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Sheffield United 3-3 Blackpool: Match descends into chaos, ending with four red cards and a mass brawl | CNN

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Sheffield United 3-3 Blackpool: Match descends into chaos, ending with four red cards and a mass brawl | CNN



CNN
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The place to begin in a match equivalent to this? The 98th-minute equalizer, or the 4 pink playing cards? The missed penalty or maybe the mass brawl?

There was little time to take a breath at Bramall Lane as Sheffield United and Blackpool drew 3-3 in an exciting English Championship match.

Oliver Norwood scored the stoppage time leveler for United simply when Blackpool thought it had performed sufficient to safe a comeback victory after going 2-0 down within the first half.

After going 3-2 up with targets from Jerry Yates (2) and Kenny Dougall, Blackpool rode its luck with Rhian Brewster lacking a penalty within the 88th minute.

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That got here after the visiting group was diminished to 9 males after the sendings off of Marvin Ekpitete (78th minute) and Dominic Thompson (81st minute).

Issues bought much more frantic after the ultimate whistle when Blackpool’s Shayne Lavery and United goalkeeper Wes Foderingham had been proven pink for an altercation which had each gamers on the bottom. That made it 4 pink playing cards within the remaining 20 minutes with each units of gamers concerned in a chaotic melee at full-time.

“It’s not the scenes you wish to see on the finish of a sport,” former Tottenham defender Michael Dawson mentioned on Sky Sports activities.

Per PA Media, Sheffield United supervisor Paul Heckingbottom mentioned: “Lavery has come and grabbed Wes to maintain him out of the way in which and as Wes has spun, they’ve each grappled one another and simply fallen over.

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“They didn’t appear to assume something had occurred however clearly the referee has seen two lads on the ground and he’s pondering that they’re combating. We’ll have to take a look and see what we do about it.”

“It’s simple saying folks have gotten to maintain their management,” Blackpool supervisor Michael Appelton informed the BBC.

“However when it occurs so shortly and out of the blue in the direction of the top of the sport, I felt I wanted to have my say with the referee.

“I did have my say as a result of I used to be upset. I believed they [the officials] had a poor day.”

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China prices weaken further as economic pressures mount

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China prices weaken further as economic pressures mount

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China’s consumer prices remained in deflation for the fourth straight month and producer prices fell at their fastest pace in nearly two years, piling pressure on policymakers as they try to boost domestic demand and negotiate trade tensions with the US.

The country’s consumer price index fell 0.1 per cent year on year in May, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday. Producer prices, which reflect the cost of goods at the factory gate, dropped 3.3 per cent, the fastest rate of decline since July 2023.

US-China trade tensions have weighed on the economic backdrop in a country already grappling with a prolonged property slowdown. Talks between US and Chinese representatives are expected to take place in London later on Monday, after a telephone call between US President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping last week.

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Inflation data in China has for years been close to deflationary territory, raising concerns over consumer confidence and adding to calls for more stimulus from Beijing.

The People’s Bank of China last month announced cuts to key lending rates as part of a steady easing that has also seen mortgage rates reduced to support the housing sector.

There has also been intense competition in mainland industries especially in the automotive sector, which has seen a wave of recent price cuts amid a battle for market share.

Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics, noted core inflation, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.6 per cent, its highest level in almost a year, but added that “persistent overcapacity will keep China in deflation both this year and next”.

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Newsom Calls Threat to Use Marines 'Deranged'

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Newsom Calls Threat to Use Marines 'Deranged'


National Guard members sent tear gas into a crowd of protesters outside a federal detention center in Los Angeles on Sunday, while President Trump and his aides escalated their threats to use force against demonstrators opposing immigration enforcement. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth posted on X that active-duty Marines stationed at nearby Camp Pendleton were on “high alert” and would be mobilized “if violence continues”—which experts said would violate the law and California Gov. Gavin Newsom called “deranged,” the Washington Post reports. Although there were clashes in spots, police reported most of the city was calm. Developments include:

  • Deployment: US Northern Command said 300 members of the California National Guard ordered in by Trump arrived in the morning, assigned to protect federal property and personnel. They were spotted unloading equipment at a federal building on Wilshire Boulevard and at the Edward R. Roybal Federal Building, per the Post.

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Junk bond sales surge as companies try to beat fresh tariff uncertainty

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Junk bond sales surge as companies try to beat fresh tariff uncertainty

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US companies with risky credit ratings are rushing to sell junk bonds ahead of an expected resurgence of trade tensions in July that could depress demand for corporate debt.

Companies with weaker credit ratings tapped the high-yield bond market for $32bn in May, the most since October, according to data from JPMorgan. Junk bond sales in the first week of June already have surpassed April’s $8.6bn total.

Bankers and investors say they expect a steady flow of new debt sales during the rest of the month and into July while demand remains high and market uncertainty stays relatively low.

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But the expiration of the 90-day pause on Donald Trump’s so-called “liberation day” tariffs early next month could set up another surge in uncertainty, echoing the early April ructions that ground the market for new levered debt deals to a halt.

“You get into these patterns where the market gets into a lull and gets ahead of itself. It feels good now, but it’s setting up for some volatility in July,” said David Forgash, a portfolio manager at Pimco.

The extra costs paid by risky corporate borrowers to lenders compared to US government debt, known as spreads, jumped from 3.5 percentage points on April 1 to 4.61 percentage points on April 7, according to Ice BofA data.

That was the highest level for corporate borrowing costs since May 2023, as investors demanded a higher premium for the added risk they saw following Trump’s April 2 tariff announcement.

As progress appeared to be made in trade negotiations between the US and China, spreads retreated back to the levels experienced in late March. Still, they have not come back to the historically low marks seen in late 2024 and early 2025, when junk bond spreads fell below 3 percentage points.

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One leveraged finance banker noted that debt markets have been able to look past not only Trump’s new tariffs, but the protracted conflicts in Israel and Palestine and between Russia and Ukraine when deciding whether and how much to invest.

But higher than expected tariffs or a new geopolitical conflict involving a world power “could throw a spanner in the works”, the banker said.

“I don’t think we’re going to go back to April where the market is grinding to a halt, but it’s certainly going to cause spreads to be wider,” the banker said.

There is also strong demand for highly rated corporate credit. Bank of America strategists say they expect investment-grade bond sales to be between $110bn and $120bn in June, which would be the most for the calendar month since 2021.

Kyle Stegemeyer, head of investment grade debt capital markets and syndicate at US Bancorp, said he expected companies to continue to take advantage of lulls in volatility before potential surges due to tariffs and tax bill negotiations.

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“I think most issuers are coming to the conclusion that if there’s an open window and the backdrop’s attractive, why wait it out until closer to maturity?”

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