue that will drive a programme for government and that’s the context in which we’ll engage,” he said. On Monday, Labour leader Ivana Bacik reiterated her party’s determination to forge an alliance with fellow centre-left parties with the intention of having a unified approach to the prospect of entering government. Asked if Labour was prepared to go into government with Fianna Fail and Fine Gael on its own, she told RTE: “No, not at this stage. We are absolutely not willing to do that. “We want to ensure there’s the largest number of TDs who share our vision and our values who want to deliver change on the same basis that we do.” The Social Democrats have been non-committal about any potential arrangement with Fianna Fail and Fine Gael, and have restated a series of red lines they would need to achieve before considering taking a place in government. Leader Holly Cairns, who gave birth to a daughter on polling day on Friday, said in a statement: “The party is in a very strong position to play an important role in the next Dail. In what position, government or opposition, remains to be seen.” Fianna Fail secured the most first preference votes in Friday’s proportional representation election, taking 21.9% to Fine Gael’s 20.8%. Sinn Fein came in third on 19%. While Sinn Fein’s vote share represented a marked improvement on its disappointing showing in June’s local elections in Ireland, it is still significantly down on the 24.5% poll-topping share it secured in the 2020 general election. The final breakdown of first preferences also flipped the result of Friday night’s exit poll, which suggested Sinn Fein was in front on 21.1%, with Fine Gael on 21% and Fianna Fail on 19.5%.