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More than 52,000 voters were allowed to cast ballots on Monday after delivery failures disrupted polling, as supporters of Rafael López Aliaga demanded the resignation of electoral chief Piero Corvetto and counting continued for a third day in Lima.
Partial results from 77 per cent of ballots counted showed Keiko Fujimori in the lead with 16.86 per cent, followed by Rafael López Aliaga and Jorge Nieto, as Peru holds a tightly contested 2026 presidential election with mandatory voting for over 27 million citizens.
An EU observer mission said it had found no evidence of fraud, despite claims by Rafael López Aliaga, who has questioned the integrity of the vote and the handling of postal ballots. The delays recall the 2021 election, when results took five days, and a runoff is expected around 7 June pending official confirmation.
More than 52,000 voters were allowed to cast ballots on Monday after delivery failures disrupted polling, as supporters of Rafael López Aliaga demanded the resignation of electoral chief Piero Corvetto and counting continued for a third day in Lima.
Partial results from 77 per cent of ballots counted showed Keiko Fujimori in the lead with 16.86 per cent, followed by Rafael López Aliaga and Jorge Nieto, as Peru holds a tightly contested 2026 presidential election with mandatory voting for over 27 million citizens.
An EU observer mission said it had found no evidence of fraud, despite claims by Rafael López Aliaga, who has questioned the integrity of the vote and the handling of postal ballots. The delays recall the 2021 election, when results took five days, and a runoff is expected around 7 June pending official confirmation.
More than 52,000 voters were allowed to cast ballots on Monday after delivery failures disrupted…
Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Los Angeles Kings goalie Darcy Kuemper (35) and forward Trevor Moore (12) react as Vancouver Canucks forward Elias Pettersson (40) and forward Jake DeBrusk (74) celebrate DeBrusk’s game winning overtime goal in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images Jake DeBrusk scored twice, including the overtime winner, as the Vancouver Canucks edged the visiting Los Angeles Kings 4-3 on Tuesday night.
DeBrusk tapped in an Elias Pettersson feed at the side of the net at 2:58 of the extra frame.
Defenseman Elias Pettersson and Zeev Buium also scored for Vancouver (25-48-8, 58 points), who have won three straight.
Kevin Lankinen made 31 saves as the Canucks finished the season 9-27-5 on home ice. Vancouver wraps up the regular season on Thursday in Edmonton.
Quinton Byfield and Alex Laferriere each scored and added an assist, and Adrian Kempe had the other goal for the Kings (35-26-20, 90 points).
Darcy Kuemper stopped 21 shots.
Los Angeles, currently in the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference, can still catch the third seed in the Pacific Division with one game remaining in the regular season. The Kings wrap up the regular season on Thursday in Calgary.
The Canucks outshot the Kings 7-4 as the two teams were tied 1-1 after 20 minutes.
Pettersson opened the scoring at 9:21 of the first, putting his shot from the point under the blocker of a screened Kuemper for his third of the season.
Los Angeles tied it 1-1 as Byfield redirected a Laferriere feed past Lankinen for his 23rd of the season — matching his career best.
The Canucks took a 2-1 lead on a power play 52 seconds into the middle frame, with DeBrusk banging home the loose puck off Brock Boeser’s shot past Kuemper for his 22nd.
Kempe responded 12 seconds later, chipping an Anze Kopitar feed up and over the pad of Lankinen for his 36th of the season.
Los Angeles took its first lead at 2:17 of the second as Laferriere put home the rebound off Drew Doughty’s point shot for his 21st.
Buium tied it 3-3 at 9:20 of the second, completing a give-and-go with Nils Hoglander for his sixth of the season.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Los Angeles Kings goalie Darcy Kuemper (35) and forward Trevor Moore (12) react as Vancouver Canucks forward Elias Pettersson (40) and forward Jake DeBrusk (74) celebrate DeBrusk’s game winning overtime goal in the third period at Rogers Arena. Mandatory Credit: Bob Frid-Imagn Images Jake DeBrusk scored twice, including the overtime winner, as the Vancouver Canucks edged the visiting Los Angeles Kings 4-3 on Tuesday night.
DeBrusk tapped in an Elias Pettersson feed at the side of the net at 2:58 of the extra frame.
Defenseman Elias Pettersson and Zeev Buium also scored for Vancouver (25-48-8, 58 points), who have won three straight.
Kevin Lankinen made 31 saves as the Canucks finished the season 9-27-5 on home ice. Vancouver wraps up the regular season on Thursday in Edmonton.
Quinton Byfield and Alex Laferriere each scored and added an assist, and Adrian Kempe had the other goal for the Kings (35-26-20, 90 points).
Darcy Kuemper stopped 21 shots.
Los Angeles, currently in the second wild-card spot in the Western Conference, can still catch the third seed in the Pacific Division with one game remaining in the regular season. The Kings wrap up the regular season on Thursday in Calgary.
The Canucks outshot the Kings 7-4 as the two teams were tied 1-1 after 20 minutes.
Pettersson opened the scoring at 9:21 of the first, putting his shot from the point under the blocker of a screened Kuemper for his third of the season.
Los Angeles tied it 1-1 as Byfield redirected a Laferriere feed past Lankinen for his 23rd of the season — matching his career best.
The Canucks took a 2-1 lead on a power play 52 seconds into the middle frame, with DeBrusk banging home the loose puck off Brock Boeser’s shot past Kuemper for his 22nd.
Kempe responded 12 seconds later, chipping an Anze Kopitar feed up and over the pad of Lankinen for his 36th of the season.
Los Angeles took its first lead at 2:17 of the second as Laferriere put home the rebound off Drew Doughty’s point shot for his 21st.
Buium tied it 3-3 at 9:20 of the second, completing a give-and-go with Nils Hoglander for his sixth of the season.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Vancouver, British Columbia, CAN; Los Angeles Kings goalie Darcy Kuemper (35) and…
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Cricket Australia’s (CA) hopes of opening the Big Bash League (BBL) to private investment have hit a major roadblock after member state Queensland deferred its decision on backing a plan to sell stakes in the nation’s domestic T20 franchises.
Queensland Cricket, which hosts Brisbane Heat, said on Wednesday it had made no final decision following a board meeting and would seek further information from CA.
CA had set Wednesday as a deadline for the nation’s six member states to indicate their support to proceed with a plan which would involve selling off 49 per cent stakes in most teams and 100 per cent of one team each in Victoria and New South Wales.
CA declined to comment when contacted by Reuters about Queensland’s deferral.
New South Wales’ (NSW) support for the proposal is also far from assured.
Cricket NSW boss Lee Germon said last month that alternative proposals needed to be considered.
“We may well end up at the first proposal which is selling all the clubs, but we need to do the due diligence,” he said.
“We want to invest in BBL. We want to lift it. We want to have the best players playing it.
“Are there alternative ways we can do that without necessarily going straight to selling the clubs?”
The privatisation push has been driven by CA Chairman Mike Baird and CEO Todd Greenberg following a review by Boston Consulting Group last year.
CA is hoping to raise up to AUD 600 million from the sale to future-proof the sport, boost its finances and improve Australia’s competitiveness in T20 cricket.
CA reported a net deficit of AUD 11.3 million for the 2024-25 financial year despite a jump in revenue from hosting the lucrative Border-Gavaskar series against powerhouse India.
Australia crashed out of the group stage at the recent T20 World Cup won by India, triggering acrimony on the home front.
Despite the potential for a major capital boost, influential cricket figures in Australia remain wary of private money.
Former Test captain and talent development boss Greg Chappell said the BBL was a success and selling it off could mean a damaging loss of control for the game’s local custodians.
“Australian cricket has long benefited from maintaining its autonomy,” he wrote in a column published in the Sydney Morning Herald.
“Surrendering even part of that independence could have far-reaching consequences.”
Published on Apr 15, 2026
Cricket Australia’s (CA) hopes of opening the Big Bash League (BBL) to private investment have hit a major roadblock after member state Queensland deferred its decision on backing a plan to sell stakes in the nation’s domestic T20 franchises.
Queensland Cricket, which hosts Brisbane Heat, said on Wednesday it had made no final decision following a board meeting and would seek further information from CA.
CA had set Wednesday as a deadline for the nation’s six member states to indicate their support to proceed with a plan which would involve selling off 49 per cent stakes in most teams and 100 per cent of one team each in Victoria and New South Wales.
CA declined to comment when contacted by Reuters about Queensland’s deferral.
New South Wales’ (NSW) support for the proposal is also far from assured.
Cricket NSW boss Lee Germon said last month that alternative proposals needed to be considered.
“We may well end up at the first proposal which is selling all the clubs, but we need to do the due diligence,” he said.
“We want to invest in BBL. We want to lift it. We want to have the best players playing it.
“Are there alternative ways we can do that without necessarily going straight to selling the clubs?”
The privatisation push has been driven by CA Chairman Mike Baird and CEO Todd Greenberg following a review by Boston Consulting Group last year.
CA is hoping to raise up to AUD 600 million from the sale to future-proof the sport, boost its finances and improve Australia’s competitiveness in T20 cricket.
CA reported a net deficit of AUD 11.3 million for the 2024-25 financial year despite a jump in revenue from hosting the lucrative Border-Gavaskar series against powerhouse India.
Australia crashed out of the group stage at the recent T20 World Cup won by India, triggering acrimony on the home front.
Despite the potential for a major capital boost, influential cricket figures in Australia remain wary of private money.
Former Test captain and talent development boss Greg Chappell said the BBL was a success and selling it off could mean a damaging loss of control for the game’s local custodians.
“Australian cricket has long benefited from maintaining its autonomy,” he wrote in a column published in the Sydney Morning Herald.
“Surrendering even part of that independence could have far-reaching consequences.”
Published on Apr 15, 2026
Cricket Australia’s (CA) hopes of opening the Big Bash League (BBL) to private investment have…
Apr 14, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Ben Kindel (81) controls the puck while under pressure from St. Louis Blues left wing Dylan Holloway (81) during the first period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Connor Hamilton-Imagn Images Jimmy Snuggerud had two goals and two assists to help the St. Louis Blues rally for a 7-5 win against the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night.
Dylan Holloway had two goals and an assist, Logan Mailloux had a goal and an assist, Jake Neighbours had two assists and Jordan Binnington made 18 saves for the Blues (36-33-12, 84 points), who rallied from a three-goal deficit to win their third in a row.
Avery Hayes scored two goals, Anthony Mantha had a goal and an assist and Kevin Hayes had two assists in the regular-season finale for Pittsburgh.
Stuart Skinner made 17 saves through two periods before Arturs Silovs made seven saves in the third for the Penguins (41-25-16, 98 points), who had already clinched second place in the Metropolitan Division.
Rutger McGroarty scored on a one-timer from the inside edge of the left circle off a faceoff win by Kevin Hayes to give the Penguins a 1-0 lead at 10:14 of the first period.
Avery Hayes forced a turnover at the St. Louis blue line and scored on a breakaway for a 2-0 lead at 16:40.
The Penguins forced another turnover as the Blues were trying to exit their zone and Mantha scored from the left hashmarks to make it 3-0 at 17:23.
St. Louis got on the scoreboard at 18:44 of the first when Snuggerud scored off a feed from below the goal line from Robert Thomas to cut it to 3-1.
Elmer Soderblom re-established a three-goal cushion when he got behind the defense and waited out Skinner as he dragged the puck in front and scored to make it 4-1 at 2:58 of the second.
The Blues answered with three straight goals in the period to tie it entering the third.
Oskar Sundqvist scored a rebound off a rush to make it 4-2 at 4:51.
Mailloux scored from the high slot to cut it to 4-3 at 10:37, and Snuggerud put in a rebound while on a power play to tie it at 15:49.
Holloway was left wide open in the slot and he gave the Blues their first lead, 5-4, at 4:11 of the third period.
Pavel Buchnevich scored on a breakaway 43 seconds later to make it 6-4, but Avery Hayes tallied his own rebound just after a power play expired to cut it to 6-5 at 12:20.
Holloway sealed it with an empty-net goal for a 7-5 lead with 1:43 left.
The Blues conclude their season on Thursday against the Utah Mammoth in Salt Lake City.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Ben Kindel (81) controls the puck while under pressure from St. Louis Blues left wing Dylan Holloway (81) during the first period at Enterprise Center. Mandatory Credit: Connor Hamilton-Imagn Images Jimmy Snuggerud had two goals and two assists to help the St. Louis Blues rally for a 7-5 win against the visiting Pittsburgh Penguins on Tuesday night.
Dylan Holloway had two goals and an assist, Logan Mailloux had a goal and an assist, Jake Neighbours had two assists and Jordan Binnington made 18 saves for the Blues (36-33-12, 84 points), who rallied from a three-goal deficit to win their third in a row.
Avery Hayes scored two goals, Anthony Mantha had a goal and an assist and Kevin Hayes had two assists in the regular-season finale for Pittsburgh.
Stuart Skinner made 17 saves through two periods before Arturs Silovs made seven saves in the third for the Penguins (41-25-16, 98 points), who had already clinched second place in the Metropolitan Division.
Rutger McGroarty scored on a one-timer from the inside edge of the left circle off a faceoff win by Kevin Hayes to give the Penguins a 1-0 lead at 10:14 of the first period.
Avery Hayes forced a turnover at the St. Louis blue line and scored on a breakaway for a 2-0 lead at 16:40.
The Penguins forced another turnover as the Blues were trying to exit their zone and Mantha scored from the left hashmarks to make it 3-0 at 17:23.
St. Louis got on the scoreboard at 18:44 of the first when Snuggerud scored off a feed from below the goal line from Robert Thomas to cut it to 3-1.
Elmer Soderblom re-established a three-goal cushion when he got behind the defense and waited out Skinner as he dragged the puck in front and scored to make it 4-1 at 2:58 of the second.
The Blues answered with three straight goals in the period to tie it entering the third.
Oskar Sundqvist scored a rebound off a rush to make it 4-2 at 4:51.
Mailloux scored from the high slot to cut it to 4-3 at 10:37, and Snuggerud put in a rebound while on a power play to tie it at 15:49.
Holloway was left wide open in the slot and he gave the Blues their first lead, 5-4, at 4:11 of the third period.
Pavel Buchnevich scored on a breakaway 43 seconds later to make it 6-4, but Avery Hayes tallied his own rebound just after a power play expired to cut it to 6-5 at 12:20.
Holloway sealed it with an empty-net goal for a 7-5 lead with 1:43 left.
The Blues conclude their season on Thursday against the Utah Mammoth in Salt Lake City.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; Pittsburgh Penguins center Ben Kindel (81) controls the…
Liverpool manager Arne Slot said his side’s Champions League exit again laid bare a season-long struggle to turn chances into goals, after being eliminated by Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) following a 0-2 home defeat on Tuesday that sealed a 0-4 loss on aggregate.
Despite enjoying 53 per cent possession and having 21 attempts to PSG’s 12 and eight corners to the visiting side’s two, it was PSG which found the net as Ousmane Dembele struck twice in the second half to confirm the defending champion’s place in the semifinals.
“Unfortunately, it’s one of the many examples of this season where we weren’t able to score from the many chances we had,” Slot said.
“Again, we were so far underperforming in terms of xG (expected goals of 1.94), and that is just an ongoing thing with us throughout the whole season.”
Slot also pointed to a contentious VAR decision that saw a penalty given for a foul on Alexis Mac Allister overturned and a potentially serious injury to France forward Hugo Ekitike, adding to Liverpool’s sense of disappointment on the night.
“Another intervention of the VAR which was not in our favour, and that’s also not for the first time this season,” he said.
“Then of course we are very disappointed, because I think there were parts in the second half where you could just feel that if we can score now, this is going to become a special night.”
Slot handed a first start to Alexander Isak since the Sweden international suffered a broken leg in December and said the striker’s return underlined what his team have missed.
“He was twice close to a goal, and that’s why you play a striker of his level,” the Dutch coach said. “If I thought he wasn’t ready, I wouldn’t have played him.”
Slot said Isak’s absence had been a factor in Liverpool’s difficulties in front of goal this season, but he remained optimistic about the future.
“The future looks very bright for this team, for this club, because we’ve shown we can compete with the champions of Europe and be the dominant team in our stadium,” he said.
“Not many teams can be dominant against Paris Saint-Germain and generate so many chances, as we did. But, yeah, chances is one thing, scoring is a second.”
Liverpool, which is fifth in the Premier League as it tries to qualify for next season’s Champions League, visits rival Everton for the first time at its new stadium on Sunday.
Published on Apr 15, 2026
Liverpool manager Arne Slot said his side’s Champions League exit again laid bare a season-long struggle to turn chances into goals, after being eliminated by Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) following a 0-2 home defeat on Tuesday that sealed a 0-4 loss on aggregate.
Despite enjoying 53 per cent possession and having 21 attempts to PSG’s 12 and eight corners to the visiting side’s two, it was PSG which found the net as Ousmane Dembele struck twice in the second half to confirm the defending champion’s place in the semifinals.
“Unfortunately, it’s one of the many examples of this season where we weren’t able to score from the many chances we had,” Slot said.
“Again, we were so far underperforming in terms of xG (expected goals of 1.94), and that is just an ongoing thing with us throughout the whole season.”
Slot also pointed to a contentious VAR decision that saw a penalty given for a foul on Alexis Mac Allister overturned and a potentially serious injury to France forward Hugo Ekitike, adding to Liverpool’s sense of disappointment on the night.
“Another intervention of the VAR which was not in our favour, and that’s also not for the first time this season,” he said.
“Then of course we are very disappointed, because I think there were parts in the second half where you could just feel that if we can score now, this is going to become a special night.”
Slot handed a first start to Alexander Isak since the Sweden international suffered a broken leg in December and said the striker’s return underlined what his team have missed.
“He was twice close to a goal, and that’s why you play a striker of his level,” the Dutch coach said. “If I thought he wasn’t ready, I wouldn’t have played him.”
Slot said Isak’s absence had been a factor in Liverpool’s difficulties in front of goal this season, but he remained optimistic about the future.
“The future looks very bright for this team, for this club, because we’ve shown we can compete with the champions of Europe and be the dominant team in our stadium,” he said.
“Not many teams can be dominant against Paris Saint-Germain and generate so many chances, as we did. But, yeah, chances is one thing, scoring is a second.”
Liverpool, which is fifth in the Premier League as it tries to qualify for next season’s Champions League, visits rival Everton for the first time at its new stadium on Sunday.
Published on Apr 15, 2026
Liverpool manager Arne Slot said his side’s Champions League exit again laid bare a season-long…
Apr 14, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns center Mark Williams (left) defends against Portland Trail Blazers center Donovan Clingan in the first half during the play-in rounds of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Deni Avdija scored 41 points, and his three-point play with 16.1 seconds remaining capped the Portland Trail Blazers’ comeback from an 11-point fourth-quarter deficit for a 114-110 victory over the host Phoenix Suns in a play-in game Tuesday.
The Trail Blazers ended a four-year playoff drought and will open a best-of-seven Western Conference playoff series against the No. 2 seed San Antonio Spurs on Sunday.
The Suns will have another chance to make the playoffs on Friday, when they will host the winner of the Wednesday play-in game between the Golden State Warriors and the Los Angeles Clippers.
That winner of the Friday contest will be the No. 8 seed and will meet the defending league champion and No. 1 seed Oklahoma City Thunder in the first game of a seven-game set on Sunday.
Jordan Goodwin sank a reserve layup with 32.5 seconds left to put the Suns up 110-109, but he missed a free throw after being fouled on the play. The Blazers rebounded and called timeout to set up Avdija’s drive through the lane.
Phoenix’s Jalen Green missed a 3-point attempt with six seconds remaining. On the rebound, Portland’s Matisse Thybulle stole the ball from Goodwin and found Jerami Grant alone for a dunk with six-tenths of a second remaining.
Avdija had 14 points in the fourth quarter, and he finished with 12 assists and seven rebounds.
Jrue Holiday added 21 points and Grant had 16, including two late 3-pointers as the Blazers finished the game on a 17-5 run.
Green scored 35 points, Devin Booker had 22 and Dillon Brooks added 20 for the Suns.
The Suns trailed 83-82 entering the fourth quarter but scored the first 11 points for an 10-point edge, extending a longer 24-4 run that began after Avdija made a layup to give the Blazers a 79-69 lead midway through the third quarter.
Holiday and Avdija hit 3-pointers as the Blazers closed the deficit to 100-97 with 4:15 left before Donovan Clingan was called for a flagrant-1 foul for pulling Brooks down on Avdija’s make.
Grant made a 3-pointer and Shaedon Sharpe hit two free throws with 2:29 left, bringing the Trail Blazers within 105-104 with 2:29 left.
Grant’s next trey put the Blazers in front 107-106 before Booker’s free throws gave the Suns a 108-107 lead with 1:34 to go. After a Portland turnover and a Booker miss, Avdija hit a driving lap for a 109-108 lead with 37.3 seconds remaining prior to Goodwin’s layup.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns center Mark Williams (left) defends against Portland Trail Blazers center Donovan Clingan in the first half during the play-in rounds of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Mortgage Matchup Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images Deni Avdija scored 41 points, and his three-point play with 16.1 seconds remaining capped the Portland Trail Blazers’ comeback from an 11-point fourth-quarter deficit for a 114-110 victory over the host Phoenix Suns in a play-in game Tuesday.
The Trail Blazers ended a four-year playoff drought and will open a best-of-seven Western Conference playoff series against the No. 2 seed San Antonio Spurs on Sunday.
The Suns will have another chance to make the playoffs on Friday, when they will host the winner of the Wednesday play-in game between the Golden State Warriors and the Los Angeles Clippers.
That winner of the Friday contest will be the No. 8 seed and will meet the defending league champion and No. 1 seed Oklahoma City Thunder in the first game of a seven-game set on Sunday.
Jordan Goodwin sank a reserve layup with 32.5 seconds left to put the Suns up 110-109, but he missed a free throw after being fouled on the play. The Blazers rebounded and called timeout to set up Avdija’s drive through the lane.
Phoenix’s Jalen Green missed a 3-point attempt with six seconds remaining. On the rebound, Portland’s Matisse Thybulle stole the ball from Goodwin and found Jerami Grant alone for a dunk with six-tenths of a second remaining.
Avdija had 14 points in the fourth quarter, and he finished with 12 assists and seven rebounds.
Jrue Holiday added 21 points and Grant had 16, including two late 3-pointers as the Blazers finished the game on a 17-5 run.
Green scored 35 points, Devin Booker had 22 and Dillon Brooks added 20 for the Suns.
The Suns trailed 83-82 entering the fourth quarter but scored the first 11 points for an 10-point edge, extending a longer 24-4 run that began after Avdija made a layup to give the Blazers a 79-69 lead midway through the third quarter.
Holiday and Avdija hit 3-pointers as the Blazers closed the deficit to 100-97 with 4:15 left before Donovan Clingan was called for a flagrant-1 foul for pulling Brooks down on Avdija’s make.
Grant made a 3-pointer and Shaedon Sharpe hit two free throws with 2:29 left, bringing the Trail Blazers within 105-104 with 2:29 left.
Grant’s next trey put the Blazers in front 107-106 before Booker’s free throws gave the Suns a 108-107 lead with 1:34 to go. After a Portland turnover and a Booker miss, Avdija hit a driving lap for a 109-108 lead with 37.3 seconds remaining prior to Goodwin’s layup.
–Field Level Media
Apr 14, 2026; Phoenix, Arizona, USA; Phoenix Suns center Mark Williams (left) defends against Portland…