- 'Not safe' as Brazilian GP qualifying postponed due to heavy rain
- Spain sends thousands more troops to flood zone
- Motta's Juventus up to third with 'important' Udinese win
- WHO says strike on Gaza vaccination centre wounds four children
- Supporters of Bolivia's ex-leader Morales detain 200 soldiers: government
- Tele'a elated by 'massive' New Zealand win in Twickenham thriller
- PSG 'fight' to extend lead atop of Ligue 1 with Lens win
- Kane double takes Bayern past Union, Dortmund beat Leipzig
- Juventus up to third with Udinese win
- Anger at government grows in ground zero of Spain floods
- Trump voters see only two outcomes: 'landslide' or 'fraud'
- Faker's T1 win League of Legends world title
- Strike on Gaza polio vaccine centre wounds four children: WHO
- Zverev to face Humbert in Paris Masters final
- India denies minister plotted anti-Sikh attacks in Canada
- 'No sense' playing football after deadly floods, says Atletico coach Simeone
- PSG extend lead atop of Ligue 1 with Lens win
- Norris benefits from team orders with Brazil sprint win as Verstappen punished
- Tele'a at the double as New Zealand edge England again
- Sabalenka maintains Zheng stranglehold in winning WTA Finals start
- Man City suffer shock 2-1 Premier League loss at Bournemouth
- Man City suffer first league loss since December, Arsenal crash as Liverpool go top
- Salah strike beats Brighton to take Liverpool top
- Argentine LGBTQ march targets Milei's 'discriminatory' laws
- Kane double takes Bayern past Union, Frankfurt hit seven
- Norris clips more off Verstappen's title lead after sprint win
- Bangladesh rally says govt failing to protect Hindus, minorities
- Zverev powers past Rune to reach Paris Masters final
- Spain sends thousands more troops to flood epicentre
- Harris, Trump go toe to toe in frenzied final campaign weekend
- Arsenal Premier League hopes hit by Newcastle defeat
- UN talks on saving nature stumble on finance hurdle
- Serbia to demolish 'German' bridge amid outcry
- Hundreds in Myanmar observe All Saints' Day
- 'No sense' playing La Liga games after deadly floods: Simeone
- Van Nistelrooy wants to give Man Utd fans 'joy of winning'
- Pollution level in Pakistan megacity hits new high, says official
- Iran leader vows response to Israel, US after attacks
- New Zealand lead by 143 as spin rules in seesaw third India Test
- UK's battered Tory party elects Badenoch as new leader
- Spain sends thousands more troops to flood-hit region
- Deadly Israeli strikes on 'apocalyptic' north Gaza
- Olympic medallist Koki Ikeda vows to clear name after doping suspension
- Cavendish coy on future as Girmay wins in Japan
- Spain braces for more flood deaths, steps up aid
- Kiwi spinner Ajaz takes five wickets but India ahead in third Test
- Martin takes big step towards MotoGP title as Bagnaia crashes
- Japan urges 200,000 people to evacuate due to heavy rain
- Martin closes on MotoGP world title as Bagnaia crashes out
- UK's battered Tory party to reveal new leader
Scotland edge Wales in Six Nations thriller to end Cardiff curse
Scotland survived a stunning fightback by Wales to end their 22-year wait for a win in Cardiff with a 27-26 victory in their Six Nations opener on Saturday.
The visitors were 27-0 up early in the second half only for the home side to score 26 unanswered points of their own.
Their nail-biting win meant Scotland ended a run of 11 straight defeats in the Welsh capital, a sequence including nine Six Nations losses.
Scotland were in command after Duhan van der Merwe went over for the second of his two tries -- and his side's third in all after prop Pierre Schoeman crossed in the first half
But a new-look Wales, aided by a couple of Scotland yellow cards, then hit back with four tries as James Botham, grandson of England cricket great Ian Botham, Rio Dyer, impressive No 8 Aaron Wainwright and replacement Alex Mann all crossed to the delight of a raucous home crowd.
Scotland, for whom captain Finn Russell kicked three conversions and two penalties, were now clinging on to a one-point lead heading into the final 10 minutes.
But they regained their composure sufficiently to end the match by laying siege to the Wales line, with Van der Merwe being denied a hat-trick by the television match official.
"It's brilliant to win down here after not winning in Cardiff for 22 years but we will be a bit disappointed with that second-half performance," Russell told S4C.
"The second-half discipline wasn't good enough, two yellow cards allowed Wales back into the game."
Scotland next face France at Murrayfield, with fly-half Russell adding: "There is a lot of things to work on which is probably a good place to be getting a win first up down here."
Wales back-row Wainwright was left thinking of what might have been, telling the BBC: "We probably wanted the game to go on another five minutes.
"We left ourselves too much to do, and were probably not accurate enough in the first half. A lot of their ball came from our errors.
"As the scoreboard kept ticking down the belief grew, but first-half inaccuracies cost us."
A.Malone--AMWN