
-
Cyclone death toll rises to four on La Reunion
-
Pope spends 'peaceful night' after breathing crisis
-
German skier Aicher lands first World Cup win at 21
-
Kristoffersen leads after Slovenia giant slalom first run
-
Four dead from India avalanche, five still missing: army
-
Olympic champion Lydia Ko seizes control in Singapore
-
Sydney Mardi Gras celebrates inclusion in sea of glitter and feathers
-
Uncertainty looms as first phase of Gaza truce due to expire
-
Marc Marquez wins dominant Thai MotoGP sprint on Ducati debut
-
Australian ex-criminal bikie in sight of maiden golf win
-
PKK declares ceasefire with Turkey after 40 years of armed struggle
-
Trump to pardon late Pete Rose, baseball's disgraced great
-
Cavs rally to top Celtics in battle of NBA Eastern heavyweights
-
European allies rally behind Ukraine after White House row
-
Burn land or plant trees? Bolivian farmers weigh their options
-
'Tahs praised for 'bucket loads' of fight in narrow Drua win
-
Marquez 1-2 as Marc seizes pole for MotoGP season opener
-
Dodgers star Ohtani homers in pre-season debut
-
Cavaliers rally to top Celtics in battle of NBA Eastern Conference heavyweights
-
'King Kohli' set for another landmark after roaring back to form
-
Phase one of Israel-Hamas truce due to expire
-
Vietnam drags feet over 'urgent' pollution problem
-
After fiery Trump-Zelensky spat, what next for Ukraine?
-
In Zelensky duel, Vance throws fuel to advance 'America First'
-
Who will win the Oscar? The 10 best picture nominees
-
Intel slows $28 bn chip factory project in Ohio
-
Zelensky says Trump relationship can be repaired after White House row
-
Duplantis breaks his own pole vault world record with leap of 6.27m
-
Knapp hangs on to lead at Palm Beach Gardens
-
Gene Hackman had likely been dead nine days when found: sheriff
-
Duplantis on song as he breaks his own pole vault world record
-
Swede Duplantis breaks his own pole vault world record
-
US stocks finish gloomy week on positive note
-
Bayern beat Stuttgart to move a step closer to Bundesliga title
-
Embiid to miss rest of NBA season with knee injury - 76ers
-
Asensio sinks Cardiff as Villa reach FA Cup quarters
-
Outraged by Trump, Ukrainians praise Zelensky
-
Bayern beat Stuttgart to stay on course for Bundesliga title
-
A public bust-up, a royal invite, and wild AI - a week in Trumpworld
-
Trump kicks Zelensky out of White House after shouting match
-
From handshake to meltdown as Trump and Zelensky clash
-
Trump-Zelensky shouting match takes world leaders aback as Europe backs Ukraine
-
Rodri back in training as Man City eyes return ahead of schedule
-
Why Mexican manufacturers seem unfazed by threat of Trump tariffs
-
Groups say millions already hit as US guts aid
-
Saudi Arabia, most other Sunni Arab states to start Ramadan Saturday
-
Trump-Zelensky shouting match takes world leaders aback
-
FIFA president Infantino defends Saudi World Cup, Trump relationship
-
Shooting for the moon: the Saudi spotting teams that herald Ramadan
-
'Disgraceful' -- Trump-Zelensky row sparks US political firestorm

Olympic champion Lydia Ko seizes control in Singapore
Olympic champion Lydia Ko battled to the top of the leaderboard with a four-under-par 68 after the third round of the HSBC Women's World Championship on Saturday in Singapore.
The New Zealander holds a one-shot advantage over England’s flu-hit Charley Hull with a three-day total of 10-under-par 206 at Sentosa Golf Club.
Thailand's Jeeno Thitikul stormed into contention with the day’s lowest score of 66 to trail Ko by three with 18 holes left to play at the second stop of the LPGA Asian swing.
Making her 11th appearance at the event where her best result came in 2015 in finishing second, Ko is looking forward to finally getting the job done on Sunday.
"I'm excited to be in the final group tomorrow. I've been in the final group a couple times at this event before and I haven't necessarily taken it over the finish line," said the world number three.
"I hope tomorrow is the day to do it."
Hull is bracing for a showdown with Paris Olympic gold medallist Ko after shrugging off the flu to post a bogey-free 68.
"I woke up this morning and threw up. It was just a little bit of a bug but I'm fine," said Hull.
"I like playing with Lydia. She's a really nice person and so down to earth. I want to go out there, play golf, hole some putts and have fun."
Jeeno was in red-hot form as she stormed back into contention after two lacklustre rounds of 71 and 72.
The Thai entered the round tied for 16th but jumped 13 places after carding seven birdies and one bogey, on the ninth hole.
"I did not want to think too much about the first two rounds. I was just trying to keep my ball in the fairway today and giving myself birdie chances," said the 22-year-old.
South Korea's Kim A-lim, who topped the leaderboard at the halfway stage, fell into a tie for fourth after carding a 73.
Also lurking on six-under after three rounds was Australia's Minjee Lee.
Leading scores after the third round of the HSBC Women’s World Championship (par 72):
206 – Lydia Ko (NZL) 71-67-68
207 – Charley Hull (ENG) 69-70-68
209 – Jeeno Thitikul (THA) 71-72-66
210 – Minjee Lee (AUS) 70-72-68, Pajaree Anannarukarn (THA) 74-66-70, Kim A-lim (KOR) 68-69-73, Choi Hye-jin (KOR) 70-71-70, Yealimi Noh (USA) 72-68-71, Ayaka Furue (JPN) 71-69-71
C.Meier--BTB