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We Tracked March’s Bestsellers — These Are The Products Everyone Actually Bought

We Tracked March’s Bestsellers — These Are The Products Everyone Actually Bought

From tons of editor-approved beauty products to quirky accessories like ring watches and platform clogs, readers seemed to be refreshing their spaces, transitional-weather wardrobes, and cosmetics cases with new picks. Think: a frilly Dôen blouse (March’s most-purchased product!), an under-$15 E.l.f moisturizer, and a splurge-worthy HigherDose red-light showerhead (that was just as popular in February with readers).

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Being Viktor: How Axelsen fashioned himself into a serial winner <div id="content-body-70870591" itemprop="articleBody"><p>The conqueror. Serial winner. Absolute champion.</p><p>Viktor Axelsen lived up to his name. In his career, starting from 2009, the Dane pretty much won it all.</p><p>And so, his retirement from professional badminton should have been an occasion to celebrate one of the legends of the game. In reality, it was a bittersweet moment.</p><p>Such is the cruel nature of the sporting world that even the best do not get to finish on their own terms. Just three weeks ago, Only last month, Carolina Marin officially bid farewell through a social media post, having never returned to the court since a knee injury during the Paris Olympics semifinals, which left the Spaniard in tears.</p><p>On Wednesday, it was Axelsen’s turn. At 32, perhaps, he had a few good years left in him. But due to recurrent back issues, the Dane had to make the unfortunate decision to say goodbye. “Today is not an easy day for me. Due to my recurrent back issues, I am no longer able to compete and train at the highest level,” he wrote.</p><p>“Accepting this situation has been incredibly difficult. But I have now reached a point where my body won’t allow me to continue.”</p><p>Axelsen had been out of action since the French Open in October last year after the loss to compatriot Anders Antonsen in the quarterfinals when hardly anyone could have predicted to never see him competing again.</p><p>But those who know him completely understand the decision. For Axelsen, it was always about being the best in the world ever since his dad introduced him to the sport when he was six.</p><p><b>Being Viktor</b></p><p>“Since the day I picked up a racket, I knew my dream was to become the best in the world. I have given everything to this sport. It has never been just a career to me. It has been my life and I have left no stone unturned,” he said.</p><p>A young Axelsen would reach the hall at the Odense Badminton Klub in his hometown earlier than the coaches and other players and would repeatedly hit the shuttle vertically in the air.</p><p>There was something about him that made him stand out from the rest of his peers and Peter Gade, his first hero, could see that. “He had a fire in his eyes that I haven’t seen in the same way in other Danish players. I recognised Viktor’s fire from myself,” Gade told Danish outlet <i>Ud&Se</i> in an interview in August 2018.</p><p>Axelsen got the chance to train with Gade and the rest of the national team when he moved alone to Copenhagen at the age of 17, a year after becoming the first non-Asian boy to win the World Junior Championship in 2010.</p><p>The transition to the senior circuit wasn’t easy. At 6’4” with a broad body structure, he didn’t necessarily have what was considered to be the ideal shape and size to be a solid shuttler. But Axelsen did his research and found out about Bao Chunlai, a former World No. 1 from China who was 6’3”.</p><p>He studied how a player as tall as Bao moved on the court, made use of his massive wingspan and bent to retrieve the shots closer to the ground before returning to a neutral position. The duo met once, at the Singapore Open in 2011, where the apprentice won the battle in straight games.</p><p>Such was his dedication that Axelsen even took the daunting task of learning Mandarin to understand the mentality of the Chinese school of badminton, the ultimate powerhouse in the sport. When this fact came to the limelight, the Chinese players became cautious about discussing any tactics around Axelsen but at the same time, he endeared himself to the Chinese fans. So much so that they named him An Sai Long – ‘calm, competitive dragon.’ No wonder then that he also had a Mandarin version of his retirement post on social media.</p><p>Axelsen’s progression coincided with the latter stages of the career of Lin Dan, another idol of the Dane. He also had to face Lee Chong Wei, the Malaysian arch-rival of five-time World Champion from China. From his own generation, he had fierce competitors in Chen Long, Anthony Ginting, Kento Momota, Son Wan-ho, Chou Tien-chen and Shi Yuqi.</p><p>Amidst such competition, Axelsen continued on his own path in the pursuit of perfection, trying every possible method to gain an advantage. Sometimes, it worked. On a few occasions, it backfired too. But he never stopped hustling.</p><p>While he had won a bronze at the World Championships in 2014, he truly arrived on the big stage in 2016.</p><p>After winning the first of his three European Championships, he and his compatriots created history as Denmark lifted its maiden Thomas Cup title with a 3-2 victory over Indonesia in the final. Axelsen registered crucial wins over Chinese Taipei’s Chou (group stage), Japan’s Sho Sasaki (quarterfinals) and Indonesian Tommy Sugiarto (final). At the Rio Olympics, he came from behind to beat Lin Dan in a generational battle in the bronze medal play-off. And he finished the season with the first of his five titles at the BWF World Tour Finals.</p><p>A year later, Axelsen defeated Lin Dan in another major event – the World Championship final – to become only the third Danish man to win the gold after Flemming Delfs (1977) and Peter Rasmussen (1997).</p><p>On September 28, 2017, Axelsen was the only European player in the top 10 of the men’s BWF World Rankings – as the new No. 1, ending a 20-year-wait for Denmark.</p><p>Another major milestone for Axelsen came in 2020 when he added the prestigious All England Open title to his collection.</p><p>The pinnacle arrived in 2021 at the Tokyo Olympics. Postponed by a year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Summer Games in the Japanese capital took place with virtually no spectators in the arena. In the edition where top seed and home favourite Momota stunningly failed to make it past the group stage, and the No. 2 and 3 seeds fell in the quarterfinals, Axelsen avoided any such mishaps.</p><p>In the final, he avenged his loss from the Rio Olympics last-four battle as he took down Chen Long 21-15, 21-12, becoming the first non-Asian male Olympic champion since compatriot Poul-Erik Høyer Larsen (1996). Axelsen, who did not drop a single game in the entire tournament, burst into tears as Larsen, the then BWF President, watched from the stands. In a heartwarming gesture, Axelsen also exchanged jerseys with his Chinese opponent.</p><p>Soon after the Olympics, Axelsen left the national set up in Copenhagen and moved to Dubai. He had temporarily trained in Dubai earlier to alleviate his asthma and now, the plan was to set the base there permanently. He invited some of the world’s best upcoming shuttlers to train with him in camps at the NAS Sports Complex. Over the years, Indians such as Lakshya Sen and Ayush Shetty have got the opportunity to spar with the Dane.</p><div class="inline_embed article-block-item"><blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr"><a href="https://twitter.com/ViktorAxelsen?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@ViktorAxelsen</a> Badminton is blessed to have you and it will remember you as one of the greatest to ever play the game, but what truly sets you apart isn’t just the champion you are, it’s the person you are, that stays far beyond matches and medals.</p><p>To go from training with you… <a href="https://t.co/btT42AIHi0">pic.twitter.com/btT42AIHi0</a></p>— Lakshya Sen (@lakshya_sen) <a href="https://twitter.com/lakshya_sen/status/2044318206975000624?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 15, 2026</a></blockquote></div><p>In 2022, Axelsen made winning a habit. During that season – in which he lost just three matches – the World No. 1, who already had the Olympic gold, also won the World Championship, the All England Open, the European Championship and the BWF World Tour Finals.</p><p>Despite minor injury setbacks, Axelsen had another successful season in 2023. Even though he lost to India’s H.S. Prannoy in the World Championship quarterfinals, he finished the year with another BWF World Tour Finals trophy, his third in a row.</p><p>The root cause of what feels like an early retirement for him began in 2024. At the Singapore Open, a few weeks before the Paris Olympics, he experienced back pain so severe that he needed an injection for treatment. The pain subsided and he didn’t require another injection as he had originally planned before the Summer Games. He survived a scare in the semifinals against Lakshya, saved three game points in the opener and came back from a 0-7 start in the second game, to reach the summit clash where he dominated Thailand’s Kunlavut Vitidsarn to bag his second straight gold medal, emulating Lin Dan.</p><p>But the back pain didn’t leave him for good. Axelsen won the India Open in 2025 while being on heavy painkillers and injections. A few weeks after a shock round-of-32 loss at the All England Open, he took the call to deal with the issue through endoscopic surgery.</p><p>The return to the circuit in September wasn’t smooth as he could not meet his own lofty standards. He also had a severely heated Denmark Open semifinal against Yuqi in front of home fans in Odense where the Chinese, not the first shuttler to do so, complained about the delay caused by Axelsen’s swaying serve. The Dane, who lost the match, also drew heavy backlash from Chinese fans for his on-court behaviour. A week later, the French Open marked the end of his journey as a player.</p><p>In his extraordinary journey to become a towering figure on the court – both literally and metaphorically – Axelsen was duly supported by his parents, Henrik and Gitte, despite their divorce when he was a child. His father was also his manager while Gitte helped him loosen up before big fixtures. His sister, Johanne, was responsible for his cooler bag and always ensured he had enough snacks between matches. He has two daughters – Vega and Aya – with his ex-wife Natalia, who looked after them while he was away at tournaments.</p><p>Axelsen, the player, is done. But the Dane is not leaving badminton anytime soon. “While this is a goodbye to Viktor Axelsen the badminton player, I am not saying goodbye to the sport infinitely. I will always be around one way or the other,” he wrote.</p><p>Chen Long is mentoring the next generation of Chinese male shuttlers. Liu Yang Ming Yu, his ward, won the Junior World Championship last year in Guwahati. A similar role for Axelsen in Denmark cannot be ruled out. And as per the Chinese star’s comment under Axelsen’s post – “Life is better after retirement.”</p><p class="publish-time" id="end-of-article">Published on Apr 16, 2026</p></div><script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script> #Viktor #Axelsen #fashioned #serial #winner

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Deadspin | Texas QB Arch Manning ‘100 percent’ after foot surgery <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/27998091.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/27998091.jpg" alt="NCAA Football: Citrus Bowl-Michigan vs Texas" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Dec 31, 2025; Orlando, FL, USA; Texas Longhorns quarterback Arch Manning (16) runs with the ball against the Michigan Wolverines during the first half at Camping World Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>Arch Manning will not participate in the open scrimmage for Texas fans on Saturday but head coach Steve Sarkisian likes the Longhorns’ chances of getting their QB1 back with no limitations following offseason foot surgery. </p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>Manning played through foot pain in 2025 and underwent a “minor” procedure that limited him in spring practices. Manning participated in select 7-on-7 sessions and position workouts but was not fully available. </p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>“I feel 100% right now. We’re kind of taking it slow. But if we had a game today, I’d be playing,” Manning said Wednesday. </p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>Sarkisian said Manning is “ready to rock and roll” when June training sessions begin. Manning said he’ll plan to host his receivers and other skill players in New Orleans for workouts and “good food, maybe go fishing.”</p> </section><br/><section id="section-5"> <p>One newcomer is transfer wide receiver Cam Coleman, a transfer from Auburn who has 93 career catches and 13 touchdowns. He sent Manning a text when he made the decision to team up at Texas. </p> </section> <section id="section-6"> <p>“I was pretty fired up and let out some loud screams,” Manning said.</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>Coleman has not played against Texas in two SEC seasons, but he was well known to fans in Austin before he became one of the top five players in the transfer portal in the offseason.</p> </section><section id="section-8"> <p>One of Coleman’s marquee games to date came as a freshman on Nov. 23, 2024, in Auburn’s four-OT win against Texas A&M. Coleman had seven receptions for 128 yards and two TDs.</p> </section><section id="section-9"> <p>Manning replaced Quinn Ewers as the Texas starter in 2025 and had 3,163 passing yards, 26 touchdowns and seven interceptions.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-10"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section> </div> #Deadspin #Texas #Arch #Manning #percent #foot #surgery

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