The last time Igor De Santis ran for mayor in Ingria, a tiny village surrounded by forests and mountains near Turin, he won an easy landslide victory. But he faces a tough challenge in his bid for a fourth mandate, after his mother joined a rival camp.
Ingria, one of the smallest villages in Italy, is home to 46 inhabitants. A further 26 people, registered to vote from abroad, make up the electorate.
De Santis, 42, has led the administration since 2009 and had expected competition in the mayoral race from an opposition councillor, 70-year-old Renato Poletto. The situation became more complicated when Stefano Venuti, a Milan resident who has a second home in Ingria, threw his hat into the ring. “We weren’t expecting that,” said De Santis.
And then the micro-race was fully upended by Poletto announcing that he had secured the support of De Santis’s mother, Milena Crosasso, and had put her forward for a councillor position in the ballot to elect a new council on 8-9 June, as part of a list comprising nine women and one man. In all, 30 people – about two-thirds of the village’s inhabitants – are now competing for positions.
“I did ask [my mother] to join me but after she saw that Poletto’s list was mostly women she decided to go with them,” said De Santis. “They are all volunteers who have worked really hard for the village.”
Crosasso said that the rivalry would not impact family harmony. “Both my son and I want the best for the community and this is an opportunity to give voice to women’s points of view without weakening family bonds,” she said.
Ingria is in Italy’s Soana Valley and experiences similar issues to other mountain villages, such as depopulation, scant services and challenges with snow during winter. Since 2022, when it was named as being among Italy’s “most beautiful” villages, it has also had to deal with an increase in tourism.
“There has been an incredible spike and we have to manage this,” said De Santis. “There are few residents, but a lot of second homes. Our main aim is to preserve Ingria’s beauty.”
Venuti told Corriere della Sera newspaper that he decided to run for mayor after being urged to do so by locals. “I’ve integrated very well,” he said.
Despite the competition, De Santis, whose grandfather was mayor of Ingria for 30 years, said he was “optimistic” that he could win.
College students celebrating Memorial Day weekend by Californiaâs Shasta Lake left behind hoard of trash, according to US Forest Service officials.
Last weekend, approximately 3,000 students from the University of California, Davis and the University of Oregon partied at Shasta Lake, a 30,000-acre reservoir in the golden state, and left piles of debris cluttered around the lake.
According to forest service officials, despite being asked to clean up after themselves, the students left behind trash including cups, cans, plastic wrappers and pool floats.
Speaking to CBS, Shasta-Trinity National Forest recreation staff officer Deborah Carlisi said that staff members handed out trash bags to students for them to pack up their items.
âSome students used them, some students didnât,â Carlisi said. A three-person cleanup crew ultimately spent six hours picking up the trash around the lake. Nevertheless, not all the trash was removed.
Due to rocky beaches, high water levels and dangerous water conditions, cleanup crews will not be able to pick up the trash at the bottom of the lake âuntil late next month or early Julyâ, said Carlisi.
âWhat was left behind in the lake could be damaging to our fish and wildlife, which is a big problem. If a deer goes down to the water and eats a plastic wrapper, that would make them sick,â she added.
In response to the litter, the University of Oregon issued a statement in which it apologized for its studentsâ actions.
âThe garbage left behind does not represent the values of our institution. We are sorry for the impact to the island and extra work for the forest service,â the statement said, KGW 8 reports.
âWe are investigating this event and working with the US Forest Service and our students to remediate the damage and hopefully prevent similar actions in the future. This is not a university sanctioned or sponsored event but is attended by university students, many of whom are members of university-recognized fraternities and sororities,â the university added.
Similarly, the University of California, Davis announced that it was investigating the incident, saying, âThe university was disappointed to learn of this conduct, and is exploring ways of working with students to help restore the site or otherwise address the situation. We are still assessing information from the forest service.
âStudents are expected to comply with all laws, and failure to do so may result in discipline under the university policy on student conduct. Student visits to Shasta Lake over Memorial Day weekend are not sanctioned or sponsored by the university,â it continued.
The Guardian has reached out to the forest service for comment.
A New York City couple who were “magnet fishing” in a lake caught more than they had bargained for when they pulled out a safe that had $100,000 cash inside.
James Kane and Barbie Agostini tossed a line with a strong magnet attached to the end into a lake in Flushing Meadows Corona Park in Queens on 31 May, Friday afternoon.
The couple managed to open the safe and found the cash, bundles of $100 bills, with an estimated value of $100,000, though the money was damaged by the water.
In an interview with NY1, James Kane explained they began magnet fishing during the Covid-19 pandemic due to the allure of treasure-hunting without having to spend a lot of money on equipment. Magnet fishing simply involves putting a rope with a strong magnet on it into water with the hopes of retrieving metal objects.
No one expected a safe to be on the end of the line though. Let alone one stuffed with cash.
“We pulled out and it was two stacks of freaking hundreds,” said Kane.
The couple said they contacted the New York police department about the find and said they were told there was no crime attached to the cash and there was no way to identify the original owner of the safe, meaning they were allowed to keep it.
“I couldn’t believe it,” said Agostini. “I lost it.”
The couple said they’ve never found anything like this, citing some of their previous finds, including old guns, World War II grenades, a full-sized motorcycle, foreign coins, and jewellery.
The billionaire rightwing media mogul Rupert Murdoch has married for the fifth time, this time to retired molecular biologist Elena Zhukova.
The 93-year-old married 67-year-old Zhukova on Sunday at his Moraga vineyard in California. Pictures released by the Sun, a Murdoch-owned British tabloid newspaper, showed the couple smiling next to each other as Murdoch wore a yellow tie while Zhukova wore a long-sleeve white dress.
Murdoch’s fifth wedding comes a little over a year after reports emerged last April of him dating Zhukova four months after he ended his two-week long engagement to Ann Lesley Smith, a 67-year-old conservative radio host.
Murdoch met Zhukova through a large family gathering hosted by his third ex-wife, Wendi Deng, to whom he was married for 14 years before their divorce in 2013.
Her 42-year-old daughter, Dasha Zhukova, is a Russian-American art collector and philanthropist who was previously married to Roman Abramovich, a Russian oligarch and former owner of the Premier League football club Chelsea.
Murdoch divorced his fourth wife, 67-year old actress and model Jerry Hall, in 2022. Hall was apparently waiting to meet Murdoch at their Oxfordshire home when she received an email from him which allegedly said, “Jerry, sadly I’ve decided to call an end to our marriage … We have certainly had some good times, but I have much to do. My New York lawyer will be contacting yours immediately.”
Last September, following a seven-decade career of helming a media empire, Murdoch stepped down as chair of Fox and News Corp.
Murdoch’s publicly traded and New York-based company News Corp owns hundreds of local, national and international digital news outlets including the Wall Street Journal, Fox News and Sky News Australia, as well as the book publisher HarperCollins.
According to Forbes, Murdoch’s net worth is approximately $19.5bn.
Donald Trump risks being a âloser presidentâ if he wins Novemberâs election and imposes a bad peace deal on Ukraine, Volodymyr Zelenskiy has said, saying it would mean the end of the US as a global âplayerâ.
In an interview with the Guardian in Kyiv, Zelenskiy said he had âno strategy yetâ for what to do if Trump returned to the White House, and that the former British prime minister Boris Johnson had approached him on his behalf.
If Trump beats Joe Biden, he is widely expected to cut off US military support to Ukraine. Last year Trump boasted he could end the war in â24 hoursâ.
Trumpâs aides have previously sketched out a possible plan that would involve giving Ukraineâs eastern regions to Russia, as well as Crimea. But Zelenskiy made clear that âUkrainians would not put up with thatâ. Nor would they accept a Russian âultimatumâ that forced Ukraine to abandon integration with Europe and future membership of Nato, he said.
Zelenskiy acknowledged that a re-elected Trump could, if he really wanted to, impose a crushing military defeat on Ukraine. He could cut off âsupport, weapons and moneyâ, and even âmake dealsâ with Kyivâs partners so they stop deliveries of vital arms.
âUkraine, barehanded, without weapons, will not be able to fight a multimillion [Russian] army,â Zelenskiy told the Guardian.
Speaking inside his presidential headquarters, he said he thought this scenario was unlikely. But he said if it happened there would be grave consequences for the USâs standing in the world â as well as for Trump personally. âDoes he want to become a loser president? Do you understand what can happen?â Zelenskiy said.
He predicted that Vladimir Putin would violate any Trump-brokered deal.âA ceasefire is a trap,â he said. After a pause Putin would âgo furtherâ, humiliating Trump and making him look âvery weakâ in the eyes of the world, he said.
Zelenskiy continued: âThis is not about him [Trump], as a person but about the institutions of the United States. They will become very weak. The US will not be the leader of the world any more. Yes, it will be powerful, first of all, in the domestic economy because it has a powerful economy without a doubt. But in terms of international influence it will be equal to zero.â
Realising that Washington was no longer âa playerâ, other mostly authoritarian countries and leaders would âcome into the arenaâ and emulate Putinâs aggressive âapproachâ, Zelenskiy suggested.
And this would ultimately end in global disaster: âThe beginning of what everyone is so afraid to talk about. This is reality. And this is the real third world war.â
Asked whether Johnson had spoken to Trump on Ukraineâs behalf, Zelenskiy said: âI think he tried, and I think he spoke to him. I think so, yes, as far as I know.â
He added: âI am sorry that I am using Boris as an instrument.â
The initiative came as Kyiv lobbied pro-Trump Republicans in Congress and tried to persuade them to drop their opposition to Ukraine aid. The $61bn military aid package passed in April after a six-month delay.
Zelenskiy made his comments a day before a New York jury on Thursday convicted Trump of all 34 counts of falsifying business records. The verdict in the hush-money trial made him the first former president to be found guilty of felony crimes in the USâs near 250-year history.
In 2019, as president, Trump rang Zelenskiy and asked him to investigate his election rival Biden and Bidenâs son Hunter. If Zelenskiy failed to find dirt on Hunter Biden, US security assistance to Ukraine would be withheld, Trump suggested, according to a leak of the call. The scandal led to Trumpâs first impeachment.
Zelenskiy said he had invited Trump to visit Ukraine. âI want to talk to him openly. I want him to come and see the war for himself. And then to talk to him. I think he would need it to understand the situation better,â he said.
Zelenskiy said he understood that Trump âknowsâ Putin, based on the former presidentâs own âstatementsâ. The pair have met at diplomatic summits. Trump has previously called Russiaâs leader âa geniusâ and described his 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine as âpretty savvyâ.
Communicating with Putin was not the same as knowing him, Zelenskiy said, adding that to understand him better Trump should âsee the results of what he brought to Ukraineâ â a reference to the destruction of towns and cities, murders of civilians and the daily bombardment from Russian missiles.
Volodomyr Zelenskiy has accused China of discouraging other countries from attending a peace summit in Switzerland later this month that is aimed at bringing peace to war-ravaged Ukraine.
Speaking at Asia’s biggest security conference, the Shangri-La Dialogue, in Singapore, the Ukrainian president sought to rally support among Asia-Pacific nations, urging them to attend the Swiss meeting.
“The world has to be resilient, it needs to be strong, it has to pressure Russia,” Zelenskiy said. “There is no other way to stop Putin – only diplomatic isolation, a strong Ukrainian military and for all the countries of the world to not balance between Ukraine and Russia but to defend international justice and law.”
Zelenskiy said he was “disappointed” some world leaders had not yet confirmed attendance.
Russia was seeking to undermine the summit by warning countries not to attend and threatening a blockade of agricultural goods and food products, he said.
He later told media that China had supported such efforts to deter leaders from participating. “Regrettably, Russia, using Chinese influence on the region, using Chinese diplomats also, does everything to disrupt the peace summit. It is unfortunate that such a big, independent, powerful country as China is an instrument in the hands of Putin,” he said.
Since a phone call between Zelenskiy and the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, one year ago, Ukraine had sought meetings with Chinese officials at all levels, he said, but this had not been granted. He had not met Chinese officials despite their presence in Singapore.
Earlier on Sunday, the Chinese defence minister, Dong Jun, told attendees of the Shangri-La Dialogue his country had “been promoting peace talks with a responsible attitude”. “We have never provided weapons to either party of the conflict. We have put stricter control on the export of dual use items and have never done anything to fan the flames. We stand firmly on the side of peace and dialogue,” Dong said.
But Zelenskiy said: “With China’s support to Russia, the war will last longer and that is bad for the whole world. You cannot say that we accept sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine and at the same time be on the side of the country that violates the principles of the UN charter and the principles of sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine.”
Zelenskiy said on X he had met the US defence secretary, Lloyd Austin, on the sidelines of the Shangri-La Dialogue on Sunday morning. “We discussed the key issues: the defence needs of our country, bolstering Ukraine’s air defence system, the F-16 coalition, and drafting of a bilateral security agreement,” he said.
He said he was grateful to Joe Biden for his decision to allow Ukraine to use US-supplied weapons against targets in Russia. However, in comments to media he said that this was not enough as Ukraine still did not have the systems or permissions to target airfields from which Russia was “permanently firing”.
Weeds are undergoing a cultural makeover. Historically vilified as a threat in a nation of impeccable lawns, they are finally being embraced by gardeners, from front gardens to the Chelsea flower show.
The conservation charity Plantlife, which runs the annual No Mow May campaign encouraging gardeners to leave their lawns to grow for a month, said 46% of more than 2,000 people it surveyed would not mow more than once in May, with 40 local councils also pledging to leave wild spaces untended .
A summer-long exhibition at the Royal Horticultural Societyâs Wisley garden in Surrey opened last month, celebrating William Robinson, a pioneering advocate of wild gardens.
After last yearâs Chelsea flower show, in which weeds were declared âhero plantsâ, this year saw cow parsley and forget-me-nots, flowers that typically grow wild, win best in show in Ula Mariaâs forest bathing garden.
Now a new book focuses on the beauty of these previously unwelcome plants.
Artist and writer Anna Chapman Parker spent a year studying the weeds that grew near her house in Berwick-upon-Tweed, Northumberland, writing and illustrating Understorey: A Year Among Weeds, which is published this week.
Chapman Parker said her year observing weeds everywhere she went â on the school run, walking her dog or out shopping â had allowed her to look at nature in a new light.
âOnce you tune into whatâs going on with these plants, the most unprepossessing walk becomes something really interesting and fresh,â she said. âOne of the reasons I found this project so great was finding newness and freshness in that very routine, everyday rhythm.â
Chapman Parkerâs work on Understorey began about five years ago, when, with two young children, she found she was missing time in her studio. She would take a sketchbook outside with her, drawing whenever she had a chance while her children were playing. âI wasnât really thinking about what I was drawing,â she said. But often it was weeds.
While visiting the National Gallery in London, she had a lightbulb moment looking at Piero della Francescaâs The Baptism of Christ. Weeds were everywhere, âdotted all over the dry ochre earth, emerging from cracks in every rock,â she writes in the book. âNo longer accidental green stuff that didnât matter: they were a living constancy, a kind of wild connective tissue across time and place. I wanted to know them better.â
Armed with plant-identification apps and a copy of Wild Flowers of Britain by the photographer and botanist Roger Phillips, Chapman Parker learned about as many weeds as she could, making line drawings of them for the book, which spans a full year, showing the natural cycle of plants.
Zoe Claymore, an award-winning garden designer, said that the rehabilitation of weeds in our gardens had come as awareness grew of the climate crisis. âAs our society becomes increasingly aware of the climate and biodiversity challenges we face, we are placing greater value on the âwildâ,â she said. âThis awareness drives us to take action in the spaces we can control, such as our gardens ⦠We are reframing what a weed is in response to the climate challenges and biodiversity loss we are facing.â
As gardeners face increasingly volatile and unusual weather, weeds can also be useful, Claymore said. âAs gardening requires more resilient plants â and we know the old set of âweedsâ are resilient by nature â they become more attractive. I think there is a push to recognise these robust plants and the role they can play.â
Take the groundsel, for example. One of the most widely distributed plants in the world, each specimen bears more than 1,000 seeds, which are resistant to frost, can self-pollinate and produce three generations in a year. âItâs an incredibly impressive plant,â said Chapman Parker.
Weeds are ecologically vital too. Since the second world war, the UK has lost 97% of its wildflower meadows. While most weeds would not be described as wildflowers, they would have grown in the meadows we have lost. Full wildflower meadows are harder to establish, but spaces given over to weeds can benefit pollinators and other insects, providing habitats and shelter for all kinds of animals, as well as capturing carbon.
Weeds, Chapman Parker said, have fantastic names. Groundsel is known as old-man-in-the-spring and there is also shepherdâs purse and ivy-leaved toadflax. Their names highlight a previous, closer relationship we once had with wild plants: we fed sow thistles to lactating pigs and chickweed to hens. Feverfew was a treatment for fevers and those with the âwortâ suffix had medicinal uses.
Some weeds â notably the invasive Japanese knotweed â cause havoc or reduce biodiversity by overshadowing other species. But a few pots by the front door could harbour seeds blown on the wind or secreted by a bird.
âThat happenstance element, or behaviour, of weeds, itâs so much more interesting than going along to the garden centre and chucking in a few bedding plants,â said Chapman Parker. âItâs really lovely.â
She described her garden as having âlapsedâ since she took a keen interest in weeds, although she said she is ânot a total rewilding romanticâ. âSometimes people say: âDonât use the word âweedâ, itâs negative.â I think itâs more interesting to reclaim the word as neutral or potentially positive.
âThe international conversation around ecology is pretty dark, and most of us feel incredibly powerless and despondent about it. I think these plants are a real signal of hope.â
It is a land of mire, mist and midges that could soon be awarded a special status among the planetâs wild habitats. In a few weeks, Unesco is set to announce its decision on an application to allow the Flow Country in north Scotland to become a world heritage site.
Such a designation is only given to places of special cultural, historical or scientific significance and would put this remote region of perpetual dampness on the same standing as the Great Barrier Reef, the Grand Canyon and the Pyramids.
The Flow Country straddles Caithness and Sutherland in the most northerly part of the British Isles and is the largest area of blanket bog in the world. Covering 4,000 sq km, it is also home to a remarkable range of wildlife that includes the black-throated diver, golden plover, greenshank, golden eagle, merlin and short-eared owl, as well as otters and water voles.
The land is carpeted with sphagnum moss that covers layers of peat that can reach down to depths of 10 metres, enough to bury a double decker bus, while the local plant life includes sundews, which use their sticky tentacles to feed on insects.
It is a remarkable habitat which was the subject of a formal request made last year by a partnership including the RSPB, NatureScot and the Highland Council to have the bogs, pools, lochs and hills of the Flow Country designated a world heritage site, a place of outstanding international importance that deserves Âspecial protection. Unesco has said that, after more than a yearâs deliberation, it is ready to give its formal decision on the application in the next few weeks.
âThere are many other, larger areas of peatland in the world â in Siberia, for example â but blanket bog is special,â said Roxane Anderson, professor of peatland science at the University of the Highlands and Islands, which is also involved in the Unesco bid. âBlanket bog can cover very steep slopes, unlike other types of peatland, and can envelop the landscape in a very complex mosaic. It is also very thick, not so much a blanket as a quilt that coats the entire terrain.â
As to the factors that sustain Âblanket bog, Anderson is clear. âItâs the rain and the fog. If you have peat and the weather gets warm and dry, it will dry, crack and fall away in steep areas. But in the Flow Country it never gets dry or hot, so the bog here remains intact, even on sharp inclines.â
The blanket bogs of Caithness and Sutherland have been growing for an astonishingly long time, since the last glaciers retreated from the north of Scotland more than 10,000 years ago. Over this time, they have played a critical role in storing carbon. The Flow Country covers a total of almost one million acres of land and stores more than 400m tonnes of carbon in its blanket bog, scientists have calculated. However, there is a downside to this mix of peatland and peace: midges. The Flow Country is rated as one of the worst places in Scotland for that eternal curse of Caledonia,Culicoides impunctatus. Midges appear as maddening clouds of biting bugs that will attack humans, livestock and pets and they thrive in the regionâs boggy, acidic ground which provides a perfect environment for breeding.
The region is also remarkable because it provides an extensive area of wild land and solitude on the otherÂwise highly developed and densely populated British islands. This desolation was enhanced during the clearances of the 18th and 19th centuries, when many Highlanders were forcibly evicted from their homes in the wake of the failed uprising by the Jacobites. Vast tracts of the north of Scotland were depopulated as a result.
Just what the Flow Country will gain if it is made a world heritage site remains to be seen, however. âAt present, tourists take the North Coast 500 route, a 500-mile circuit of roads that loop round the north of Scotland completely skirting the Flow Country,â said Frances Gunn, chair of the Flow Country World Heritage Project steering group. âWe hope that, in future, if they see signs telling them they are passing a world heritage site, they might take a detour and visit us.â
A key site to appreciate the Âwonders of the Flow Country is the RSPB reserve at Forsinard which covers more than 21,000 hectares and provides sights of golden plover, dunlin, greenshank, hen harrier, skylark and meadow pipit. âIt provides a perfect view of the glories of the Flow Country,â said the RSPBâs Milly Revill Hayward.
Gunn, who has lived in the area all her life, recalls the onset of summer when she was young. Families would set off to cut peat from land at the edge of the main part of the Flow Country. âIt was a great social occasion that could last a long time, depending on the weather. For us, peat was a key source of energy. Today, we now realise that peat helps provide us with protection against Âclimate change.â
From her house, Gunn has a clear view of the peatlands of the Flow Country, while from the other side of her home, in Tongue, she can Âwitness the creation of another remarkable local project: the Sutherland Space Port which is being constructed on the nearby Aâ Mhòine peninsula. In the near future, rockets fired northwards from the port, over the open seas, will carry satellites into orbits that will sweep over the poles and allow them to monitor the Earth below.
âItâs a neat juxtaposition,â said Gunn. âOn one side, we will be working to protect the past in our neighbourhood and preserve the Flow Country. On the other, we will be launching space probes that will allow us to survey the state of the environment in every other part of the globe.â
Deontay Wilderâs career as an elite heavyweight came to a crashing end. For Daniel Dubois, the journey into the top flight is only just beginning. And the unceasing, unsentimental round-and-round of boxingâs glamour division turned in dramatic fashion early Sunday morning in the an-Nafud desert.
Wilder, who held the WBCâs version of the heavyweight title from 2015 through 2020, suffered a brutal fifth-round knockout at the hands of Zhilei Zhang in the main event of a joint Matchroom-Queenbury card that pitted the stables of British boxingâs leading promoters against one another.
The disastrous defeat marked the Americanâs fourth loss in his past five outings and the likely terminus for the 38-year-old fighter widely regarded as boxingâs biggest puncher, who had strongly hinted at retirement in the run-up to the crossroads fight at Riyadhâs Kingdom Arena.
âI have to pay attention to his right hand, but I successfully took his right hand away,â Zhang said through a translator. âI block a few punches, but hell yeah. He punches hard. I give him a lot of respect. Heâs a heavy puncher.â
Zhang, the 41-year-old from Chinaâs Henan province based in the suburbs of Newark, New Jersey, was coming off a December setback against Joseph Parker where he lost on points despite scoring two knockdowns. But he spent the opening four rounds on Sunday morning pressing an eye-opening weight advantage of 68lbs and methodically walking down the uncharacteristically timid Wilder, who appeared a silhouette of the Alabama knockout artist who raced to a record of 40 wins in 40 fights with 39 coming inside the distance before the first instalment of his heavyweight championship trilogy with Tyson Fury back in 2018.
Wilder roused from his slumber early in the fifth, landing a pair of wild right hands that moved his mountainous foe backwards, but the abrupt offensive created openings that Zhang wasted little time seizing on. Within moments heâd spun Wilder 180 degrees with a lead right hook that left the American stunned before following it up with a free shot: a second right hook that detonated flush and dumped him to the seat of his trunks. Wilder managed to beat the 10-count, but he was out on his feet and referee Kieran McCann correctly stopped it at the 1:51 mark.
âI lost to Parker,â Zhang said. âIt was a fair loss. He was a better man that night. But I do think I learned a lot from that fight, because after I knocked out Joe Joyce [twice in 2023], I was overconfident and I underestimated Parker. So I learned that I had to stay focused. As long as the bell doesnât ring, stay focused.â
The mostly dull affair, at least until the violent denouement, was in stark contrast with the all-action, defense-optional melee before it, which saw Dubois upset the odds and take a major stride toward a heavyweight title shot with an eighth-round stoppage of Filip HrgoviÄ, a 2016 Olympic bronze medalist and the IBFâs mandatory challenger .
The twice-beaten Dubois, a 26-year-old from south-east London who lost by ninth-round knockout to unified heavyweight champion Oleskandr Usyk in August, absorbed heaps of punishment in the opening rounds as HrgoviÄ found alarmingly consistent purchase with one punishing right hand after another. But the 31-year-old Croatian was cut over his right eye in the second round and over his left around the fifth and his conditioning wilted under the frenetic pace that heâd set from the opening minutes.
By the seventh Dubois was stalking HrgoviÄ around the ring, throwing and landing heavy blows with his exhausted opponent in retreat. The bloodied HrgoviÄ, whose white trunks had faded to an ominous pink, was badly hurt by a concussive right hand near the end of the frame, then a pair of explosive shots along the ropes that might have closed the show if not for the bell.
Dubois picked up where he left off in the eighth but it wasnât long before referee John Latham called time, summoning the ringside physician to inspect HrgoviÄâs double wounds. When the doctor proved unsatisfied, Latham waved it off 57 seconds into the round and Duboisâ career-best performance was accomplished.
âI ate them shots, but it was all to wake me up,â Dubois said of his sluggish start. âOnce Iâve felt a few shots, a few stings, I woke up and I was just on it. I just thought donât wait. Donât wait.
âThe round before the last, I was getting to him. It was just coming together like magic. … Iâm just so proud of myself for this. Itâs all a learning experience. Iâve come from rock bottom last year and now weâre back on top.â
The heavy-handed Briton nicknamed Dynamite claimed the IBFâs interim heavyweight title with Sundayâs win, which could be upgraded to a proper world championship should Usyk, who outpointed Fury for all four major titles last month, be stripped by the sanctioning body ahead of their scheduled Demember rematch. Dubois could also move into a lucrative showdown with former two-time champion Anthony Joshua, who took in Sundayâs action from ringside.
âIâm glad Iâve got this IBF belt and on to the next,â Dubois said. âIâve heard the next opponent will be AJ, so bring it on. Iâm just anxious to to become the best. This is my era. This is my time, and I just need to keep improving and [keep] coming through these tests.â
Earlier, Liverpoolâs Nick Ball gave Britain a second current male world champion by winning the WBA featherweight title from the American Raymond Ford in a razor-thin 12-round split decision.
One judge scored it 115-113 for Ford but was twice overruled by the same margin for Ball, who captured a world title in his second try after being cruelly denied in a controversial March draw with Mexicoâs Rey Vargas.
âHeâs a tough man and a class boxer. I had to dig deep to get the belt,â Ball said. âIâm made up. I should be two-time [champion] but itâs not the case. Iâm the champ now so it doesnât really matter.â
The 27-year-old Merseysider finished strong in a wildly entertaining back-and-forth scrap that surely demands a rematch. He joins WBO cruiserweight title-holder Chris Billam-Smith as Britainâs second man to currently hold a major world title.
Also on the undercard Russiaâs Dmitry Bivol successfully defended his WBA light heavyweight title against Malik Zinad of Libya, scoring a knockdown in the opening session before winning by sixth-round TKO for his first stoppage win since 2018.
The unbeaten Bivol, one of the sportâs most gifted technicians and a fixture on pound-for-pound lists since a 2022 win over Canelo Ãlvarez, was initially slated to headline Saturdayâs card against Artur Beterbiev in a hugely anticipated four-belt unification fight for the undisputed title at 175lbs. But Beterbiev was forced to withdraw due to a ruptured meniscus suffered in training camp last month, prompting Zinadâs call-up as a replacement opponent.
Afterward Turki Alalshikh, chairman of the General Entertainment Authority and the driving force behind Saudi Arabiaâs expanding influence in boxing, entered the ring to announce that Bivolâs fight with Beterbiev was rescheduled for 12 October in Riyadh.
Chinaâs Changâe-6 lunar probe has successfully landed on the far side of the moon to collect samples, state media reported on Sunday.
The lander set down in the immense South Pole-Aitken Basin, one of the largest known impact craters in the solar system, Xinhua news agency said, citing the China National Space Administration.
It marks the first ever attempt to collect samples from the rarely explored area of the moon, according to the agency.
The Changâe-6 is on a technically complex 53-day mission that began when it took off on 3 May.
The probe will attempt to scoop up lunar soil and rocks, and carry out other experiments.
That process should be complete within two days, Xinhua said. The probe would use two methods of collection: a drill to collect samples under the surface and a robotic arm to grab specimens from the surface.
Then it must attempt an unprecedented launch from the side of the moon that always faces away from Earth.
Scientists say the moonâs âdark sideâ â so-called because it is not visible from Earth, not because it never catches the sunâs rays â holds great promise for research because its craters are less covered by ancient lava flows than the near side.
Material collected from the dark side may better shed light on how the moon formed.
Plans for Chinaâs âspace dreamâ have been put into overdrive under its president, Xi Jinping.
Beijing has poured huge resources into its space programme over the past decade, targeting a string of ambitious undertakings in an effort to close the gap with the two traditional space powers: the US and Russia.
It has notched several notable achievements, including building a space station called Tiangong, or âheavenly palaceâ.
Beijing has landed robotic rovers on Mars and the moon, and China is only the third country to independently put humans in orbit.
But Washington has warned that Chinaâs space programme is being used to mask military objectives and an effort to establish dominance in space.
China aims to send a crewed mission to the moon by 2030 and plans to build a base on the lunar surface.
The US is also planning to put astronauts back on the moon by 2026 with its Artemis 3 mission.