Tag Archives: injuring

Jane Fonda: J.Lo ‘Never Apologized’ For Seriously Injuring Me On ‘Monster In Law’ Set – HuffPost

  1. Jane Fonda: J.Lo ‘Never Apologized’ For Seriously Injuring Me On ‘Monster In Law’ Set HuffPost
  2. Jane Fonda Says Jennifer Lopez ‘Monster-in-Law’ Slap Left Her with Cut PEOPLE
  3. Jane Fonda says Jennifer Lopez ‘never apologized’ for cutting her face in ‘Monster-in-Law’ Entertainment Weekly News
  4. Jane Fonda: Jennifer Lopez never apologized for cutting my face during scene New York Post
  5. Jane Fonda Says Jennifer Lopez ‘Never Apologized’ After Cutting Her Face When Slapping Her in ‘Monster-in-Law’ Scene Us Weekly
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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A large Navy research vessel that once belonged to late Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen tipped over — injuring 33 people — and is stuck at a 45 degree angle – Yahoo News

  1. A large Navy research vessel that once belonged to late Microsoft billionaire Paul Allen tipped over — injuring 33 people — and is stuck at a 45 degree angle Yahoo News
  2. Ship lurches in Edinburgh dry dock; At least 21 people taken to hospital | Details WION
  3. High winds unlikely to have toppled ship in Edinburgh dock – expert BBC
  4. Major incident declared at Leith Docks as ship topples over HeraldScotland
  5. A huge ship once owned by Microsoft’s co-founder has tipped over with 21 people rushed to the hospital Fortune
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Colts’ Ryan Kelly on Giants’ Kayvon Thibodeaux celebrating after injuring Nick Foles: ‘That’s just horse—t’

The Giants rolled all over the Colts in the first half of the two sides’ Week 17 matchup, going on to win 38-10 to clinch a playoff spot. One of New York’s defining early plays, however, came with some controversy. After sacking quarterback Nick Foles to end an Indianapolis drive in the final minute of the second quarter, Giants rookie Kayvon Thibodeaux celebrated while lying on the ground next to Foles, pretending to make snow angels while Foles writhed in pain with a rib injury. Moments later, after Foles was carted off, Thibodeaux was seen celebrating again, this time mimicking Foles “going to sleep.”

Here is a look at Thibodeaux’s second celebration:

Initially ruled questionable to return, Foles was ruled out for the remainder of Sunday’s contest during halftime. The veteran QB (8-13, 81 yards, 1 INT before exiting) was making his second start for the Colts after replacing Matt Ryan a week earlier. Second-year backup Sam Ehlinger, who made two starts in place of Ryan earlier this season, took over for Indy under center.

Thibodeaux downplayed the ordeal after the game, denying to reporters that he celebrated while knowing Foles was hurt: “When I did realize that he was hurt, that’s when we started getting up,” he said. “When you’re doing a celebration, you’re not looking to see who’s doing what. But I hope he gets well and I hope he’s all right.”

Colts players weren’t so quick to write it off. Center Ryan Kelly, for one, didn’t mince his words when addressing the incident after the game: “Hopefully [Thibodeaux’s] teammates will — maybe one day he’ll learn that injuries happen in this league, [and] you never want that to happen to the guy that you’re going against. That’s just horseshit.”

Thibodeaux, drafted No. 5 overall this year, has been a key member of the Giants’ defensive front, logging his third sack in five games thanks to the takedown of Foles. But his dual celebration of Sunday’s sack was a curious choice, especially considering how much attention the NFL has given to player safety — and particularly the health of QBs as it pertains to potential head injuries — as of late.

Thibodeaux’s arm clearly contacted Foles at least six different times while he lied on the ground pretending to make snow angels, suggesting the pass rusher was aware the QB was still down, and he could also be seen glancing over at Foles in between the celebratory act. He was not penalized for his actions during the game, which secured a playoff berth for New York.

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Indonesia quake kills scores, reduces homes to rubble, injuring hundreds

CIANJUR, Indonesia, Nov 21 (Reuters) – A 5.6-magnitude earthquake killed more than 60 people and injured hundreds in Indonesia’s West Java province on Monday, with rescuers trying to reach survivors trapped under the rubble amid a series of aftershocks.

The epicentre was near the town of Cianjur in West Java, about 75 km (45 miles) southeast of the capital, Jakarta, where some buildings shook and some offices were evacuated.

Indonesia’s disaster mitigation agency (BNPB) said 62 people had been killed. At least 25 people were trapped under collapsed buildings, it said.

BNPB spokesperson Abdul Muhari said the search would continue through the night.

“So many buildings crumbled and shattered,” West Java governor Ridwan Kamil told reporters.

“There are residents trapped in isolated places … so we are under the assumption that the number of injured and deaths will rise with time.”

Indonesia straddles the so-called “Pacific Ring of Fire”, a highly seismically active zone, where different plates on the Earth’s crust meet and create a large number of earthquakes and volcanoes.

The BNPB said more than 2,200 houses had been damaged and more than 5,300 people had been displaced.

A 5.6 magnitude earthquake hit Indonesia’s Java island on Monday

Electricity was down and disrupting communications efforts, Herman Suherman, head of Cianjur’s government, said, adding that a landslide was blocking evacuations in one area.

Hundreds of victims were being treated in a hospital parking lot, some under an emergency tent. Elsewhere in Cianjur, residents huddled together on mats in open fields or in tents while buildings around them had been reduced almost entirely to rubble.

Officials were still working to determine the full extent of the damage caused by the quake, which struck at a relatively shallow depth of 10 km, according to the weather and geophysics agency (BMKG).

Vani, who was being treated at Cianjur main hospital, told MetroTV that the walls of her house collapsed during an aftershock.

“The walls and wardrobe just fell… Everything was flattened, I don’t even know the whereabouts of my mother and father,” she said.

Within two hours, 25 aftershocks had been recorded, BMKG said, adding there were concerns about more landslides in the event of heavy rain.

In Jakarta, some people evacuated offices in the central business district, while others reported buildings shaking and furniture moving, Reuters witnesses said.

In 2004, a 9.1 magnitude quake off Sumatra island in northern Indonesia triggered a tsunami that struck 14 countries, killing 226,000 people along the Indian Ocean coastline, more than half of them in Indonesia.

Reporting by Tommy Ardiansyah, Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana and Johan Purnomo in Cianjur, Ananda Teresia, Gayatri Suroyo, Fransiska Nangoy in Jakarta
Writing by Ed Davies and Kate Lamb; Editing by Kanupriya Kapoor, Kim Coghill, Toby Chopra and Nick Macfie

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Driver arrested after mowing down a group of Los Angeles-area law enforcement recruits, injuring 25, is released from jail



CNN
 — 

The man who was arrested for allegedly driving a vehicle into a group of law enforcement recruits in Whittier, California, was released from jail Thursday night, but the sheriff’s department insists they did not make a mistake.

Nicholas Joseph Gutierrez, 22, was released from custody at 9:49 p.m., according to jail records, citing an insufficient complaint.

Gutierrez is still considered a suspect in the case, and the decision to release him was made because investigators want more time to collect evidence to present to the District Attorney’s office for charges, not because they believe an error was made, said a spokesperson for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

“It’s not like they arrested the wrong suspect,” Deputy Deanna Mares told CNN late Thursday night. “They just want to make sure the investigation is going to be complete.”

The Sheriff’s Department is typically required to present a case to the DA within 48 hours of a suspect’s arrest, and they were not ready to do that in the case of Gutierrez, Mares said.

Twenty-five recruits from multiple law enforcement agencies were hurt Wednesday when a vehicle drove into the group, an incident Sheriff Alex Villanueva initially called “a horrific accident.” That characterization changed dramatically Thursday morning, when the department announced the arrest of Gutierrez on suspicion of attempted murder of peace officers.

The sheriff’s department originally said they intended to present the case to the DA’s office on Friday. The department did not give a new timetable Thursday for presenting the case.

CNN reached out Friday to Alexandra Kazarian, an attorney for Gutierrez. She told CNN affiliate KABC Thursday, “I have no doubt that an in-depth investigation will confirm that Nicholas is a hard working young man who holds no animosity towards law enforcement, and this was an absolutely tragic accident.”

Gutierrez was booked Wednesday afternoon, according to inmate records. He was alone in the vehicle at the time of the crash, the sheriff’s department told CNN.

Five of the cadets injured were listed in critical condition, authorities said. Another four recruits suffered moderate injuries, while 16 others sustained minor injuries, the sheriff’s office said in an initial news release.

Gutierrez also suffered minor injuries, Los Angeles County Fire Department Capt. Sheila Kelliher said. All were taken to local hospitals and no updates have been given on the conditions of those injured.

The case remains under investigation and additional charges are pending, the sheriff’s office said. CNN has reached out to the DA’s office and the California Highway Patrol, which is leading the investigation into the crash, for further details.

Officials initially said the crash appeared to have been “a horrific accident,” Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva had said in a news conference Wednesday.

The driver, who was going the wrong way, showed no sign of impairment, Villanueva said, and blew a zero in a Breathalyzer test administered at the scene. There were no skid marks visible at the site of the crash, the sheriff said.

“It looked like an airplane wreck – so many bodies scattered everywhere in different states of injury,” said Villanueva of the scene. “It was pretty traumatic for all individuals.”

Kelliher initially said the recruits were all from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. But according to Villanueva, those injured include recruits from the L.A. Sheriff’s Department, along with Pasadena, Glendale and the Bell Police Departments. Recruits from the El Segundo and UCLA police departments were also present but were not hurt.

The 75 recruits, all wearing white T-shirts and green shorts, were on what Captain Ted McDonald of the sheriff’s department training bureau described as a “typical run” as part of the department’s 22-week training course. They were accompanied by two safety vehicles and were running in four lines when they were hit, McDonald said.

The crash occurred about 500 feet away from a fire station, officials said. The four most critically injured patients were immediately rushed to the hospital, Los Angeles Fire Chief Anthony Marrone said, likely saving their lives.

Kelliher said the incident was “hard to see because these young people are getting ready to go put themselves in the line of danger in their career. And who knows that while you’re training to do that, you’re actually in harm’s way.”

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Russia pummels Ukraine with missiles and drone strikes, injuring civilians

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KYIV, Ukraine — Smarting from military failures and its evident isolation in a week of key global meetings, Russia on Thursday unleashed its second major missile barrage against Ukraine in three days, accusing Kyiv of refusing peace talks and warning of further attacks on critical infrastructure.

Thursday’s attacks injured scores of civilians and damaged infrastructure in the country’s south and east, including gas facilities, Ukrainian officials said, as Russia sought to degrade Ukraine’s economy and sap its will to fight during the country’s frigid winter months. On Thursday, the first snow fell on Kyiv.

The bombardment was the latest in a relentless assault on Ukraine’s energy systems that began early last month, and it reflected Moscow’s narrowed strategic options following a string of battlefield defeats including its retreat from Kherson city in the south.

With its ground forces battered and losing territory, Russia has resorted to long-range bombing, while it struggles to train and equip tens of thousands of new conscripts, many of whom may have no desire to fight in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s failing war.

After most Group of 20 leaders at a summit in Indonesia this week strongly condemned Russia’s war against Ukraine, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Thursday sought to shift the blame to Kyiv for the lack of electricity and heat in many parts of Ukraine — outages that were a direct result of Russia’s military strikes.

The blackouts occurred because of “the unwillingness of the Ukrainian side to solve the problem, to enter into negotiations,” Peskov said. Speaking to reporters, he claimed that Russia struck only targets of military significance and warned that Moscow would attain its goals in Ukraine either through peace talks or continued military action.

Border village in east Poland hit by deadly fallout from war next door

“First they negotiate, then they refuse to negotiate, then they pass a law that prohibits any kind of negotiations, then they say they want negotiations but public ones,” Peskov said, dismissing Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s call Wednesday for any negotiations to be held in public.

There seems to be limited or no willingness to give ground from either side, with Moscow insisting that Ukrainian territory it illegally annexed will forever be Russian land. Ukraine, meanwhile, is demanding Russia’s full withdrawal from all Ukrainian territory, including Crimea, which Russia annexed illegally in 2014.

The restoration of territorial sovereignty was part of a 10-point peace plan Zelensky presented to G-20 leaders this week. The plan also called for Russia to pay reparations.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov on Thursday accused Kyiv of setting preconditions for talks, which he said proved Ukraine was not interested in negotiating.

But Ryabkov said Russia’s commitment to its unconditional territorial integrity was unshakable, including “within the constituent territories that were admitted to the Russian Federation recently.” This was not the same as setting preconditions for talks, he said.

Ukrainian officials said that Thursday’s continuing bombardment proved the hollowness of claims by Russia that it is willing to negotiate.

In one small sign of compromise, Russia on Thursday agreed to a Turkish-brokered 120-day extension of a grain-export deal, allowing Ukraine to ship grain from three ports, after Moscow previously threatened that it would not extend the deal.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry on Thursday said it was a “technical prolongation” of the deal, with no side objecting.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced that he had secured commitments to continue the agreement, which is regarded as crucial to preventing a global food crisis.

“It has been seen clearly how important and beneficial this agreement is for the food supply and security of the world, with the delivery of more than 11 million tons of grains and foodstuffs to those in need with nearly 500 ships in the last four months,” Erdogan said in a statement. He expressed gratitude to Putin and Zelensky as well as United Nations Secretary General António Guterres.

In the UAE, Russians fleeing Ukraine war seek success in ‘Dubaisk’

During a brutal fusillade Tuesday, Russia launched more than 90 missiles and 11 Iranian drones against Ukraine, according to Ukrainian officials. One missile — now believed to have come from Ukrainian air defenses — landed in eastern Poland, killing two men in the village of Przewodow.

Zelensky insisted Wednesday that the missile that struck Poland was not fired by his military, saying he had “no doubt” about this despite intelligence and initial investigative results announced by Polish President Andrzej Duda and NATO. On Thursday, Duda visited the scene of the incident but indicated that Ukraine was unlikely to be able to participate in the investigation anytime soon.

Zelensky’s position, however, was rebutted by President Biden in the early hours Thursday.

Asked about Zelensky’s claim after disembarking from Marine One shortly upon his return to the White House from the Group of 20 leaders’ summit in Indonesia, Biden said, “That’s not the evidence.”

Barely a half-hour later, at 8 a.m. local time in Ukraine, air raid sirens blared across the country.

And about an hour after that, local authorities reported that Ukraine’s air defenses were shooting down Russian missiles and drones but that some energy and industrial infrastructure targets had been hit.

In Dnipro, a regional capital in central Ukraine, dashboard camera footage showed a giant explosion in the center of a city street as vehicles drove along a main thruway. Zelensky posted the video, which The Washington Post was not immediately able to independently verify.

“Morning. A peaceful city and the desire of people to live a normal life. Go to work, on business. Missile strike!” Zelensky wrote in a comment accompanying the video.

Valentyn Reznichenko, governor of the Dnipropetrovsk region, posted on his Telegram channel that Russian missiles hit two districts of Dnipro, causing a “major fire” and damaging residential buildings. He said that 14 people were hospitalized with injuries, including a 15-year-old girl.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal told an economic conference in Kyiv on Thursday that Russians were “bombing our enterprises in Dnipro,” including the aerospace manufacturer Pivdenmash.

Missile in Poland was accident, NATO says. But spillover fear remains.

Oleksiy Chernyshov, the head of Ukraine’s state energy company, Naftogaz, said in a statement Thursday that Russia had launched a “massive attack” on the company’s gas-production infrastructure. “Currently, several destroyed objects are known. Others have suffered damage of varying degrees,” Chernyshov said.

Other areas of the country also reported destruction and casualties. On the Black Sea coast, authorities reported that three people were injured during attacks in the Odessa region. Military officials said that Russians launched cruise missiles from the Black Sea and from two Su-30 bombers. Six missiles were shot down, they said.

Kharkiv Gov. Oleh Syniehubov said that four missiles hit critical infrastructure in the Izyum region in eastern Ukraine. Eight people were injured, the regional prosecutor‘s office said.

Kyiv’s military administration posted on Telegram that air defenses shot down four missiles and five self-detonating drones but said there had been no strikes on buildings or infrastructure.

However, the governor of the Kyiv region, Oleksiy Kuleba, said that the electricity situation was “difficult” and that scheduled power outages were planned.

But even with the missiles flying, Erdogan announced Thursday that he had secured commitments to continue the interim deal protecting Ukrainian grain exports from Black Sea ports — an agreement regarded as crucial to preventing a global food crisis.

“As a result of the four-way talks hosted by Turkey, the Black Sea Grain Corridor Agreement was extended for 120 days as of 19 November 2022, in line with the decision taken between Turkey, the United Nations, the Russian Federation and Ukraine,” Erdogan said in a statement.

Dixon reported from Riga, Latvia. Zeynep Karatas in Istanbul, and Loveday Morris in Przewodow, Poland, contributed to this report.

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Brazilian politician surrenders after injuring policemen while resisting arrest

RIO DE JANEIRO/BRASILIA, Oct 23 (Reuters) – Brazilian politician Roberto Jefferson surrendered early Sunday evening after wounding two policemen while resisting arrest ordered by the country’s Supreme Court.

President Jair Bolsonaro tried to distance himself from his ally posting a video on social media after his arrest, saying someone that fires at policemen should be treated as a criminal.

Two officers were injured by shrapnel of a grenade thrown by the former congressman. Both went to the hospital and were later released, the statement said.

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In a video posted on social media on Sunday morning, the congressman showed an image of federal police officers arriving at his house, and later admitted in another video that he had aimed at the police car but not at the officers.

Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes had ordered Jefferson to be taken to jail after the former congressman and president of PTB political party released a tape offending justice Carmen Lucia, due to decisions she made related to the presidential elections.

In his decision, Moraes said Jefferson did not comply to conditions to his house arrest.

Jefferson was already under investigation for the alleged involvement in producing fake news, and on Friday released statements offending justice Carmen Lucia, who had decided to transfer part of Bolsonaro’s air time to presidential candidate and former President Luis Inacio Lula da Silva after the leftist complained about offenses in the adversary’s political ads.

Two opposition senators, Randolfe Rodrigues and Eliziane Gama had asked the Supreme Court to punish Jefferson for offending Lucia.

Political tension has risen ahead of the presidential election runoff next Sunday. Bolsonaro had previously tweeted a condemnation of Jefferson’s comments on the Justice and his resistance to prison. Lula said the issue should now be solved by the police and blamed Bolsonaro for increasing political violence.

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Reporting by Rodrigo Viga Gaier and Alexandre Caverni, Writing by Tatiana Bautzer; editing by Diane Craft

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Tourist minibus plunges off cliff in Peru killing 4, injuring 16 others

A tourist bus fell off a cliff in Peru on Sunday night, killing four people and injuring 16, authorities said.

The bus was traveling in the Abra Málaga sector on the Cusco-Quillabamba road network when it plunged 328 feet around 7 p.m. local time, Peru’s Ministry of Foreign Trade and Tourism said.

Three Colombians and one Peruvian were among the dead, according to the ministry. No U.S. citizens were injured in the wreck.

In this photo released by the National Police, a van lays in ruins after it fell off a cliff in an area known as Abra Malaga, as it transported tourists between Machu Picchu and Cuzco, Peru, Aug. 22, 2022.

National Police/AP

People injured in the crash are from Canada, Israel, France, Argentina, Greece, Peru, Spain and the Netherlands, the ministry said, adding that one Canadian is in the intensive care unit.

Those who were injured were transported to two clinics in Cusco, Peru. Peruvian President Pedro Castillo Terrones said they’re monitoring their condition.

The National Police of Peru is investigating what caused the crash, the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Tourism said in a news release.

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Erik ten Hag has risked INJURING his Man United players by making them run 13.8km on a day off

A Los Angeles-based doctor that specializes in sports science says Erik ten Hag has risked injuring his Manchester United players by making them run 13.8km in the heat on their day off.

Sportsmail reported how a furious Ten Hag made his team cover the exact distance which Brentford outran his side by when the Bees defeated United 4-0 in Saturday’s late game – the shock result of the Premier League weekend.

The Dutchman scrapped the planned day off for the Red Devils in order to unleash his wrath on the team but according to Dr Rajpal Brar, he has risked doing more harm than good to his players.

Responding to the reports at first on Twitter, Brar said: ‘If true, I’m assuming the sports science & physio staff intervened. That’s how you get players into the red zone and/or injured.’

The ‘red zone’ is when an athlete reaches 90-100 per cent of their maximum heart rate, meaning they are also at maximum effort and exertion.

And later, speaking to Sportsmail, Dr Brar expanded on his thoughts: ‘In terms of rest/recovery and injury risk – think of your body like a bucket.

‘Activity adds water to the bucket whereas rest & recovery removes it. With the wrong balance of the two, the bucket will overflow (or on the other end, be bone dry which you also don’t want).

Erik ten Hag axed Manchester United’s planned day off after the 4-0 defeat by Brentford

Ten Hag made the United squad run 13.8km – how much Brentford outran them in the defeat

Responding to the reports, Dr Rajpal Brar said that Ten Hag has risked injuring players

Dr Brar said Ten Hag’s punishment could catch up with players in later games 

‘Playing in a high level football match adds significantly to that bucket and adding another day of running on the day after – there’s a reason it was a scheduled rest day – can lead to that overflow and potential injury risk. Maybe not during the session but in following matches. The ‘red zone’ is essentially that state of high fatigue & raised injury risk.

‘Elite footballers’ activity & physical/mental state is closely monitored by the sports science & medical teams for a reason & training programs, lineup decisions, etc are tailored around them.’

Ten Hag arrived early at United’s Carrington training base on Sunday to put the United team through the ringer before leading an inquest into the Brentford result. 

The temperature was 30C in Manchester on Sunday – 86 Fahrenheit. 

But Ten Hag has to find answers to his team’s awful play, and fast. United faces fierce rival Liverpool next on Monday, August 22 at Old Trafford and Jurgen Klopp’s side beat United 5-0 there last season. 

There have been concerns over the standard United has been training at in recent weeks and those worries were compounded by Saturday’s emphatic defeat that puts United last in the Premier League standings.

There are also fears that Cristiano Ronaldo’s attitude is having a negative impact.

Although Ronaldo is said to be training well, he exchanged words with Ten Hag’s No 2 Steve McClaren at the final whistle after refusing to applaud United’s travelling fans at Brentford. There is a feeling that his mood is having a negative effect on the dressing room.

However, United have dismissed suggestions that Ronaldo’s contract could be cancelled, and reiterated that he is staying at the club.

It comes after the season started with a 2-1 loss to Brighton at Old Trafford and Ten Hag is now the first United manager in over a century to lose his first two games.

He was visibly furious with the performance of his team on Saturday night.

‘It’s rubbish, and it’s poor. We need higher standards than that, that’s clear,’ he told BeIN Sports.

‘We have to deliver and we didn’t. We have to change, that’s quite clear.

’35 minutes you concede four goals. It is not possible. The team has to take the responsibility. I feel really sorry for the fans. We let them down.’

 There are concerns of Cristiano Ronaldo’s attitude and its impact in the United dressing room

Ten Hag lost his first two games as United coach and it doesn’t get easier with Liverpool next

Club chiefs have so far failed in their attempts to hand their new coach the players he has asked for during the summer transfer window, with their hunt for Frenkie de Jong still ongoing.

United legend Rio Ferdinand defended Ten Hag on Saturday night but said United’s pursuit of De Jong has bordered on begging.

He said: ‘I don’t feel sorry for the players, I feel sorry for Ten Hag,’ Ferdinand said. ‘He’s coming under false pretenses. He’s coming expected new signings.

‘He’s probably sitting there thinking “I’ve been sold a dummy here. I didn’t know I was coming into this”. Confidence, I know, was going to be low.

‘He knew that but he thought “I’ll be able to rebuild that,” but obviously the players are not at the standard required. Simple as that.’

As for the De Jong pursuit, Ferdinand said: ‘We’re almost wh**ing ourselves out for this player. 

‘For three months in the transfer window, with our cap out begging, “please come to us, please come to us.” 

 United is last in the Premier League standings and is already in crisis after two games

‘They’ve walked around behind him, begging him (de Jong), “please turn round and notice us, please turn round and notice us.” And he’s looking around and saying “not for me.” 

‘And we’re still there; “please give us one chance.” How are we putting ourselves in that position? How are we allowing ourselves to be put in a position like that?

‘Do you think Klopp or Pep or Sir Alex or Jose would be following around a player like this? They wouldn’t be doing that!’



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Taxi Jumps Curb, Critically Injuring 3 People in Manhattan

Three people were in critical condition on Monday afternoon after a taxi jumped the sidewalk in Manhattan’s Flatiron district. The driver hit a cyclist and several pedestrians with his vehicle, the authorities said.

Around 1 p.m., according to the Fire Department, the taxi crashed into a building near 29th Street and Broadway, an area packed with bars, restaurants and hotels. Police officials were investigating the cause of the collision, which they believe for now to be an accident.

As the driver turned left onto Broadway, the police said, his cab hit a cyclist and veered onto the sidewalk. The vehicle then accelerated and pushed two women against a wall.

Mamadou Barry, 40, was among the pedestrians who watched the collision unfold. He said that the cyclist remained conscious, but with his arm twisted in an unnatural way.

Mr. Barry joined more than a dozen other bystanders to move the cab away to free a victim who had been crushed. As pedestrians screamed, Mr. Barry looked away, not wanting to see the extent of the injuries. “It was scary,” he said.

Deputy Chief John Chell of the Police Department said at a news conference that “a remarkable scene took place: About 15 to 20 New Yorkers attempted to pick this cab off these women.”

Mohammad Khan, the owner of a perfume shop in the neighborhood, said he hurried to the site of the crash after hearing a commotion from his store, arriving to find the victims with gory injuries. Bystanders were offering them water and comforting them as they waited for ambulances to arrive, he said.

The Police Department was investigating whether the accident was caused by the driver having experienced a “medical episode,” a spokesman said earlier on Monday.

At least six people were injured and taken to the hospital, including the taxi driver, according to the authorities. Three had life-threatening injuries.

The cab was still on the scene about 3 p.m., near a juice store and a dessert shop. The driver’s door was open, next to a bicycle in the green bike lane.

The crash comes amid a startling rise in traffic deaths during the pandemic in the city and across the country.

In New York City, crashes killed 59 people during the first three months of this year, according to data from Transportation Alternatives, a bicycle and pedestrian advocacy group. It has been the deadliest start to the year since 2014, when then-Mayor Bill de Blasio announced his Vision Zero traffic safety program that aimed to eliminate traffic deaths by 2024.

Car ownership in the city also jumped during the pandemic, as more people avoided public transit. A recent weekend in June had about 60 percent of the subway ridership of a comparable weekend prepandemic, according to data from the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Mayor Eric Adams recently announced a $904 million investment in safer streets over the next five years, money that would help for amenities like more protected bike lanes and pedestrian-only spaces. He has also said police officials will increase enforcement of traffic laws.

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