Saturday, July 3, 2021

Semifinal opening odds for Euro 2021 knockout stage

Semifinal opening odds for Euro 2021 knockout stage

Italy and Spain kick off the semifinal stage at the European Championship.


Nicolo Barella of Italy celebrates with Marco Verratti and Federico Chiesa after scoring their side’s first goal during the UEFA Euro 2020 Championship Quarter-final match between Belgium and Italy at Football Arena Munich on July 02, 2021 in Munich, Germany.
 Photo by Christof Stache - Pool/Getty Images


The semifinals of Euro 2020 have begun, and tournament favorite Italy continues to look the part. In the first semifinal, the Azzurri will face Spain, while TEAM and TEAM will face off.


The first lines for the semifinal round are listed below.

Opening odds, Semifinals

Italy vs. Spain

Italy: +160
Tie: +215
Spain: +195


Italy and Spain meet in a rematch of the 2012 Euro final. Spain won that match to complete a historic trifecta (2008 European Championship, 2010 World Cup, 2012 European Championship), although Italy is the favorite tonight. Spain has been shaky at the back at times during the knockout stage and Italy is scoring goals in bunches.


Czech Republic/Denmark vs Ukraine/England

TEAM:
Tie:
TEAM:



Thursday, July 1, 2021

Why Bill Cosby's conviction was overturned

Why Bill Cosby's conviction was overturned

 

Bill Cosby arrives for his sexual assault trial, Thursday, April 26, 2018, at the Montgomery County Courthouse in Norristown, Pa. (AP Photo/Matt Slocum)


By MARYCLAIRE DALE and ALANNA DURKIN RICHER Associated Press

PHILADELPHIA (AP) – Bill Cosby's sexual assault conviction was thrown out Wednesday by Pennsylvania's highest court in a ruling that swiftly freed the actor from prison more than three years after he was found guilty of drugging and molesting Temple University employee Andrea Constand at his suburban Philadelphia mansion.

Cosby, 83, was the first celebrity tried and convicted in the #MeToo era, and his conviction was considered as a turning point in the movement to hold powerful men accountable for sexual misbehavior.

Here's a look at the case against Cosby and the court's decision:

WHY DID THE COURT TOSS HIS CONVICTION?

The split court found that Cosby was unfairly punished because the former district attorney had assured the comedian once known as "America's Dad" that he wouldn't be charged over Constand's charges. Cosby was charged by another prosecutor who claimed he wasn't bound by that arrangement.

The court said that's not the case. The court decided that Cosby relied on that assurance when he consented to testify without using his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in a lawsuit brought against him by Constand.

The court found the prosecutor who later presented the charges was bound to stick to the nonprosecution agreement, hence the conviction cannot stand. The judges said that "denying the defendant the benefit of that decision is an affront to fundamental fairness, particularly when it results in a criminal prosecution that was foregone for more than a decade."

WHAT'S THE DEAL WITH THE NONPROSECUTION AGREEMENT?


The promise not to charge Cosby was made in 2005 by Bruce Castor, who was then the senior prosecutor for Montgomery County. Castor was also on the legal team that defended former President Donald Trump during his historic second impeachment trial following the Jan. 6 rebellion at the U.S. Capitol by his supporters.


During a court hearing weeks after Cosby's 2015 arrest, Castor said that he promised Cosby he wouldn't be charged in the hopes that it would induce the actor to testify in a civil action brought by Constand and allow her to collect damages. Castor recognized the only place the subject was stated in writing was in the 2005 press statement announcing his decision not to prosecute but said his decision was meant to insulate Cosby from prosecution "for all time."


His successor highlighted, during the appeal arguments, that Castor went on to indicate in the news release that he could rethink the decision in the future.


Castor had argued that Constand's case would be tough to prove in court because she waited a year to come forward and stayed in contact with Cosby.


The initial jurors who heard the case may have agreed with him, as they could not reach a decision in 2017. But a second jury empaneled after the #MeToo movement burst found him guilty during his 2018 retrial. Constand resolved her civil case against Cosby for more than $3 million.


Castor's successor, District Attorney Kevin Steele, charged Cosby in 2015 after a federal judge, acting on a request from The Associated Press, released documents from her 2005 lawsuit against Cosby, disclosing his damaging testimony about sexual encounters with Constand and others. Castor has stated Cosby "would've had to have been nuts to say those things if there was any chance he could've been prosecuted."


HOW RARE IS THIS?


Extremely rare.


Wesley Oliver, a Pennsylvania law professor who has watched Cosby's case closely over the years, said he has never heard of a high court in Pennsylvania or anyplace else contending with a prosecutor's informal commitment not to prosecute.


"It creates new ground totally," said Oliver, who teaches at Duquesne University School of Law in Pittsburgh. "It establishes precedence not just for Pennsylvania but potentially other states."


He said the ruling should bring home to prosecutors the risks of implying at news conferences, in press releases, or even in private that they will not prosecute.


"They should at least add three words — 'at this moment,'" he remarked. "If you add that qualifier, which wasn't done in Cosby's instance, you should be fine to go," Oliver added.


CAN COSBY BE TRIED AGAIN?


It's quite unlikely. The judgment on Wednesday prohibits Cosby from being tried again over Constand's complaint, finding it to be the "sole remedy that comports with society's legitimate expectations of its elected prosecutors and our criminal justice system."


And the charges leveled by dozens of other women, like the five who testified at his 2018 trial, sometimes go back decades and are most likely too remote to prosecute.


Cosby turns 84 next month. However, his lawyer stated he remained in good health, save for vision impairments that leave him legally blind.


The trial judge found him a sexually violent predator who could still represent a danger to women given his wealth, power and renown, and ordered that he be on a lifetime sex offender registry and check-in monthly with authorities. However, the decision negates that finding.


NBA playoffs 2021: Chris Paul and the Phoenix Suns are on a one-of-a-kind path to the NBA Finals.

NBA playoffs 2021: Chris Paul and the Phoenix Suns are on a one-of-a-kind path to the NBA Finals. 


NBA Playoffs
Image credit : NBA.com



The Phoenix Suns reaching the NBA Finals is one of the most implausible happenings in the sport's history.


Let's just start there. Pick where you draw the line, whether it was their decade in a playoff-less pit before this season, or that they were 26-39 last year going into the Orlando, Florida, bubble, or that as late as April their championship chances were at +2,500.


It's a crazy turn regardless of the one-off nature of this season, with all its injuries and derailments. Almost as insane as Chris Paul posting the highest-scoring half of his career — 31 of his 41 points in the Suns' Game 6 130-103 triumph over the LA Clippers — in the second half of a closeout game to advance to the Finals.


There were innumerable acts that led to the Suns' victory and Paul carrying the Western Conference title trophy with tears in his eyes Wednesday night.


"We've seen the bottom of the bottom for multiple years," said Devin Booker, who won just 30% of his games and had six head coaches over his first five seasons in Phoenix.

"I've been through a lot of bulls---, honestly. I've put my head down and I've worked."

It feels like karma was at work for sure. This team has been burdened with awful luck dating back to 1969 when the Suns lost a coin flip for the chance to choose Lew Alcindor (who eventually changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) (who later changed his name to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar). Instead, they got Neal Walk. Jerry Colangelo, then the general manager, was so unhappy that he drove around aimlessly for hours after hearing the news over the phone.


In 1976, the Suns were tied 2-2 in the Finals before losing a triple-overtime game to the Boston Celtics in one of the most agonizing losses the league has experienced and were done in Game 6. In 1993, with MVP Charles Barkley, they ran into Michael Jordan's Chicago Bulls. In 2005, Joe Johnson broke his eye socket in the playoffs. In 2007, Steve Nash's unstoppable bloody nose and Amare Stoudemire's ban happened.


In a postseason that has seen superstars go down everywhere, Paul and Booker have managed to evade both significant injury and illness.


"I've been on the other end of so many losses. I know what that feels like," said Paul, who has seen three of his playoff runs end in injury.

"If you put the work in, you live with the outcome. We've worked. We're a work team. It was good to see it all come together."


Most teams who win at the top levels overcome their share of adversity. Who knows where the Suns stand in that regard, but they've had a lot.


Head coach Monty Williams was fired after leading the New Orleans Pelicans to the playoffs in 2015, a setback that seriously harmed his career.


Paul was moved to the Oklahoma City Thunder in 2019 and few anticipated he would have a chance to contend while playing out his deal. His last two All-Star seasons are an ultimate reply, with this Finals berth the crowning achievement in a Hall of Fame career.


The frosting on the cake is that he's leaning toward opting out of the $44 million final year of his agreement, league sources say, because he has been so excellent that he's now in a position to lock in a new deal for tens of millions more in Phoenix or somewhere. Now that is an answer.


Booker has battled with continuing disrespect, the odor of the team's failure rubbing off on his reputation and the smear that comes with a turnstile on the coach's office. This first playoff run, in which he's averaging 27.0 points per game, has drastically enhanced his status and certainly transformed his reputation permanently. He has a sure berth on Squad USA, and there will be a jet waiting on the runway after the Finals to instantly fly him to Tokyo as he's regarded a critical element of the national team.


You could keep going down the roster, from Cameron Payne, who started last season playing in China, to Cameron Johnson, who was mocked for being taken 20 spots too high in the draft, to Torrey Craig, who got cut by the Milwaukee Bucks in March.

The Suns' entire run is a story of surprising redemption — in astonishingly rapid form.


Last season, after the Suns closed on an 8-0 streak in the bubble that still left them a game out of the playoffs, Williams made an impassioned speech in a temporary locker room at Walt Disney World Resort.


"We want to be the kind of team that controls our own destiny," Williams said. "That's our next step."


Game 1 of the NBA Finals, no matter the opponent, will be in Phoenix next week. Whether they're a team of destiny or they're controlling it themselves, the Suns are writing a unique story.


"It's a long time coming," said Booker, his nose still bleeding postgame, appropriately sounding older than his 24 years. "We've been waiting on this moment right here."

100 million Americans will be subjected to new vaccine regulations.

President Joe Biden talks in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington on Thursday, September 9, 2021. In an all-out effort to ...