Champions League: Tyler Adams’ past purpose of USMNT stuns Atletico Madrid and sends RB Leipzig to the semi-finals

Tyler Adams does it!! The American puts Leipzig 2-1 with a few minutes to the end! pic.twitter.com/HShBjxNXGz

Arguably the ultimate goal ever scored through an American at the top point of club football. The only other player from the U.S. men’s national team to succeed in the semi-finals is four-time World Cup veteran DaMarcus Beasley, Beasley, who retired last year. Beasley played for Dutch club PSV opposed to AC Milan in 2003.

Surprisingly, Atlético Diego Simeone coach opted for an initial line-up that did not come with 20-year-old Joao Felix, electrifying. The Portuguese striker missed a lot, as Leipzig took a deserved lead thanks to a very good shot by Dani Olmo five minutes after the start of the middle of the moment:

RB Leipzig is on set! Dani Olmo is coming home for the inauguration! pic.twitter.com/GF2zfD7TZ9

Simeone pulled Felix off the bench shortly after the inaugural game. The move was temporarily worth it when the young star kicked a penalty that intensified to convert from the spot:

Joel Felix levels! The Portuguese burys the penalty to take Atletico Madrid even to Lisbon. pic.twitter.com/6GVg3PTeGM

The defeat is a blow for Atletico, which Simeone has controlled since 2011 and won the Champions League in 2014 and 2016, losing twice to Crosstown’s most decorated rival, Real Madrid.

But it is a giant step for Leipzig, who is only making his appearance in the Champions League this season cursed by the coronavirus, which delayed the completion of the event’s affairs over five months and moved it to an impartial place in the Portuguese capital.

After passing through Germany’s lower divisions, Leipzig did not graduate from the Bundesliga until 2016. They are now among the 4 European finalists. And that’s why Julian Nagelsmann’s team will have to thank Tyler Adams’ past heroism.

Nine-year-old Omar Seoudi was dreaming at a Halifax Walmart last week when something strange happened: Omar and his mother were waiting near the money sign at the Mumford Road location while his father was returning to pick up anything else. “A guy came out of nowhere and gave him a bunch of socks and said, ‘Is this pile of socks yours?'” Omar told CBC News. “And while the boy was giving her socks, a woman came and then she looked at me for about 3 moments, then she just took my mom’s purse.” When his circle of relatives emigrated to Canada last year, he was told that Canada was a safe country, so it did not happen to him that he was witnessing a robbery. “I feel pretty guilty because I may have literally avoided the problem,” he said. “I literally would have bought my mom’s purse, so in my opinion it’s my fault because I didn’t do anything when I saw it stolen.” When his mother found out what happened, he ran after the thieves, but they escaped. The family circle regrouped, told the store what happened and called the police. “I’m going to protect you” His parents told him it wasn’t his fault and they tried to convince him. But that night, he jumped up and talked in his sleep. His father, Mostafa, said the next day they discovered that Omar was watching his parents and everyone with suspicion. “Sometimes I came to my right, seldom to my left. I ask him, ‘Why are you doing this?’ said Mostafa. He said, “This time I will protect you. I know other people are very bad and they’re going to rob you, so I’ll protect you. I learned from my mistakes. “His parents told him that he had done nothing wrong; Omar not only communicated in his sleep, he also spoke to the police. You need to be a scientist when you grow up and make sense of the details. He gave the police a clear description of the woman who looked him in the eye before stealing from his mom. “I saw her with freckles on her face and she had short, blond hair like here,” she says, pointing her neck. Black mask; the uncommon but intelligent thing is that he had removed the mask when he stole it.” The family circle said they lost keys, credit cards and money. But the worst thing they lost was their son’s sense of security. Omar, meanwhile, watched videos on how to prevent thieves. He said they wouldn’t be surprised he was dreaming for a moment. Halifax police are investigating.

One by one, the Maple Leafs sat in front of their laptops, iPads and smartphones to deal with music, remotely via videoconferences, of course, after another season that began with big dreams and ended with a dull noise. There were no excuses, but the feeling that Toronto stays on the track with a young, talented core that only scratches the surface. There is more ownership of well-paid stars in their twies when things go wrong, a greater understanding of what it takes to win, greater mutual engagement and expansion at all levels, the Leafs insisted.

Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai said Thursday that he was beaten after the top prominent user was arrested under a new national security law and suggested patience in a “long-term struggle” for democracy. Lai, a staunch democratic movement in the city, was arrested Monday on suspicion of collusion with foreign forces when police raided the offices of his apple daily tabloid. In a video appearance #LiveChatWithJimmy on Twitter, Lai thanked his people and said his movements showed that the police raid was a “violation of the trust of the other People of Hong Kong” in prolonged freedoms, which he equated with oxygen.

A former licensed masseur convicted of sexually assaulting several patients in Vancouver agreed not to practice massage treatment for 30 years, according to the regulatory school, ending his field career. Bodhi Jones, 39, pleaded guilty to three types of offenders. sexual assault in 2018 after several clients accused him of abuse. Sentenced to 18 months of space arrest, 3 years of probation and life imprisonment in the sex offender registry, Jones resigned as a masseur after police began investigating him in 2017 and has not been re-registered since. However, he reached an agreement with the College of Mass Therapists of B.C. this month to resolve your separate investigation into your conduct. “While Mr. Jones requested the cancellation of his registration on February 21, 2017 Array … the Investigative Committee considered it vital to its public coverage mandate that there be a formal cancellation of its CMTBC registration through a disciplinary order,” it reads in a notice. In a consent order, Jones agreed that he cannot re-apply as a therapist until 2050. By then, I’d be 69 years old and un certified. The order said Jones assaulted women between October 1, 2016 and January 22, 2017, touching them with “inappropriate and sexually” massages without their consent. Jones was rated first with 4 counts of sexual assault. The fourth rate was suspended on 10 April 2019. The former therapist was barred from entering his former painting site, Qi Integrated Health, as a component of his 2019 ruling. Jones also painted as a singer-songwriter. His 2014 album, Bones, was nominated for a Juno Award for Best Recording Package.

Alberta has reported a higher number of cases of COVID-19 by population for much of the pandemic compared to the rest of Canada. They’re currently neck and neck with Quebec’s and remain stubbornly high compared to neighbouring provinces, even though they never reached the levels laid out in the government’s worst-case scenarios and are well below the springtime peak. Currently, Alberta — with a population of about 4.4 million — has more active cases than Ontario, with a population of 14.6 million.Why?Is there something in Alberta’s culture or politics that could be driving the higher numbers? Is there some demographic clue that explains it all? Is it policy? A few different factors might be behind it.The epidemiologyAccording to data reported on Aug. 12, Alberta had nearly 24 active cases per 100,000 residents, compared to 21 for Quebec and six for Ontario — two provinces that have often led the country in total cases — and 13 next door in Saskatchewan. This is still a big improvement from May, when Alberta peaked at just over 70 active cases per 100,000, but it’s well above the low of eight per 100,000 in June. Quebec, by comparison, peaked at just over 350. Craig Jenne, an infectious disease expert at the University of Calgary, says age is likely one of the reasons Alberta is seeing more cases since the province eased restrictions. “We in general have a lower average age here, which means there are more people, for example, working jobs that may expose them,” he said.”But also more people that are likely going out to restaurants and pubs and bars than other provinces.”Statistics Canada estimates the median age in Alberta in 2019 is 37.1 — the lowest of the provinces, but higher than Nunavut and the Northwest Territories. It’s below the national median of 40.8 and well below some of the provinces with the oldest populations, like Newfoundland and Labrador at 47.1.Outbreaks have been attributed to bars and restaurants in Alberta, including 58 cases linked to the Fire N Ice Lounge in Calgary, 23 to the Cactus Club on Stephen Avenue in Calgary, as well as 19 to Greta Bar and 12 to The Pint, both in Edmonton.Jenne also notes that there appears to be a shift in attitudes across North America and Europe. “We’re seeing that shift strongly as cases move from older to younger people — this attitude that they are protected, or that at least it’s not a dangerous infection,” he said.  “And as a result, people are willing to take more risk, and that does lead to increased infections.”Alberta’s higher numbers can’t simply be brushed off by attributing them to higher per capita testing for COVID-19 than every other province except Ontario.Jenne points to the hospitalization rates in Alberta, which are currently second only to Quebec, and also a high rate of positive results in relation to tests administered.Alberta was ahead of most of Canada in reopening its economy starting in May, which could also be a factor, Jenne said. He predicted other jurisdictions could see their numbers rise in the coming weeks.”Now, the good news is it seems to be stabilizing, and we can hold at this level fairly safely,” said Jenne. The Albertan attitudeAlberta is often viewed, inside and outside the province, as some sort of cohesive political monolith focused on libertarian values. Like most stereotypes, that one’s not quite up to snuff. “So to say, well, Alberta numbers are going up because there’s something sort of attitudinally odd about Alberta, that doesn’t really explain kind of the regional differences we’re seeing now,” said Janet Brown, an Alberta-based pollster who frequently mines the views of the province’s residents. “If it was, if it was all about these libertarians who were just too damn stubborn to wear masks, then … we should have seen outbreaks in rural Alberta a long time ago.”Instead, Brown notes the pandemic was largely a story of Calgary and area until recently. The biggest outbreaks over the course of the pandemic have been among largely immigrant communities that work in meat plants just south of Calgary.Some of Brown’s past polling, commissioned by the CBC, shows Albertans are politically drawn to the middle of the road rather than the left and right fringes. Brown says the province is far more diverse in its views than most of the rest of Canada realizes and that makes it difficult to isolate easy answers regarding some social driver of the higher COVID-19 numbers. But there are ideological factors at play for how Albertans have responded to the pandemic. Brown says the most distinct split in attitudes regarding COVID-19 she found in recent polling for CBC News was between left and right — with those on the right who support the governing United Conservative Party more concerned about the economy and opening it up sooner, and those on the left more concerned about health and a slower reopening. There’s also the at times confounding interplay of two core Alberta values. “One of the values is just that sense of individuality, that sense that I don’t want government telling me what to do,” says Brown.”But another core value is a sense of community and coming together. Alberta can be sort of neighbourly like no other jurisdiction. So there’s a funny push-pull there.”For Brown, it’s a sign that despite the potential pushback against some policies, when it comes down to it, Albertans are prepared to clamp down and find solutions. Don’t panicJenne says Alberta has been pretty lucky in terms of the timing of its infections and when most big policy decisions had to be made. School was out, winter was easing its grip and there were lessons to learn from other jurisdictions. At least two of those things will change in the coming months. “We have to remember that the overall spike we saw in April started with one individual in the province,” he said. “So the fact that there’s community level transmission is still a risk, and we don’t exactly know — we’ve got good models and a good idea and we’re prepared for it — but we don’t know exactly what’s gonna happen when school is open.”Jenne warns that it’s up to individuals to remain vigilant and look out for one another or the province might have to reapply some of the restrictions that have fallen away. For Brown, the timing of a new round of anxiety over the numbers could actually prove useful.”Maybe the fact that Albertans are getting agitated, that our numbers are going up, maybe that’s the best thing that can happen,” Brown said, “because we’re going to go back to school with a level of vigilance that maybe people in Ontario aren’t going to go back to school with.”

REGINA – Regina is scheduled to pass a sentence to hear today a request from the Saskatchewan government to remove a young man’s teepee from the legislative chamber lawn. A 24-year-old Aboriginal man traveled more than six hundred kilometres to Regina from a network in northern Saskatchewan to call for a law dealing with high suicide rates in the area. According to court documents filed throughout the province, the guy does not have permission and that in the park is forbidden to camp at night and make campfires. and Regina’s police won’t enforce them without a warrant. moderate limits on the use of public space. “This is the moment in two years when the government has gone to court to get Aboriginal protesters and American Indians out of this grass segment. In 2018, an organization established what it called Justice for our camp for children stolen after the top: Profile of the deaths of young Aboriginal Colten Boushie in Saskatchewan and Tina Fontaine in Manitoba were acquitted of the high-profile deaths of young Aboriginal Colten Boushie in Saskatchewan and Tina Fontaine in Manitoba, where protesters spent months drawing attention to racial injustice and number of young Aboriginal people in care , until a sentence issued sentence that ordered the camp to be disguised. This report from The Canadian Press was first published on August 13, 2020 The Canadian Press

The owner of an independent movie theatre in Grand Falls-Windsor says his business is being pushed to the brink of closure, as he tries to operate under COVID-19 restrictions that he feels are harsher than those for bars and restaurants.While restaurants and lounges are permitted to operate at 50 per cent capacity, cinemas are capped at 50 people no matter the size of the space. Shawn Feener, who owns and operates the Classic Theater, says that limit isn’t sustainable to his bottom line, despite being open and showing old blockbusters and the scattered new release.”It’s not very hard to do the math,” he said. “I’m making $250 on the door, I’m paying royalties to the movie companies — even though the movies are 30-plus years old, I’ve still gotta pay a royalty. So, I mean, I’m not making nothing on the door.”Feener said he’s taken extensive safety measures, including signs and directions for foot traffic, hand sanitizer and physical distancing, but hasn’t been able to convince the provincial government to loosen its rules.”Here at the Classic Theater, we took every measure right to the limit,” he said.He put together a package for the Department of Health and Community Services — that included a video he made on safety measures for his customers — to ask for an exemption. He said he now wants government officials to visit his business, and look at his precautions.”Let’s start categorizing each individual business, let’s start looking at the floor plans,” he said. “Because there’s not two corner stores, there’s not two bars, there’s not two cinemas that got the same floor plan.” ‘It’s so frustrating’Feener said the restriction particularly stings, because bars and restaurants are operating with more people in much smaller spaces.”It’s so frustrating, you know, that we’ve done everything. Like the government asked us to close our business because of COVID, and we agreed wholeheartedly,” he said. “We do all of this and then the government comes out again and says ‘OK, now we got to learn to live with COVID.’ Ok, we’re living with COVID, we’re doing everything we could possibly do.”The area’s MHA, Chris Tibbs, has taken up Feener’s cause — and is calling on the provincial government to reverse its decision. He said the business is a victim of a double standard.”How you can jam… one hundred people into something half the size of this movie theatre and maintain safety and physical distancing when we [can’t] do it right here is beyond me,” he said. “I couldn’t be happier for the bars and restaurants, I want to make that quite clear, but we want the same opportunity.” In Wednesday’s media briefing, Newfoundland and Labrador’s Chief Medical Officer of Health said the interactions that take place inside movie theatres are different — and that’s why the rules are different.”People who are watching a movie tend to go in together, they spend a period of time together in the same enclosed space,” said Dr. Janice Fitzgerald. “That’s a little bit different than people who are going to a restaurant who may overlap and may not spend a lot of time with each other.””There’s a couple of things to keep in mind: People, space, time, place, right?”However, Fitzgerald also said the province is currently reviewing those restrictions, and the general restriction against gatherings above 50 people.”Certainly these are questions that we are looking at,” she said.Feener wants the provincial government to expand his capacity to more than 80 people — 40 per cent of his previous allowance. He said that amount would be safe and economically feasible.He also invited Dr. Fitzgerald and Health Minister John Haggie to come to his business to see his measures firsthand.Nova Scotia currently allows its movie theatres to operate at 50 per cent occupancy with a cap at 200 people, while Ontario has limited the number of people to 50 inside the entire movie theatre building — not just a single auditorium — prompting Cineplex to ask that province’s government to loosen its regulations.Read more articles from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

Seismological knowledge recommends that six explosions preceded the Beirut port explosion, the most recent being the burning of fireworks that allegedly activated a warehouse full of ammonium nitrate, an Israeli analyst said Thursday. The six explosions occurred 11 seconds apart from the August 4 incident, and the biggest explosion followed the last four3 seconds, Boaz Hayoun of the Israeli Tamar organization told Reuters Boaz Hayoun. Hayoun, a former army engineering officer whose existing functions include overseeing the protection criteria for the use of explosives in Israel, said his research was based on knowledge of seismological sensors stationed in the area.

During Wednesday’s standing committee on Finance (FINA) on the WE Charity case and the now-cancelled student service scholarship program, conservative mp and FINA vice president Pierre Poilievre brought a movement to suspend Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s salary “until he returns to paintings and answers questions in Parliament “because it has taken about 20 days off in six weeks. Arrangement according to Poilievre. The movement declared inadmissible.

The NSA and FBI said the Russian Higher Intelligence Directorate, known as GRU, used a hacking tool code called “Drovorub” to penetrate Linux-based computers. Linux is an operational formula used in the infrastructure of PC servers.

The presumed Democratic vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris said the United States is now surprised.

Quebec bloc leader Yves-Fran’ois Blanchet has threatened to overthrow the liberal government for its handling of the WE controversy if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, its staff leader Katie Telford and finance minister do not resign. The Bloc cannot force an election without the participation of other opposition parties.

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