Activists Protest over Gaza During Tour de France, Call for Israeli Team to Be Barred

 Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 17 - Bollene to Valence - Bollene, France - July 23, 2025 Spectators wave Palestinian flags during stage 17. (Reuters)
Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 17 - Bollene to Valence - Bollene, France - July 23, 2025 Spectators wave Palestinian flags during stage 17. (Reuters)
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Activists Protest over Gaza During Tour de France, Call for Israeli Team to Be Barred

 Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 17 - Bollene to Valence - Bollene, France - July 23, 2025 Spectators wave Palestinian flags during stage 17. (Reuters)
Cycling - Tour de France - Stage 17 - Bollene to Valence - Bollene, France - July 23, 2025 Spectators wave Palestinian flags during stage 17. (Reuters)

Dozens of pro-Palestinian activists waved flags and unfurled banners on Wednesday as the Tour de France peloton rode through Dieulefit, a southeastern French town honored as a "Town of the Just" for sheltering Jewish people during World War Two.

A house was draped with Palestinian flags and protesters waved dozens more by the roadside. Cries of "Free Palestine" echoed through the town, as the riders cycled through. One banner read "Affamer c'est tuer", meaning "Starving is killing".

Vanessa Huguenin, who runs a family-owned department store in Dieulefit, a town of about 3,000 people, said the action had been planned for nearly two months to take advantage of the Tour's visibility.

"We can't change Israel or Hamas, but we want our government to act, not just say 'it's not good'," she said.

Such protests about international politics are relatively rare in the three-week annual race, in which fans line the route as the riders tackle daily stages. A small protest over the war in Gaza occurred during the first stage of last year's edition.

A man was also arrested last Wednesday in Toulouse after running onto the final straight of the stage wearing a T-shirt reading "Israel out of the Tour" and waving a black and white keffiyeh headdress.

Through a loudspeaker on Wednesday, a protester shouted: "Mr. Adams, spokesperson for a genocidal army," referring to Sylvan Adams, co-owner of the Israel-Premier Tech cycling team competing in the race. The protester called for the team to be kicked out.

Israel has repeatedly rejected that its military operation in Gaza amounts to genocide.

"Israel-Premier Tech respects everyone's right to free speech which includes the right to protest," said a statement from Israel-Premier Tech, which is Israel's first elite cycling team, founded in 2014.

"Our focus is on racing and we continue to work closely with race organizers and relevant parties to ensure that any protests do not jeopardize team members' safety, nor impact races, or our right to participate."

The team have been granted extra security on the Tour, with police officers by the team bus and they were escorted by plain-clothed officers at the team's presentation in Lille.

'PROTECTING EVERYONE'

Huguenin, 45, said the town's history inspired residents to act and said the protest had been peaceful.

"Here we say no one is a stranger. My grandparents hid people during the war. For us, being 'just' means protecting everyone, regardless of race or religion," she said.

The war between Israel and Hamas has been raging for nearly two years since the Palestinian group killed some 1,200 Israelis and took 251 hostages from southern Israel in the deadliest attack in Israel's history, Israeli tallies show.

Israel has since killed nearly 60,000 Palestinians in Gaza, Gaza's health ministry says. It has decimated Hamas as a military force, reduced most of the territory to ruins and forced nearly the entire population to flee their homes multiple times.

The man arrested last Wednesday said he was due to stand trial for endangering the riders and refusing to give his fingerprints. He says the security officer who tackled him threw his walkie-talkie at him.

Race organizers Amaury Sports Organization declined to comment about either protest.



Guthrie Wins Second Dakar Rally Stage in Saudi Desert

Rallying - Dakar Rally - Stage 5 - Bivouac Refuge to Hail - Hail, Saudi Arabia - January 8, 2026 Toyota Gazoo Racing W2RC's Henk Lategan and Brett Cummings in action during stage 5 REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
Rallying - Dakar Rally - Stage 5 - Bivouac Refuge to Hail - Hail, Saudi Arabia - January 8, 2026 Toyota Gazoo Racing W2RC's Henk Lategan and Brett Cummings in action during stage 5 REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
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Guthrie Wins Second Dakar Rally Stage in Saudi Desert

Rallying - Dakar Rally - Stage 5 - Bivouac Refuge to Hail - Hail, Saudi Arabia - January 8, 2026 Toyota Gazoo Racing W2RC's Henk Lategan and Brett Cummings in action during stage 5 REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
Rallying - Dakar Rally - Stage 5 - Bivouac Refuge to Hail - Hail, Saudi Arabia - January 8, 2026 Toyota Gazoo Racing W2RC's Henk Lategan and Brett Cummings in action during stage 5 REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

Mitch Guthrie became the first driver to win a second stage in the Dakar Rally after Nani Roma was penalized for speeding in the Saudi desert on Thursday.

Guthrie won his first major stage on Tuesday and the American prevailed again on the 371-kilometer second half of the marathon stage from AlUla east to Hail.

Roma thought he'd won his 14th career car stage — one more than he achieved on a motorbike — after four hours by four seconds but a 70-second penalty meant he lost the stage by 66 seconds. Martin Prokop's third place gave Ford the podium sweep, The AP news reported.

Henk Lategan, nearly 13 minutes behind the winner, held on to the overall lead in his Toyota but Nasser Al-Attiyah's second-placed Dacia and Mattias Ekström's third-placed Ford closed to less than six minutes behind.

But for a brief time near the end, Lategan opened the way for almost the entire day.

“It was really, really, really difficult, one of the most difficult stages I've had to open,” he said. “There were no bike tracks and a lot of the tracks were really, really small tracks. The rain washed a lot of them away. The last two days you didn't really want to open but Brett did a great job to get us here. For the car to make it through two days of marathon is actually an amazing job by the team seeing that this car was tested for the first time three months ago.”

Roma improved from seventh to fourth and Guthrie from 13th to sixth. They were separated by Ford teammate Carlos Sainz, the four-time champion less than nine minutes off the pace with eight stages to go, including another two-day marathon next week outside Bisha.

Another Benavides first to Hail Argentine rider Luciano Benavides won the 356-kilometer motorbike stage, emulating his brother Kevin, who won the stage into Hail in 2024.

Hero's Ignacio Cornejo was second, nearly four minutes behind, and defending champion Daniel Sanders third.

Benavides was chasing KTM teammate Edgar Canet, the prologue and stage one winner, until Canet suffered a tire blowout. He repaired it but came home slowly, 4 1/2 hours after Benavides. Canet started the day fourth overall. Ross Branch lost over an hour and fell from sixth overall when the foam on his rear wheel melted.

Benavides recovered from knee, shoulder and back injuries in October at the Moroccan Rally to line up in his ninth Dakar. Early in Thursday's stage he suffered a high-speed crash but he and his motorbike were unscathed.

“I'm super, super proud because it was not clear if I would race this Dakar,” Benavides said. “I'm super emotional because I ... suffered quite a lot to be here and get another stage win."

He's at a career-best third in the general standings, six minutes behind teammate Sanders, who regained the lead from Honda's Tosha Schareina and Ricky Brabec.

Brabec was still second, two minutes back but Schareina was penalized 10 minutes for forgetting to leave the bivouac between the flags. He's still fourth overall and only 12 minutes back.

Teammate Adrien van Beveren, third the last two years, was running second in the stage when a wire became stuck in his wheel. He lost 30 minutes and recovered to ninth but was 53 minutes behind overall.


Morocco Coach Fights off Critics as Tournament Tension Mounts

Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Round of 16 - Morocco v South Africa - Laurent Pokou Stadium, San Pedro, Ivory Coast - January 30, 2024 Morocco coach Walid Regragui reacts REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Round of 16 - Morocco v South Africa - Laurent Pokou Stadium, San Pedro, Ivory Coast - January 30, 2024 Morocco coach Walid Regragui reacts REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
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Morocco Coach Fights off Critics as Tournament Tension Mounts

Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Round of 16 - Morocco v South Africa - Laurent Pokou Stadium, San Pedro, Ivory Coast - January 30, 2024 Morocco coach Walid Regragui reacts REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko
Soccer Football - Africa Cup of Nations - Round of 16 - Morocco v South Africa - Laurent Pokou Stadium, San Pedro, Ivory Coast - January 30, 2024 Morocco coach Walid Regragui reacts REUTERS/Siphiwe Sibeko

Morocco coach Walid Regragui defended his team's approach on Thursday as criticism mounts ahead of Friday's Africa Cup of Nations quarter-final clash against Cameroon, ​with the host nation seeking to justify their pre-tournament favorites tag.

Morocco have faced criticism for their form despite progressing comfortably to the last eight, finishing top of their group with seven points out of a possible nine and beating Tanzania 1-0 in the round of 16 at the weekend.

Regragui has already warned ‌supporters that ‌top-ranked Morocco need to approach their ‌matches ⁠with “humility” ​but ‌their performances have drawn widespread scrutiny for being overly cautious, Reuters reported.

Speaking at a pre-match press conference, Regragui said the team remained confident despite feeling the pressure.

"We are still thinking the same way and have confidence in what we are doing," he told reporters.

"The players feel it and ⁠we know we have to live up to it. The most important ‌thing is that the fans continue ‍to support us.

"We have ‍the humility to believe that we can win this ‍Cup of Nations," he declared.

"It’s a tournament that requires staying grounded, even if people do not want to understand that. But when you see the results and all the ​strong teams that have progressed, then you realize what you are up against.”

When Morocco last hosted ⁠the Cup of Nations in 1988, Cameroon knocked them out in the semi-finals and the two countries have a long history of fierce contests.

"This will be a clash that will reverberate around the continent. Cameroon needs no introduction. We know it's going to be tough again,” Regragui predicted.

Morocco are unsure whether defensive midfielder Sofyan Amrabat will recover from injury in time after missing their last two games but attacker Hamza Igamane is available ‌after missing the opening fortnight of the tournament with injury, the coach said.


American Malinin Redefines Limits ahead of 2026 Olympics

Figure Skating - ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating - Grand Prix Final - Aichi International Arena, Nagoya, Japan - December 6, 2025 Ilia Malinin of the US reacts after performing in the Men's Free Skating REUTERS/Issei Kato
Figure Skating - ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating - Grand Prix Final - Aichi International Arena, Nagoya, Japan - December 6, 2025 Ilia Malinin of the US reacts after performing in the Men's Free Skating REUTERS/Issei Kato
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American Malinin Redefines Limits ahead of 2026 Olympics

Figure Skating - ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating - Grand Prix Final - Aichi International Arena, Nagoya, Japan - December 6, 2025 Ilia Malinin of the US reacts after performing in the Men's Free Skating REUTERS/Issei Kato
Figure Skating - ISU Grand Prix of Figure Skating - Grand Prix Final - Aichi International Arena, Nagoya, Japan - December 6, 2025 Ilia Malinin of the US reacts after performing in the Men's Free Skating REUTERS/Issei Kato

American Ilia Malinin is barely 21, but he has redefined the boundaries of men's figure skating, and when he steps onto the ice at the Milano Cortina Olympics, he ​will not be measuring himself against the field - because he is in a class of his own.

Malinin's competition is internal, a relentless pursuit of what is possible rather than what has already been done.

Malinin is the first skater to land seven quadruple jumps in a single program and the first to execute the difficult quad Axel in competition - a feat once considered virtually impossible, Reuters reported.

The Virginia native won the recent Grand Prix Final by nearly 30 points -- think of the clear daylight between Usain Bolt at his best and the rest of the field. Malinin admitted it can be "tricky" to find ways to push himself.

"I really love to give myself a challenge, ‌that battle between ‌myself when I go to competitions instead of really focusing on my ‌competitors," ⁠Malinin ​told reporters ‌on a recent video call. "(That way) it is easier to find ways to progress more and really push yourself to different heights, different limits."

Johnny Weir, a commentator and former skater, recently said on Instagram that compared to other skaters who are rigid or precise, Malinin "skates so naturally, like he was literally grown out of the ice, like a flower petal flowing downstream."

Malinin also has unofficial elements in his programmes, his signature "Raspberry Twist" and a back-flip -- both added largely for spectacle, since neither are assigned points values as technical elements.

"It's a special person who can break the mold of ⁠figure skating and really become a legend," Weir told the Washingtonian. "Not just because they win but because they change the whole sport."

Three-time world champion Patrick ‌Chan said Malinin's fearlessness sets him apart.

"He's willing to throw himself ‍into trying, he's not scared of the unknown," the ‍Canadian told Reuters. "When I was learning quads for the first time, it was the fear of the unknown. ‍Am I going to really hurt myself? But he is just so malleable, he reminds me of little kids, he falls and pops right back up."

'IT'S JUST RIDICULOUS'

Chan performed with Malinin on the "Stars on Ice" exhibition tour.

"I remember standing taking notes for the show for 10, 15 minutes in a cold rink, and Ilia just takes two pushes and does a ​triple Axel. It's just ridiculous.

"I was like, 'get out of my face' kind of thing, 'you're just so ludicrously talented, I don't even want to talk to you'," the 35-year-old said laughing.

Malinin is ⁠known as "Quad God," audaciously giving himself the social media handle "ilia_quadg0d_malinin" back in 2020 after sticking his first two quad jumps in competition.

It ruffled some feathers.

"Everyone kind of got angry at me, like, 'Why'd you name yourself Quadg0d? You only landed two quads'," he told the Washingtonian. "And I was like, 'Well, I guess now it's time for me to land the rest of them.' The username was my motivation."

Malinin is primarily coached by his Russian-born parents Tatiana Malinina and Roman Skorniakov, who both competed for Uzbekistan at the Olympics.

He keeps himself warm waiting to compete by juggling a soccer ball. At home, he swaps blades for bricks, building Lego cars while his cats observe from their plush perch. When he dialled into a recent video call, the backdrop included a fleet of Lego cars and a towering cat tree.

Malinin's curiosity has made him the sport's ultimate innovator. Every program is a laboratory, every jump a question: What else can ‌I do? The answer is never about beating opponents, it is about rewriting limits.

And Weir predicts a "massive" performance in Milan in February.

"It will be a Simone Biles kind of storybook, in the way he has revolutionized our sport."