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Alcaraz confidence dented by loss in first Tour match as number one

CARLOS Alcaraz’s first ATP Tour event as world number one ended in a 7-5 6-3 defeat to David Goffin at the Astana Open on Tuesday and the Spaniard said he would have to learn how to play against opponents who dial up the pressure and aggression.

Mr. Alcaraz, the youngest player to top the men’s world rankings, was broken five times by lucky loser Mr. Goffin.

“He played better than me, really, really aggressive,” said 19-year-old Mr. Alcaraz, who won his first Grand Slam title at the US Open last month.

“I couldn’t handle that pressure that he was pushing on me and of course, it’s something that I have to learn and take lessons from this match.

“Coming back to competition is never easy. He played two matches here on this court. It’s not easy to get used to, it’s really, really slow. It was really tough on me, for my confidence,” Mr. Alcaraz added.

Mr. Alcaraz, who has qualified for the season-ending ATP Finals, is next scheduled to compete at the ATP 500 event in Basel later this month.

Mr. Goffin said he had been confident of pulling off an upset despite not playing well in his last few tournaments.

“When you play against the world number one on a big stage, big crowd, the fire inside gives you so much power to play your best tennis because you don’t have any choice,” he said. “You have to fight and give your best and that was the case today.” — Reuters

Miado targets fourth straight win against dangerous Williams

JEREMY “The Jaguar” Miado looks to continue his winning ways in his return to the ONE Championship Circle, but it won’t come easy.

Standing in his way is the dangerous multi-sport knockout artist “Mini-T” Danial Williams in a three-round strawweight bout at ONE Fight Night 3 set on 22 October from the Singapore Indoor Stadium.

The fight has been brewing for months after Mr. Williams challenged the Marrok Force MMA standout in one of his post-fight press interviews, and now he’ll get his wish.

“Guys like Jeremy Miado excite me,” Mr. Williams said in an earlier interview.

“I just like his style. I’m here to put on a show for the fans. The fans want to see action. I’m here to put on a show for the fans, and Mr. Miado is going to be the guy who’s going to give it to me.”

Mr. Miado has won three straight bouts, including back to back impressive finishes over Miao Li Tao where he pulverized the Chinese man with a flying knee in their first meeting, and followed it up with a standing KO win in their second faceoff.

His last match left a lot to be desired as it ended with an injury to compatriot Lito Adiwang, but a win is still a win for Mr. Miado and another one here could see him move back to the strawweight rankings.

The same rankings is where Mr. Williams wants to be as he’s also on a three-fight winning streak in mixed martial arts. His latest outing was an impressive one, flattening Zelang Zhaxi with a right cross to keep his winning ways.

An impressive win for Mr. Miado would definitely be huge for his stock as he becomes the first Filipino to compete in a Prime Video card that will air live on US primetime.

The duo would join a stacked card headlined by the battle between two KO artists in ONE Bantamweight World Champion John “Hands of Stone” Lineker and Fabrico “Wonder Boy” Andrade.

New York Yankees Judge new AL home run king

NEW YORK Yankees slugger Aaron Judge smashed his 62nd home run of the year on Tuesday to break the American League (AL) single-season record set in 1961 by Roger Maris. Mr. Judge clobbered the first inning offering from Texas Rangers starter Jesus Tinoco over the left field wall to etch his name into history and give the Yankees an early 1-0 lead at Globe Life Field in Arlington. Mr. Judge watched intently after he sent the 1-1 breaking ball toward the outfield at 102 miles per hour (164 km per hour), the crowd standing in anticipation. The ball arrived 391 feet (119 metres) later into the glove of a lucky fan who cleanly snatched what will be a highly sought after collectors item. The 30-year-old’s teammates embraced him one-by-one after he crossed the plate to finally break the tie with Mr. Maris after failing to do so in the past five games, including one played earlier on Tuesday. The overall Major League Baseball (MLB) record belongs to Barry Bonds, with 73 homers hit for the National League’s San Francisco Giants in 2001. Bonds is among the many of MLB’s great sluggers tainted by doping accusations in the so-called “Steroid Era”. — Reuters

Atlanta Braves clinch NL East crown

JAKE ODORIZZI pitched five strong innings and the Atlanta bullpen finished with four scoreless frames to help the visiting Braves beat the Miami Marlins 2-1 on Tuesday and clinch their fifth straight N.L. East Division championship. Kenley Jansen retired the side in order in the ninth inning, striking out two, to post his league-leading 41st save. Jordan Groshans flew out to end the game. It was the 22nd division title for the Braves (101-60), the most in major league history. The defending world champions were 10 1/2 games behind the New York Mets on May 1 before winning 77 of their final 110 games. The Marlins dropped to 68-93. Mr. Odorizzi (6-6) worked five innings and allowed one run on two hits, one walk and matched his Atlanta season high with seven strikeouts. He retired 10 of the last 11 batters he faced. Collin McHugh worked a scoreless sixth inning, Raisel Iglesias struck out the side in the seven and A.J. Minter got out bases-loaded trouble in the eighth when pinch-hitter Nick Fortes popped out. — Reuters

Liverpool beats Rangers, 2-0

LIVERPOOL — Liverpool put their recent stutters behind them to comfortably beat Rangers 2-0 in the Champions League on Tuesday and move into second spot in Group A. The win, thanks to a sumptuous first-half free kick from Trent Alexander-Arnold and a second-half penalty by Mohamed Salah, put the six-times European champions on six points after three games — three points behind leaders Napoli. The Scots, who barely threatened Liverpool to the disappointment of their passionate fans complete with a bagpipe-player, remain bottom of the group on zero points. In need of a morale booster after their poor start to the Premier League, Liverpool’s four-man attack of Salah, Diogo Jota, Luis Diaz and Darwin Nunez swarmed over Rangers from the off. By contrast, the visitors’ Colombian striker Alfredo Morelos was largely isolated. Liverpool manager Juergen Klopp was delighted by his team’s tidy and confident performance, albeit against obviously weaker opposition, especially the first goal from Alexander-Arnold whom he had defended from recent criticism. Liverpool’s Mr. Nunez could have had a hat-trick in the first half as Mr. McGregor pulled off four saves in succession from the Uruguayan striker. — Reuters

Inter Milan sinks Barcelona, 1-0

INTER MILAN bounced back after two consecutive losses in Serie A with a crucial Champions League 1-0 win against Barcelona on Tuesday thanks to a Hakan Calhanoglu goal. The Turkish midfielder slotted home a clinical strike from just outside the area, with the ball going into the corner to the goalkeeper’s right in added time before the break. The home win lifted Inter to second place in Group C on six points, three behind leaders Bayern Munich and three in front of Barcelona. Inter and Barca will face each other again next week at the Camp Nou when a third loss in four games would leave Barca in danger of being knocked out of the Champions League at the group stage for the second consecutive season. four points from the European qualification spots and eight behind leaders Napoli and Atlanta. Barcelona, by contrast, arrived as the new LaLiga leaders and with striker Robert Lewandowski on a roll, having scored in six consecutive LaLiga match weeks. But the Polish star forward made no impression at the San Siro, ending with no shots on target.In the 24th minute, Barcelona got a break when a potential penalty for a handball by Eric Garcia inside the box was ruled out by the VAR check which spotted a close offside in the build-up. — Reuters

Divided European aviation sector seeks cure to travel chaos

STOCK PHOTO | Image from Pixabay

European airlines and airports, reeling from delays that caused widespread disruption as demand roared back after COVID-19, are counting the cost of efforts to avoid a repeat next summer.

Industry leaders meeting at the headquarters of air traffic control agency Eurocontrol sparred on Wednesday over who was to blame for the chaos that upset passengers and politicians.

“We found ourselves more in the news than we would have wished over the summer,” Olivier Jankovec, director general of airports association ACI Europe, told a Eurocontrol conference.

Labour or parts shortages and strikes led to cancellations of hundreds of flights, prompting some airports to introduce capacity curbs and exposing slim margins for error.

“We somehow survived the summer but it was not great and it should not be happening again. We have to put appropriate resources in the system to deal with the challenges,” Wizz Air Chief Executive Jozsef Varadi said.

For the budget carrier, that may mean unusually recruiting more people than it needs for the time being.

“We are redesigning the operating model to make sure that we build … more slack in the system so we’re going to be losing some efficiency,” Varadi said.

“I’m not optimizing for today, but optimizing for demands to make sure that we remain as low-cost as possible.”

Airports too are increasingly upping pay or handing out recruitment bonuses to hire back workers laid off during the pandemic. Many defected to new-economy jobs like ride-sharing.

Officials gave no estimate for the overall cost of making the network more delay-proof but airports said they were facing a 7 billion euro ($6.98 billion) funding crunch.

 

RECRUITMENT WOES

“We are not attractive any more and that is one of the problems that airports face,” said Arnaud Feist, chief executive of Brussels Airport. Automation will increase, he added.

Those left behind were exposed to “unprecedented levels of violence” as tempers rose over the summer, said Livia Spera, general secretary of the European Transport Workers Federation.

The airline industry’s overall drive to contain costs is unlikely to take a backseat for long.

“I think this is temporary. I don’t think this is a structural change,” the head of the International Air Transport Association, Willie Walsh, said in an interview.

Airlines say they are squeezed between regulations requiring them to compensate consumers for delays while bearing the full cost of disruption from a long list of suppliers from manufacturers to airports, air controllers or ground handlers.

Airports complain they did not get state support available to traditional carriers and point the finger back at airlines.

“Some airlines were hiding their own staffing issues behind airports and that wasn’t helpful,” Jankovec told Reuters.

Walsh, who regularly clashed with Heathrow while running British Airways, pulled out official airport data showing security waiting times well above target at the London hub.

“If customers aren’t getting through in time then you’re getting into delayed departures, delayed arrivals. So everything gets knocked out,” he told Reuters.

Heathrow has said rebuilding capacity quickly after the pandemic is “challenging” but that the entire aviation supply chain is affected.

Now, airlines and airports are once again at odds over rules for the usage of airport slots over the coming winter.

A series of air traffic controller strikes is adding to the tensions.

Eurocontrol, a 41-nation coordination agency, called for measures to soften the impact of strikes such as an abrupt one-day action that closed much of French airspace last month.

“Workers have the right to strike and that should be protected, but overflights should be facilitated,” Director General Eamonn Brennan told Reuters.

Controllers say curbs would be hard to achieve in one part of Europe without infringing rights of controllers elsewhere. – Reuters

Bangladesh plunged into darkness by national grid failure

STOCK PHOTO | Image by 41330 from Pixabay

Large swathes of Bangladesh were left without electricity on Tuesday after a grid failure, a government official said, adding that authorities were working to gradually restore power supply in the country of 168 million people.

The country’s power grid malfunctioned at around 2 p.m. (0800 GMT) on Tuesday, leading to blackouts across 75-80% of the Bangladesh, Bangladesh Power Development Board official Shameem Hasan told Reuters.

An investigation was underway to ascertain the reason for the grid‘s collapse and power had been restored in 45% of the regions hit by the blackouts, he said. By nightfall, it was still not clear when power would be fully restored.

Bangladesh, which gets three quarters of its electricity from imported natural gas, has been facing frequent power cuts this year due to its inability to address higher power demand.

The country has rationed some gas supplies amid high global prices driven up by Russia’s war in Ukraine. The government vowed frugal spending after reporting a record fiscal deficit last year.

Over a third of the country’s 77 gas-powered units were short of fuel, government data showed on Tuesday.

Grid failures generally happen when there is a high mismatch between demand and supply, potentially due to unexpected or sudden changes in power use patterns.

Bangladesh‘s peak power demand on Tuesday was 3% higher than the 13,800 MW forecast by the Bangladesh Power Development Board, according to government data.

 

GARMENT FACTORIES HIT

Operations at Bangladesh‘s lucrative export-oriented garment industry, which supply to clients such as Walmart, Gap Inc., H&M, VF Corp., Zara and American Eagle Outfitters were hit by the power outage on Tuesday.

“To cope with the (power) crisis, we have been using generators. Today’s outage was unpredictable. We had to shut our offices,” because generators can not run for long periods, Shahidullah Azim, Vice President of the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association told Reuters.

The association represents members that have more than 4,500 garment factories nationwide. Bangladesh is the world’s second-biggest garment exporter after China.

“We can’t run factories without power,” Azim added.

Zunaid Ahmed Palak, a junior minister in Bangladesh, said on Facebook it was “risky to restore (power) with a heavy load”.

The load on the power grid generally increases in the evenings in Bangladesh, when citizens return home after work. Demand growth in the recent years has largely been driven by the residential segment.

“If the stability of the system is fairly satisfactory, the power lines of all area of Dhaka will be activated. We sincerely apologize for the inconvenience,” Palak said.

The Association of Mobile Telecom Operators of Bangladesh said on Tuesday mobile and internet services may be disrupted in some parts of the country due to the national power grid failure. – Reuters

From stubs to soft toys, an Indian factory reprocesses cigarette ends

STOCK PHOTO | Image by Hans from Pixabay

Sitting on the floor of a house on the outskirts of New Delhi, women smile and chat as they fill brightly coloured toy bears with white stuffing made from a product more commonly found in a trash can.

The material is composed of cigarette stubs, separated into fibres and cleaned and bleached after being gathered from the city streets where they had been discarded along with millions of others.

Reprocessing them into a range of products including toys and pillows is the brainchild of businessman Naman Gupta.

“We started with 10 grams (of fibre per day) and now we are doing 1,000 kilogrammes … Annually we are able to recycle millions of cigarette butts,” he told Reuters from his factory on the outskirts of the Indian capital.

His workers also separate out the butts’ outer layer and tobacco, which are turned into recycled paper and compost powder respectively.

The World Health Organization estimates that nearly 267 million people, nearly 30 per cent of India’s adult population, are tobacco users, and butts litter urban streets where general cleanliness standards are abysmally low.

“(So) working here also helps keep our environment clean,” said Poonam, a worker in Gupta’s factory who gave only her first name. – Reuters

Exxon signals strong Q3 earnings on natural gas pricing

Exxon Mobil Corp. on Tuesday signaled strong third quarter operating profits on the heels of the prior quarter’s all-time high as earnings from natural gas offset weaker refining and chemicals, according to a securities filing.

The largest U.S. oil producer issued a snapshot of factors affecting its third quarter that showed results could land near the company’s $17.9 billion second quarter profit.

Exxon and rivals this year have posted sky-high earnings on rising energy prices and demand aided by cost-cutting. Gas prices, in particular, have soared this year on strong demand from Europe since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

In the third quarter, U.S. natural gas prices averaged $7.95 per million British thermal units (mmBtu), up from $7.17 mmBtu in the second quarter. Brent prices eased to $98 per barrel in the same period, from an average of $109 between April and June. Exxon‘s official results are due on Oct. 28.

The snapshot showing more stellar profits comes after Exxon Chief Executive Darren Woods and U.S. Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm clashed over White House criticism of fuel prices last week.

In a breakdown of individual business units, Exxon indicated natural gas boosted operating results by about $2 billion, offsetting an about $1.6 billion decline in oil profits. Earnings from pumping oil and gas could reach about $13 billion, compared to Wall Street’s forecast of a $10.1 billion operating profit.

Weak refining margins reduced profits from selling gasoline and diesel by about $2.6 billion, offset by lower maintenance costs and an additional business day during the quarter. Operating profit could fall to about $3.4 billion from $5.3 billion in the second quarter, the filing indicated.

Chemical results also will slip by about $300 million from the prior period’s $1.07 billion operating profit, and motor oil results will double to about $800 million, offsetting the chemicals drop, the filing showed.

Overall, a tally of changes show an operating profit of about $17.8 billion, above IBES Refinitiv forecast of a $14.68 billion, or $3.44 per share, profit. Exxon earned $17.9 billion, or $4.21 per share, an all time record, in the prior quarter.Reuters

Sept. inflation zooms to over 13-year high

The OVERALL year-on-year increase in prices of widely used goods and services rose to its highest pace in more than 13 years in September as food costs spiked.

Preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed headline inflation rose to 6.9% in September from 6.3% in August and 4.2% in September 2021.

September’s inflation print matched September and October 2018’s 6.9% and was the fastest in over 13 years or since the 7.2% print in February 2009, during the global financial crisis, PSA’s Undersecretary Claire Dennis S. Mapa said during the press conference.

September print marked the sixth straight month inflation breached the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) 2-4% target this year.

The latest headline figure was higher than the 6.7% median in a BusinessWorld poll conducted last week but fell within the 6.6%-7.4% estimate given by the BSP for that month.

Inflation averaged 5.1% in the nine months to September, higher than 4% last year. This remained below the BSP’s 5.6% forecast for 2022.

Core inflation, which discounted volatile prices of food and fuel, stood at 4.5% in September, slower than the previous month’s 4.6% but higher than 2.6% a year earlier.

“The main source of the higher trend of September 2022 overall inflation was due to the rising of prices of food and non-alcoholic beverages at 7.4% in September, from 6.3% in August 2021,” the PSA said in a statement.

The PSA also noted increases in the vegetables, tubers, etc. (3.5% in September from -2.7% in August), fish and other seafood (9.1% from 7.2%), and sugar, confectionery, and desserts (30.2% from 26%).

Other commodity groups also picked up in September. Housing, water, electricity, gas, and other fuels picked up to 7.3% in September from 6.8% in August, followed by restaurants and accommodation services picking up slightly by 4.6% from 4.2%.

Similarly, September inflation rate for the bottom 30% of households, which remained under 2012 prices, surged to 6.7% from 5.9% in August, and 5.3% in September 2021. This was the highest inflation rate for this segment in almost four years or since the 7.3% print in November 2017.

For the year, bottom 30% inflation averaged 4.8%. — Bernadette Therese M. Gadon

New M Safe film assures safe, feel-good family moments at McDonald’s

In the recently released M Safe film, McDonald’s brings to screen shared, feel-good moments that parents and their children have missed in the past 2 years.

While kids learn to adjust to being outside once again, McDonald’s shows that starting at a place they have always loved—like their favorite McDonald’s branch—is a safe place to visit as they ease back into pre-pandemic routines.

In the short film, viewers get to see an adorable little kid in a dinosaur costume practicing some safety procedures at home. These practices are then mirrored in the following scenes when, after two long years, the little girl’s mother brings her back to McDonald’s. The kid is in awe, and we see that everything she’s practiced is put to good use as they enjoy dining safely at McDo. Like most parents, there is no better feeling than seeing children experience firsthand those same feel-good moments they have missed.

“While more Filipinos continue to seek missed and new experiences outside their homes, we encourage families, parents, and kids to experience those same feel-good moments while staying safe at McDonald’s. With our M Safe practices in place, every McDonald’s store is a safe space where families can enjoy quality time together without worry,” says Kenneth S. Yang, President and Chief Executive Officer of McDonald’s Philippines.

McDonald’s remains committed to safety across all channels with the strict implementation of M Safe practices for all customers and employees at all times. For dine-in, families can have peace of mind as McDonald’s stores are equipped with hand sanitizers, proper ventilation, and a fresh air supply system. Frequent sanitation of customer areas is continuously done while customers continue to wear face masks except when eating.

To ensure a safe dining experience for everyone in-store, 100% of McDonald’s employees nationwide are fully-vaccinated and continue to apply the protocols set in place. Whether dine-in, delivery, or ride-thru—all families are assured that their food is safely prepared by fully-vaccinated employees in a safe environment that follows stringent global food quality standards.

To stay updated, please visit McDonald’s website at www.mcdonalds.ph for more information. McDonald’s also encourages customers to send their feedback to msafe@ph.mcd.com.

 


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