Tag: villa

  • Manchester United keep WSL title bid on track with late win at Aston Villa

    Manchester United keep WSL title bid on track with late win at Aston Villa

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    In the best traditions of Fergie-time, substitute Millie Turner headed home the latest possible winning goal to help Manchester United stretch their lead at the top of the Women’s Super League to six points.

    The centre-back converted Katie Zelem’s much-disputed free-kick three minutes into added time to keep United’s dreams of a league and FA Cup double alive.

    Marc Skinner had reckoned it was good to play ahead of title rivals – on the proviso United won. With Manchester City playing Leicester on Sunday and the Champions League semi-finalists, Chelsea and Arsenal, not in WSL action this weekend, this was United’s opportunity to put down their marker.

    They may have played one more game than City – and three more than Chelsea, whom they lead by seven points – but the nature of this United comeback could yet power them to their first top-flight title.

    Rachel Daly twice gave Villa the lead with superb finishes in the first half, against the meanest defence in the division, yet it was the shot she crashed against the crossbar at 2-1 early in the second half that will stick in the England player’s craw.

    Skinner, the United manager, admitted Villa were the better side, especially in the first half, but invoked the club’s traditions under Sir Alex Ferguson in being able to win right at the death.

    “It reinforces that we can do that,” he said. “It reinforces that the great Manchester United men’s teams never gave up until way into … well, it’s called ‘Fergie time’ for a reason, right? For me it shows much more about our mentality and it’s a massive sign of what we can achieve.”

    Villa dominated United, especially with crosses into the box in the first half, with Lucy Staniforth particularly productive. Up against her former club, the midfielder’s corner invited Daly to time her run superbly and flash her header into the far corner. It was an outstanding, old-fashioned type of centre-forward’s goal.

    Leah Galton equalised after Ona Batlle accelerated down the right flank to deliver such a fine low cross that the winger did not have to break stride to sidefoot in her ninth goal of the season.

    United’s kept trying to play out from the back but Villa never gave them time, and Skinner admitted they should have played over the press more. “They were all over us, first half,” he said.

    Rachel Daly scores Aston Villa’s second goal.
    Rachel Daly scores Aston Villa’s second goal. Photograph: Clive Mason/Getty Images

    This was a cracking game, the tempo unrelenting. Anna Patten, the Villa centre-back, headed another Staniforth corner against the crossbar and United looked set to lose for only a second time in 19 games.

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    Yet at the other end, Hannah Hampton made a great reaction save from Galton and, just before half-time, Hayley Ladd was unfortunate to have a goal chalked off after Hampton, running into Galton, was adjudged to have been fouled.

    By that stage Daly had moved level top of the WSL scorers with Bunny Shaw on 18. Maz Pacheco crossed low from the left and Daly was allowed enough time to sidefoot an expert low shot into the far corner with her left foot.

    She so nearly completed her hat-trick on the hour. After a period of sustained United pressure, Villa counterattacked in devastating fashion. Nobbs played a reverse pass for Kenza Dali to cross for Daly to shoot against the bar.

    How United made them pay. Within two minutes, Hannah Blundell crossed from the left wing and Nikita Parris, left unmarked, headed home the equaliser. With Russo heading over and United using all five substitutes, it seemed like their pressure was not going to pay. But then up stepped Turner.

    It was a debatable decision for Maz Pacheco’s foul on Vilde Boe Risa. “It’s a tough one to take,” Villa manager, Carla Ward, said. “The lineswoman’s a yard away and there’s 20 seconds left and she says it’s no foul. The ref’s 30 yards away and says it’s a foul. We’ve had some big calls go against us. Something’s got to change. But my players have been absolutely outstanding.”

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    #Manchester #United #WSL #title #bid #track #late #win #Aston #Villa
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Tyrone Mings keeps Aston Villa on track for Europe with Fulham winner

    Tyrone Mings keeps Aston Villa on track for Europe with Fulham winner

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    Seconds after the final whistle Unai Emery marched down the touchline with the demeanour of an office worker clocking off for the day, high‑fived a handful of young, ecstatic Aston Villa supporters and then disappeared down the tunnel. His work at Villa, who extended their unbeaten run to 10 games with victory against Fulham, is akin to something of a magic act.

    Since Emery’s first Villa game in November no Premier League team have picked up more wins and only Arsenal, the Premier League leaders, have registered more points. A spectacular finish to a wonderfully lopsided season is in store.

    Emi Martínez threw his gloves into the crowd as the Holte End crooned to the beat of Jeff Beck.

    Quite where Villa’s journey goes from here with five games to play remains to be seen but their unexpected and extraordinary gallop towards achieving a top‑six finish continues to gather pace. For the first time since 1998 Villa, who now occupy fifth, have won five successive league games at home. Fulham’s season, meanwhile, appears to be petering out after so much early promise. Next up? The visit of the champions Manchester City. And then a trip to Anfield.

    The last time these teams met, in October, Villa succumbed to a 3-0 defeat in what proved to be Steven Gerrard’s final game in charge. Tyrone Mings, who grabbed the winner here with a clever backward header from a corner, scored an own goal that night. Villa were woeful and supporters made their anger plain after a loss that left them outside the relegation zone only on goals scored.

    Six months on the mood around the club could scarcely be more different. Emery has given Villa’s players a shot in the arm and while his methods have hardly been radical he has the fanbase dreaming of European nights for the first time in 13 years. “We have to be ambitious, realistic and play under pressure,” Emery said afterwards. “I like playing under pressure. If we are playing under pressure, we have something to do. We are candidates. Our commencing matches will be key to get the European positions. Our dreams, they are here.”

    Fulham gave Villa an early fright in this contest when Andreas Pereira’s acrobatic effort from Harrison Reed’s cross rattled the side netting inside 21 seconds but the hosts slowly asserted their authority. Ashley Young saw an effort from the edge of the box diverted wide by Reed and Ollie Watkins then led Tosin Adarabioyo into conceding another corner. Fulham dealt with the first set piece but not the second. Mings beat his marker, Tim Ream, to the punch and the Villa centre-back’s back header from John McGinn’s inswinging corner looped in at the far post.

    Eight of Villa’s starting lineup here also began that miserable autumn night at Craven Cottage, though this team are almost unrecognisable. Fulham, by contrast, had six survivors from that October contest though Willian, who started the reverse fixture, was injured in the warmup at Villa Park and replaced by Manor Solomon. Harry Wilson, who scored in Fulham’s recent wins against Everton and Leeds, was forced off after 17 minutes and replaced by Bobby Decordova-Reid. Perhaps those changes disrupted Fulham, who struggled to test the returning Martínez.

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    Fulham manager Marco Silva (left) walks off the pitch after losing at Aston Villa
    Marco Silva (left) ponders his side’s defeat at Aston Villa. Photograph: Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

    Marco Silva, hands clasped behind his back and alone with his thoughts, pondered how his toothless Fulham side could find a way back into the game. They offered little in attack without Aleksandar Mitrovic, who still has three games of an eight-match suspension to serve. Silva had seen enough midway through the second half and made a triple substitution, with Carlos Vinícius replacing Pereira, who operated up front alongside Daniel James. The injuries to Willian and Wilson did not help but Silva was reluctant to make excuses. “If you compare with the first game against Villa, when we played at the Cottage [in October], our frontline was completely different and I believe that made a huge impact in our threat that we didn’t show tonight in our attacking line,” the Fulham manager said.

    Jacob Ramsey released Watkins through on the Fulham goal but Antonee Robinson did enough to kill Villa’s attack, allowing his goalkeeper, Bernd Leno, to claim the ball.

    At the other end the 37-year-old Young, who departed to a standing ovation, cut out a dangerous cross just before it could reach the lurking James at the back post. If, and it is a big if, this in-form Villa side can beat Manchester United at Old Trafford on Sunday, they could yet muscle in on the conversation for the Champions League places. Gerrard’s largely joyless reign feels a lifetime ago.

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    #Tyrone #Mings #Aston #Villa #track #Europe #Fulham #winner
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • ‘There’s a Villa in France for the Person Who Can Sue on Remdesivir’

    ‘There’s a Villa in France for the Person Who Can Sue on Remdesivir’

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    mag mahr lettergeorgia lead

    ‘The epitome of David versus Goliath’

    Lawyers at the conference were worried about the next public health crisis as well — but for altogether different reasons. Warner Mendenhall, whose firm was one of the conference organizers, is worried when another disease hits, the government will try to bring Covid-era restrictions back.

    “We’re all very concerned about what the next thing is,” he told me during a break between panels. “We have to get back to where we trust people to do the right thing for themselves and their families… The government needs to be in an advisory capacity, not a mandatory capacity.”

    The cases discussed at the conference were broken up by genre: employer and education mandates, hospital negligence, civil rights, fraud, medical license and board certification, vaccine injury, and censorship. In the employer mandates panel, New York lawyers Steven Warshawsky and James Mermigis, who’s been called the “Anti-Shutdown Lawyer” in local media for his fight against the state and city’s lockdowns, talked about representing businesses and individuals challenging Covid vaccine mandates and lockdown orders, offering advice on which courts might be more friendly to their cases than others. On a panel about civil rights cases, attorney Dana Wefer of New Jersey spoke about her cases against testing mandates and representing a group of nurses required to get a Covid booster who refused.

    Mendenhall is bullish about the opportunity — and the money to be made — for attorneys getting into this area of law. He says a medical malpractice suit involving Covid treatment, which he admits attorneys are still “figuring out,” could bring in hundreds of thousands of dollars in attorney fees.

    “We believe there’s a villa in France for the person who can figure out how to sue on remdesivir,” said John Pfleiderer, a lawyer at Mendenhall’s firm, during the hospital negligence panel. He was referring to the Covid treatment, approved by the FDA for Covid and recommended by NIH as a treatment option, that some doctors and lawyers at the conference said is harming patients.

    Several lawsuits have already been filed alleging remdesivir has been linked with patient injury or death, though none have won yet, Mendenhall said. He said lawyers are working on bringing a mass tort claim.

    The broad bucket of Covid-related tort cases that lawyers here and elsewhere in the country are pursuing are “hard cases to bring,” says Wendy Parmet, the faculty co-director at the Center for Health Policy and Law at Northeastern University. They “may succeed in some situations,” Parmet said. “And they are more likely to attract lawyers, because there’s money to be had.” Many lawyers can easily recall the late 1990s, the heyday of tobacco lawsuits, when massive settlements made lawyers millions of dollars in fees.

    There are several legal defenses that make these cases challenging, Parmet said, including immunity for Covid medical countermeasures granted by the PREP Act, federal qualified immunity that protects public health officials charged with violations of federal law and state sovereign immunity doctrines, which make it hard to sue state officials for discretionary good-faith actions.

    But even if most don’t succeed, they will have an impact. “It creates some second thoughts” among those getting sued, Parmet said. “Combined with this political climate that in much of the country is so hostile to health interventions, the fear is that health officials will be wary of doing things that may be necessary to protect the public health.”

    On my way out of the conference on Saturday, I bumped into an attorney outside the main conference room who was visiting from Florida and requested not to use his name to protect his family’s privacy. He said he’d just quit his job at a consulting firm after getting into a fight with his employer over not getting vaccinated on religious grounds. He felt like he’d been sidelined and retaliated against professionally after that and quit his job on St. Patricks’ Day.

    Now he’s planning to set out as a solo practitioner and is interested in “doing everything I can to protect people” from government mandates. Sure, he said, there’s money to be made in this business, but for him, “it’s not about the financial remuneration. I don’t think that’s the real reason people are here.”

    Indeed, not all the attorneys who spoke said they were succeeding in their fights. Some cautioned that the medical malpractice cases, while potentially lucrative, were extremely challenging to win. Others said they were doing it for free, driven by the deep-seated belief that they are on the right side of history against a government that has violated millions of Americans’ rights.

    “My case against the governor is the epitome of David versus Goliath,” said Bobbie Anne Flower Cox, who challenged New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s quarantine regulations. A state supreme court sided with Cox’s clients; Hochul, a Democrat, is appealing the ruling. “If I can do it and win, you can do it and win.”

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    #Villa #France #Person #Sue #Remdesivir
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Dubai opens multi-use child care villa for underprivileged children

    Dubai opens multi-use child care villa for underprivileged children

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    Abu Dhabi: A new multi-purpose childcare villa was opened by the Dubai Foundation for Women and Children (DFWAC) to create a safe and secure environment for underprivileged children, the Dubai Media Office (DMO) reported.

    The villa, which can accommodate up to 14 children, provides full access to the care, support, and resources needed to foster their growth and development. Male children aged between 3 and 11 and female children aged 13 years old are living in the facility.

    It also offers a full range of services, including residential, psychological, social, legal, health, and educational support. Moreover, the villa also hosts various activities, entertainment programs, and initiatives to empower children.

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    #Dubai #opens #multiuse #child #care #villa #underprivileged #children

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Virat Kohli buys new Villa; here’s full list of his properties

    Virat Kohli buys new Villa; here’s full list of his properties

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    Mumbai: Indian cricketer Virat Kohli is known for his style. Whether it is his stylish shots with the bat, stylish looks or stylish lifestyle, the cricketer is considered as the most stylish cricketer in the world. He is even featured in various stylish and luxurious commercial advertisements. As you might be aware that King Kohli is earning a lot of money from various franchises, BCCI and brand endorsements, here in this write-up we will give a sneak peek of his luxurious properties.

    2,000sq ft Villa in Alibaug

    Recently, Virat Kohli added another address to reach out to by purchasing a new villa. According to reports, he bought a 2,000 sq ft villa in Avas Living – a luxury bungalow project in Awas Village, Alibaug. Awas is known for its natural beauty and is one of the preferred locations among prominent personalities. This is Virat and his wife Anushka’s second property in Alibaug.

    Reportedly, Virat Kohli shelled out Rs 6 crore to become the proud owner of this luxurious villa. It offers a 400 sq ft swimming pool too. It is also said that the Avas Living project is designed by Sussanne Khan and Virat is their wellness ambassador.

    Here’s Virat Kohli and Anushka Sharma’s property portfolio.

    Virat and Anushka, who are supremely successful in their respective professions, have built a strong property portfolio which includes, an apartment in Mumbai, a bungalow in Delhi and a farmhouse in Alibaug

    Luxurious Home In Mumbai

    Virat Kohli is a proud owner of a luxurious home on the 35th floor in Tower C of the three-tower complex named Omkar in Mumbai’s Worli. King Kholi lives with his wife Anushka Sharma here. This Worli home of the cricketer costs approx Rs 34  crore. According to various reports, the sea-facing house comes with many amenities.

    Farmhouse in Alibaug

    Alibaugh is where most of the B-town celebrities own a farmhouse or a holiday home. The place is known for its greenery and is a less polluted area. Virat Kohli has also bought the property for Rs 20 crore in Alibaug. He and his wife own a lavish farmhouse in the area.

    Bungalow In Gurugram

    The cricketer also owns a bungalow near the national capital. Reportedly, it is the best among all his homes in terms of interior design. It is spread across 10,000 sq ft. The bungalow is worth crores and it is also reported that family members of the cricketer and his wife often visit the place to spend some quality time together.  

    Virat

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    #Virat #Kohli #buys #Villa #heres #full #list #properties

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Indian family buys most expensive Dubai villa for Rs 203 cr

    Indian family buys most expensive Dubai villa for Rs 203 cr

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    Dubai is a real estate paradise with its world-famous infrastructure and architecture. As there is a high demand for luxury properties in Dubai. Recently, an Indian investor who regularly invests in the Dubai property market purchased the most expensive eight-bedroom villa on ‘Lanai Island’ within the Tilal Al Ghaf master-development.

    The value of the villa is Dirhams 90.5 million (Rs 2,03,32,44,495), Metropolitan Premium Properties has disclosed the deal.

    The 30,200-square-foot luxury villa was designed by Kelly Hoppen Interior Designing Award-winning architect firm SAOTA. This three-storied villa has many features. 

    Other facilities include three swimming pools, a gym, reception, 24/7 security, separate guest house. It is also built with eight spacious bedrooms.

    Lanai Island where Tilal Al Ghaf is located, is a private island. It has 13 luxury buildings. Of these, 9 are coastal buildings and 4 are edge mansions. The locals say that this is the heaven of ghosts.

    Tilal Al Ghaf is developed by Majid Al Futtaim in Dubai. It has an area of ​​3.50 lakh square meters along with schools, hospitals, restaurants and other residential facilities.

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    #Indian #family #buys #expensive #Dubai #villa

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )