London Marathon hero runs across Ireland in race to find dementia cure

Jordan Adams, who ran the London marathon with a 25-kilogram fridge on his back last weekend, is now running around Ireland in a race to find a cure for a form of dementia both he and his brother are near certain to contract.

“This mission is ongoing, as is our family’s devastation with dementia, one step at a time,” Adams told a crowd who gathered to see him off on Wednesday in County Donegal, their latest stop.

The 30-year-old is running consecutive daily marathons for 32 days in each of Ireland’s 32 counties, north and south of the Irish border, with the finish in Dublin on May 28. Without the fridge, though.

Assisted by his younger brother Cian, 25, who will mostly cycle the routes, the pair started in County Antrim in Northern Ireland on Monday, just a day after completing the 26.2-mile-long (42 kilometres) course in London.

Nicknamed the FTD brothers, their mother, Geraldine, was diagnosed in 2010, aged 47, with a rare form of familial Frontal Temporal Dementia.

Overnight, Cian, then aged just 9, Jordan, as a 15-year-old, their older sister and father became primary carers of their mum, who died at 52 in 2016.

Two years later, Jordan learned he carries the MAT-T gene mutation, which gives him a 99.9 percent chance of developing the same early-onset dementia. Soon after, Cian tested positively for the same gene.

With terminal symptoms expected to aggressively emerge in their 40s, the brothers face a stark race against time.

“What makes this disease even more cruel is that we’ve lost twelve Irish relatives, including my mum and Nan,” Jordan, from the English Midlands, told AFP. “We wanted to come to Ireland, where all the devastation started, to honour our Irish relatives.”

Running with a fridge on board in the London Marathon was “surreal”, said Jordan, who did the stunt to bring attention to the disease. But with Cian alongside to douse him with water, they reached the finish line together.

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“We both share the same diagnosis and the same future, so I know our mum was shining down with a lot of pride,” Jordan told AFP.

The brothers are not new to extreme challenges. They ran around the United Kingdom two years ago, while Jordan has a seven-in-seven-day marathon challenge under his belt.

Undaunted by the Irish 32-in-32 test, Cian said it “comes in handy that he works as a physiotherapist.

“We’ve put together a good plan over the last six months, strength and conditioning, plyometrics, running training to get Jordan in the best nick possible for this challenge,” Cian told AFP.

“Touch wood, at the moment his legs feel good for it,” he said.

The brothers have set themselves the goal of raising one million pounds in their mother’s honour, and for research into an Alzheimer’s cure that could save them. After London, they are almost halfway there.

Carol Molloy, who helps run the local branch of the Alzheimer Society of Ireland (ASI), told AFP that around 64,000 people are living with dementia in the EU member.

An estimated one in 10 of those have a young-onset diagnosis, with that number expected to grow to around 150,000 by 2050, according to Molloy.

Some 50 percent of the proceeds of the brothers’ marathon challenge will go to the ASI.

READ: Jannik Sinner stops Rafael Jodar to book spot in Madrid Open semis

Jannik Sinner stops Rafael Jodar to book spot in Madrid Open semis

Jannik Sinner ended the inspired run of teen home favourite Rafael Jodar with a 6-2, 7-6 (7/0) victory at the Madrid Open on Wednesday to complete his set of semi-finals reached at all nine Masters 1000 tournaments.

The 19-year-old Jodar has taken the tour by storm this clay season, winning a maiden ATP title in Marrakesh, and making the semi-finals in Barcelona and the quarter-finals in Madrid before he was stopped by the world number one at the Caja Magica.

This time last year, Jodar was playing college tennis for the University of Virginia and was ranked 687 in the world. He will crack the top 35 when the new rankings are released on Monday.

Sinner was seriously tested before he extended his current winning streak to 21 consecutive matches.

The world number one will next face recent Barcelona champion Arthur Fils in Friday’s semi-final after the Frenchman skipped past Jiri Lehecka 6-3, 6-4 to improve to 9-0 on clay this season.

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The first-set scoreline may have read 6-2, but it was far from a routine affair for Sinner, who found himself facing a young opponent who could match his firepower, particularly on the forehand wing.

The Italian was tested in multiple service games, including a marathon one at 2-2, and had to save a pair of break points before he took a one-set lead in 44 minutes.

Leaning on the rowdy home support that included several Real Madrid stars, past and present, Jodar skirted danger at the start of the second set and put pressure on the Sinner serve.

But despite his best efforts, Rafael Jodar couldn’t convert any of the five break points he created as Jannik Sinner forced a tiebreak, and won the last 11 points of the match to advance to his first Madrid semi-final.

READ: Atletico Madrid, Arsenal draw in Champions League semi-final

Atletico Madrid, Arsenal draw in Champions League semi-final

Julian Alvarez’s penalty secured Atletico Madrid a 1-1 draw against Arsenal in a nervy Champions League semi-final first leg clash on Wednesday.

Viktor Gyokeres sent the Premier League leaders ahead from the spot just before the interval after he was fouled, but Alvarez followed suit 10 minutes into the second half after Ben White’s handball.

Arsenal were upset at a late penalty decision being overturned following a VAR review when David Hancko made contact with Eberechi Eze in the area.

“I’m incredibly fuming,” said Arsenal coach Mikel Arteta. “It’s a clear and very obvious penalty.”

Atletico had the better of it for long periods, but Arsenal’s solid defending helped them leave the Spanish capital in a good position to return to the Champions League final 20 years after their last appearance.

“Here, you have to suffer,” Arteta told Movistar. “Many teams have suffered here, including some of the best in the world.

“We had some good moments in the match and moments where we had to suffer. The margins are very slim.”

What the game lacked in the dizzying goal rush of Paris Saint-Germain’s 5-4 win over Bayern Munich in the other semi-final the night before, it was replaced with tension and a desperation not to fall behind.

Toilet paper rained down from the stands of the Metropolitano stadium minutes before kick-off, in a striking, if wasteful, display, which invited cynical jokes from some quarters about the calibre of the spectacle ahead.

In a tussle between arguably the continent’s two biggest teams never to lay a finger on the trophy neither wanted to blink first.

Atletico Madrid still have an old-style defensive reputation but pinned Mikel Arteta’s miserly Arsenal back in the early stages, with David Raya tipping Alvarez’s shot around the post.

The Gunners, a long way from Arteta’s eve-of-the-game demand they dominate proceedings, looked to smash and grab.

Noni Madueke, starting on Arsenal’s right flank with Bukayo Saka only fit for the bench, hammered just wide as last year’s beaten semi-finalists sporadically emerged from their half.

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The next time they did, Gyokeres won a penalty. The Swedish striker, who might not have started if Kai Havertz had been fit, exchanged passes with Martin Zubimendi, and Hancko clumsily shoved him in the back from behind.

Diego Simeone and Atletico veteran Antoine Griezmann begged for the decision to be reviewed, but VAR saw no reason to intervene.

Gyokeres took the spot-kick himself, walloping it past Jan Oblak, who dived the right way but stood no chance of keeping it out.

Three-time runners-up Atletico, back in the semi-finals for the first time in nine years, came out guns blazing in the second half.

Raya saved Ademola Lookman’s drive with Gabriel blocking Griezmann’s follow-up.

The hosts pulled level from the penalty spot after White handled Marcos Llorente’s shot, the ball bouncing up and hitting his arm, which was away from his body.

Alvarez took it, and having missed in Atletico’s Copa del Rey final shoot-out defeat earlier in April, this time made no mistake with an unforgiving blast rivalling Gyokeres’s first-half effort.

MLS-bound Griezmann looped a shot off the crossbar and then sent the rebound off target as Atletico turned the screw in pursuit of an advantage to take into next Tuesday’s second leg.

“This is what we have to do in the away game,” said Griezmann. “(The second half) was much better in terms of intensity.”

Nigeria international Lookman twice came close and could end up ruing his missed chances, kept out by the alert Raya.

Arsenal thought they had won a second penalty when substitute Eze went down under a sluggish Hancko challenge, but to their fury, the referee changed his mind after a VAR review, deciding the Slovakian defender’s contact was minimal.

Arsenal next take on Fulham as they continue their battle with Manchester City for the Premier League title, while with little to play for in La Liga, Simeone will rotate heavily, before this tie is decided in London.

READ: PSG’s Achraf Hakimi ruled out of Champions League semi-final return

PSG’s Achraf Hakimi ruled out of Champions League semi-final return

Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) defender Achraf Hakimi will miss the Champions League semi-final second leg at Bayern Munich next week due to a thigh injury, the European champions said on Wednesday.

PSG travel to Munich for the return leg on May 6, leading the tie 5-4, but the loss of Hakimi is a significant blow for Luis Enrique.

He played the full 90 minutes and even provided an assist in Tuesday’s first leg as PSG won 5-4 in a thrilling encounter at the Parc des Princes.

However, he was in visible discomfort in the closing minutes of the match, as PSG could not make any more substitutions.

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He is now set to miss the return leg as PSG look to defend their Champions League crown, while his participation in a crucial Ligue 1 title clash against Lens on May 13 is also in doubt.

The club released a statement that read: “Having sustained an injury to his right thigh during the match against Bayern Munich, Achraf Hakimi will be out of action for the next few weeks.”

Midfielder Warren Zaire-Emery, 20, is a likely replacement at right-back in the absence of Hakimi, who finished sixth in last year’s Ballon d’Or voting. It also raises questions over his availability for Morocco at the World Cup.

Second-choice goalkeeper Lucas Chevalier will miss PSG’s trip to Germany as well due to injury.

READ: Zaragoza goalkeeper handed 13-game ban

Marnus Labuschagne hails collective effort after win over Multan Sultans

LAHORE: Hyderabad Kingsmen captain Marnus Labuschagne praised his side’s effort after sealing a dominant eight-wicket win over Multan Sultans in the Eliminator 1 of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) 11.

Kingsmen first delivered with the ball, limiting a strong Multan Sultans batting lineup to 159 in 20 overs.  In reply, they chased down the 160-run target with ease, losing two wickets in the process and 28 balls to spare.

Usman Khan and Maaz Sadaqat starred with gutsy half-centuries, scripting a remarkable comeback for a team that lost their opening four games of the tournament.

With this win, they booked their place in Eliminator 2 and will play Islamabad United on May 1, at the same venue.

Speaking in the post-match presentation, Marnus Labuschagne mentioned the management and owners, lauding a special win.

“It is really hard to put into words what it means for the franchise, the owners, the team, and the sports staff for us to be here: it is really special. We put a lot of work and time into making sure we came prepared today,” he told the presenter.

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“We played really well especially with the bat and tried to come a few new ideas and a little bit of prep. It is nice that it came off today. [On bouncing back after the defeat to United] We actually addressed it today because I felt when we won that amazing game against Multan we were so high. We probably just expected to go and do the same thing the next game,” he added.

The skipper praised his players for staying composed under pressure, saying trust and communication were vital in T20 cricket, where bowlers are bound to have difficult overs.

“It is just great when you have guys in whom you can put your faith. In T20 cricket, you are always going to have a bad over and be put under pressure. But it doesn’t matter because you can just trust them and communicate and they trust that process.”

“I am so proud of the guys from where we were – not winning a game over the first four games and then finding our feet in back half of the tournament and really making a push,” he concluded.

READ: Shakib Al Hasan calls Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup withdrawal a ‘blunder’

Shakib Al Hasan calls Bangladesh’s T20 World Cup withdrawal a ‘blunder’

Bangladesh star all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan has described the interim government’s decision to withdraw the team from the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 as a “blunder”.

In February 2026, the International Cricket Council (ICC) replaced Bangladesh with Scotland after the government refused permission for the side to travel to India, citing security concerns. The mega event was jointly hosted by India and Sri Lanka.

The issue stemmed from Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur Rahman’s withdrawal from the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2026 over security concerns. Notably, it was also the first time since 1999 that Bangladesh had not appeared in the World Cup.

The veteran all-rounder called the decision a big mistake for Bangladesh Cricket, noting that the country loves watching cricket.

“I think it was a big loss. It was a great miss as far as Bangladesh cricket is concerned,” he said on the sidelines of the EUT20 Belgium event in Mumbai.

“We as a country love watching our players playing in the World Cup. We are a cricket-loving country. I think it was a blunder from the government side that they took the decision not to participate in the World Cup,” Shakib said.

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He expressed hope for the revival of cricket ties between India and Bangladesh, noting that a bilateral series could be a step towards easing tensions.

“I think things will get better,” Shakib said. “The effort should be made [to improve relationship between BCCI and BCB]. I think one or two series if Bangladesh visit India or India visit Bangladesh; like I heard there’s a series likely to happen in August or September. When that happens, I think the ice will break, and things will get better,” he said.

Speaking about former captain Tamim Iqbal, who recently became president of the Bangladesh Cricket Board, Shakib expressed optimism that things will improve eventually.

The 39-year-old expressed hope to get an oppurtunity to play a farewell match in Dhaka.

“I think he will have a long-term plan if he becomes president,” Shakib said. “Hopefully Bangladesh cricket will get benefit from him.”

“I am hopeful that I can get what I want,” he remained optimistic about getting an oppurtunity to play a farewell match.

READ: Zaragoza goalkeeper handed 13 game ban

Hyderabad Kingsmen knock out Multan Sultans in PSL 11 Eliminator

LAHORE: A clinical bowling effort backed by Usman Khan and Maaz Sadaqat’s gutsy half-centuries powered Hyderabad Kingsmen past Multan Sultans in the Eliminator 1 of the Pakistan Super League (PSL) 11 at the Gaddafi Stadium on Wednesday.

The Kingsmen chased down a 160-run target without breaking a sweat on the loss of two wickets with 28 balls to spare, largely due to Usman and Sadaqat’s brisk fifties.

In pursuit of the target, Kingsmen made an early stutter when captain Marnus Labuschagne fell for 11 in the second over.

Usman Khan and Sadaqat then took control, sharing a match-defining 92-run partnership for the second wicket. Usman led the charge with an aggressive 64 off 35 balls, striking eight fours and three sixes before being dismissed in the 11th over.

Sadaqat carried on the momentum, finishing unbeaten on 64 off 35 deliveries, hitting eight fours and three sixes. He was ably supported by Saim Ayub, who added 15 not out, as the Kingsmen sealed victory in the 16th over.

For Multan Sultans, there was nothing much in the bowling charts, with Steve Smith and Mohammad Ismail taking one wicket each.

Earlier, Shan Masood’s fighting half-century took Multan Sultans to a respectable total

Put into bat first, Multan Sultans managed to amass 159-9 in 20 overs, thanks to Masood’s unbeaten 69 from 46 balls, including four sixes and four boundaries.

Kingsmen pacers — Mohammad Ali, Akif Javed, and Hunain Shah combined to jolt the opposition in the first five overs.

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The inform duo of Sahibzada Farhan and Steve Smith added 28 in 2.5 overs before both were dismissed in quick succession. The former managed 15, whereas the latter managed 13.

Sultans woes were further compounded with Josh Philippe’s (6) wicket, trapped by Hunain in the fourth over.

Consequently, they were reduced to 36-3.

The slide continued as Shan Masood lost partners at the other end at regular intervals. At the halfway mark of the innings, Sultans lost six of their batters with their score reeling at 85-6.

Yet, Masood managed to tick the score with a vital 34-run on the ninth-wicket partnership with Faisal Akram. Eventually, the Sultans managed to cross the 150-run mark and post a fighting total.

For Hyderabad Kingsmen, all three pacers shared six wickets between them.

READ: Hammad Azam criticizes Rizwan’s remarks on Hyderabad Kingsmen

Zaragoza goalkeeper handed 13 game ban

The Spanish football federation banned Real Zaragoza goalkeeper Esteban Andrada for 13 matches on Wednesday after he punched a Huesca player in the face.

The federation’s disciplinary committee said in a statement both the Argentina international and his club would also be fined, after he was first sent off and then “attacked” Huesca’s Jorge Pulido in the second tier derby clash last Sunday.

Andrada was issued a 12-match ban for the punch itself, while his initial red card carries an automatic one-match ban, ruling him out for the rest of the season dealing a blow to Zaragoza’s hopes in their battle to avoid relegation.

The 35-year-old, on loan from Mexican side Monterrey, shoved over Pulido and was shown a second yellow card for the incident.

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Andrada then became enraged, running to hit Pulido and sparking a brawl on the pitch in stoppage time.

“The truth is I’m very, very sorry for what happened,” said Andrada afterwards.

“It’s not a good image for the club, for the fans, and especially not for a professional like myself. So, I’m very sorry.”

Huesca goalkeeper Dani Jimenez and Zaragoza’s Dani Tasende were also sent off in the aftermath of the brawl, with hosts Huesca holding on for a 1-0 win. Jimenez was banned for four matches and Tasende two.

“We witnessed scenes unbecoming of this sport and which should never have occurred,” said Zaragoza in a statement on Sunday.

READ: Hammad Azam criticizes Rizwan’s remarks on Hyderabad Kingsmen

Hammad Azam criticizes Rizwan’s remarks on Hyderabad Kingsmen

Hyderabad Kingsmen all-rounder Hammad Azam has launched a scathing attack on Rawalpindiz skipper Mohammad Rizwan over comments made during a press conference. 

A few days earlier, Rizwan remarked that Hyderabad did not deserve a place in the playoffs, while acknowledging it could be his personal opinion.

“The last match played in Hyderabad, they didn’t deserve it. This can be my own wrong thinking, I’m sorry for this. This is my own opinion. If they go from here properly, if they oust us from here, then they deserve it. The matches that are going on in Lahore, they are doing very well. The rhythm that they are playing, I think it was their luck,” Rizwan said in a press conference.

Now, Hammad has reacted to the statement and expressed disappointment over Rizwan’s statement, saying a former Pakistan captain should not have made such remarks.

“It was a very bad statement, to be honest. When I heard this thing and saw their press conference, I was very disappointed because I wasn’t expecting that a captain who has been the captain of PSL for a long time, you have been the ex-captain of Pakistan, you have decided that we don’t deserve it because one game went bad,” Hammad said.

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He also highlighted Rizwan’s performance as captain over the last two seasons of the Pakistan Super League (PSL), urging the batter to focus on his own performances.

“Now, if we come to personal performances, I think he [Rizwan] have won two matches in the last 18 matches, one this year and one last year. So, they should also do self-analysis that what they deserve and what they don’t deserve,” he stated.

“One game can go bad, there is nothing like that in that. And against them, the first match we played, we bowled them out for 125. In this match, we defeated them by more than 100 runs. So, that thing should go in our positive. So, I think we deserve it. We are at this stage, at this place.” Hammad Azam concluded.

READ: Usman Khan opens up about struggles after Pakistan snub

PSL 11: Hyderabad Kingsmen win toss against Multan Sultans in Eliminator 1

LAHORE: Hyderabad Kingsmen have won the toss and opted to bowl first against Multan Sultans in the Pakistan Super League (PSL) 11 at the Gaddafi Stadium on Wednesday. 

Head to Head

Hyderabad and Sultans have met twice in PSL 11, with each team winning one game.

Playing XIs

Hyderabad Kingsmen: Maaz Sadaqat, Marnus Labuschagne, Saim Ayub, Usman Khan, Kusal Perera, Glenn Maxwell, Irfan Niazi, Hassan Khan, Hunain Shah, M Ali, Akif Javed

Multan Sultans: Sahibzada Farhan, Steven Smith, Ashton Turner, Shan Masood, Josh Philippe, Mohammad Nawaz, Arafat Minhas, M Imran Randhawa, Peter Siddle, Faisal Akram, M Ismail

READ: Usman Khan opens up about struggles after Pakistan snub