Mike Freeman’s 10-Point Stance: Are We Seeing the Downfall of Todd Gurley?

Los Angeles Rams' Todd Gurley II watches from the bench during the first half of the NFL Super Bowl 53 football game against the New England Patriots, Sunday, Feb. 3, 2019, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Patrick Semansky/Associated Press

How hurt is Todd Gurley? How is Carson Wentz’s recovery coming? Is Gronk really retired? All that and more in this week’s 10-Point Stance.

1. How worried should the Rams be about Todd Gurley II’s knee?

Recently, I asked a Rams team official how concerned they are about the knee of Todd Gurley II.

Not concerned at all, the person said, but we’re watching it just in case.

That has been the refrain from the Rams, both publicly and privately, for months. What I can tell you is, around the league, few people buy it. Actually, no one does.

Teams think the Rams have been downplaying what are more serious, and unknown, knee issues for Gurley. Teams have no clue if this belief is accurate. It’s all guesswork.

But something is definitely not right, and the main indicator of that is the Rams themselves. They are doing things that show yes, indeed, they are worried.

For instance, they drafted Darrell Henderson in the third round in April. Gurley is in his prime, and while picking a back that high while having a young and entrenched starter isn’t unprecedented, it’s still unusual.

Also, Gurley isn’t participating in on-field practices during the offseason. And he’s trying to cut his weight down before the season, according to NFL Network’s Steve Wyche (via NFL.com’s Kevin Patra).

And then there was a report by NFL Network’s Ian Rapoport this week that the Rams plan on lessening the number of carries for Gurley.

“The days of Todd Gurley just being the straight-up, every-down bell cow are probably over,” Rapoport said Monday on NFL Total Access (via NFL.com’s Jeremy Bergman), adding, “Of course, Gurley’s knee, the wear and tear on that knee, the surgically repaired knee, is something that everyone knows has been concerning to the team for some time.”

So, yes, the Rams won’t say it, but everything they’ve done indicates they are extremely worried about Gurley.

Why else would they want to change anything about him? Remember, Gurley is 24 years old and is coming off a season with 1,831 yards from scrimmage and 21 touchdowns. He’s one of the most talented, productive and valuable players in football.

But then, last year, he missed the last two regular-season games. The Rams said there was little concern. Then he rushed just 34 times in three postseason games. In the Super Bowl, he looked like a shell of himself. And, again, the Rams, and Gurley, said, Nothing to see here, folks.

“I know there’s a lot of concern about my health,” Gurley said after Super Bowl LIII, “but I’m really fine.”

“Todd is healthy,” McVay echoed to reporters at the time. “We just didn’t get a chance to get anyone going offensively, and that starts with me.”

Now Gurley has yet to participate in on-field drills during OTAs, and the Rams are still saying all is cool.

The lack of concern, to be blunt, simply isn’t believable.

2. So what’s actually wrong?

LOS ANGELES, CA - JANUARY 12: Los Angeles Rams running back Todd Gurley #30 scores a touchdown against the Dallas Cowboys at Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on January 12, 2019 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by John McCoy/Getty Images)

John McCoy/Getty Images

No, there’s likely nothing catastrophic, but there’s obviously something. There was a report by Jeff Howe of The Athletic in March that stated Gurley has arthritis in his knee. That would actually explain all of this.

Arthritis in a runner’s knee wouldn’t be devastating, but it would slow him. I’ve covered a handful of backs who had this issue, and it slowed them dramatically. It can have a serious impact on the basic running motion, and few people outside the team would even notice.

All we know for sure is the team says it’s not worried.

Should it be?

The answer, without question, is yes.

3. Glazer: No time to panic, but…

Carolyn Kaster/Associated Press

One last thing on Gurley, and it comes from Fox NFL analyst Jay Glazer, one of the best football journalists to ever do it. I wanted to give Glazer’s quote a place to itself because if he says it, bank on it.

“It is a concern,” Glazer wrote in The Athletic about Gurley’s knee. “The sky isn’t falling but even now, they’re being smart about it. It did swell up on him last year; this is a knee that has had wear and tear. Eventually, you’re going to factor this in especially with them having to sit him down the stretch last year. It’s not all doom and gloom, but it is definitely something you have to monitor and be prepared for in case that thing blows up on him again. We already learned that lesson last year. That’s why he isn’t doing any on-field work yet.”

All this leads to another huge question with Gurley: Did the Rams reward him with that huge contract extension too soon?

The answer is no, but it’s a fair question.

The Rams gave Gurley a $57.5 million extension in 2018. They had to do it. He’d earned it, and there were no indications that Gurley’s knee was going to be a huge problem. The Rams are good, but they’re not time travelers.

So they did the right thing even if it may be a problem in the future.

4. Carson Wentz will be OK

Matt Slocum/Associated Press

If anyone had concerns about the health of Eagles quarterback Carson Wentz, and if he was recovering OK from a broken back, coach Doug Pederson put it all to rest this week. Pederson was asked how Wentz has looked the past two weeks in team workouts.

“Yeah, I mean, gosh, he’s strong,” Pederson said, according to a team transcript. “His lower body is strong. His arm is strong. You are seeing the things that we saw a couple of years ago when he was healthy, obviously. He’s leading the offense, leading the team and really doing a nice job out there, getting on the same page with [wide receiver DeSean Jackson] and really kind of getting that rapport going.

“Same with [wide receiver Nelson Agholor]. I think Nelly is another one that’s really had a good offseason so far. But, yeah, Carson, been real impressed with where Carson is.”

5. Roger Goodell continues to push for fewer preseason games

Brynn Anderson/Associated Press

Commissioner Roger Goodell, as he has done for several years now, once again pushed for a shortened preseason. And he’s right; four preseason games is too many. Really, only two are needed, and having four causes unnecessary physical strain on players while they play in meaningless contests.

Make no mistake, though: Goodell isn’t pushing for a shorter preseason out of the goodness of his heart. He’s doing it as part of a strategy designed to push for an 18-game regular season.

The players overall remain vehemently opposed to an 18-game season. The union absolutely wants no part of it unless some massive concessions are made by the owners in the next collective bargaining agreement.

This won’t be the last we hear about this. With the CBA set to expire after the 2020 season, and all the money that could be made with two extra games, Goodell will bring this up again and again. But what truly matters is what the players think. They’d have to agree to an 18-game season, and there’s little chance they will.

6. Other summits to come

Gregory Payan/Associated Press

Von Miller’s pass-rusher summit—gathering the best in the league to one place and essentially having a position-specific think-tank exchange—is a pretty remarkable thing.

I’ve heard some coaches grumble that players shouldn’t exchange ideas or techniques, that they should keep all their secrets—no matter how minor—to themselves. It’s an old-school way of thinking and likely doesn’t represent the future.

In fact, I’ve heard from agents how other positions want to do the same thing. One thing I heard is there might be some type of wide receiver summit.

That would be fun.

7. No one believes Gronk is really retired

Mike Reiss @MikeReiss

Video: A smiling Rob Gronkowski answers questions from reporters, saying there will always be a family feel at Gillette Stadium, while touching on his connection with the New England community, how he plans to do more events like this, and how life is good in retirement. https://t.co/74zFGXH1Kk

Former Patriots tight end Rob Gronkowski made a public appearance recently and said he was done with football. What I can tell you is few people, including sources on the Patriots, believe that.

The belief is that once the season gets going, and Gronkowski starts missing football, he will rejoin the team. It’s not just a hunch, sources say; you can count on it.

8. Saquon Barkley taking leadership role

ATLANTA, GEORGIA - JANUARY 31: Saquon Barkley attends SiriusXM at Super Bowl LIII Radio Row on January 31, 2019 in Atlanta, Georgia. (Photo by Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM)

Cindy Ord/Getty Images

It’s not a shock this is happening, but running back Saquon Barkley has become one of the leaders in the Giants locker room, if not the leader.

Odell Beckham Jr. is gone. Defensive end Olivier Vernon is gone. Safety Landon Collins is gone. Quarterback Eli Manning is there, but he’s a shell of himself.

“Obviously Odell’s gone, but that trade happened so long ago. We’ve been in the locker room for a really long time without him,” Barkley told For the Win. “We’re still doing the same things that we need to do, and I think we’ve even grown more as a team, just going out more, whether it’s getting dinner or doing things like Topgolf and other team activities. I think the locker room is really great, and I think it’s showing on the field.”

We won’t know exactly how the loss of Beckham will impact the team until real games are played. But it’s a good sign that Barkley has assumed a leadership role vacated by those names. This is one of the best signs for the Giants in an offseason of the team making really dumb decisions like trading Beckham.

The team couldn’t be in better hands than Barkley’s.

9. Big humans aren’t supposed to move like this

Los Angeles Rams @RamsNFL

Don’t blink 😳

@AaronDonald97 | #LARams https://t.co/VoQ6Eojsky

When you watch this video of Aaron Donald moving like a leopard, remember that he is 280 pounds.

I’ve covered the NFL for decades and have seen dozens of these drills, and I have never, ever, ever, ever seen a defensive lineman, especially an interior one, move that fast.

It seems like Donald—the two-time reigning Defensive Player of the Year—is just getting better and better, and that has to scare the hell out of the rest of the league.

10. The XFL continues to grow

XFL @xfl2020

XFL establishes health advisory committee.

Full details here ➡ https://t.co/bYEDRksuw9 https://t.co/s4fzqEFMuz

While the Alliance of American Football may have failed, the XFL continues to grow. One thing the league added recently was a health advisory committee made of experts in neurology and mental health, according to a release from the league.

The league’s initial health advisory committee is composed of neurosurgeon Dr. Julian Bailes, who will be the chief medical adviser, orthopedist Dr. Larry Lemak and mental health expert Dr. Claudia Reardon.

I’ve heard the NFL for years talk about how it cares about the health and safety of its players. Sometimes, the league actually meant it.

Hopefully what the XFL is doing is genuine. If it is, that’s a really good thing.

Mike Freeman covers the NFL for Bleacher Report. Follow him on Twitter: @mikefreemanNFL.

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Iran’s Khamenei: US Middle East peace plan a ‘great betrayal’

Iran‘s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday slammed the United States‘s Middle East peace plan as a “great betrayal of the Islamic world” and urged Gulf rivals not to back it.

Washington is gearing up to roll out economic aspects of its long-awaited proposal for peace between Israel and Palestine, dubbed the “deal of the century”, at a conference in Bahrain later this month.

“The aim of this conference is to realise America’s traitorous, dastardly plan on Palestine, which they have named the ‘deal of the century’,” Khamenei said in a live television address at prayers for the Eid al-Fitr holiday.

“The ‘deal of the century’ will, God willing, never take root … This is a great betrayal of the Islamic world. We hope the leaders of Bahrain and Saudi [Arabia] will realise into what a quagmire they are stepping and how harmful it will be for their future.”

Israeli bias

The peace plan, fronted by US President Donald Trump‘s son-in-law Jared Kushner, has already been rejected by the Palestinians, who say the White House’s policies have been blatantly biased in favour of Israel.

US allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) are set to attend the Bahrain conference on June 25-26.

Palestinians have cut off all contacts with the Trump administration since the president broke with decades of bipartisan policy to recognise Jerusalem as the capital of Israel in December 2017.

Critics say the Bahrain event may be a prelude to a US push to jettison the “two-state” solution – a long-standing, international formula for an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel in the West Bank, occupied East Jerusalem and Gaza.

The twin-state blueprint has been the basis for decades of lending and technical support from global financial institutions, aimed at building the capacity of Palestinian government ministries and the private sector.

Referendum call

In comments released on his official website later on Wednesday, Khamenei also insisted Iran did not seek to “throw Jews into [the] sea” and saw a referendum as the solution to the Palestinian-Israeli conflict.

He repeated Iran’s proposal of holding a vote with the participation of “Muslim, Christian and Jewish residents of Palestine as well as Palestinian refugees” on a system of government.

Kushner, a White House senior adviser, concluded a trip to the Middle East and Europe  this week, aimed partly at drumming up support for the Peace for Prosperity conference intended to unveil the economic part of Trump’s long-heralded peace plan.

Though Saudi Arabia and the UAE plan to attend the Bahrain conference, they have assured the Palestinians they would not endorse a US plan that fails to meet their main demands.

Khamenei berated Saudi Arabia and Bahrain for enabling American plans.

“This meeting belongs to the Americans, but Bahraini rulers are hosting it due to their weaknesses and anti-Muslim and anti-popular stand,” he said.

Meanwhile, Israeli Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Tzipi Hotovely said in a weekend radio interview that “Israelis” would attend the Bahrain conference, but it was unclear whether she was referring to officials or business delegates.

Asked if she believed the event should be postponed given Palestinians’ boycott, Hotovely responded: “No. There is no reason to … Apart from them, everyone’s okay. Everyone’s in favour.”

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Study: Russia’s manipulation of Twitter was far vaster than believed


Russian troll farm

Russia’s troll farm was found to have considerably more sway than previously thought and might have generated income for some of its phony accounts. | Naira Davlashyan/AP Photo

Russia’s infamous troll farm conducted a campaign on Twitter before the 2016 elections that was larger, more coordinated and more effective than previously known, research from cybersecurity firm Symantec out Wednesday concluded.

The Internet Research Agency campaign may not only have had more sway — reaching large numbers of real users — than previously thought, it also demonstrated ample patience and might have generated income for some of the phony accounts, Symantec found.

Story Continued Below

The company analyzed a massive data set Twitter released in October 2018 on nearly 3,900 accounts and 10 million tweets.

The research discovered that the average lag between account creation and first tweet was 177 days. The most retweeted account garnered 6 million retweets, and less than 2,000 of those came from within the IRA-linked network of accounts. The huge delay points to a lot of patient preparation, and the retweets indicate that a lot of unaffiliated Twitter users were amplifying the IRA’s message.

While most of the accounts were automated, they frequently demonstrated evidence of manual manipulation, such as slight wording changes in an apparent bid to dodge detection, according to Symantec.

“While this propaganda campaign has often been referred to as the work of trolls, the release of the dataset makes it obvious that it was far more than that,” the company wrote. “It was planned months in advance and the operators had the resources to create and manage a vast disinformation network.”

Some accounts also appeared to generate revenue via URL shorteners, with one account even earning as much as $1 million, although those were apparently rogue accounts operating outside the IRA’s main mission.

The research also found that the accounts played to both sides of the aisle more than previously believed, and that most of them were fakes pretending to be regional news outlets, while a smaller subset amplified those messages.

“The campaign directed propaganda at both sides of the liberal/conservative political divide in the U.S., in particular the more disaffected elements of both camps,” Symantec found.

And the company warned in the closing message of its study: “The sheer scale and impact of this propaganda campaign is obviously of deep concern to voters in all countries, who may fear a repeat of what happened in the lead-up to the U.S. presidential election in 2016.”

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2020 Democrats talk philosophy on podcasts, shoot hoops on late-night shows


Kamala Harris gestures as she speaks during a radio broadcast.

Sen. Kamala Harris speaks with host Mark Thompson during an interview at SiriusXM’s New York Studios on April 5. | Slaven Vlasic/Getty Images for SiriusXM

2020 elections

In a packed field, candidates are seizing every opportunity to reach a fragmented voting public that doesn’t always watch the evening news.

Preet Bharara surprised his own mother during last week’s interview with presidential candidate Andrew Yang.

She texted him after his podcast was released, not about Bharara and Yang’s debate over the policy of universal basic income, but about the pair’s discussion of bigotry and bullying growing up. Bharara had revealed on “Stay Tuned” that he faced racial taunts during a school trip to a planetarium.

Story Continued Below

“I hadn’t intended to go where I went,” Bharara said in an interview.

That willingness to veer away from the horserace and the drama that drives TV news into more personal territory is precisely why the podcast Bharara’s been taping for a year and a half — after President Donald Trump ousted him as U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York in March 2017 — has become part of an unlikely group of media outlets landing interviews with 2020 Democratic candidates.

Podcasts, late-night programs and web shows are increasingly serving as off-ramps from the daily news churn, offering candidates opportunities for more freewheeling conversations and showing off their personalities or pop culture bonafides to a variety of audiences. And in a packed Democratic field, candidates are seizing every opportunity to reach a fragmented voting public that doesn’t always watch the evening news.

“I got time to talk to Pete Buttigieg about political philosophy,” said Bharara, referring to the South Bend, Indiana mayor. “We talked about Immanuel Kant and John Rawls. How often do you hear a conversation about that? That happens on a podcast like mine. It doesn’t happen on MSNBC. It allows candidates to show another and deeper side.”

Democratic presidential candidates aren’t about to turn down invites from MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow or the “Morning Joe” crew, with the exception of Joe Biden, who has been eschewing most media interviews. They’ll surely keep hitting town hall stages on CNN and Fox News and must-stops like ABC’s “The View” and CBS’s “Late Night with Stephen Colbert.” And everyone wants to make this month’s debate on NBC, MSNBC and Telemundo.

But in addition, Sen. Cory Booker shot hoops in Newark with Desus Nice and The Kid Mero, the former Viceland hosts who launched Showtime’s “Desus & Mero” in February. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand told the late-night hosts in March why she’s running for president while cooking omelets in her Troy, New York home. Buttigieg will appear on Thursday night’s show.

“We want to talk to every single motherfucking one of them,” co-host Mero said of the 2020 field in April before rolling the Booker interview.

On Friday night in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders will take the stage at “Political Party Live!”, a millennial-geared podcast that’s already hosted Yang, California Sen. Kamala Harris, former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke and former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro. Booker will join the show Saturday from Gene’s Bar in Iowa City.

Candidates have also talked to former Obama strategist David Axelrod and Vox’s Ezra Klein, and at least a dozen 2020 hopefuls have flocked to “Pod Save America,” which, though only launched in early 2017, has become a mainstay in Democratic politics.

“Smart campaigns are looking for forums that allow their candidates to connect with engaged audiences, break out of the 30-second soundbite culture of cable, and talk about more than Trump’s latest tweet,” said Dan Pfeiffer, a former senior Obama adviser and co-host of “Pod Save America.”

“The advantage of many of these platforms is that they are evergreen and can be consumed on demand hours, days and weeks after the interview,” Pfeiffer said. “The more traditional platforms are ephemeral.”

Candidates have experimented with non-traditional or niche platforms in recent cycles. Hillary Clinton went on Buzzfeed’s “Another Round” podcast in 2016, where the hosts asked her why they never saw her sweating; “I’m really not even a human being,” Clinton responded. “I was constructed in a garage in Palo Alto.”

Peter Hamby, who began hosting Snapchat’s “Good Luck America” show during the 2016 election, noted that “new formats and new shows have been evolving and mutating since the birth of the smartphone” more than a decade ago.

“But candidates and campaigns are being less smug about new platforms and new shows,” he said. “They’re more willing to step into the breach because they realize you have to be on all screens at all times of the day.”

“A lot of people just consume an entirely different set of media than a lot of the people in Washington and New York who are making political news,” said Hamby, a former CNN reporter.

It’s also been a long time since the Democratic field had so many candidates, all of whom want a lighthearted, viral moment that makes them memorable to voters.

Still, there are risks for candidates when stepping away from more conventional political shows.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren discussed issues like taxing corporations and reparations for slavery over more than 45 minutes last Friday on Power 105.1’s “The Breakfast Club,” the nationally syndicated hip-hop morning show that’s become a destination for 2020 contenders.

But co-host Charlamagne tha God also challenged Warren’s past identification as Native American, an issue that’s largely faded from mainstream political coverage. “You’re kind of like the original Rachel Dolezal,” he said, referring to a white woman who identified as black.

On Friday’s “Vice News Tonight,” Charlemagne said he’s glad candidates are visiting “The Breakfast Club,” though he was blunt about their political calculations. “They’re only coming here because of the large listening audience,” he said, “and it’s a large listening audience of black and brown people.”

Buttigieg, who appeared on “The Breakfast Club” in March, has embraced a wide spectrum of media venues, from Hugh Hewitt’s conservative radio show — a must-stop during the 2016 Republican primary — to TMZ Live, where the candidate talked policy, pop culture and busted out a guitar. More recently, Buttigieg made headlines after stopping by a TMZ camera to defend NFL kneeling protests and point out Trump’s lack of military experience.

“It’s ultimately the candidate who determines the success of these things. There’s no magic recipe,” said Lis Smith, a Buttigieg communications adviser who has spearheaded an ambitious media strategy for a Midwestern mayor who had little national name recognition before getting in the race.

More Coverage: Bernie Sanders and Kamala Harris on the Breakfast Club.

Smith recalled driving with Buttigieg in March as the candidate noticed a flurry of mentions on Twitter after his interview with Bharara, which took place before the candidate broke out on national television during a CNN town hall.

“Preet asked questions that aren’t on cable news,” she said, allowing for a conversation “that is 20 levels deeper” than most TV news shows. (Bharara said the Buttigieg interview was one of his best performing podcasts to date).

Iowa politician Stacey Walker and millennial business owners Veronica Tessler and Simeon Talley launched “Political Party Live!” in 2016 to engage young progressive Democrats and promote diverse voices in state politics. And like any good party, the hosts made sure there was beer, pizza, and music to go along with the political talk.

The appearance by Harris in February helped open the floodgates this cycle in terms of candidates coming on the show.

“This is the first time we’ve ever been a force in the presidential selection process in Iowa,” said Walker, who said the team is talking to several campaigns beyond the six candidates who have appeared or agreed to do so.

“Our hope is to be a resource to Iowans,” he said. “Iowans really do take their role being the first-in-the-nation caucuses state seriously. I think the candidates know that.”

Bharara said he and his team are talking this week about which candidate to invite next. He stressed that listeners want a “thoughtful discussion” — and said he’s not bound by the rigid criteria to get on the TV debate stage.

“For our podcast,” he said, “we don’t have some DNC-inspired formula of polling and donors that will determine when they do or don’t get airtime.”

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Egypt attack: Soldiers killed in raid on Sinai checkpoint

Egypt has for years been battling armed groups in the north of Sinai Peninsula [File: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters]
Egypt has for years been battling armed groups in the north of Sinai Peninsula [File: Mohamed Abd El Ghany/Reuters]

Fighters killed eight Egyptian security personnel at a security checkpoint in the restive Sinai Peninsula, state media said.

The attack by “terrorist elements” took place in the city of El-Arish in northern Sinai and an exchange of fire was ongoing, the Middle East News Agency said on its Facebook page on Wednesday.

“Eight killed and three wounded were transferred to El-Arish public hospital. All of the victims were Central Security Force personnel,” a medical source told the AFP news agency.

Egyptian state TV also reported the attack and said there were fears the death toll could rise as there were reports of attacks on multiple checkpoints.

The attack came at the start of the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Fitr, marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.

No group has claimed responsibility so far for the early morning attack and authorities have not yet commented on the incident.

Nationwide offensive

Egypt has for years been battling armed groups in the North Sinai.

Hundreds of police officers and soldiers have been killed in attacks, which intensified after the army’s removal of President Mohamed Morsi in 2013.

In February 2018, the army launched a nationwide offensive against the fighters focused mainly on the North Sinai.

According to official figures, around 650 fighters have been killed since the start of the operation, while the army has lost some 50 soldiers.

No independent statistics are available and the region is largely cut off to journalists making verification of casualty figures extremely difficult.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) recently said that security forces committed widespread abuses against civilians in Sinai, some of which amount to war crimes, urging other nations to halt military assistance to Egypt.

SOURCE:
News agencies

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Qatar marks second anniversary of Arab quartet blockade

Two years after four Arab countries blockaded Qatar, there remains little sign the political crisis – the worst in the Gulf region for years – is edging any closer towards a resolution.

Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Bahrain, and Egypt cut off diplomatic and trade ties with Qatar on June 5, 2017, shortly after US President Donald Trump met several Arab and Muslim leaders in Saudi Arabia.

The quartet has accused Doha of supporting “terrorism” and “destabilising the region”, which Qatar has fiercely denied. A list of 13 demands was also presented by the blockading countries, which Doha firmly rejected.

The demands included shutting down Al Jazeera Media Network, the downgrade of diplomatic relations with Iran, and the closure of Turkey’s military base that is currently under construction in Qatar.

Summits highlight polarisation

Qatar expresses reservations over Mecca summit outcome

Despite Qatar sending a high-ranking official to Saudi Arabia – for the first time since the crisis began – the political standoff continues as the outcome of the gathering dispelled any sign of thawing relations.

Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Abdullah bin Nasser Al Thani attended the three emergency summits called for by Saudi Arabia in the holy city of Mecca at the end of last month, and shook hands with Saudi King Salman bin Abdul Aziz and his son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

The summits, which included separate meetings of the GCC, the Arab League, and the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation, came following recent attacks on oil assets, including two Saudi oil tankers, off the UAE’s coast. 

After communiques were made at the end of the gathering, Qatar’s Foreign Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani highlighted the polarisation in the Gulf by expressing his reservations about the hard-line statements issued against Iran.

“The statements condemned Iran but did not refer to a moderate policy to speak with Tehran,” Sheikh Mohammed told Al Jazeera.

In separate comments to the UK-based Al-Araby broadcaster, the foreign minister said the meetings’ final communique was made without Qatar’s input or consultation.

He also questioned the “unity” called for by neighbouring nations amid the two-year blockade.

Both Saudi Arabia and the UAE were quick to respond, criticising Qatar for raising concerns.

“Countries … during summits announce their positions and reservations in the meetings according to customs and not after the meetings,” Adel al-Jubeir, Saudi Arabia’s minister of state for foreign affairs, said on Twitter.

His Emirati counterpart, Anwar Gargash, also criticised Doha for being “weak” under pressure.

“Seems to me that attendance and agreement in meetings and then backtracking on what was decided on is [a result of] pressure on the weak that lack sovereignty or have ill intentions or lack credibility, and it might be all these factors,” he tweeted.

Economic improvement 

Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said Qatar’s economy has proven resilient to the blockade and lower oil prices.

“Economic performance improved in 2018,” the IMF said in a statement on Monday. “Qatar’s economy has successfully absorbed the shocks from the 2014-16 drop in hydrocarbon prices and the 2017 diplomatic rift.”

“Real GDP growth is estimated at 2.2 percent, up from 1.6 percent in 2017,” it added.

The IMF declared Qatar’s banking sector healthy, but reported a cooling in the property market.

“After a period of rapid growth, real estate prices in Qatar are adjusting to new levels. According to the real estate price index developed by Qatar Central Bank, following an 82 percent increase during 2012-16, real estate prices fell by 15 percent during 2017-18,” it said.

The report concluded “substantial buffers and prudent policies” would help Doha manage any “rising trade and geopolitical tensions”.

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UCLA Walks off to Win 2019 Women’s College World Series Title vs. Oklahoma

UCLA's Brianna Tautalafua (33) is greeted by teammates after a home run in the sixth inning against Oklahoma during the first game of the best-of-three championship series in the NCAA softball Women's College World Series in Oklahoma City, Monday, June 3, 2019. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

Alonzo Adams/Associated Press

The No. 2 UCLA Bruins clubbed 8 home runs in their two-game series against the No. 1 Oklahoma Sooners, but all it took to win the 2019 Women’s College World Series was a single.

Kinsley Washington looped the game-winning base hit into left field, and while the play at the plate was a matter of inches, UCLA slid into its first national title since 2010. The Bruins defeated Oklahoma 5-4 in Game 2 Tuesday night in Oklahoma City.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

WALK OFF FOR THE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP 😱😱😱

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/LbILY0t4S5

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

All the feels! Kinsley Washington is the HERO!

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/vvTs64eodi

The Bruins handed the Sooners their worst loss in 24 years in Monday’s Game 1 by dominating 16-3. Oklahoma bounced back in Game 2, but UCLA continued to overwhelm with the long ball. For the second night in a row, four different Bruins drilled four solo home runs.

The game-winner looked to be off the bat of Brianna Tautalafua in the bottom of the fifth inning, but Shay Knighten tied the game 4-4 in the top of the seventh with the Sooners down to their final out.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

Are you even surprised at this point? ANOTHER HOME RUN!!!

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/tyZXYH7w7y

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

Brianna Tautalafua had 3 home runs all season. She now has 2 in the Championship Series alone 👏

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/cX1bY3pSPZ

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

BIG PLAY SHAY! BIG PLAY SHAY!

Down to the final out, Shay Knighten TIES IT UP, 4-4, in the seventh inning!!!

#WCWS | @OU_Softball https://t.co/6dSlRR1hHw

Sooners starting pitcher Giselle Juarez performed much better in Game 2 than she did Game 1, completing the game at 124 pitches, but she came up just short against UCLA’s hot bats.

Big 12 Player of the Year Sydney Romero delivered with a home run in the top of the third inning, but the Sooners will kick themselves for leaving her on base after her leadoff double in the top of the first.

While the Sooners batted around on back-to-back USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year Rachel Garcia to tie the game 3-3 in the top of the fourth, she pitched a complete game and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

The Most Outstaning Player, Rachel Garcia gives @sportsiren her first take following winning the National Championship.

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/KNVOo8iWe1

The Bruins now hold 12 national titles, the most all time in Division I college softball.

Meanwhile, it’s a bitter end for a successful Sooners senior class that captured two national titles (2016 and 2017) in four years.

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UCLA Walks off to Win 2019 Women’s College World Series Title vs. Oklahoma

UCLA's Brianna Tautalafua (33) is greeted by teammates after a home run in the sixth inning against Oklahoma during the first game of the best-of-three championship series in the NCAA softball Women's College World Series in Oklahoma City, Monday, June 3, 2019. (AP Photo/Alonzo Adams)

Alonzo Adams/Associated Press

The No. 2 UCLA Bruins clubbed 8 home runs in their two-game series against the No. 1 Oklahoma Sooners, but all it took to win the 2019 Women’s College World Series was a single.

Kinsley Washington looped the game-winning base hit into left field, and while the play at the plate was a matter of inches, UCLA slid into its first national title since 2010. The Bruins defeated Oklahoma 5-4 in Game 2 Tuesday night in Oklahoma City.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

WALK OFF FOR THE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP 😱😱😱

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/LbILY0t4S5

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

All the feels! Kinsley Washington is the HERO!

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/vvTs64eodi

The Bruins handed the Sooners their worst loss in 24 years in Monday’s Game 1 by dominating 16-3. Oklahoma bounced back in Game 2, but UCLA continued to overwhelm with the long ball. For the second night in a row, four different Bruins drilled four solo home runs.

The game-winner looked to be off the bat of Brianna Tautalafua in the bottom of the fifth inning, but Shay Knighten tied the game 4-4 in the top of the seventh with the Sooners down to their final out.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

Are you even surprised at this point? ANOTHER HOME RUN!!!

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/tyZXYH7w7y

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

Brianna Tautalafua had 3 home runs all season. She now has 2 in the Championship Series alone 👏

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/cX1bY3pSPZ

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

BIG PLAY SHAY! BIG PLAY SHAY!

Down to the final out, Shay Knighten TIES IT UP, 4-4, in the seventh inning!!!

#WCWS | @OU_Softball https://t.co/6dSlRR1hHw

Sooners starting pitcher Giselle Juarez performed much better in Game 2 than she did Game 1, completing the game at 124 pitches, but she came up just short against UCLA’s hot bats.

Big 12 Player of the Year Sydney Romero delivered with a home run in the top of the third inning, but the Sooners will kick themselves for leaving her on base after her leadoff double in the top of the first.

While the Sooners batted around on back-to-back USA Softball Collegiate Player of the Year Rachel Garcia to tie the game 3-3 in the top of the fourth, she pitched a complete game and was named the tournament’s Most Outstanding Player.

NCAA Softball @NCAAsoftball

The Most Outstaning Player, Rachel Garcia gives @sportsiren her first take following winning the National Championship.

#WCWS | @UCLASoftball https://t.co/KNVOo8iWe1

The Bruins now hold 12 national titles, the most all time in Division I college softball.

Meanwhile, it’s a bitter end for a successful Sooners senior class that captured two national titles (2016 and 2017) in four years.

Read More

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Xi worried as ‘extreme’ US pressure on Iran raises tensions

Chinese President Xi Jinping has expressed concern over an increase in tensions in the Middle East owing to the “extreme pressure” by the United States on Iran and urged all sides to show restraint.

In comments made to Russian media before a visit to the country on Wednesday, Xi also underlined the importance of a multinational nuclear deal between Iran and world powers for regional peace and stability and called for its full implementation.

Tensions between Washington and Tehran have escalated in recent weeks, a year after the administration of US President Donald Trump withdrew from the landmark Iran nuclear deal to curb the Islamic Republic’s nuclear programme in return for lifting of punishing sanctions.

Washington reimposed sanctions last year and tightened them sharply at the start of last month, ordering all countries to halt imports of Iranian oil. It has also hinted at military confrontation, sending extra forces to the region to counter what it describes as Iranian threats.

Xi told TASS news agency and Rossiyskaya Gazeta newspaper that because of the “extreme pressure” Washington has put on Tehran and the unilateral sanctions, tensions have continued to rise in the Middle East.

“The development of the situation is worrying,” Xi said, according to a transcript published by China’s Foreign Ministry ahead of his arrival in Russia.

Commenting on the nuclear deal, Xi said the positions of Beijing and Moscow on the issue “are highly aligned, and both hope that all relevant parties remain rational and exercise restraint, step up dialogue and consultations and lower the temperature on the present tense situation”. 

 Russian President Vladimir Putin, right, and Chinese President Xi Jinping

Xi is scheduled to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin [File: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP]

China, which is locked in a major trade war with the US, has also been angered by Washington’s threats against countries and companies that violate US sanctions by importing Iranian oil. China and Iran have close energy ties.

Xi did not directly address the oil sanctions issue, but appeared to allude to them by saying, “China will continue to firmly safeguard its own legitimate and lawful rights and interests”.

During his June 5-7 visit to Russia, Xi is scheduled to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin and speak at a major investor forum in St Petersburg.

Last week, Chinese Vice Foreign Minister Zhang Hanhui told reporters that Beijing and Moscow had broad consensus and common interests on the trade war that has roiled global supply chains and financial markets.

“China and Russia will certainly strengthen economic and trade cooperation, including cooperation in various fields such as economic and trade investment,” Zhang said.

“We will certainly respond to various external challenges, do what we have to do, develop our economies, and constantly improve the living standards of our two peoples.”

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Prayuth in the lead as Thailand’s parliament set to pick PM

Thailand‘s new parliament is set to vote for prime minister, with retired General Prayuth Chan-ocha appearing set to stay in power thanks largely to the support of senators who were handpicked by the country’s military government.

Prayuth, who led a coup and five years ago and then headed the military government’s National Council for Peace and Order, is widely expected to overcome the challenge of Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit, a charismatic tycoon leading the anti-military bloc.

Both the elected lower house and the appointed Senate are scheduled to convene together at 11am (04:00 GMT) on Wednesday to decide on the prime ministerial post more than two months after the first election since the coup, a controversial poll marred by allegations of inaccurate counting and vote-buying.

Any successful candidate will need at least 376 votes, or more than half of the 750 members of the combined houses.

There are 500 seats in Thailand’s lower house – 375 directly-elected and the rest allocated according to a party list – and 250 in the upper house whose members have already been chosen by the military government and endorsed by the kind.

The pro-military camp has already gathered 150 confirmed votes in the lower house, with more expected. Together with the 250 senators’ votes for Prayuth, his victory appear certain.

For his part, Thanathorn, the leader of the progressive Future Forward Party, has some 245 legislators backing him. But he does not have the Senate’s support and is also facing disqualification over his shares in a media company.

Thailand’s parliament meets but military retains upper hand (2:42)

‘A new threat’

The March 24 election was widely seen as a choice between military-government-backed rule and parties aligned with exiled former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his sister Yingluck, whose administration was toppled in 2014.

But an unexpected third force emerged with billionaire auto parts scion Thanathorn, whose Future Forward Party won more than six million votes and 81 seats to become Thailand’s third largest political force, behind Phalang Pracharat, the military-backed party created to support Prayuth, and Pheu Thai, which is supported by Thaksin and won the most seats in the polls.

Thanathorn, 40, is in a coalition with Pheu Thai and five other parties. In a sudden late move, they agreed on Tuesday to put him forward as the sole candidate in the vote for prime minister.

Analysts say Thanathorn is the military government’s biggest fear while also representing a fresh change for voters weary of the influence of the Shinawatra family.

“Vested interests have succeeded in vilifying and turning Thaksin into a bogeyman for urban, middle-class Thais,” Paul Chambers, a lecturer at Thailand’s Naresuan University, told Al Jazeera last month. “Thanathorn is young, new, vivacious and a threat to that urban middle-class vote which vested interests had assumed was already conservative. Thanathorn is now a greater threat than Thaksin.”

Thanathorn, however, has been hamstrung by legal complaints that led to his suspension from parliament and a dramatic walk-out on its early sessions. 

He said on Tuesday that the suspension had nothing to do with qualifying as a candidate for prime minister, and he called on swing parties to back him in the vote.

“The most important thing is to return Thailand to democracy,” he told reporters. “And to stop Prayuth to come back as prime minister.”

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