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Iceland votes for a new parliament amid disagreements on immigration, energy policy and the economy REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — Icelanders will elect a new parliament Saturday after disagreements over immigration, energy policy and the economy forced Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktsson to pull the plug on his coalition government and call early electi Marco Di Marco And Danica Kirka, The Associated Press Nov 30, 2024 1:03 AM Nov 30, 2024 1:05 AM Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message A Bilboard of the Democratic Party (Lýðræðisflokkurinn) reading "Let's limit the interest rate by law to a maximum of 4%" is backdropped by Mt. Esja covered with fresh snow, in Reykjavik, Iceland, Friday, Nov. 29, 2024. (AP Photo Marco Di Marco) REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — Icelanders will elect a new parliament Saturday after disagreements over immigration, energy policy and the economy forced Prime Minister Bjarni Benediktsson to pull the plug on his coalition government and call early elections. This is Iceland’s sixth general election since the 2008 financial crisis devastated the economy of the North Atlantic island nation and ushered in a new era of political instability. Opinion polls suggest the country may be in for another upheaval, with support for the three governing parties plunging. Benediktsson, who was named prime minister in April following the resignation of his predecessor, struggled to hold together the unlikely coalition of his conservative Independence Party with the centrist Progressive Party and the Left-Green Movement. Iceland, a nation of about 400,000 people, is proud of its democratic traditions, describing itself as arguably the world’s oldest parliamentary democracy. The island’s parliament, the Althingi, was founded in 930 by the Norsemen who settled the country. Here’s what to look for in the contest. How does the election work? Voters will choose 63 members of the Althingi in an election that will allocate seats both by regional constituencies and proportional representation. Parties need at least 5% of the vote to win seats in parliament. Eight parties were represented in the outgoing parliament, and 10 parties are contesting this election. Turnout is traditionally high by international standards, with 80% of registered voters casting ballots in the 2021 parliamentary election. Why now? A windswept island near the Arctic Circle, Iceland normally holds elections during the warmer months of the year. But on Oct. 13 Benediktsson decided his coalition couldn’t last any longer, and he asked President Halla Tómasdóttir to dissolve the Althingi. “The weakness of this society is that we have no very strong party and we have no very strong leader of any party,’’ said Vilhjálmur Bjarnson, a former member of parliament. “We have no charming person with a vision ... That is very difficult for us.” Why is Iceland's politics so fractured? The splintering of Iceland's political landscape came after the 2008 financial crisis, which prompted years of economic upheaval after its debt-swollen banks collapsed. The crisis led to anger and distrust of the parties that had traditionally traded power back and forth, and prompted the creation of new parties ranging from the environment focused Left-Green Alliance to the Pirate Party, which advocates direct democracy and individual freedoms. “This is one of the consequences of the economic crash,’’ said Eva H. Önnudóttir, a professor of political science at the University of Iceland. “It’s just the changed landscape. Parties, especially the old parties, have maybe kind of been hoping that we would go back to how things were before, but that’s not going to happen.” What are the issues? Like many Western countries, Iceland has been buffeted by the rising cost of living and immigration pressures. Inflation peaked at an annual rate of 10.2% in February 2023, fueled by the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. While inflation slowed to 5.1% in October, that is still high compared with neighboring countries. The U.S. inflation rate stood at 2.6% last month, while the European Union’s rate was 2.3%. Iceland is also struggling to accommodate a rising number of asylum-seekers, creating tensions within the small, traditionally homogenous country. The number of immigrants seeking protection in Iceland jumped to more than 4,000 in each of the past three years, compared with a previous average of less than 1,000. What about the volcano? Repeated eruptions of a volcano in the southwestern part of the country have displaced thousands of people and strained public finances. One year after the first eruption forced the evacuation of the town of Grindavik, many residents still don’t have secure housing, leading to complaints that the government has been slow to respond. But it also added to a shortage of affordable housing exacerbated by Iceland’s tourism boom. Young people are struggling to get a foot on the housing ladder at a time when short-term vacation rentals have reduced the housing stock available for locals, Önnudóttir said. “The housing issue is becoming a big issue in Iceland,'' she said. —— Kirka reported from London. Marco Di Marco And Danica Kirka, The Associated Press See a typo/mistake? Have a story/tip? This has been shared 0 times 0 Shares Share by Email Share on Facebook Share on X Share on LinkedIn Print Share via Text Message More World News Ireland headed for coalition government following parliamentary election, exit poll suggests Nov 29, 2024 2:54 PM In a shock offensive, insurgents breach Syria's largest city for the first time since 2016 Nov 29, 2024 1:04 PM Nigeria confirms that at least 27 people died and more than 100 are missing after boat capsized Nov 29, 2024 10:49 AM Featured Flyer

Carolina Panthers tight end Ja'Tavion Sanders was taken to a hospital for a neck injury after landing on his head while making a catch late in the first half of Sunday's 30-27 home loss to the Kansas City Chiefs. As Sanders was brought down near the sideline after a 10-yard reception, he was flipped upside down and landed directly on the top of his helmet as he went out of bounds on the tackle by cornerback Trent McDuffie. After receiving attention from the team's medical staff, Sanders was strapped to a backboard and taken off the field on a cart with 40 seconds remaining in the half. He was taken to Atrium Health Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte for observation and later released Sunday afternoon, according to the team. On the CBS broadcast following halftime, Panthers head coach Dave Canales said Sanders had movement in all his extremities, while extreme precaution was taken because of back tightness. CBS reported he was being examined for a concussion before later amending that to a neck injury. The 21-year-old rookie out of Texas had a team-leading three receptions for the Panthers at the half for 49 yards. In 11 games this season, Sanders has 29 receptions for 302 yards and a touchdown. Sanders was a fourth-round selection in the NFL draft in April. --Field Level MediaLucintel Forecasts The Global 3D Printing Medical Device Market To Reach $4 Billion By 2030.

By Haripriya Suresh BENGALURU (Reuters) – India’s Tech Mahindra is stepping up focus on its banking, financial services and insurance (BFSI) business in a bid to bridge the gap with larger peers which have historically made more revenue from the lucrative segment, its CEO said in an interview. Mohit Joshi, who took the helm of India’s No.5 software services exporter in December 2023 after more than two decades at Infosys, wants to increase the share of BFSI in Tech Mahindra’s revenue mix by up to 25% by March 2027, from about 16% currently. Some of Tech Mahindra’s peers in the $254 billion Indian IT sector already make as much as a third of their revenue from this sector. “We still have a lot of room to catch up,” said Joshi, who started out as a banker with ABN Amro and ANZ before joining Infosys. “I do expect that the relative share of BFSI revenue within TechM will increase, but...organically.” Unlike its peers, Tech Mahindra has relied heavily on telecom clients to boost revenue. That will change as Joshi tries to take advantage of his own expertise and experience dealing with financial services firms to turn the company around. “BFSI is the single largest spender from a tech services perspective. It’s very important for us to play aggressively in this space. Large banks typically spend over $10 billion a year in terms of technology,” Joshi said. Tech Mahindra, which has lagged its peers in both revenue and profit, will focus on core banking, payments, asset and wealth management and custodian services, as well as insurance, he said. Joshi has already shored up its BFSI leadership. GENERATIVE AI Generative artificial intelligence is a friend and not a foe for the sector, according to Joshi. “GenAI is the best spokesperson for why we need more money to be spent on technology,” he said, adding it is not the end of the road for software developers. “I do feel that the overall demand for developers is not going to reduce, because there is a lot more work to be done candidly than there are people just now.” Joshi played down concerns about any potential hit to customer service roles at Tech Mahindra. “I’m very skeptical about whether we’ll see a wholesale replacement of contact centers with GenAI because when it comes to critical issues, people prefer to speak with human beings.” (Reporting by Haripriya Suresh; Editing by Dhanya Skariachan and Varun H K) Disclaimer: This report is auto generated from the Reuters news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content. var ytflag = 0;var myListener = function() {document.removeEventListener('mousemove', myListener, false);lazyloadmyframes();};document.addEventListener('mousemove', myListener, false);window.addEventListener('scroll', function() {if (ytflag == 0) {lazyloadmyframes();ytflag = 1;}});function lazyloadmyframes() {var ytv = document.getElementsByClassName("klazyiframe");for (var i = 0; i < ytv.length; i++) {ytv[i].src = ytv[i].getAttribute('data-src');}} Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ document.getElementById( "ak_js_1" ).setAttribute( "value", ( new Date() ).getTime() );

The Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake girls’ volleyball team competed in the NYSPHSAA Class A championship on Sunday for the fifth straight season, but came up just short of winning the title. The Spartans fell to Section 5’s Pittsford Sutherland in four sets, 25-23, 25-23, 12-25, 25-17. “I feel for them, and I’ll tell you what I tell my kids,” Burnt Hills head coach Gary Bynon said of his postgame message to his team. “I’m honored and privileged to be a part of this program. I never in my wildest dreams thought that I could be a part of something so special. To watch the way that these kids not only play volleyball, but the way they handle themselves in school, in the sport of volleyball and in the community – nothing I can say will make them feel better – but they make me proud.” The difference in Sunday’s championship came down to the team that played the cleaner match, given that there was not much room for error. “I talked to the kids beforehand, ‘I’m not going to sit here and lie to you that this is like any other game.’ You’ve got to play like it’s a state championship,” Bynon said. “We thought it was a serve-receive game, and whoever did better on either side was going to be the team that won.” Pittsford Sutherland was able to come away with a pair of 25-23 wins in the first two sets, games that could have gone either way. “It’s so heartbreaking with those two 25-23 games. Every coach, at some time in practice, says that every point counts,” Bynon said. “We were up 23-21 in Game 2, after being down 9-2. A couple points here and there, and it makes a difference.” Another struggle for the Spartans throughout the day was having to play with a deficit. “It’s so hard to dig yourself a hole, and the whole game is fighting and crawling back,” said Burnt Hills senior Sophie Chevalier. “It’s a lot of work, and you’re just thinking, ‘if we didn’t dig ourselves in the big hole, we could be up.’ But it happens, and we had to keep pushing the whole game.” Burnt Hills cruised to a 25-12 victory in the third set, to keep its season alive. However, Pittsford Sutherland was able to build a lead once again in the fourth. While the Spartans were able to get the set within a point on a couple occasions, the deficit was too much to overcome. The loss ended Burnt Hills’ hopes of securing the program’s 10th overall state title. It was the Spartans 17th trip to a state final under Bynon. Over the years, Burnt Hills and Pittsford Sutherland have become familiar with each other at the event. The Knights won state titles over the Spartans in 2010, 2013 and 2014, while Burnt Hills won a title over Pittsford Sutherland in 2012. During the pool-play round of the state tournament on Saturday, Burnt Hills came away with a three-set win over Pittsford Sutherland, 23-25, 25-20, 15-11. Entering Sunday’s championship, the Spartans knew they were in for a fight. “Yesterday was a great day for us,” Chevalier said of the pool play. “We had a lot of energy and we kept the pressure on them. Today, they switched that around and the pressure was on us. We were feeling it a bit towards the end.” Burnt Hills freshman hitter Alex Wemyss led the offense on Sunday with 13 kills. Ava Goodemote contributed 11 kills, while Sarah Robbins had 10 kills and seven blocks. Cassie Vaughan, Burnt Hills’ setter, had 37 assists, six digs and three blocks. Chevalier tallied five kills and 16 digs, while Ella Chamberlain had seven digs. Spartan sophomore libero Audri Chamberlain left her mark with 12 digs, saving some of Pittsford Sutherland’s biggest hits. “She’s got to be around 500 digs, and she didn’t start playing libero until October,” Bynon said of Audri Chamberlain. “What she’s going to do for this program over the next two years is going to be pretty amazing. I can’t say enough about what she does back there. Libero is one of the toughest positions to play, and she handles it.” Of the 16 players on the Spartans roster, four are set to graduate. Seniors Julia Morales, Chevalier, Robbins and Vaughan saw their high school volleyball careers come to an end following Sunday’s state championship. “I’m going to remember all the girls on the team, and what the coaches have done for us,” Chevalier said of what she’ll take from her time with Burnt Hills volleyball. “They do so much more than just teach us volleyball. I’m going to take with me the things that coach says every day.” Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Jada Leggieri cheers on her teammates during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Ava Goodemote goes up for a hit during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake libero Audri Chamberlain handles the ball during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Sarah Robbins serves during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake celebrates after a point during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Ava Goodemote handles the ball during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Sophie Chevalier (18) high-fives Alex Wemyss-Purdy (6) during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Sophie Chevalier (18) high-fives Alex Wemyss-Purdy (6) during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake celebrates after a point during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Alex Wemyss-Purdy handles the ball during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Sophie Chevalier serves during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake's Ava Goodemote goes up for a hit during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake fans cheer on the girls' volleyball team during the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake lines up following the NYSPHSAA Class A championship match against Pittsford Sutherland on Sunday, Nov. 24, 2024 at Cool Insuring Arena.Percentages: FG .420, FT .732. 3-Point Goals: 6-21, .286 (Jennings 2-3, Avery 2-8, Dean 1-2, Keller 1-2, Newman 0-2, Thompson 0-4). Team Rebounds: 3. Team Turnovers: 1. Blocked Shots: 1 (Ousmane). Turnovers: 7 (Brantley 3, Dean, Jennings, Newman, Ousmane). Steals: 4 (Avery, Brantley, Dean, Newman). Technical Fouls: None. Percentages: FG .589, FT .680. 3-Point Goals: 7-18, .389 (Sanders 3-5, DuSell 2-4, Rolison 1-2, Davidson 1-4, T.Coleman 0-3). Team Rebounds: 1. Team Turnovers: 1. Blocked Shots: 3 (Love 2, Hymes). Turnovers: 9 (Rolison 2, Sanders 2, T.Coleman 2, Davidson, Hymes, McBride). Steals: 4 (Love 2, Davidson, Sanders). Technical Fouls: None. .

'Democracy And Freedom': Jimmy Carter's Human Rights Efforts In Latin America

A report this week indicated Chargers running back J.K. Dobbins was set to miss time with a knee sprain and it will be at least a four-game absence from the lineup. The Chargers announced that Dobbins has been placed on injured reserve on Saturday. Safety Alohi Gilman, who has a hamstring injury, was also moved to that list. Dobbins has been enjoying a strong season after three injury-plagued years with the Ravens. He has 158 carries for 766 yards and eight touchdowns, but the Chargers will have to go with Gus Edwards, Hassan Haskins, and Kimani Vidal for the time being. The Chargers filled one of the open roster spots by signing veteran safety Tony Jefferson to the active roster. They also called up cornerback Dicaprio Bootle and linebacker Jeremiah Jean-Baptiste from the practice squad on a temporary basis.

Advanced Analytics Market Size, Share, Latest Trends, Growth Factors, Industry Opportunities, Advance Technology And Forecast – 2028

Should we have more children? It’s a heavy question for a Sunday morning, but one that we must ask, in our current times. In 2009, climate scientist Johan Rockstrom, along with 28 renowned scientists, introduced the idea of Planetary Boundaries, which serves as a kind of master health check for Earth. They defined boundaries as “safe limits for human pressure on the nine critical processes which together maintain a stable and resilient Earth”. In 2009, we exceeded the recommended limits on at least two of these boundaries. By 2023, we had crossed these limits on six, including climate change, novel entities (microplastics, endocrine disruptors and their ilk), land-use change (think deforestation), freshwater change, biochemical flows (phosphorous and nitrogen) and biosphere integrity (we are in the midst of a sixth mass extinction; the last one being when the dinosaurs disappeared). How much of this situation is attributable to the fact that there are “too many” of us? According to History Database of the Global Environment (HYDE), a population land-use model, there were an estimated 19 million people on Earth 7,000 years ago, with 2.5 million living on the land that is currently India. The database’s creator, Kees Klein Goldewijk of Utrecht University in the Netherlands, tells me this was estimated by hindcasting from later population estimates, using available literature. It was a broad stroke, not meant to be accurate at a regional level, but capable of helping us understand how land use, population and climate trade-offs might play out. Comparing the database’s estimated carbon-dioxide concentrations at that time with CO2 concentration data from ice cores shows, if anything, that HYDE’s estimates are conservative. This was a time when the strong Indian monsoon let rivers run full, making floodplain agriculture more productive. This likely helped India support larger populations: over the next 3,000 years, population would rise by nearly eight times, to reach 20 million. Indeed, between 4000 and 2000 BCE, India quite possibly had the fastest growing population in the world, thanks, in part, to the agricultural marvels of the Harappan Civilisation. These farmers mastered their local water, not by trying to control it but by shaping their cities and their diets to what the local land and climate supported. Technology, after all, is but the handmaiden of philosophy. When the philosophy was “Adapt”, water management and diets did. And so, when water was plentiful, the people gorged on wheat, but in a dry spell, they made do with foxtail millets, as archaeobotanical evidence shows. Today, we are dazzled by shiny tech, ignoring the “winner-take-all” or “ignore-negative-externalities” philosophies operating behind many of them, and forgetting that philosophy, like climate, always comes home to roost. *** About 4,000 years ago, a study of snail shells from a lake in a Harappan-era settlement showed that the monsoon, our monsoon, weakened not for one or two years, but for two centuries. Together with other factors, this is believed to have led to the decline, or deurbanisation, of the civilisation that once flourished here. Two millennia later, a climate shift may have played a hand in the fall of the Roman Empire. Closer to home, an interplay of climate and population appear to have shaped the many cities of Delhi, acting like a pendulum, pushing it from river to ridge and back again. For example, Iltutmish established his city far from the Yamuna, in the defensible Lal Kot. But as the population grew, the people needed water, and so he built a tank called Hauz-i-Shamsi, in 1231. When that proved insufficient, the city began inching closer to the river. As the Mamluks ceded to the Khiljis, a spell of weaker monsoons pushed the city closer to the river, prompting Alauddin Khilji to build another tank, Hauz Khas, to harness the rains. Even that was not enough. As the Khiljis ceded to the Tughlaqs, the drought intensified, with famines killing thousands. “Rumours of cannibalism were current,” the historian Irfan Habib writes, in his 2001 book Economic History of Medieval India, 1200-1500. A geological blink later, India was colonised. Between 1600 and 1700, forests turned to fields at a galloping rate. To the colonisers, driven by a philosophy of maximising revenue, this was free land. The bill for that “free” gift came due much later, as we shall see. *** In 18th-century England, the economist Thomas Malthus wrote that “the power of population is infinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man”. Later in life, he taught young men headed to India as part of the East India Company that famine was a consequence of fast-growing populations. Did that particular instruction make colonial leaders less concerned with their role in famine amelioration? The 19th century saw famines claim millions of lives. Deforestation, a fixed, cash tax, and the forest and market policies of the Raj made a dry stream flow less reliable, and pushed farmers to grow inedible or climate-unsuited crops. Did all this, paired with the export of grain while the masses starved, cause the death toll, or was it the Malthusian ogre of a growing population? The next century saw India gain independence, after which the crude death rate (the number of deaths per 1,000 in a given year) began to plummet. It fell from 27 in 1941 to 15 in 1971, to 10 in 1991, and 7 in 2011. India, worried about its population, launched its National Family Planning Programme in 1952, the first country in the world to do so. And yet, while India’s birth rate fell, the population continued to boom. Last year, ours became the world’s most populous country. That is not a bad thing, per se. Indeed, there are advantages to a large population: one Bengaluru is bigger than an Israel; one Delhi much larger than a Singapore. These tiny nations have spun wealth out of their vulnerabilities and so can we, if we play our cards, especially education and local policy, right. However, per United Nations data, our numbers seem likely to swell by another 100 million by 2030 — just as the climate is changing again, asking us to make land use greener, leaving us less room to grow more crops or build on. Where will these 100 million be housed, when our cities and towns are running out of green spaces and water bodies? Where will the land come from, to graze the animals and raise the crops they will need? Where will the cotton for their throwaway onesies be grown? Population and climate both limit the strategic options we can take. With a smaller population and a friendlier climate, we could have taken our water for granted. Doing so now is tantamount to ritual suicide. Being blasé about food waste is a luxury we no longer have. We may never (and I pray we never) experience famine again, but so many mouths to feed means that the smallest supply disruptions (a heatwave here or a flood there) will send prices soaring. This is especially true since we have doubled down on crops that don’t suit their local climate, pumping out so much groundwater to support rice and sugarcane and the myriad others that we have altered the tilt of Earth’s axis. *** It’s more than food: we churn out cement, steel, cobalt, plastic, cotton and chemicals to give solidity to our ephemeral desires. The average Indian consumes only 1/10th the energy and the meat an American consumes, but the average Indian is consuming more, of late. If that trend continues, then Houston, or rather Sriharikota, we have a problem. It’s the defining trade-off for this generation: progeny or philosophy, somethings gotta give. A decade ago, Samuel L Jackson, playing the eccentric villain Valentine in a Kingsman film, said: “When you get a virus, you get a fever. That’s the human body raising its core temperature to kill the virus. Planet Earth works the same way. Global warming is the fever, mankind is the virus. We’re making our planet sick. A cull is our only hope. If we don’t reduce our population ourselves, there’s only one of two ways this can go: The host kills the virus, or the virus kills the host.” I don’t agree. There is a way for both host and “virus” to survive: we learn to co-exist. We evolve to become less lethal (as the variants of Covid-19 did), and use our resources more thoughtfully, in a philosophy that acknowledges that the environment matters. Seeing the smog all around us, though, I wonder if that will happen fast enough. (Mridula Ramesh is a climate-tech investor and author of The Climate Solution and Watershed. She can be reached on tradeoffs@climaction.net)

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Jake Paul sided with his former rival, Tommy Fury, in a social media shot at former UFC star Darren Till. Jake Paul is fresh off his unanimous decision win over boxing legend Mike Tyson earlier this month. Just days after the win, Paul isn’t slowing down in his marketing tactics and unleashed a brutal troll job on Tommy Fury’s upcoming boxing opponent . Fury will face former UFC star Darren Till at Misfits Boxing X Series 20 in a 205lb exhibition boxing match on January 18th. Ahead of their upcoming boxing match, the two sides traded barbs at a pre-fight press conference, featuring a wild brawl on stage . Till has previously exuded supreme confidence in what he would do to Paul if the two were ever booked for a boxing match. After the Fury vs. Till announcement, Paul highlighted one of Till’s biggest losses to irk the former UFC title challenger. READ MORE: ‘This is wrong!’... Bellator champs, including Patricio Pitbull, scorch PFL over inactivity Jake Paul puts Darren Till below former rivals Ben Askren, Tyron Woodley on the fighting hierarchy In a recent post to X , Paul belittled Till with footage from the latter’s UFC title loss to one of his former boxing opponents, Tyron Woodley. “MMA/UFC career fact check,” Paul began. “Silva > Woodley > Diaz > Askren > Perry > Till (got spanked by Tyron).” It’s uncertain, as of this writing, what provoked Paul to throw such a blatant shot at Till online. But, it’s clear he has a rooting interest in the upcoming Fury vs. Till scrap. After defeating Tyson earlier this month, Paul is expected to return sometime in the first quarter of 2025. A rematch with Fury could potentially be in the works, depending on how the Fury vs. Till clash plays out in January. Till made his exhibition boxing debut against Mohammad Mutie earlier this year, winning by TKO and igniting a post-fight scuffle. The former UFC standout still wants an eventual return to the Octagon to face one of the top names in the middleweight division, including possibly Bo Nickal . READ MORE: Francis Ngannou bizarrely backs Jon Jones’ decision to not fight Tom Aspinall Jake Paul remasters heel role to defend former rival Paul suffered his first professional boxing loss to Fury last year after winning his first six professional fights, including victories over Woodley and UFC Hall of Famer Anderson Silva. Since the Fury loss, he’s rattled off five-straight wins, including a TKO victory over Bare Knuckle FC superstar Mike Perry . Till’s late-career UFC struggles led to him parting ways with the promotion last year, just weeks after a UFC 282 loss to Dricus du Plessis. He lost five of his last six fights with the promotion, including the welterweight title defeat to Woodley at UFC 228. Depending on how things play out in January, Paul and Till could potentially be on a boxing collision course. Paul has a history of facing former MMA standouts in the boxing ring but wants to one day fight for a boxing world title, calling out Canelo Alvarez and others. In the meantime, Paul took a rare defense against one of his former rivals and holds little regard for Till’s fighting accolades. READ MORE: Jon Jones’ desired pay for Tom Aspinall fight predicted by longtime UFC commentator

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