Live Updates: Trump “not satisfied” with new peace deal offered by Iran as standoff’s costs multiply
The U.S. Embassy in Beirut has called on Lebanon's government to further its engagement with…
The U.S. Embassy in Beirut has called on Lebanon's government to further its engagement with…
मध्य प्रदेश में इस समय भीषण गर्मी का दौर चल रहा है लेकिन इसी बीच…
Delhi Capitals pacer Kyle Jamieson was pulled up by the Indian Premier League for his animated send-off towards Rajasthan Royals batter Vaibhav Sooryavanshi during their clash in Jaipur on Friday.
The Kiwi pacer had managed to get the 15-year-old opener bowled on just his second ball of the innings, after conceding a boundary off his first ball.
The league has given him a demerit point and a warning for breaching Level 1 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct. Jamieson was found to have breached Article 2.5 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct, which relates to “using language, actions or gestures which disparage or which could provoke an aggressive reaction from another player in the match.”
Jamieson admitted to the offence and accepted the sanction imposed by the match referee, Rajeev Seth, the statement added.
Published on May 02, 2026
Delhi Capitals pacer Kyle Jamieson was pulled up by the Indian Premier League for his animated send-off towards Rajasthan Royals batter Vaibhav Sooryavanshi during their clash in Jaipur on Friday.
The Kiwi pacer had managed to get the 15-year-old opener bowled on just his second ball of the innings, after conceding a boundary off his first ball.
The league has given him a demerit point and a warning for breaching Level 1 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct. Jamieson was found to have breached Article 2.5 of the IPL’s Code of Conduct, which relates to “using language, actions or gestures which disparage or which could provoke an aggressive reaction from another player in the match.”
Jamieson admitted to the offence and accepted the sanction imposed by the match referee, Rajeev Seth, the statement added.
Published on May 02, 2026
Delhi Capitals pacer Kyle Jamieson was pulled up by the Indian Premier League for his…
Apr 25, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Los Angeles Football Club forward Denis Bouanga (99) shoots during the second half against Minnesota United FC at Allianz Field. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-Imagn Images Los Angeles FC have experienced dominating results on the field this season but coach Marc Dos Santos is not too happy with the MLS schedule-makers entering Saturday night’s road match at San Diego FC.
LAFC are coming off a big 2-1 victory over visiting Toluca FC in the first leg of the CONCACAF Champions Cup semifinals on Wednesday night. Los Angeles doesn’t have much time to prepare before it visits a rival that didn’t play a midweek match.
Dos Santos isn’t just fretting about this weekend assignment. He pointed out he has been frustrated with the schedule since late March.
LAFC played eight matches in April between MLS and Champions Cup play and has five more coming in the first 17 days of May.
“The schedule is a scandal. It’s a scandal,” Dos Santos told reporters. “I don’t understand why MLS … who is the genius in the meeting that says, ‘I have a good idea?’ At some point, it’s enough. Saturday we have to go to San Diego.”
Regardless, LAFC (6-2-2, 20 points) have been thriving and have outscored MLS opponents 17-6. In Champions Cup play, LAFC have outscored their foes 16-5 and are 5-0-2 entering the second semifinal leg at Toluca on May 6.
LAFC also get star forward Denis Bouanga back from a suspension for yellow-card accumulation. He has four goals and four assists in MLS play.
Last season, San Diego went 2-0 against LAFC during its stellar expansion campaign when it won the Western Conference.
Things are much different for San Diego FC (3-5-2, 11 points) this season. The club has lost five straight matches, is winless in its last seven MLS games (0-5-2) and eight overall, counting a loss to Toluca in the Champions Cup Round of 16.
Nobody associated with San Diego was expecting to be sitting in 11th place entering May.
“It’s been a tough period for San Diego FC, five losses in a row,” said San Diego star forward Anders Dreyer, who has five goals and four assists in MLS play. “It’s not what we wanted, but that’s the reality. That’s how it is and we can’t run from that.”
Last weekend, San Diego lost 2-1 to visiting Portland when the Timbers scored the decisive goal in the sixth minute of second-half stoppage time.
San Diego coach Mikey Varas is hoping the turnaround begins Saturday.
“It’s a tremendous opportunity for us to take the next step and get back on track,” Varas said. “We know we’re in a tough moment and haven’t been at our best. But we’re working very hard and doing everything possible to get back to it.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 25, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Los Angeles Football Club forward Denis Bouanga (99) shoots during the second half against Minnesota United FC at Allianz Field. Mandatory Credit: Brace Hemmelgarn-Imagn Images Los Angeles FC have experienced dominating results on the field this season but coach Marc Dos Santos is not too happy with the MLS schedule-makers entering Saturday night’s road match at San Diego FC.
LAFC are coming off a big 2-1 victory over visiting Toluca FC in the first leg of the CONCACAF Champions Cup semifinals on Wednesday night. Los Angeles doesn’t have much time to prepare before it visits a rival that didn’t play a midweek match.
Dos Santos isn’t just fretting about this weekend assignment. He pointed out he has been frustrated with the schedule since late March.
LAFC played eight matches in April between MLS and Champions Cup play and has five more coming in the first 17 days of May.
“The schedule is a scandal. It’s a scandal,” Dos Santos told reporters. “I don’t understand why MLS … who is the genius in the meeting that says, ‘I have a good idea?’ At some point, it’s enough. Saturday we have to go to San Diego.”
Regardless, LAFC (6-2-2, 20 points) have been thriving and have outscored MLS opponents 17-6. In Champions Cup play, LAFC have outscored their foes 16-5 and are 5-0-2 entering the second semifinal leg at Toluca on May 6.
LAFC also get star forward Denis Bouanga back from a suspension for yellow-card accumulation. He has four goals and four assists in MLS play.
Last season, San Diego went 2-0 against LAFC during its stellar expansion campaign when it won the Western Conference.
Things are much different for San Diego FC (3-5-2, 11 points) this season. The club has lost five straight matches, is winless in its last seven MLS games (0-5-2) and eight overall, counting a loss to Toluca in the Champions Cup Round of 16.
Nobody associated with San Diego was expecting to be sitting in 11th place entering May.
“It’s been a tough period for San Diego FC, five losses in a row,” said San Diego star forward Anders Dreyer, who has five goals and four assists in MLS play. “It’s not what we wanted, but that’s the reality. That’s how it is and we can’t run from that.”
Last weekend, San Diego lost 2-1 to visiting Portland when the Timbers scored the decisive goal in the sixth minute of second-half stoppage time.
San Diego coach Mikey Varas is hoping the turnaround begins Saturday.
“It’s a tremendous opportunity for us to take the next step and get back on track,” Varas said. “We know we’re in a tough moment and haven’t been at our best. But we’re working very hard and doing everything possible to get back to it.”
–Field Level Media
Apr 25, 2026; Saint Paul, Minnesota, USA; Los Angeles Football Club forward Denis Bouanga (99)…
KL Rahul topped the Indian Premier League (IPL) run-scoring charts with a match-winning knock in Delhi Capitals’ (DC) seven-wicket win over Rajasthan Royals on Friday, saying individual milestones mean more when they help the team win.
Rahul has been DC’s most consistent performer this season, registering three half-centuries and one century despite the team’s mixed results.
The 34-year-old struck 75 off 40 balls, with six fours and five sixes, as DC snapped a three-match losing streak and completed their highest successful run chase of 226 in the IPL.
Rahul had earlier hit an unbeaten 152 in a defeat against Punjab Kings, a knock that drew praise but did not bring the desired result for the team.
“After playing for so many years, numbers do matter,” Rahul said at the post-match presentation.
“You’re happy that you score runs and you score these big runs and break records. But if you don’t get the win after the game, it’s not as much fun.”
Rahul has been in strong form this season and he credited it to work on maintaining a higher strike rate to suit the demands of modern day T20 cricket.
While he is enjoying a good run in the tournament, he acknowledged that DC had slipped up in key moments despite pushing hard in earlier games.
“This competition and T20 cricket doesn’t allow you a second chance,” he said.
“So it was important that we take our chances and when we’re ahead, really press hard and finish the game, which we weren’t doing.”
DC was also boosted by the return of Australia fast bowler Mitchell Starc, who took three wickets in his first match of the season after months on the sidelines with elbow and shoulder injuries.
Sixth-placed DC next faces Chennai Super Kings on Tuesday.
Published on May 02, 2026
KL Rahul topped the Indian Premier League (IPL) run-scoring charts with a match-winning knock in Delhi Capitals’ (DC) seven-wicket win over Rajasthan Royals on Friday, saying individual milestones mean more when they help the team win.
Rahul has been DC’s most consistent performer this season, registering three half-centuries and one century despite the team’s mixed results.
The 34-year-old struck 75 off 40 balls, with six fours and five sixes, as DC snapped a three-match losing streak and completed their highest successful run chase of 226 in the IPL.
Rahul had earlier hit an unbeaten 152 in a defeat against Punjab Kings, a knock that drew praise but did not bring the desired result for the team.
“After playing for so many years, numbers do matter,” Rahul said at the post-match presentation.
“You’re happy that you score runs and you score these big runs and break records. But if you don’t get the win after the game, it’s not as much fun.”
Rahul has been in strong form this season and he credited it to work on maintaining a higher strike rate to suit the demands of modern day T20 cricket.
While he is enjoying a good run in the tournament, he acknowledged that DC had slipped up in key moments despite pushing hard in earlier games.
“This competition and T20 cricket doesn’t allow you a second chance,” he said.
“So it was important that we take our chances and when we’re ahead, really press hard and finish the game, which we weren’t doing.”
DC was also boosted by the return of Australia fast bowler Mitchell Starc, who took three wickets in his first match of the season after months on the sidelines with elbow and shoulder injuries.
Sixth-placed DC next faces Chennai Super Kings on Tuesday.
Published on May 02, 2026
KL Rahul topped the Indian Premier League (IPL) run-scoring charts with a match-winning knock in…
Waymo is working to crack down on the practice, the company confirmed Friday, after reports of new mid-ride age-verification checks began to float around on social media. The company has “policies in place” to help it identify violations of its terms of service, Waymo spokesperson Chris Bonelli wrote in a statement to WIRED. “We are continuing to refine our system and processes for accuracy over time.” Violating its terms of service can lead to temporary or permanent suspension of an account, Waymo says.
The company uses cameras inside its cars to check that riders aren’t violating its rules. Its privacy policy notes that the company records video inside the vehicle during trips. Waymo says its support workers “may review video under certain circumstances” and, “in more urgent circumstances,” access live video during a trip. The company says it does not use facial recognition or “other biometric identification technologies” to identify individuals.
The news comes a month after several California labor groups, including the California Gig Workers Union, filed a formal complaint with a state regulatory agency, accusing Waymo of violating the terms of its permit to operate in the state by knowingly transporting unaccompanied minors. The matter was assigned to a judge this week. The state is evaluating new rules that could allow solo riders under 18 in driverless cars, perhaps patterned after a program that permits ride-hail companies with human drivers to transport minors in California.
So far, several fresh-faced adults have been caught in the crossfire. On Tuesday, San Francisco machine learning engineer Nicholas Fleischhauer was about five minutes into his Waymo ride when the car connected him to support. A voice came over the line asking Fleischhauer to verify his age. He told the worker the truth: He’s 35. “I had messy and wet hair and a backpack on me,” he says, by way of explaining why he might have been flagged by Waymo’s system. Plus, “people have told me that I look young for my age.” Fleischhauer says he takes Waymo weekly, but this marked the first time he had been asked about his age.
Since last summer, Waymo has allowed parents in the Phoenix area to set up teen accounts for riders ages 14 to 17. The accounts allow the teen riders’ adults to track their real-time locations during their trips. Waymo says a specially trained team of support agents deals with any issues its teen riders might have. Waymo says that “hundreds” of Phoenix families use the service each week.
In Waymo’s other markets across the US, adults are allowed to ride with guests under 18, though children under 8 must be in a secured car or booster seat.
Ethan S. Klein is 23, but his 26th LA Waymo ride on Thursday—plus the music he was listening to—was interrupted by an in-car call from a support agent who asked him, for the first time, to verify his birth date. Klein is an adult, but his first impulse was almost teen-like. “I was a little startled,” he says. “I thought I was in trouble!”
By law, autonomous vehicles aren’t allowed to carry unaccompanied minors in California. Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving-car company, doesn’t allow kids under 18 to ride alone anywhere outside of metro Phoenix, Arizona. But that hasn’t stopped some time-strapped parents from using their own accounts to transport their kids to school, extracurricular activities, and even social outings. Some have reported that the lack of drivers makes them feel safer.
Waymo is working to crack down on the practice, the company confirmed Friday, after reports of new mid-ride age-verification checks began to float around on social media. The company has “policies in place” to help it identify violations of its terms of service, Waymo spokesperson Chris Bonelli wrote in a statement to WIRED. “We are continuing to refine our system and processes for accuracy over time.” Violating its terms of service can lead to temporary or permanent suspension of an account, Waymo says.
The company uses cameras inside its cars to check that riders aren’t violating its rules. Its privacy policy notes that the company records video inside the vehicle during trips. Waymo says its support workers “may review video under certain circumstances” and, “in more urgent circumstances,” access live video during a trip. The company says it does not use facial recognition or “other biometric identification technologies” to identify individuals.
The news comes a month after several California labor groups, including the California Gig Workers Union, filed a formal complaint with a state regulatory agency, accusing Waymo of violating the terms of its permit to operate in the state by knowingly transporting unaccompanied minors. The matter was assigned to a judge this week. The state is evaluating new rules that could allow solo riders under 18 in driverless cars, perhaps patterned after a program that permits ride-hail companies with human drivers to transport minors in California.
So far, several fresh-faced adults have been caught in the crossfire. On Tuesday, San Francisco machine learning engineer Nicholas Fleischhauer was about five minutes into his Waymo ride when the car connected him to support. A voice came over the line asking Fleischhauer to verify his age. He told the worker the truth: He’s 35. “I had messy and wet hair and a backpack on me,” he says, by way of explaining why he might have been flagged by Waymo’s system. Plus, “people have told me that I look young for my age.” Fleischhauer says he takes Waymo weekly, but this marked the first time he had been asked about his age.
Since last summer, Waymo has allowed parents in the Phoenix area to set up teen accounts for riders ages 14 to 17. The accounts allow the teen riders’ adults to track their real-time locations during their trips. Waymo says a specially trained team of support agents deals with any issues its teen riders might have. Waymo says that “hundreds” of Phoenix families use the service each week.
In Waymo’s other markets across the US, adults are allowed to ride with guests under 18, though children under 8 must be in a secured car or booster seat.
Ethan S. Klein is 23, but his 26th LA Waymo ride on Thursday—plus the music he was listening to—was interrupted by an in-car call from a support agent who asked him, for the first time, to verify his birth date. Klein is an adult, but his first impulse was almost teen-like. “I was a little startled,” he says. “I thought I was in trouble!”
By law, autonomous vehicles aren’t allowed to carry unaccompanied minors in California. Waymo, Alphabet’s self-driving-car…
दोनों दिशाओं में 826 किमी कुल दूरी तय करेगी। 17-17 फेरे दोनों दिशाओं में लगाए…
Apr 26, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Tampa Bay Lightning center Gage Goncalves (93) plays the puck against the Montreal Canadiens during the second period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images Gage Goncalves scored the overtime game-winning goal to give the visiting Tampa Bay Lightning a 1-0 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Friday and force Game 7 of their Stanley Cup playoff series.
The deciding game of their Eastern Conference first-round set will be Sunday in Tampa. That clash has quite the affair to top in entertainment value.
A thrilling Game 6 finally came to a close when Goncalves buried a loose puck amidst a scramble at 9:02 of overtime for his first career playoff overtime winner.
It came shortly after the Lightning killed a Montreal power play.
Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy had struggled to find his form during this series, but he delivered his best performance with 30 saves to post his eighth career playoff shutout.
Montreal goalie Jakub Dobes stopped 32 shots in a fantastic goaltending duel.
All six games have been decided by one goal. Both teams have won twice in overtime.
The series winner will face the Buffalo Sabres in the second round of the playoffs.
The lack of goals was not indicative of the action. Both clubs generated a litany of scoring chances in a back-and-forth clash.
Tampa came within a whisker of scoring first early in the second period when Corey Perry slipped a shot through Dobes’ legs, but Phillip Danault pulled the puck off the goal line behind his netminder.
Late in the second period, Vasilevskiy robbed Ivan Demidov with a pair of sprawling saves that had the Montreal forward looking skyward during a Canadiens power play. Danault was also stopped on a partial breakaway in the dying seconds of the frame.
Alexandre Texier, who scored the winning goal in Game 5, rang a shot off the post early in the third period moments before Jake Guentzel was stopped on a breakaway at the other end.
During Tampa’s ensuing power play, both Nikita Kucherov and Guentzel struck iron.
Dobes also stood tall during another Lightning third-period power play, capping it with a clutch stop on Brayden Point.
–Field Level Media
Apr 26, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Tampa Bay Lightning center Gage Goncalves (93) plays the puck against the Montreal Canadiens during the second period in game four of the first round of the 2026 Stanley Cup Playoffs at Bell Centre. Mandatory Credit: David Kirouac-Imagn Images Gage Goncalves scored the overtime game-winning goal to give the visiting Tampa Bay Lightning a 1-0 victory over the Montreal Canadiens on Friday and force Game 7 of their Stanley Cup playoff series.
The deciding game of their Eastern Conference first-round set will be Sunday in Tampa. That clash has quite the affair to top in entertainment value.
A thrilling Game 6 finally came to a close when Goncalves buried a loose puck amidst a scramble at 9:02 of overtime for his first career playoff overtime winner.
It came shortly after the Lightning killed a Montreal power play.
Lightning goaltender Andrei Vasilevskiy had struggled to find his form during this series, but he delivered his best performance with 30 saves to post his eighth career playoff shutout.
Montreal goalie Jakub Dobes stopped 32 shots in a fantastic goaltending duel.
All six games have been decided by one goal. Both teams have won twice in overtime.
The series winner will face the Buffalo Sabres in the second round of the playoffs.
The lack of goals was not indicative of the action. Both clubs generated a litany of scoring chances in a back-and-forth clash.
Tampa came within a whisker of scoring first early in the second period when Corey Perry slipped a shot through Dobes’ legs, but Phillip Danault pulled the puck off the goal line behind his netminder.
Late in the second period, Vasilevskiy robbed Ivan Demidov with a pair of sprawling saves that had the Montreal forward looking skyward during a Canadiens power play. Danault was also stopped on a partial breakaway in the dying seconds of the frame.
Alexandre Texier, who scored the winning goal in Game 5, rang a shot off the post early in the third period moments before Jake Guentzel was stopped on a breakaway at the other end.
During Tampa’s ensuing power play, both Nikita Kucherov and Guentzel struck iron.
Dobes also stood tall during another Lightning third-period power play, capping it with a clutch stop on Brayden Point.
–Field Level Media
Apr 26, 2026; Montreal, Quebec, CAN; Tampa Bay Lightning center Gage Goncalves (93) plays the…
Lecce beat Pisa 2-1 and sent the Tuscan club into the Italian second division on Friday.
Pisa was promoted from Serie B a year ago but goes down after a woeful season in Serie A in which it won only two of its 35 games so far.
The result also meant relegation for second-from-bottom Verona. It has 19 points, one more than Pisa, but it cannot catch Lecce, which is fourth-to-last in the table with 32.
Lameck Banda put Pisa 1-0 up in the 52nd minute but Mehdi Léris equalised for the home side four minutes later.
However, Walid Cheddira scored a 65th-minute winner for visiting Lecce to lift it four points above the relegation zone with three matches left to play.
Serie B’s Venezia also got the point it needed to secure promotion thanks to a 2-2 draw with Spezia.
Giovanni Stroppa’s team tops the Serie B table, one point ahead of Frosinone, which can join Venezia in the top tier with a win or draw against Mantova in its final match next Friday.
Published on May 02, 2026
Lecce beat Pisa 2-1 and sent the Tuscan club into the Italian second division on Friday.
Pisa was promoted from Serie B a year ago but goes down after a woeful season in Serie A in which it won only two of its 35 games so far.
The result also meant relegation for second-from-bottom Verona. It has 19 points, one more than Pisa, but it cannot catch Lecce, which is fourth-to-last in the table with 32.
Lameck Banda put Pisa 1-0 up in the 52nd minute but Mehdi Léris equalised for the home side four minutes later.
However, Walid Cheddira scored a 65th-minute winner for visiting Lecce to lift it four points above the relegation zone with three matches left to play.
Serie B’s Venezia also got the point it needed to secure promotion thanks to a 2-2 draw with Spezia.
Giovanni Stroppa’s team tops the Serie B table, one point ahead of Frosinone, which can join Venezia in the top tier with a win or draw against Mantova in its final match next Friday.
Published on May 02, 2026
Lecce beat Pisa 2-1 and sent the Tuscan club into the Italian second division on…
Sometimes, when it feels like I hate all of my clothes and none of my…