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73856618
Mayorella marianaensis
2023-05-21 15:35:26+00:00
Mayorella marianaensis is a species of amoebozoan protist discovered in 2023 in Mariana Trench sediments. It belongs to the order Dermamoebida, a group of naked amoebae with a thick glycocalyx. Cells of Mayorella marianaensis were isolated and cultivated from deep-sea sediments at a depth of 3,144 meters in the vicinity of the Mariana Trench, in the Pacific Ocean. The culture was characterized as a new Mayorella species through morphological and phylogenetic analyses using SSU rRNA genes. The results were published by Xiaoli Lei, Xiaojuan Chen, Jianming Chen and Chen Liang in the journal Protist in June 2023. Mayorella marianaensis locomotive cells have an average width of 74 μm and length of 28 μm. In addition there are three floating forms identified. The most common floating form is an irregular sphere of 25–47 μm in diameter. The second floating form has between 18 and 25 very small pseudopodia (around 9–30 μm in length), while the third has about 6 to 9 thin and radiating pseudopodia (around 25–125 μm in length). The cell coat (or cuticle) outside of the plasma membrane is around 190 to 290 nm thick and consists of two layers: an outer layer, loosely arranged, with its surface covered with hairs called glycostyles; and an inner layer, closely arranged in stripes.
2023
75014801
Pleurosigma pacificum
2023-10-09 14:06:49+00:00
Pleurosigma pacificum is a species of planktonic diatom discovered in the tropical Western Pacific Ocean. Pleurosigma pacificum is a naviculoid diatom, a type of photosynthetic protist (or alga) that is similar in shape to those of the genus Navicula, said to be shaped like a boat. In particular, naviculoid diatoms of the genus Pleurosigma usually have a sigmoid valve or raphe, in the shape of a sigmoid function or the letter S. The species P. pacificum is characterized by lanceolate valves, around 45.0–51.1 μm long and 13.0–15.6 μm wide, that taper gradually towards subacute ends. Their raphe is straight, filiform, slightly curved near the poles. The center of the valve is round, while the terminal area is shaped like a funnel. Pleurosigma pacificum is a planktonic unicellular alga known only from its type location, in the Pacific Ocean. Pleurosigma pacificum was isolated from the tropical Western Pacific Ocean, hence its name "pacificum". Cells were obtained from phytoplankton samples collected from the upper 200 meter water column. Its morphology was studied through light microscopy and electron microscopy. Its DNA was sequenced and, through phylogenetic analyses based on two genes, SSU rDNA and rbcL, its taxonomic position within the genus Pleurosigma was confirmed. The species was described by researchers Fei-Chao Du, Yu-Hang Li and Kui-Dong Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. The results were published in the journal PhytoKeys in 2023.
2023
73699262
2024 Florida Amendment 3
2023-05-01 18:26:48+00:00
Florida Amendment 3, officially titled "Adult Personal Use of Marijuana" (Florida initiative 22-05), is a voter initiative that will appear on the 2024 ballot. It would amend the state constitution to legalize cannabis in the state of Florida. The initiative was registered with authorities around August 2022 for signature collection and assigned initiative number 22-05. To qualify for the ballot, 891,589 valid signatures were required. By December 1, 2022, it had gotten 53,982 signatures. With 294,037 validated signatures by early 2023, an automatic state supreme court legal review was triggered. 635,961 signatures were validated by the Florida Secretary of State as of April 4, and there were 841,130 validated signatures by May 1. Around June 1, the Florida Division of Elections validated 967,528 signatures – enough for the measure to qualify for the 2024 ballot. The Florida Supreme Court issued a ruling on April 1, 2024 that the initiative would appear on the November general ballot. Hialeah mayor Esteban Bovo voice opposition to the amendment, saying "this amendment threatens to undermine the laws we've upheld and the safety of our residents".
2023
73312318
Kentucky Senate Bill 47
2023-03-17 14:56:19+00:00
Kentucky Senate Bill 47 is a law enacted in 2023 to create a medical cannabis program in the state (also called medical marijuana). House Bill 136 in the 2022 session would have created a medical cannabis program. It was passed by the house of representatives 59–34 on March 17, 2022. The governor of Kentucky, Andy Beshear, said on April 7, 2022, that he was considering executive action to permit medical cannabis in his state if House Bill 136 was not approved in the state senate. When the session ended without senate consideration of the bill, Beshear issued executive order 2022-338 on June 14, 2022, that created the Kentucky Medical Cannabis Advisory Committee to provide recommendations on ways forward for medical cannabis. The advisory committee held its first meeting on June 20. Governor Beshear asked the state legislature to create a legislatively authorized medical program, after some degree of opening the door to one in 2022 via his own executive order. Senate Bill 47 to create a medical cannabis program cleared a committee on March 14, prior to Senate readings. It was the first time a legalization bill had received a state senate hearing. The bill was approved 26–11 by the senate on March 16. It received its first reading in the house the same day. The bill was passed by the house of representatives on March 30, and Governor Beshear signed the bill the next day on March 31. The bill establishes regulations for medical cannabis qualifying conditions. Under the bill, the Kentucky Center for Cannabis Research would be able to add new conditions to the list. Patients will be able to possess a 30-day supply. Smoking cannabis is prohibited, but raw cannabis will be available for vaporizing. The bill also establishes THC limits: 35% on flower, 70% on concentrates, and 10 milligrams on edibles. The program goes into effect January 1, 2025.
2023
76967922
Fyllingsdalstunellen
2024-05-20 09:09:50+00:00
Fyllingsdaltunellen (the Fyllingsdal tunnel) is a 2900 meter long tunnel through Løvstakken for pedestrians and cyclists between Fyllingsdalen and Minde in Bergen, Norway. The tunnel opened in spring 2023 and is the world's longest cycling tunnel. It runs parallel to the light rail tunnel through the same mountain, and also functions as an escape tunnel for the light rail. The width of the road is 6 meters. 3.5 meters is a cycle lane with white asphalt, 2.5 meters is a walking lane for pedestrians, and there are also road shoulders. The lanes are separated from each other, with separate bicycle lanes for each direction, and the pedestrian lane slightly raised. The tunnel walls are made of slanted concrete blocks to dampen reverberation and echoes. From Fyllingsdalstunellen The tunnel is camera monitored, and has emergency lights and telephones. Cellphone coverage and emergency network has been established, as well as access for emergecy vehicles.
2023
73895543
2023 Cathay Pacific discrimination scandal
2023-05-27 02:42:21+00:00
The Cathay Pacific discrimination scandal (also known ironically as the Carpet Airline Discrimination Scandal) refers to a series of alleged discrimination incidents by the flight attendants against multiple passengers aboard Cathay Pacific Flight 987, flying from Chengdu Tianfu International Airport in mainland China to Hong Kong International Airport in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region on May 21, 2023. On 23 May 2023, an audio recording was posted to the internet in which Cathay Pacific flight attendants could allegedly be heard making fun of a passenger based on their lack of English proficiency. Later that day, after being criticized by Chinese media and tens of thousands of netizens, Cathay Pacific apologised on Chinese social media sites for their flight attendants’ discriminatory actions against non-English speakers, by saying that the airlines has "suspended the flight attendants concerned and launched an internal investigation", where any "inappropriate words and deeds" that violated its rules and professional ethics would be dealt with seriously once confirmed. The company emphasized the importance of the incident and promised to conduct a serious investigation. They reiterated their commitment to providing high-quality service to their passengers. However, many mainland netizens considered it to be 'insincere' and 'painless' because the statement was not stamped. Some even changed Cathay Pacific's English name to 'Carpet Airlines' as a form of ridicule. As for public reaction, many mainland Chinese netizens were not convinced by Cathay's apology. Some questioned why the apology was posted from Beijing instead of Hong Kong. Others criticised Cathay for only posting the apology in simplified Chinese on Weibo, and demanded Cathay to publish a global apology in both Chinese and English on their official website, Facebook, and Instagram. On the 23rd, the poster of the original Xiaohongshu post stated that the director of customer service at Cathay Pacific's headquarters had contacted her to further understand the situation. She insisted that her intention was to ensure an apology from the flight attendants for their discriminatory remarks and for Cathay Pacific to apologize to any passengers who had an unpleasant experience. She stated she would not delete her posts until the flight attendants apologized. In the afternoon, under the pressure of public opinion, Cathay Pacific issued a statement on Weibo again, 'formally apologizing' for the incident. The statement stated that the crew members involved in the incident had been suspended, an internal investigation was underway, and the results would be made public within three days. Due to the rising discontentment, Cathay Pacific apologised for the third time, saying that the airlines dismissed the three flight attendants who made inappropriate acts against non-English speaking passengers. CEO Ronald Lam apologized on behalf of the airlines and promised that he himself will lead a cross-departmental working group to conduct a comprehensive review and re-examination of the airline's service process, personnel training and related systems to avoid similar incidents from happening again. On the afternoon of the 23rd, a user posted personal attacks towards the poster of the original complaint post in Cantonese on Xiaohongshu, calling the incident as "a small matter that reveals the fragility of many." The user cussed the whistleblower for "shamelessly recording audio," and pointed out that "one of the recorded flight attendants was not from Hong Kong and that English was not her mother tongue", asking "why do you guys demand her to use Mandarin". In stark contrast to the Cathay Pacific's official apology statement, the post raised doubts among netizens about Cathay Pacific's sincerity in handling the incident. The whistleblower later posted a thread on Xiaohongshu in response to the insults, stating that she "never mentioned the nationality of the flight attendants or crew in the original thread". However, the cussing post stated the nationality and mother tongue of them. Therefore, the whistleblower suggested that the user who posted the insulting thread "is very likely to be" one of the involved flight attendants and criticized the user for still not realizing the discriminatory elements in the recording and the malicious intention expressed. On 24 May 2023, when being asked of the incident, Hong Kong chief executive John Lee said the incident had "hurt the feelings of compatriots in Hong Kong and the mainland". And at this time, CEO Ronald Lam apologized again, but in Mandarin, by saying that he will personally lead a taskforce to conduct a review into the company's code of conduct.
2023
75782029
2023–2024 Japanese slush fund scandal
2024-01-11 11:54:44+00:00
Beginning in November 2023, a scandal involving the misuse of campaign funds by members of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan's conservative Seiwa Seisaku Kenkyūkai and Shisuikai factions became public after it was revealed the faction had failed to report over ¥600 million in campaign funds and stored them in illegal slush funds. The scandal has led to discussions regarding the future of the LDP and its political dominance in Japan. On 18–19 January 2024, three factions of the Liberal Democratic Party (Seiwa Seisaku Kenkyūkai, Kōchikai, and Shisuikai) all announced their intention to dissolve to form a war cabinet. Several Liberal Democratic Party lawmakers were indicted, including incumbent lawmakers Yasutada Ōno and Yaichi Tanigawa, who both resigned from the party following their indictments. The Liberal Democratic Party has been the dominant party in Japanese politics since its formation in 1955. The dominance of the LDP, referred to popularly as the 1955 System, has only been interrupted twice: between 1993 and 1994, as a result of corruption scandals and the end of the Japanese asset price bubble, and from 2009 to 2012 as a result of continuing economic crisis during the Lost Decades. The LDP later recovered both times: in 1994 by forming a coalition with the Japan Socialist Party, and in 2012 as a result of the Fukushima nuclear accident a year prior. The LDP has numerous factions, but since 2012 has been dominated by the right-wing Seiwa Seisaku Kenkyūkai, also referred to as the Seiwakai or Abe faction. Formerly led by Shinzo Abe (for whom it is nicknamed), the Seiwakai continued to wield significant influence even after Abe resigned as Prime Minister in 2020. Prime Minister Fumio Kishida is a member of the liberal Kōchikai faction, which competes with the Seiwakai for influence. Other factions include the Shisuikai, or Nikai faction, led by Toshihiro Nikai; the Shikōkai, led by Tarō Asō; and the Heisei Kenkyūkai, led by Toshimitsu Motegi, among others. Following the assassination of Shinzo Abe in 2022, the LDP's popularity was significantly shaken after the extent of political influence by the Unification Church new religious movement was revealed. Kishida reshuffled his cabinet on 10 August 2022 in an attempt to purge UC-associated ministers from the government and regain popular support, but public scrutiny continued over remaining cabinet officials with connections to the church, and support for Kishida's government dropped by a further 16% according to polls conducted by the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper. Amidst continuing unpopularity, Kishida again reshuffled his cabinet on 13 September 2023, promising change. The new cabinet was primarily noted by The Japan Times as having a relatively high number of women in official positions, as well as including members of rival factions in high-ranking positions ahead of a leadership election within the LDP in 2024. The Japan Times assessed that the placement of Heisei Kenkyūkai leader Motegi as Secretary-General of the Liberal Democratic Party was a measure to reduce his ability to criticise Kishida, while Shikōkai member Taro Kono was appointed as Minister for Digital Transformation despite controversy regarding his handling of an Individual Number Card data breach. Important Seiwakai members Kōichi Hagiuda and Hirokazu Matsuno retained their cabinet positions, as did Shikōkai leader Asō. On 8 December 2023 Kishida, as well as other members of the LDP, were questioned by opposition lawmakers during a meeting of the National Diet. According to initial public allegations, dozens of members of the Diet from the Seiwakai were suspected of collecting at least ¥100 million from fundraising and storing the money in slush funds, in violation of Japanese campaign finance and election law. Amidst questioning, Kishida stated that the scandal was being publicly investigated and ordered the LDP to stop fundraising. Hirokazu Matsuno, Chief Cabinet Secretary, was the first individual to be named in the scandal. According to the allegations, he diverted over ¥10 million from fundraising events to a slush fund over a timeline of five years. Matsuno refused to speak about the scandal, noting that it was under investigation by police and stating that the Seiwakai was investigating its accounts. On 13 December 2023, amidst the growing size of the scandal, Kishida announced the removal of four ministers from his cabinet: Matsuno, Minister of Economy, Trade, and Industry Yasutoshi Nishimura, Minister for Internal Affairs and Communications Junji Suzuki, and Minister of Agriculture Ichiro Miyashita. Deputy Minister of Defence Hiroyuki Miyazawa was also removed from office. All of the removed officials were members of the Seiwakai, while Matsuno's replacement, Yoshimasa Hayashi, was a member of the Kōchikai. The same day as the removal of the Seiwakai ministers, the opposition Constitutional Democratic Party of Japan filed a motion of no confidence in Kishida's cabinet, which was defeated due to LDP dominance in the Diet's chambers. CDPJ and Japanese Communist Party parliamentarians criticised the government's response to the scandal, with CDPJ leader Kenta Izumi saying that the LDP lacked "self-cleansing ability" and JCP leader Kazuo Shii calling it a "bottomless, serious problem." Miyazawa said following his removal that the Seiwakai faction leadership had told him "it's okay to not enter" kickbacks received between 2020 and 2022, and therefore assumed the practice was legal. The scandal continued to grow late into the month, as the National Police Agency (NPA) raided the Seiwakai and Shisuikai headquarters. The NPA said that five of six LDP factions, including Kishida's Kōchikai, were under investigation for improper usage of slush funds. Kishida, who was unrelated to the scandal, left the Kōchikai as information regarding their involvement in the scandal became public. He further promised legal reforms and anti-corruption measures, promising to act as a "ball of fire." On 7 January 2024 the first arrests in the scandal were made, with former deputy Minister of Education Yoshitaka Ikeda and his aide Kazuhiro Kakinuma being charged with covering up ¥48 million received by the Seiwakai between 2018 and 2022. The NPA cited the possibility of destruction of evidence as a reason for their arrest. After information about the arrests became public, Ikeda was expelled from the LDP. Kishida's approval ratings fell as a result of the scandal, decreasing to 23% as of 13 December 2023, the lowest such rating any Prime Minister has had since the LDP's 2012 return to power. By 22 December, Kishida's approval ratings had further declined to 17%. Per a 18 December 2023 Mainichi Shimbun poll, 79% of individuals polled disapprove of Kishida's performance as Prime Minister, the highest disapproval since the end of World War II. Support for the LDP, according to the poll, remained the highest of any party, with 17% above the CDPJ's 14%. On 18 January 2024, Kishida announced his intention to dissolve the Kōchikai faction as a result of the scandal. The following day on 19 January, the Shisuikai and Seiwa Seisaku Kenkyūkai factions announced their dissolutions. Referred to by American journalist Anthony Kuhn as "Japan's worst political corruption scandal in decades," the scandal has threatened the LDP's authority and led to public speculation that the party could lose power following the next Japanese general election. Hitoshi Tanaka, a Japanese diplomat, has speculated that it could result in a change of government in Japan, potentially affecting Japan–United States relations. This notion has been disputed by University of Shizuoka professor Seijiro Takeshita, who has noted that the opposition to the LDP is fragmented and that the 2009–2012 Democratic Party of Japan government has continued to influence the unpopularity of the opposition. According to Takeshita, the scandal is likely to further increase political apathy and cynicism among the general population. Political journalist Hiroshi Izumi has claimed without evidence that the scandal is part of a broader attempt by Kishida and the Japanese judiciary to get revenge on the Seiwakai following a series of corruption scandals under Abe's premiership that went uninvestigated.
2023
75315801
Cyprus Confidential
2023-11-14 20:16:51+00:00
Cyprus Confidential is a journalism project investigating financial services in Cyprus and their role in allowing avoidance of international sanctions, and implementation of Russian state goals. It is conducted by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, Paper Trail Media and 69 media partners including Distributed Denial of Secrets and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) and more than 270 journalists in 55 countries and territories. Other media partners included Arab Reporters for Investigative Journalism, the Belarusian Investigative Center, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, CBC, Der Spiegel, the Guardian, Le Monde, Politiken, Syrian Investigative Reporting for Accountability Journalism, Ukraine’s Slidstvo and The Washington Post. The investigation suggests that "67 of the 105 Russian billionaires on the 2023 Forbes World’s Billionaires List used financial services firms on the island of Cyprus to hide their wealth and keep it out of reach from Western sanctions". The leaks include confidential information from financial services companies, mostly with connections to Cyprus, showing strong links with high-up figures in the Kremlin, some of whom have been sanctioned. The investigation reveals how Russian oligarchs transferred large amounts of assets to Cyprus after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The United States, the United Kingdom and the European Union imposed sanctions on more than 1,600 individuals and entities after Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. = The investigation is based on 3.6 million leaked files from the mid-1990s to April 2022, and include confidential background checks, organizational charts, financial statements, bank account applications and emails. The leaks come from six Cyprus-based financial services providers and a Latvian firm that sells Cypriot corporate registry documents: ConnectedSky Cypcodirect DJC Accountants i-Cyprus Kallias & Associates MeritKapital MeritServus According to the ICIJThe leaked records from Cypcodirect, ConnectedSky, i-Cyprus and Kallias & Associates were obtained by Paper Trail Media. Distributed Denial of Secrets obtained documents from Kallias & Associates, which were then shared with Paper Trail Media and ICIJ. DJC Accountants’ records were obtained by Distributed Denial of Secrets and shared by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project. = The investigation found more than 650 companies and trusts registered in Cyprus and more than 100 in other secrecy jurisdictions that were owned or controlled by Russians who have been sanctioned since 2014. The companies and trusts used to hide properties and other investments from oversight and included mother companies of Russian holdings and subsidiaries of Russian conglomerates including Evraz, which supplies the train rails used to transport arms and ammunition to Russian troops in Ukraine. The investigation purports to show "how 67 of the 105 Russian billionaires on the 2023 Forbes World’s Billionaires List used financial services firms on the island of Cyprus to hide their wealth and keep it out of reach from Western sanctions". The leaks contain confidential information from financial services companies, mostly with connections to Cyprus, and show that country to have strong links with high-up figures in the Kremlin, some of whom have been sanctioned. The investigation reveals how Russian oligarchs transferred large amounts of assets to Cyprus after the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The US, UK and EU imposed sanctions on more than 1,600 individuals and entities after Moscow launched its invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The investigation found that Cyprus financial firms were working for more than 95 sanctioned individuals and 44 PEPs who were "linked to state-owned companies or organizations deemed to merit added scrutiny because of a heightened risk involving corruption or other illicit activity". The investigation revealed secret talks to help Syria evade oil-industry sanctions and that German journalist Hubert Seipel had received more than $700,000 from a shell company linked to Russian oligarch Alexei Mordashov as a "sponsorship" to write books about Vladimir Putin and the "political environment in the Russian Federation". The investigation also revealed how the spyware firm Intellexa exploited loopholes in Cyprus and that US surveillance giant Verint Systems's network of operations includes subsidiaries in India. The investigation implicated Bulgarian businessman Ognian Bozarov in the payment behind the 2008 bombing and assassination of Ivo Pukanić and another journalist at the Croatian magazine Nacional, which Bozarov denied. It also revealed Sudanese businessman and alleged Hamas financier Abdelbasit Hamza's involvement with a Cyprus company that mines Egyptian gold. = Governments including Cyprus president Nikos Christodoulides and European lawmakers began responding to the investigation's findings in less than 24 hours. In November 2023, members of the European Parliament called for a crackdown on financial corruption and for member states that allow sanctions violations to be held accountable. Sophie in 't Veld the Parliament rapporteur for penalties for the violation of Union restrictive measures said that "When it’s about corruption and financial wrongdoings, the national authorities very often are the culprits. They’re complicit. The European Union is turning into a gangster’s paradise, because there is complete impunity." That month, Cyprus president Christodoulides promised to launch a probe and Cyprus Finance Minister Makis Keravnos said a criminal investigation had been initiated against firms including PwC for Russian sanctions violations. In December 2023, the United States announced it was sending two dozen experts from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network to Cyprus to assist with 29 cases related to money laundering and Russian sanctions violations. = The Greens–European Free Alliance called for EU countries to close loopholes in response to the investigation.
2023
73083354
E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump
2023-02-19 21:38:33+00:00
E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump is the name of two related lawsuits by author E. Jean Carroll against Donald Trump, who served as the 45th president of the United States. The two suits resulted in a total of $88.3 million in damages awarded to Carroll; both cases are under appeal. Both cases were presided over by Judge Lewis Kaplan and were related to Carroll's accusation from mid-2019 (while Trump was in office) that he sexually assaulted her in late 1995 or early 1996. Trump denied the allegations, prompting Carroll to sue him for defamation in November 2019 (a.k.a. Carroll I). In November 2022, Carroll filed her second suit against Trump (a.k.a. Carroll II), renewing her claim of defamation and adding a claim of battery under the Adult Survivors Act, a New York law allowing sexual-assault victims to file civil suits beyond expired statutes of limitations. This suit went to trial in April 2023. Evidence included testimony from two friends Carroll spoke to after the incident, a photograph of Carroll with Trump in 1987, testimony from two women who had separately accused Trump of sexual assault, footage from the Trump Access Hollywood tape and his October 2022 deposition. A jury verdict in May 2023 found Trump liable for sexually abusing and defaming Carroll, and ordered him to pay US$5 million in damages. Trump appealed and made an unsuccessful counterclaim. In July, Judge Kaplan clarified that the jury had found that Trump had raped Carroll according to the common definition of the word. In August 2023, Kaplan dismissed a countersuit and wrote that Carroll's accusation of "rape" is "substantially true". In September 2023, Kaplan issued a partial summary judgment regarding Carroll I, finding Trump liable for defamation via his 2019 statements. The jury verdict from the January 2024 trial was $83.3 million in additional damages. To appeal, Trump secured a bond for this amount plus 10 percent. On June 21, 2019, E. Jean Carroll published an article in New York magazine which stated that Donald Trump had sexually assaulted her in late 1995 or early 1996 in the Bergdorf Goodman department store in New York City. Contrary to Trump's later assertion that she was a "then almost sixty-year-old woman", she is less than three years Trump's senior, being 52 at the time, and he 49. Further details of the reputed incident were published in Carroll's 2019 book What Do We Need Men For?: A Modest Proposal. Carroll said that on her way out of the store she ran into Trump and he asked for help buying a gift for a woman. After she suggested a handbag or a hat, the two reputedly moved on to the lingerie section and joked about the other trying some on. Carroll said they ended up in a dressing room together, the door of which was shut, and Trump forcefully kissed her, pulled down her tights and raped her before she was able to escape. She stated that the alleged incident lasted less than three minutes, during which time there was no sales attendant present in the department. Lisa Birnbach and Carol Martin told New York magazine that Carroll had confided with them shortly after the alleged assault. The allegations were made during the Trump administration. In an official government statement, Trump denied that he had ever met Carroll, accused her of trying to sell books, implied she had a political agenda, compared the accusation to one against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and said Bergdorf Goodman had confirmed they had no surveillance footage of the alleged incident. Trump further called on the public to provide information indicating that Carroll was conspiring with the Democratic Party or New York magazine.: 59, 88  Trump separately stated in an interview with The Hill that Carroll was "totally lying" and that "she's not my type." Carroll provided New York with a photograph of her and her then-husband John Johnson socializing with Trump and his then-wife Ivana Trump in 1987. Trump dismissed its significance, saying, "Standing with my coat on in a line—give me a break—with my back to the camera. I have no idea who she is." Carroll initially chose not to describe the alleged sexual assault as rape, instead describing it as a fight. "My word is fight. My word is not the victim word ... I fought." A couple of weeks after the New York magazine article was published, Carroll ran into lawyer George Conway (a Trump critic and husband of Kellyanne Conway), who told her to file a defamation lawsuit and helped her find a lawyer. Conway then wrote an op-ed for The Washington Post encouraging readers to believe Carroll. = In November 2019, Carroll filed a defamation lawsuit with the New York Supreme Court. The suit states that Trump had damaged her reputation, substantially harmed her professionally, and caused emotional pain. Decades ago, the now President of the United States raped me. When I had the courage to speak out about the attack, he defamed my character, accused me of lying for personal gain, even insulted my appearance. No woman should have to face this. But this lawsuit is not only about me. I am filing this on behalf of every woman who has ever been harassed, assaulted, silenced, or spoken up only to be shamed, fired, ridiculed and belittled. After the lawsuit was filed, White House press secretary Stephanie Grisham described the lawsuit as "frivolous" and Carroll's story as fraudulent. In January 2020 Carroll's attorneys served a request for a DNA sample from Trump for "analysis and comparison against unidentified male DNA present" on a black dress she was wearing when the alleged assault occurred. In December 2020 Carroll said she was willing to delay collecting the sample and testimony from Trump in exchange for earlier access to other relevant records. The DNA sample request included a DNA report on Carroll and five others who may have come into contact with the dress during a photo shoot. In September 2020 government lawyers from the Department of Justice (DOJ) asserted that Trump had acted in his official capacity while responding to Carroll's accusation; they said that the Federal Tort Claims Act grants their department the right to take the case from Trump's private lawyers and move it to federal court. A White House official also argued that the act provides precedent for the government to exercise this right. Carroll's lawyer Roberta Kaplan stated that "Trump's effort to wield the power of the U.S. government to evade responsibility for his private misconduct is without precedent." In October 2020, U.S. District Court Judge Lewis Kaplan (of no relation to Roberta Kaplan) rejected the DOJ's motion, ruling that the president is not a government employee and that Trump's comments were not related to his job as such. The following month, the DOJ filed an appeal with the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. In June 2021 (during the Biden administration) the DOJ argued to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals that DOJ lawyers should defend Trump as a federal employee, stating, "Speaking to the public and the press on matters of public concern is undoubtedly part of an elected official's job." On September 27, 2022, the appeals court passed the question of whether Trump was shielded by his former office as U.S. president on to the District of Columbia (D.C.) appeals court. Trump's attorney Alina Habba praised the ruling as a reversal of the District Court's stance (that the comments were not executive business). In January 2023 the District of Columbia (D.C.) appeals court held oral arguments before a full panel of judges. Trump's lawyers argued that his comments fell within the scope of his employment, while some judges pointed out that D.C. law holds employers responsible when their employees cause individuals harm in the scope of their employment but not otherwise. Judge Catharine Easterly noted that employer liability cases usually have a trial record and jury verdict to refer to, while Judge John Howard questioned whether further fact-finding was warranted. In March 2023, Judge Kaplan ruled that the infamous Donald Trump Access Hollywood tape and the testimonies of Jessica Leeds and Natasha Stoynoff (who both allege that Trump began groping them without permission) would be admissible at the trial for the original lawsuit. He then postponed the trial for the defamation claim while the appeals court continued to deliberate. On April 21, 2023, the Second Circuit Appeals Court said it should not be responsible for deciding the question of whether Trump had acted within the scope of his role as president when he made public comments about Carroll, and it remanded the issue to the U.S. District Court for Judge Kaplan to decide. In July, the DOJ recanted its position that Trump was acting in his official capacity. = On October 12, 2022, Trump published a lengthy post on Truth Social against E. Jean Carroll, to which he attached a June 2019 photograph of her. Carroll would later successfully claim this post as defamatory in her lawsuit against him. This "Ms. Bergdorf Goodman" case is a complete con job ... I don't know this woman, have no idea who she is, other than it seems she got a picture of me many years ago, with her husband, shaking my hand on a reception line at a celebrity charity event. She completely made up a story that I met her at the doors of this crowded New York City Department Store and, within minutes, "swooned" her. It is a Hoax and a lie, just like all the other Hoaxes that have been played on me for the past seven years. ... She has no idea what day, what week, what month, what year, or what decade this so-called "event" supposedly took place. The reason she doesn't know is because it never happened, and she doesn't want to get caught up with details or facts that can be proven wrong. If you watch Anderson Cooper's interview with her, where she was promoting a really crummy book, you will see that it is a complete Scam. She changed her story from beginning to end, after the commercial break, to suit the purposes of CNN and Andy Cooper. ... For the record, E. Jean Carroll is not telling the truth, is a woman who I had nothing to do with, didn't know, and would have no interest in knowing her if I ever had the chance. = Trump was deposed by Carroll's lawyer Roberta Kaplan on October 19. Trump said that he usually had security guards with him but was unable to name any working for him at that time.: 73–76  He denied reaching out to Bergdorf Goodman ahead of his statements in 2019, arguing that "if it did happen, it would have been reported within minutes.": 78  He accused Carroll and her lawyer of being "aligned with Hillary Clinton", an assertion he based on "somebody [having] mentioned it", but admitted that he had no knowledge of Carroll's political party or documentation of her pursuing a political agenda; he went on to repeatedly accuse Roberta Kaplan of being a political operative of Clinton or the Democratic Party. When asked if anyone had given him information on Carroll conspiring with that party or New York magazine, Trump said, "I'll let you know.": 202  He threatened to sue Carroll and Kaplan after the proceedings were complete. He also accused Carroll of attempting to sabotage his 2024 presidential campaign by keeping him "busy with litigation.": 130–131  Trump called the litigation a hoax comparable to supposed ruses against him related to both Russia and Ukraine. Trump reiterated that Carroll was "not my type", and told the lawyer, "You would not be a choice of mine either ... under any circumstances." Trump was shown the photograph he had characterized as a reception line at a charity event, but proceeded to mistakenly identify the image of Carroll as his second wife, Marla Maples, despite his first wife Ivana Trump also being in the picture; upon recognizing his mistake, he protested that the photo was "very blurry". He then confirmed that all of his wives were his "type", and that by type he primarily meant physical type. Despite attacking Carroll for not remembering the exact year of the alleged incident, Trump was unable to state the exact years of the beginning or end of any of his marriages when asked, and claimed that he was unsure if he had any extramarital affairs during his first marriage (including with Maples, despite this affair having regularly featured in New York tabloids). Trump reiterated in his deposition that he did not know Carroll before she sued him, calling her a "nut job" and inaccurately asserting that in her CNN interview with Anderson Cooper she "actually indicated that she loved" the alleged assault and "said it was very sexy to be raped". (Carroll had actually said, "I was not thrown on the ground and ravished, which... The word rape carries so many sexual connotations. This was not—this was not sexual. It just hurt. ... I think most people think of rape as being sexy.") He said Carroll alleged he "swooned" her, a word he said he used because he thought it would be more polite than saying fucked. When asked if he had made the statements in the Access Hollywood tape (e.g., "when you're a star, [beautiful women] let you do it. They let you do anything. ... grab 'em by the pussy"), Trump responded, "Well, historically, that's true with stars. If you look over the last million years, that's largely true, unfortunately or fortunately." He then agreed that he was such a "star". = On November 24, 2022, Carroll sued Trump for battery under the Adult Survivors Act (a law passed the previous May which allows sexual-assault victims to file civil suits beyond expired statutes of limitations). Carroll made a renewed claim of defamation, citing Trump's statements on Truth Social from October. The second suit alleges that: Trump manhandled Carroll, "pulled down her tights", groped around her genitals and raped her; this reputedly left Carroll unable to develop sexual relationships. Carroll sought unspecified damages for the two charges and for Trump to retract his Truth Social statements about her. Lawyers for Trump said in a December 19 court filing that they would request a dismissal of the lawsuit partially on the basis that the New York law is invalid due to its allegedly contradicting the state's constitution regarding due process. Judge Kaplan set an April 25, 2023, trial date and denied the request to dismiss the lawsuit. As the case is the second to be called E. Jean Carroll v. Donald J. Trump, it is distinguished by the name Carroll II. = One of the discovery disputes was over Trump's DNA. On February 10, Joe Tacopina, who had become Trump's lead lawyer in the case on January 31, 2023, said Trump would be willing to provide a DNA sample, though the discovery period had ended after three years of Carroll's lawyers requesting such a sample. Further, Tacopina stipulated that an appendix from Carroll's report (chiefly regarding her own DNA) must first be proffered and that Trump's DNA would be submitted only to be compared to the material on the dress. Carroll's lawyer asserted that the motion was a "bad-faith effort to taint the potential jury pool". On February 15 Judge Kaplan dismissed Trump's offer as an out-of-line delay tactic. Further, the judge argued that the presence of Trump's DNA would not conclusively prove whether a rape occurred as no sperm was detected. In late March, the judge prohibited any mention of DNA evidence at the trial. On February 16, 2023, Trump's lawyers requested that the allegations from Leeds and Stoynoff and the Access Hollywood tape be barred as evidence (the tape having been cited by Carroll's lawyer as evidence of a larger pattern of sexual misconduct). Carroll's counsel argued that the accounts of the two women demonstrate a "consistent pattern". On March 2 Trump's lawyers again asked for the tape's dismissal, arguing that it does not demonstrate a pattern of behavior consistent with Carroll's accusation. In March, Kaplan ruled that the tape and testimony from the two women would be admissible at the trial for the second suit along with testimony from two Bergdorf Goodman employees. Trump's purported "rebuttal damage expert" was rejected because he did not qualify as an expert witness. Kaplan also denied a joint request from both parties to consolidate the two lawsuits into one trial. On February 23 Trump's lawyers requested that the defamation claim in the second lawsuit be dismissed, arguing that his Truth Social post from October was merely a response regarding the first lawsuit which mostly repeated previous positions (despite making original incursions), and was thus protected under supposed "absolute litigation privilege" provided by New York State Civil Rights Law § 74. In late March, Judge Kaplan denied this request. On March 11 Judge Kaplan asked Trump and Carroll if they had any objection to the use of an anonymous jury. On March 23 Kaplan ruled that the jury would be anonymous for the trial. He cited Trump's incendiary rhetoric against perceived enemies (including officials) ahead of his criminal indictment in New York related to hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. On April 10 Kaplan ruled that the jury would be anonymous even to the lawyers involved in the case, citing threats by Trump supporters against Judge Juan Merchan, who was overseeing the New York criminal investigation of The Trump Organization. On April 14 Kaplan upheld his ruling for an anonymous jury and denied a request from Trump's team for information about its members on the basis of possible bias after they cited negative online comments made about him on Carroll's June 2019 New York article. On April 10 Trump and Carroll were given ten days to declare whether they would attend the trial. Defense attorney Tacopina speculated about "logistical and financial burdens upon New York City" associated with Trump's physical appearance. On April 20 the judge argued that Trump had had "ample time" to make arrangements for trial and said it would be no easier for the Secret Service to protect him at his newly announced April 27 campaign event in New Hampshire than at the simultaneous trial. On April 11 defense attorney Tacopina asked to delay the trial by a month, arguing that media coverage of the Daniels scandal would taint the jury pool. Carroll's lawyer argued that Trump "instigated (and sought to benefit from) ... much of the very coverage about which he now complains." On April 17 Kaplan agreed with Carroll's lawyer and ruled against the delay request, arguing that there was no reason to assume jury selection would be easier to conduct in May. On April 13 Trump's attorneys asked to reopen discovery about whether Carroll knew that her lawyer's firm had received donations from Democrat-aligned billionaire and LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman. Judge Kaplan allowed discovery for the "carefully circumscribed examination of that narrow question". Trump's attorneys requested an extra month to make this inquiry, but Kaplan refused to delay the trial. On April 21 the judge sealed the information related to Hoffman's alleged contributions, as requested by Carroll's team. = The trial began on April 25, 2023, in federal court at the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York. That day, the judge selected a jury of six men and three women, anonymous even to the judge, and it was arranged that the jury would be transported by U.S. Marshals from an underground garage throughout the trial. In opening statements that day, the judge advised both counsel to tell their clients to avoid comments likely to "inspire violence". On April 26 Carroll testified; she said she was unaware if any employees were present during the alleged incident because the department was on a different story and she was focused on riding the escalator, while also supposing that the encounter would make a humorous anecdote. She said after entering the dressing room, Trump slammed her against the wall (hurting the back of her head) and digitally penetrated her before doing so with his penis (causing vaginal pain). She said she struggled against Trump, and upon leaving the store, was "extremely rattled" and in disbelief about what happened. She talked with her friend Lisa Birnbach on the phone, thinking, "If Lisa thought it was funny then it was not a bad thing and I didn't completely do a stupid thing," Carroll recalled thinking. "I had not processed it. I had not processed what was going on." Birnbach told Carroll, who was laughing on the phone, that it wasn't funny, that Carroll was raped and should report the assault to the police, Carroll testified. Carroll said that the following evening she told her friend and co-worker Carol Martin, who reputedly confirmed Carroll's fear that if she publicly discussed the incident, Trump would retaliate via his legal team. She further acknowledged her political distaste of Trump but said, "I'm settling a personal score because he called me a liar repeatedly and it really has decimated my reputation." She said she did not go public during Trump's 2016 campaign because "the more women who came forward to accuse him, the better he did in the polls." Additionally, Carroll said she initially thought the incident happened in 1994 or 1995, until realizing Lisa Birnbach visited Mar-a-Lago to write a February 1996 New York story on Trump (after 5–6 months of communicating by phone), which Carroll said would not have occurred if her friend knew about the alleged attack. Also on April 26, Carroll's lawyers introduced a 2017 email exchange between her and Martin, indicating an intention to "scheme" by doing their "patriotic duty". Carroll stated that she was not scheming to "bring down Donald Trump", as Tacopina suggested the messages could imply. A former Bergdorf Goodman manager testified that departments were often left unattended and dressing rooms left open (though the doors would have automatically locked if closed). The judge ruled that evidence related to Reid Hoffman's funding of the trial was inadmissible, saying, "I've determined there is virtually nothing there in terms of credibility." Trump commented about the suit on Truth Social, calling it a scam and mentioning the (inadmissible) DNA evidence. Judge Kaplan warned Tacopina that Trump should stop making such comments, as they constitute a potential liability to him. On April 27 Carroll was cross-examined by Tacopina, who asked why she did not scream during the alleged incident. She said she "was too much in panic to scream". She said she was surprised by the sudden turn to assault, which she alleged began with Trump pushing her against the wall and kissing her, and ended with no communication between them; she said she noticed no other customers as she left. She said she had experienced daily regret since first suing Trump due to feeling threatened, elaborating that she had received many negative comments echoing Trump's attacks. Additionally, she said she was unable to recall the specific meaning of her 2017 email response to Martin. Carroll said she omitted the incident from her diary because she thought it would force her to think about the negative experience, and said she was inspired to come forward by the #MeToo movement, especially the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse cases. She said that although she wanted her book to succeed, she was not struggling financially. Tacopina mentioned the dress Carroll allegedly wore during the incident, leading the judge to stop testimony for the day, though Tacopina claimed he had not planned to mention the barred DNA evidence. Carroll finished testifying on May 1, whereat Tacopina cited inconsistencies in Carroll's account, such as her stating that she had not used the Bergdorf fitting rooms in the years after the alleged assault before saying that she actually had used them since the incident. Tacopina played an audio clip of Carroll saying that she did not blame Trump for the cessation of her romantic life, but that she "just didn't have the luck to meet that person that would cause me to be desirous again" and that "maybe in that dressing room my desire for desire was killed." Carroll had said that she was a "big fan" of Trump's show The Apprentice due to its outstanding "witty competition". She also asked on social media, "Would you have sex with Donald Trump for $17,000? Even if you could a) give the money to charity? b) close your eyes? And he's not allowed to speak." Additionally, Tacopina asked if Carroll had seen a 2012 episode of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit involving a rape in a Bergdorf fitting room, which Carroll said she had not seen and called an "astonishing" coincidence. Tacopina also referred to an incident in which Carroll called the police to report vandalism to a mailbox, prompting her to explain, "I don't want anybody to know that I suffer. Up until now, I would be ashamed to let people know what is actually going on." Also on May 1, Trump's team requested a mistrial, alleging that the judge was being unfair in Carroll's favor. During cross-examination Tacopina had questioned a passage from Carroll's 2019 book suggesting that all men should be sent to Montana for "retraining", and the judge explained it was an allusion to Jonathan Swift's A Modest Proposal (the title of which Carroll took for her 2019 book's subtitle), which satirically suggests that poor Irish people might ease their economic troubles by selling their children as food to the rich. Tacopina complained that the judge, by providing this clarification, had "bolstered [Carroll's] testimony". Judge Kaplan denied the request for a mistrial without comment. On May 2 witnesses testified for Carroll. Lisa Birnbach said that in 1996, remembering having met with Trump that January for a story she was writing, said that Carroll called her, and short of breath, alleged that Trump had just assaulted her. Birnbach reputedly offered to transport Carroll to the police, but the latter refused and requested that their conversation remain secret. Birnbach said she did not talk about it again until 2019, once Carroll had decided to go public with her account. Jessica Leeds, a retired stockbroker, testified that Trump had suddenly groped her in a similar manner to Carroll while Leeds was traveling on an airplane in the late 1970s. Leeds said a flight attendant invited her to move to first class and sat her next to Donald Trump, whom she did not know, and that he groped her breast and tried to kiss her, but that she broke away when he started reaching up her skirt. She recalled passengers sitting behind them, who did not intervene, and reasoned that the incident may have lasted less than a minute. Leeds said she did not speak about the incident but that Trump later saw her and referred to her as "that cunt from the airplane". Also on May 2, Tacopina confirmed that Trump would not testify at the trial. On May 3 video of Trump's deposition was shown to the jury. Trump stated that he rarely shopped at Bergdorf Goodman and reiterated that he did not read Carroll's written accusations in either her book or in her New York magazine article. A clinical psychologist testified that she evaluated Carroll and found that she had been harmed by the alleged rape but found no signs of mental disorder. Journalist Natasha Stoynoff testified that while visiting Mar-a-Lago in December 2005, Trump brought her to look at a room while his wife Melania was changing outfits; he allegedly forced her against a wall and kissed her while she tried to push him off and told her they were going to have an affair, citing the well-known "best sex I've ever had" quote attributed to his previous wife Marla Maples. Stoynoff said she only told a limited number of people because she did not want it to affect her career. A clip was played to the jury of Trump denying Stoynoff's claim while running for president, in which he implies she is unattractive. Additionally, on May 3 Tacopina announced that Trump's team would not present a defense case. Tacopina said that, due to health concerns, they decided not to call an expert witness they had proposed. On May 4 news anchor Carol Martin testified and corroborated Carroll's account of their conversation following the alleged assault, thinking it occurred sometime between 1994 and 1996, and remembering Carroll saying she had also told Birnbach. Martin said she and Carroll did not "scheme" against Trump, though the former demonstrated hate for Trump in some of her text messages. Clips of Trump's deposition were played. Both the prosecution and defense rested their case on May 4. That day Trump made a statement from Ireland indicating he might come to the trial. The judge allowed Trump to move to reopen the case, but Trump did not respond by the May 7 deadline. On May 8 closing arguments were made. Carroll's lawyer Roberta Kaplan cited her client's attire during the alleged assault—a wool dress with tights—as indicating the weather at the time, which Carroll had narrowed down to after Birnbach's collaboration with Trump on a February 1996 article, further thinking it happened on a Thursday because the store was open late. Additionally, it reputedly happened while Carroll hosted a talk show on America's Talking (1994–1996), which Kaplan argued Trump likely saw in part because it was on immediately before an interview with him filmed in the same building for the same network. Kaplan argued that Carroll "was trying to come to grips with the fact that she was being attacked", which she remembered in "great detail". Kaplan cited the moment in Trump's deposition when he mixed up Carroll with his wife, evidently debunking his claim that she was not his "type"; further, Kaplan asserted that Trump followed an established pattern of behavior of his when caught in wrongdoing by making an excuse (that the photograph was reputedly blurry). Another of Carroll's lawyers argued that Tacopina relied on rhetoric rather than evidence and cited Trump's failure to deny the charges in person, further ridiculing the idea that Carroll, Birnbach, and Martin secretly conspired to take down Trump based on the plot of an episode of Law & Order: SVU. Tacopina focused on the gaps in the plaintiff's case, particularly the unknown date of the incident, asserting that she "tailored her testimony" by saying she realized it was on a Thursday, and accused her of failing to bring the case to police because it "would never make it through a police investigation in a million years". Tacopina repeated Trump's dismissal of the Access Hollywood tape as "locker room talk" and argued that it shows Trump bragging about "women letting you do something" rather than sexual assault. He argued that Leeds's story was false because other airline passengers would not have sat by and let it happen. He also asserted that the prosecution could have called Trump as a witness but, "Instead, what they want is for you to hate him enough to ignore the facts." Verdict and aftermath (May 2023–present) The jury reached a unanimous decision on May 9, 2023, after deliberating for less than three hours. Considering the preponderance of the evidence, the jury delivered a verdict that first stated that Carroll had not proven that Trump raped her, and next stated that Carroll did prove that Trump had sexually abused her, and also stated that Trump defamed Carroll with false statements made with actual malice in the October 2022 Truth Social post; thus the jury awarded Carroll a total of $5 million in damages from Trump. In an appearance on CNN the day after the verdict, Trump continued to disparage Carroll; he called her a "whack job", said the trial was "rigged", denied raping Carroll and said "I didn't do anything else either", and claimed "I don't know who the hell she is." This led Carroll to consider a third defamation lawsuit against Trump concerning these comments. On May 11, 2023, Trump appealed the verdict. On June 8, Trump's team requested the award to be reduced to under $1 million or that a new trial should be held regarding damages, citing the jury's supposed rejection of the rape claim. Carroll's lawyers said that Trump mischaracterized the verdict (that he sexually abused Carroll) as supporting his contention that he did not rape her. On June 23, Trump's lawyers proffered $5.55 million to a federal court in case the appeal failed. On June 27, Trump filed a counterclaim alleging that Carroll had defamed him, particularly when she told CNN "yes he did" rape her in response to a question about the jury not finding him liable for that offense. According to Carroll's lawyer, four other statements made in the counterclaim occurred outside New York's one-year statute of limitations. On August 7, Judge Kaplan dismissed the counterclaim and wrote that Carroll's accusation of "rape" is "substantially true". A few days later, Trump appealed the dismissal. On July 19, Judge Kaplan denied Trump's bid for a new trial, as there was no "seriously erroneous result" nor "miscarriage of justice". Analyzing Trump's arguments, Kaplan found that Trump "misinterprets the jury's verdict", as in actuality, the "proof convincingly established, and the jury implicitly found, that Mr. Trump deliberately and forcibly penetrated Ms. Carroll's vagina with his fingers, causing immediate pain and long lasting emotional and psychological harm". Kaplan affirmed that Trump had raped Carroll according to the common meaning of the word and ruled against altering the award amount. On May 14, 2024, Carroll's lawyers requested an expedited appeal, arguing that its completion by July 2024 would lessen the chance of Trump seeking delays related to other trials or his potential presidency. = On May 9, 2023, Judge Kaplan explained to jurors a verdict form, discussing three types of battery for which Trump could be liable to pay damages under New York law: rape, sexual abuse, and forcible touching. Seeking $10 million in damages, Carroll amended her original defamation suit on May 22, 2023, to include additional comments Trump made following the verdict against him that month, both on a CNN town hall broadcast and Truth Social. After that amendment was filed, Trump made further negative remarks about Carroll on Truth Social, in which he admitted he had met her as captured by the 1987 photograph, despite having otherwise claimed (including in his 2019 official statement) that he had not. In court filings on May 26 and June 5, Trump's lawyers sought to prevent Carroll from amending her case, including her replacement of the word 'rape' with 'sexual assault', on the basis that the May verdict rejected Carroll's claim that Trump raped her. In fact, the jury only found that the rape accusation was unproven as compared to sexual abuse. On June 13, Judge Kaplan ruled that Carroll could amend her lawsuit. Two days later, Kaplan ruled that the trial would begin on January 15, 2024, unless the case had "been entirely disposed of" by that date. On June 1, Kaplan denied a Trump ally's request to dismiss the case on the basis that Trump was being persecuted for being a white Christian. Trump's team asked for the case to be dismissed partially based on free speech protections and purported presidential immunity; on June 29, Kaplan denied this request, arguing that novel defenses (e.g., absolute immunity) had been introduced too late. Trump's team appealed this decision and requested for the trial to be delayed during the appeal effort; on August 18, Kaplan denied the delay. On September 12, Alina Habba argued to a three-judge panel of the Second Circuit Appeals Court that District Court proceedings should be stayed until the appeals court "resolves whether a president may raise his immunity defense". The next day, the appeals court denied the stay request but granted an expedited appeal process, which would also cover the matter of Trump's dismissed counterclaim. During an October 23 hearing, Circuit Judge Denny Chin defended Kaplan's opinion that Trump's immunity defense had been introduced too late. On December 13, the 2nd Circuit ruled that Trump could not use presidential immunity as a defense because he had raised it too late. On January 8, the 2nd Circuit declined to take up Trump's appeal again. On July 11, 2023, the DOJ dropped its prior position that Trump had been acting in the scope of his office when making his initial responses to Carroll's allegations. On September 6, 2023, Kaplan issued a partial summary judgment in favor of Carroll, ruling that Trump was liable for defaming Carroll via statements he made in 2019. Kaplan ruled that the jury's verdict in Carroll II "plainly established that Mr. Trump's 2019 statements were false", with the "substantive content" of Trump's defamatory 2022 statement being "identical to the substantive content" of Trump's 2019 statements; in both statements, Trump accused Carroll of "concocting a sexual assault allegation for improper purposes"; since "the jury considered and decided issues that are common to both cases" and concluded that "the sexual assault occurred", this indicated that "Carroll did not lie about it". As a result, the 2024 trial was expected to primarily focus on determining the amount of additional damages Trump will owe Carroll. On November 3, Kaplan announced that the jury would again be anonymous, citing Trump's statements about the court and case. On November 13, Trump's team moved to add "a new rebuttal expert", after the court twice rejected proposed expert witness Robert Fisher (who argued Carroll "benefitted from this public dispute"). On November 29, Trump posted on Truth Social that the Adult Survivors Act was unconstitutional, further disparaging Carroll and calling the case "election interference" (as he had said about a number of other unsettled legal matters). On December 21, less than a month before the trial's start date, Trump's team requested a 90-day delay to allow further appeal planning (possibly including a strategy of asking for the case to be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court), citing Special Counsel Jack Smith's recent description of the question of immunity as being "weighty and consequential" in the federal criminal case against Trump for alleged election obstruction. On December 28, a three-judge panel for the 2nd Circuit Appeals Court denied the delay request. Also on December 21, Carroll's lawyer asked Judge Kaplan to indicate quotes from the New York civil investigation of The Trump Organization he intended to cite in the trial. The judge responded that Trump's testimony related to his wealth would be relevant to the jury's calculation of punitive damages he must pay Carroll. Trump's lawyers requested on December 28 that the transcript of his October 2022 deposition be omitted as evidence from the 2024 trial because he might provide new testimony. On January 4, 2024, Judge Kaplan denied the request as frivolous. That morning, Trump posted 31 links on Truth Social (in about as many minutes and without comment) to negative stories and online posts about Carroll, as well as video clips stripped of context to make her statements about sexual assault seem fetishistic. On January 6, Trump mocked Carroll at a political rally for not screaming during the "made up" attack. That night, the judge ruled that Trump's lawyers could not argue before the jury that Trump did not rape Carroll. On January 9, Kaplan further ruled that the defense could not argue about Carroll's choice of lawyer, who was paying her legal fees, her romantic/sexual proclivities, or that Trump did not sexually abuse her or act with actual malice when making disparaging comments about her. Discussion of DNA evidence by either party was also barred. The judge affirmed that, contrary to implications by the defense, the trial would not be a "do over" of past proceedings and was to focus (as established) on additional damages owed to Carroll. Additionally on January 14, Kaplan ruled that Trump could not present Anderson Cooper's interview with Carroll or suggest she hoped to boost book sales. On January 12, 2024, Carroll's lawyer asked Judge Kaplan to ensure that if Trump testified, Trump first be required to tell the jury that he would keep his comments to the matter at hand and not make barred arguments, saying "his recent statements and behavior [e.g. in his New York business trial] strongly suggest that he will seek to sow chaos". Carroll's lawyer also asked that Trump be required to admit he sexually abused Carroll and disparaged her with actual malice. Also on January 12, the judge denied a request from Trump to delay the trial by a week so he could attend the funeral of his mother-in-law, prompting an incendiary Truth Social post. On January 13, Carroll's lawyer argued that Trump's counsel misrepresented the reason for his unavailability on January 17, as a campaign event was scheduled for that day. On January 14, the judge granted a continuance allowing Trump to testify on January 22, even if all other matters in the trial had concluded. After his being frequently mentioned by the defense in the first trial, on January 13, lawyer George Conway said he would be "admitted into evidence" in the case. On January 15, Tacopina withdrew from Trump's counsel. A few days later, Tacopina told MSNBC that "It was just my time," and said he had withdrawn for both personal and moral reasons. = The trial began on January 16, 2024, with Trump in attendance and Judge Lewis A. Kaplan presiding. A nine-member jury was selected, again being anonymous even to the lawyers and judge, who recommended using nicknames for further protection. Ahead of opening statements, Trump's Truth Social account made 22 posts about Carroll, which the latter's counsel cited in opening statements. Habba argued that Carroll's attackers were not inspired by Trump because Carroll was first attacked online before Trump denied her allegations. Habba insinuated that Carroll wanted "Trump to pay her for the mean tweets". The judge scolded Habba for repeating some arguments about topics he had already ruled on. On January 17, Carroll testified and was cross-examined. Her counsel complained that during testimony, Trump could be heard saying things like "witch hunt" and "con job"; he also reportedly pounded the table. The judge warned Trump that he could force him to leave. Trump replied that he "would love it". Trump posted on Truth Social that he felt obligated to attend "every moment" of the trial, in addition to attacks on the judge and asserting that he was the one who was owed damages. Judge Kaplan corrected Habba on trial procedure multiple times, including the process of entering evidence. Trump did not attend trial on January 18, as he attended his mother-in-law's funeral. A Northwestern University professor serving as an expert witness for Carroll argued that $12.1 million could be fairly spent on paying conservative pundits to repair Carroll's reputation. In her cross-examination by Habba, Carroll testified that she would prefer to have the reputation she did before accusing Trump as opposed to the popularity she gained, which she said "lowered" her reputation. After that day's proceedings, the court adjourned for the week. During the trial, Habba again targeted the connection between Carroll and George Conway, prompting the latter to state that "there's no secret there." On January 19, Habba requested a mistrial in this case on the basis that Carroll had deleted emails containing death threats. (Judge Kaplan eventually denied the request for a mistrial; he explained that starting the trial over again would not remedy the deleted emails.) In a January 20 court filing, Roberta Kaplan said she intended to present new evidence on January 22, including out-of-court comments by Trump during the trial. On January 22, court proceedings ended early because a juror and Habba reported they were feeling unwell. Afterwards, Trump made numerous Truth Social posts disparaging Carroll. Habba requested that trial not be held on January 23, as Trump would be involved with the New Hampshire primary that day. On the night of January 24, Trump posted 37 times to Truth Social about Carroll. On January 25, Carroll's counsel cited Trump testimony from the New York civil real-estate trial in which he argued he was worth billions of dollars, supporting Carroll's request for $10 million or more in damages as being relatively conservative. Carroll's team rested its case that day. Trump briefly testified, saying he stood by his 2022 testimony that Carroll's claim was a "hoax" and a "con job". He also said he had never instructed anyone to hurt Carroll and (in a comment stricken from the record) that he "just wanted to defend" himself, his family and the presidency. The defense then rested its case. Trump arrived late on January 26. As Habba talked out of turn, the judge told her she was "on the verge of spending some time in the lockup". Shortly afterward, minutes into Roberta Kaplan's closing argument, during which she argued for $12 million in damages, Trump suddenly stood up and left the courtroom. Verdict and aftermath (January 2024–present) On January 26, 2024, the jury deliberated for three hours and awarded Carroll $7.3 million in emotional damages, $11 million in reputation-related damages, and $65 million in punitive damages, totaling $83.3 million. The jury found Trump had committed sexual abuse and forcible touching, two of the three elements of Carroll's battery claim. Trump said he would appeal. The judge advised the jurors not to disclose that they had served on the trial and forbade them from revealing other jurors' identities. In a January 29 letter to Judge Kaplan, Habba cited an article from the New York Post asserting that Kaplan, as a senior litigation partner, had served as something like a mentor to junior litigation associate Roberta Kaplan during their nearly two years of overlapping time at the Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison law firm in the 1990s. The following day, Roberta Kaplan called the allegations "utterly baseless" and said she could not recall directly interacting with Lewis Kaplan at all during their shared time at the firm. Habba said Roberta Kaplan's response had seemingly resolved the issue. On January 30, New York Governor Kathy Hochul mentioned the case during a bill-signing ceremony for a law expanding the state's legal definition of rape to include nonconsensual vaginal, anal, and oral contact, effective non-retroactively on September 1, 2024. On February 19, a lawyer for Carroll stated on MSNBC that their team was continuing to monitor Trump in a legal capacity, as he had that preceding weekend repeated his claim that he had not known Carroll prior to when she made her allegation against him. = Efforts to reduce, stay or overturn judgment (February–April 2024) = On February 23, arguing that the penalty would likely be reduced or rescinded, Trump's lawyers requested a suspension of the payment deadline until a month after Kaplan was to rule on post-trial motions (scheduled to be done by March 7), or allowing a lower payment around $24–40 million. On February 24, Judge Kaplan denied the stay on the basis that the payment remained unsecured and Trump's team had not "first ... afforded [Carroll] a meaningful opportunity to be heard". On March 5, Trump's lawyers requested a reduction of damages or that a new trial be held on the basis that evidence about Trump's state of mind while commenting about Carroll had been excluded. According to Trump's team, the judge failed to instruct the jury to determine whether he acted with malice as defined by common law, which dictates that it was his "sole, exclusive desire to harm" Carroll. On March 7, the judge denied the request, stating that Trump had "waited until 25 days after the jury verdict" to file the motion. An appeal effort required Trump to either pay the award money to the court (which would hold onto it during his appeal) or else seek a creditor to help him with an appeal bond. On March 8, Trump filed an appeal notice and secured a $91.63 million bond (based on the 110% typically required by the district court to cover interest), underwritten by a subsidiary of the insurance company Chubb. On March 11, Carroll's lawyers asked the judge to approve the bond but requested the nullification of text in the bond agreement which added a 30-day delay to the damages payment deadline (following the appeal), plus an addition of 30 days for Chubb to pay it if Trump could not. The judge ordered that this stipulation be removed and approved the bond the following day. On April 25, Kaplan upheld the judgment, finding it to pass "constitutional muster", and denied a motion for a new trial, calling the defense's arguments both legally and factually "entirely without merit". While Trump claimed that the awarded damages were excessive, Kaplan disagreed, citing "evidence that Mr. Trump used the office of the presidency — the loudest 'bully pulpit' in America and possibly the world — to issue multiple statements castigating Ms. Carroll", while also highlighting that "Trump's malicious and unceasing attacks on Ms. Carroll were disseminated to more than 100 million people ... They included public threats and personal attacks, and they endangered Ms. Carroll's health and safety. The jury was entitled to conclude that Mr. Trump derailed the career, reputation, and emotional well-being of one of America's most successful and prominent advice columnists and authors".
2023
75280059
FBI investigation into Eric Adams' 2021 mayoral campaign
2023-11-10 21:19:29+00:00
In spring 2023, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York began a corruption investigation into alleged straw donors from the government of Turkey through construction company KSK Construction to the 2021 campaign of New York City mayor Eric Adams. Adams's fundraising efforts have attracted scrutiny. In 2018, real estate developer David Schwartz met with Adams, then-borough president of Brooklyn, and donated to his campaign. Adams endorsed zoning changes sought by Slate Property Group, Schwartz's company, to construct a skyscraper taller than as allowed by zoning laws. In May 2021, employees of the Brooklyn construction firm KSK Construction donated a total of US$14,000 to Adams's mayoral campaign, allowing the campaign to qualify for US$18,000 in public matching funds. According to Politico, of the firm's eleven employees, ten had not made a prior political donation; co-owner Erden Arkan last donated to former Brooklyn borough president Marty Markowitz's campaign in 2009. Adams has boasted his support for Turkey, stating that no other mayor in New York City history had visited the country as much as he did. In August 2015, the consulate-general of Turkey paid for Adams's trip to the country. After securing the Democratic mayoral primary in July, Adams urged then-fire commissioner Daniel A. Nigro to allow the government of Turkey to occupy the Turkish House; the New York City Fire Department declined to sign off on the building, citing fire safety issues. During his borough presidency, Adams met with Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. On November 2, 2023, investigators raided the Brooklyn home of Brianna Suggs, Adams's chief fundraiser. The search warrant, obtained by The New York Times, states agents seized three iPhones, two laptops, contribution card binders, and other documents. The Federal Bureau of Investigation searched a dozen locations that day, including the residence of former Turkish Airlines executive Cenk Öcal and international affairs aide Rana Abbasova. On November 3, investigators questioned Nigro over the Turkish House. Days after the raid at Suggs's home, the Federal Bureau of Investigation seized at least two of Adams's cellphones and an iPad. Adams's campaign cooperated with the FBI's request. The New York Times initially reported the seizures. On February 29, 2024, The New York Times reported that the FBI searched two houses owned by Winnie Greco, Adams's Asian affairs advisor. On April 5, the Times reported that the FBI is investigating flight upgrades Adams purportedly received on Turkish Airlines flights. = Adams canceled several meetings at the White House to discuss the New York City migrant housing crisis following the raid. At a Day of the Dead celebration at Gracie Mansion that night, Adams stated that his campaign was up to the "highest ethical standards". Adams denied the accusations at a press conference at New York City Hall press conference the following week, disclosing that he had retained the law firm Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr. Following a report from The New York Times that Adams was being investigated over the construction of the Turkish House, Adams further denied wrongdoing and assured that he would continue to cooperate with investigators. Adams and the City Hall's chief counsel requested the Federal Bureau of Investigation cease leaks of its investigation. = Brooklyn Democratic Party chairwoman Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn questioned if the inquiry was related to Adams' race. State senator Leroy Comrie called the investigation a witch hunt. = Representative Brandon Williams accused the investigation of being a "weaponization of the justice system" against Adams' critical comments towards president Joe Biden. New York City Council minority leader Joe Borelli defended Adams on Twitter. = The New York Post's editorial board questioned if the investigation could be political retribution. Politico compared the rhetoric among Adams's supporters with Donald Trump's supporters. Kim, Elizabeth (November 9, 2023). "What to expect from the investigation into Mayor Adams' campaign". Gothamist. Retrieved November 12, 2023. Lach, Eric (November 13, 2023). "What Kind of Trouble Is Eric Adams In?". The New Yorker. Retrieved November 14, 2023. Lane, Charles; Campbell, Jon (November 9, 2023). "How the Brooklyn company involved in Mayor Adams' FBI probe avoided fundraising disclosures". Gothamist. Retrieved November 12, 2023.
2023
73479031
2022–23 in skiing
2023-04-06 06:54:00+00:00
This topic lists the snow ski sports for the 2022–23 season. = January 19–25: World Junior Alpine Skiing Championships 2023 in St Anton am Arlberg Junior Downhill winners: Rok Ažnoh (m) / Stefanie Grob (f) Junior Super-G winners: Livio Hiltbrand (m) / Lara Colturi (f) Junior Giant Slalom winners: Alban Elezi Cannaferina (m) / Hanna Aronsson Elfman (f) Junior Slalom winners: Corrado Barbera (m) / Hanna Aronsson Elfman (f) Junior Team Alpine Combined winners: Italy (m) / Switzerland (f) Junior Mixed Team Parallel winners: Sweden (Cornelia Öhlund, Emil Nyberg, Liza Backlund, & Lucas Kongsholm) February 6–19: FIS Alpine World Ski Championships 2023 in Courchevel–Méribel Downhill winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Jasmine Flury (f) Super-G winners: James Crawford (m) / Marta Bassino (f) Giant Slalom winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Mikaela Shiffrin (f) Slalom winners: Henrik Kristoffersen (m) / Laurence St-Germain (f) Alpine Combined winners: Alexis Pinturault (m) / Federica Brignone (f) Parallel winners: Alexander Schmid (m) / Maria Therese Tviberg (f) Mixed Team Parallel winners: United States (Nina O'Brien, River Radamus, Paula Moltzan, & Tommy Ford) = October 2022 October 22 & 23: World Cup #1 in Sölden The Women's Giant Slalom event was cancelled. Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marco Odermatt October 26–30: World Cup #2 in Zermatt The two Men's Downhill events are cancelled. November 2022 November 2–6: World Cup #3 in Breuil-Cervinia The two Women's Downhill events are cancelled. November 12 & 13: World Cup #4 in Lech–Zürs Both Parallel events are cancelled. November 19 & 20: World Cup #5 in Levi Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin (2 times) November 22–27: World Cup #6 in Lake Louise Ski Resort #1 One of the Men's Super-G events was cancelled. Men's Downhill winner: Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Men's Super-G winner: Marco Odermatt November 26 & 27: World Cup #7 in Killington Ski Resort Women's Giant Slalom winner: Lara Gut-Behrami Women's Slalom winner: Anna Swenn-Larsson November 29 – December 4: World Cup #8 in Beaver Creek Resort One of the Men's Downhill events was cancelled. Men's Downhill & Super-G winner: Aleksander Aamodt Kilde November 29 – December 4: World Cup #9 in Lake Louise Ski Resort #2 Women's Downhill winner: Sofia Goggia (2 times) Women's Super-G winner: Corinne Suter December 2022 December 10 & 11: World Cup #10 in Val-d'Isère Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marco Odermatt Men's Slalom winner: Lucas Braathen December 10 & 11: World Cup #11 in Sestriere Women's Giant Slalom winner: Marta Bassino Women's Slalom winner: Wendy Holdener December 14–17: World Cup #12 in Val Gardena The Men's Super-G event was cancelled. Men's Downhill winners: Vincent Kriechmayr (#1) / Aleksander Aamodt Kilde (#2) December 14–18: World Cup #13 in St. Moritz Women's Downhill winners: Elena Curtoni (#1) / Sofia Goggia (#2) Women's Super-G winner: Mikaela Shiffrin December 18 & 19: World Cup #14 in Alta Badia Men's Giant Slalom winners: Lucas Braathen (#1) / Marco Odermatt (#2) December 22: World Cup #15 in Madonna di Campiglio Men's Slalom winner: Daniel Yule December 26–29: World Cup #16 in Bormio Men's Downhill winner: Vincent Kriechmayr Men's Super-G winner: Marco Odermatt December 27–29: World Cup #17 in Semmering Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin (3 times) January 2023 January 4: World Cup #18 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen #1 Men's Slalom winner: Henrik Kristoffersen January 4 & 5: World Cup #19 in Zagreb One of the Women's Slalom events was cancelled. Women's Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin January 7 & 8: World Cup #20 in Adelboden Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marco Odermatt Men's Slalom winner: Lucas Braathen January 7 & 8: World Cup #21 in Kranjska Gora #1 Women's Giant Slalom winners: Valérie Grenier (#1) / Mikaela Shiffrin (#2) January 10: World Cup #22 in Flachau Women's Slalom winner: Petra Vlhová January 10–15: World Cup #23 in Wengen Men's Super-G & Downhill winner: Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Men's Slalom winner: Henrik Kristoffersen January 12–15: World Cup #24 in St Anton am Arlberg Women's Super-G winners: Federica Brignone (#1) / Lara Gut-Behrami (#2) January 17–22: World Cup #25 in Kitzbühel Men's Downhill winners: Vincent Kriechmayr (#1) / Aleksander Aamodt Kilde (#2) Men's Slalom winner: Daniel Yule January 18–22: World Cup #26 in Cortina d'Ampezzo #1 Women's Downhill winners: Sofia Goggia (#1) / Ilka Štuhec (#2) Women's Super-G winner: Ragnhild Mowinckel January 24 & 25: World Cup #27 in Schladming Men's Giant Slalom winner: Loïc Meillard Men's Slalom winner: Clément Noël January 24 & 25: World Cup #28 in Kronplatz Women's Giant Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin (2 times) January 26–29: World Cup #29 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen #2 The Men's Downhill event was cancelled. January 28 & 29: World Cup #30 in Špindlerův Mlýn Women's Slalom winners: Mikaela Shiffrin (#1) / Lena Dürr (#2) January 28 & 29: World Cup #31 in Cortina d'Ampezzo #2 Men's Super-G winner: Marco Odermatt (2 times) February 2023 February 4: World Cup #32 in Chamonix Men's Slalom winner: Ramon Zenhäusern February 23–26: World Cup #33 in Crans-Montana The Women's Super-G event was cancelled. Women's Downhill winner: Sofia Goggia February 25 & 26: World Cup #34 in Palisades Tahoe Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marco Schwarz Men's Slalom winner: Alexander Steen Olsen March 2023 March 1–5: World Cup #35 in Aspen One of the Men's Downhill events was cancelled. Men's Downhill winner: Aleksander Aamodt Kilde Men's Super-G winner: Marco Odermatt March 1–5: World Cup #36 in Kvitfjell Women's Super-G winners: Cornelia Hütter (#1) / Nina Ortlieb (#2) Women's Downhill winner: Kajsa Vickhoff Lie March 10 & 11: World Cup #37 in Åre ski resort Women's Giant Slalom & Slalom winner: Mikaela Shiffrin March 11 & 12: World Cup #38 in Kranjska Gora #2 Men's Giant Slalom winner: Marco Odermatt (2 times) March 13–19: World Cup #39 (final) in Soldeu Downhill winners: Vincent Kriechmayr (m) / Ilka Štuhec (f) Super-G winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Lara Gut-Behrami (f) Giant Slalom winners: Marco Odermatt (m) / Mikaela Shiffrin (f) Slalom winners: Ramon Zenhäusern (m) / Petra Vlhová (f) Team Parallel winners: Norway (Thea Louise Stjernesund, Rasmus Windingstad, Maria Therese Tviberg, & Timon Haugan) = November 28 & 29, 2022: EC #1 in Mayrhofen (Women's only) Giant Slalom winner: Doriane Escané Slalom winner: Moa Boström Müssener December 1 & 2, 2022: EC #2 in Zinal (Women's only) Super-G winners: Karen Smadja-Clément (1st) / Janine Schmitt (2nd) December 1 & 2, 2022: EC #3 in Obergurgl (Men's only) Giant Slalom winners: Josua Mettler (1st) / Sam Maes (2nd) December 5 & 6, 2022: EC #4 in Zinal (Women's only) Giant Slalom winners: Asja Zenere (1st) / Jessica Hilzinger (2nd) December 6 & 7, 2022: EC #5 in Santa Caterina di Valfurva (Men's only) Super-G winners: Josua Mettler (1st) / Andreas Ploier (2nd) December 12 & 13, 2022: EC #6 in Zinal (Men's only) Giant Slalom winners: Livio Simonet (2 times) December 13 & 14, 2022: EC #7 in Ponte di Legno (Women's only) Giant Slalom winners: Asja Zenere (2 times) December 15, 2022: EC #8 in Obereggen (Men's only) Slalom winner: Steven Amiez December 16, 2022: EC #9 in Val di Fassa (Men's only) Slalom winner: Alex Vinatzer December 16 & 17, 2022: EC #10 in Valle Aurina (Women's only) Slalom winners: Paula Moltzan (1st) / Nicole Good (2nd) December 19–22, 2022: EC #11 in St. Moritz (Men's only) Downhill winner: Cameron Alexander (2 times) = November 30 – December 3, 2022: NAC #1 in Copper Mountain (Women's only) Giant Slalom winner: Britt Richardson (2 times) Slalom winners: Allie Resnick (1st) / Kiki Alexander (2nd) December 5–10, 2022: NAC #2 in Copper Mountain Men's Downhill winners: Sam Morse (1st) / Erik Arvidsson (2nd) Women's Downhill winner: Patricia Mangan (2 times) Men's Super-G winners: Kyle Negomir (2 times) Women's Super-G winners: Kiki Alexander (2 times) December 12–15, 2022: NAC #3 in Beaver Creek (Men's only) Giant Slalom winners: Jacob Dilling (1st) / Cooper Cornelius (2nd) Slalom winners: Jimmy Krupka (2nd) / Justin Alkier (2nd) = August 5–7, 2022: SAC #1 in Chapelco Giant Slalom winners: Nicolás Pirozzi (m) / Lara Colturi (f) August 9–13, 2022: SAC #2 in Cerro Catedral Giant Slalom winners: Andres Figueroa (m) / Lara Colturi (f) Slalom #1 winners: Andres Figueroa (m) / Francesca Baruzzi (f) Slalom #2 winners: Andres Figueroa (m) / Lara Colturi (f) August 27, 2022: SAC #3 in El Colorado Giant Slalom winners: Delfin Van Ditmar (m) / Lara Colturi (f) August 28, 2022: SAC #4 in La Parva Slalom winners: Akira Sasaki (m) / Lara Colturi (f) August 29 – September 2, 2022: SAC #5 in La Parva Downhill #1 winners: Miha Hrobat (m) / Vanessa Nußbaumer (f) Downhill #2 winners: Jacob Schramm (m) / Sabrina Maier (f) Super-G #1 winners: Johan Clarey (m) / Patricia Mangan (f) Super-G #2 winners: Cyprien Sarrazin (m) / Patricia Mangan (f) Alpine Combined winners: Henrik von Appen (m) / Lara Colturi (f) September 12–16, 2022: SAC #6 in Cerro Castor Men's Giant Slalom winners: Giovanni Borsotti (1st) / Alex Vinatzer (2nd) Women's Giant Slalom winners: Sara Hector (1st) / Hilma Lövblom (2nd) Men's Slalom winners: Juan del Campo (1st) / Joaquim Salarich (2nd) Women's Slalom winners: Hanna Aronsson Elfman (1st) / Chiara Pogneaux (2nd) September 26 – October 1, 2022: SAC #7 in Corralco Downhill #1 winners: Henrik von Appen (m) / Malin Sofie Sund (f) Downhill #2 winners: Henrik von Appen (m) / Malin Sofie Sund (f) Alpine Combined winners: Tiziano Gravier (m) / Malin Sofie Sund (f) Super-G winners: Henrik von Appen (m) / Malin Sofie Sund (f) Here first two Alpine combined competitions are cancelled. = August 22–30, 2022: ANC #1 in Coronet Peak Slalom #1 winners: Isaiah Nelson (m) / Katie Hensien (f) Slalom #2 winners: Benjamin Ritchie (m) / Zoe Zimmermann (f) Super-G #1 winners: Willis Feasey (m) / Candace Crawford (f) Super-G #2 winners: Willis Feasey (m) / Candace Crawford (f) Giant Slalom #1 winners: Isaiah Nelson (m) / Candace Crawford (f) Giant Slalom #2 winners: Andreas Žampa (m) / Alice Robinson (f) = January 25–29: 2023 IBU Open European Championships in Lenzerheide Individual winners: Endre Strømsheim (m) / Lisa Maria Spark (f) Pursuit winners: Vebjørn Sørum (m) / Selina Grotian (f) Sprint winners: Erlend Bjøntegaard (m) / Anastasiya Merkushyna (f) Single Mixed Relay winners: Norway (Juni Arnekleiv & Endre Strømsheim) Mixed Relay winners: Norway (Maren Kirkeeide, Karoline Erdal, Erlend Bjøntegaard, & Vebjørn Sørum) February 8–19: Biathlon World Championships 2023 in Oberhof March 4–12: Biathlon Junior World Championships 2023 in Shchuchinsk = November 29 – December 4, 2022: World Cup #1 in Kontiolahti Individual winners: Martin Ponsiluoma (m) / Hanna Öberg (f) Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Julia Simon (f) Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Lisa Theresa Hauser (f) Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners: Norway (Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, Sturla Holm Lægreid, Tarjei Bø, & Johannes Thingnes Bø) Women's 4x6 km Relay winners: Sweden (Linn Persson, Anna Magnusson, Hanna Öberg, & Elvira Öberg) December 8–11, 2022: World Cup #2 in Hochfilzen Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Julia Simon (f) Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Denise Herrmann-Wick (f) Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners: Norway (Sturla Holm Lægreid, Filip Fjeld Andersen, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen) Women's 4x6 km Relay winners: France (Lou Jeanmonnot, Anaïs Chevalier-Bouchet, Chloé Chevalier, & Julia Simon) December 15–18, 2022: World Cup #3 in Annecy Pursuit winners: Sturla Holm Lægreid (m) / Elvira Öberg (f) Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Anna Magnusson (f) Mass Start winners: Johannes Dale (m) / Lisa Theresa Hauser (f) January 5–8: World Cup #4 in Pokljuka Men's Pursuit & Sprint winner: Johannes Thingnes Bø Women's Pursuit & Sprint winner: Elvira Öberg Single Mixed Relay winners: Norway (Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen & Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold Mixed Relay winners: France (Fabien Claude, Quentin Fillon Maillet, Anaïs Chevalier-Bouchet, & Julia Simon) January 11–15: World Cup #5 in Ruhpolding Individual winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Lisa Vittozzi (f) Mass Start winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Julia Simon (f) Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners: Norway (Sturla Holm Lægreid, Tarjei Bø, Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen, & Johannes Thingnes Bø) Women's 4x6 km Relay winners: Norway (Karoline Offigstad Knotten, Ragnhild Femsteinevik, Marte Olsbu Røiseland, & Ingrid Landmark Tandrevold) January 19–22: World Cup #6 in Antholz-Anterselva Pursuit winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Denise Herrmann-Wick (f) Sprint winners: Johannes Thingnes Bø (m) / Dorothea Wierer (f) Men's 4x7.5 km Relay winners: Norway (Sturla Holm Lægreid, Tarjei Bø, Johannes Thingnes Bø, & Vetle Sjåstad Christiansen) Women's 4x6 km Relay winners: France (Lou Jeanmonnot, Anaïs Chevalier-Bouchet, Chloé Chevalier, & Julia Simon) March 2–5: World Cup #7 in Nové Město na Moravě March 9–12: World Cup #8 in Östersund March 16–19: World Cup #9 (final) in Oslo Holmenkollen = November 24–27, 2022: IBU Cup #1 in Sjusjøen All events here were cancelled. November 30–December 3, 2022: IBU Cup #2 in Idre Individual winners: Endre Strömsheim (m) / Janina Hettich-Walz (f) Pursuit winners: Martin Uldal (m) / Marthe Krakstad Johansen (f) Men's Sprint winner: Endre Strömsheim (2 times) Women's Sprint winners: Marthe Krakstad Johansen (#1) / Selina Grotian (#2) December 15–18, 2022: IBU Cup #3 in Ridnaun-Val Ridanna Pursuit winners: Mats Överby (m) / Maren Kirkeeide (f) Sprint winners: Endre Strömsheim (m) / Federica Sanfilippo (f) Mass Start 60 winners: Martin Uldal (m) / Gilonne Guigonnat (f) January 5–8: IBU Cup #4 in Brezno-Osrblie Sprint winners: Eric Perrot (m) / Eleonora Fauner (f) Super Sprint Final winners: Eric Perrot (m) / Maren Kirkeeide (f) Single Mixed Relay winners: Norway (Mats Ŏverby & Frida Dokken) Mixed Relay winners: Norway (Isak Frey, Endre Strömsheim, Juni Arnekleiv, & Maren Kirkeeide) January 13–15: IBU Cup #5 in Arber Individual Short winners: Sindre Fjellheim Jorde (m) / Hannah Auchentaller (f) Men's Sprint winners: Sindre Fjellheim Jorde (#1) / Vebjørn Sørum (#2) Women's Sprint winners: Hanna Kebinger (#1) / Paula Botet (#2) February 2–4: IBU Cup #6 in Obertilliach February 23–26: IBU Cup #7 in Canmore #1 March 1–4: IBU Cup #8 (final) in Canmore #2 = February 22 – March 5: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2023 in Planica = November 25–27, 2022: World Cup #1 in Rukatunturi Individual Start Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Ebba Andersson (f) Pursuit Free winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Frida Karlsson (f) Sprint Final Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Emma Ribom (f) December 2–4, 2022: World Cup #2 in Lillehammer Individual Start Free winners: Iver Tildheim Andersen (m) / Jessie Diggins (f) Mass Start Classic winners: Pål Golberg (m) / Frida Karlsson (f) Sprint Final Free winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Emma Ribom (f) December 9–11, 2022: World Cup #3 in Beitostølen Individual Start Classic winners: Pål Golberg (m) / Kerttu Niskanen (f) Sprint Final Classic winners: Richard Jouve (m) / Nadine Fähndrich (f) 4x5 km Relay Classic/Free winners: Norway (Lotta Udnes Weng, Mikael Gunnulfsen, Silje Theodorsen, & Simen Hegstad Krüger) December 17 & 18, 2022: World Cup #4 in Davos Individual Start Free winners: Simen Hegstad Krüger (m) / Jessie Diggins (f) Sprint Final Free winners: Federico Pellegrino (m) / Nadine Fähndrich (f) December 31, 2022 & January 1: World Cup #5 in Val Müstair Pursuit Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Tiril Udnes Weng (f) Sprint Final Free winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Nadine Fähndrich (f) January 3 & 4: World Cup #6 in Oberstdorf Men's Individual Start Classic & Pursuit Free winner: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo Women's Individual Start Classic & Pursuit Free winner: Frida Karlsson January 6–8: World Cup #7 in Fiemme Valley Mass Start Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Katharina Hennig (f) Mass Start Free winners: Simen Hegstad Krüger (m) / Delphine Claudel (f) Sprint Final Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Lotta Udnes Weng (f) January 21 & 22: Original World Cup #8 in Milan All events here are cancelled. January 21 & 22: Replaced World Cup #8 in Livigno Sprint Final Free winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Jonna Sundling (f) Men's Team Sprint Free winners: France (Renaud Jay & Richard Jouve) Women's Team Sprint Free winners: Sweden (Linn Svahn & Maja Dahlqvist) January 27–29: World Cup #9 in Les Rousses Individual Start Free winners: Harald Østberg Amundsen (m) / Ebba Andersson (f) Mass Start Classic winners: Johannes Høsflot Klæbo (m) / Ebba Andersson (f) Sprint Final Classic winners: Richard Jouve (m) / Kristine Stavås Skistad (f) February 3–5: World Cup #10 in Toblach Individual Start Free winners: (m) / (f) Sprint Final Free winners: (m) / (f) 4x7.5 km Relay Classic/Free winners: March 11 & 12: World Cup #11 in Oslo March 14: World Cup #12 in Drammen March 17–19: World Cup #13 in Falun March 21: World Cup #14 in Tallinn March 24–26: World Cup #15 (final) in Lahti = Australia/New Zealand Cup July 30 & 31, 2022: ANC #1 in Falls Creek Alpine Resort Sprint Classic winners: Lars Young Vik (m) / Katerina Paul (f) Men's 15 km Freestyle winner: Phillip Bellingham Women's 10 km Freestyle winner: Zana Evans August 20 & 21, 2022: ANC #2 in Perisher Ski Resort Sprint Freestyle winners: Lars Young Vik (m) / Katerina Paul (f) Men's 10 km Classic winner: Seve de Campo Women's 5 km Classic winner: Phoebe Cridland East European Cup November 13–15, 2022: EEC #1 in Shchuchinsk Sprint Classic winners: Konstantin Bortsov (m) / Anna Melnik (f) Men's 10 km Individual Classic winner: Vitaliy Pukhkalo Women's 10 km Individual Classic winner: Kseniya Shalygina Men's 15 km Individual Free winner: Vitaliy Pukhkalo Women's 15 km Individual Free winner: Kseniya Shalygina North American Cup November 30 – December 4, 2022: NAC #1 in Vernon Sprint Classic winners: Magnus Bøe (m) / Hailey Swirbul (f) Mass Start winners: Tom Mancini (m) / Anna-Maria Dietze (f) Sprint Freestyle winners: Andreas Kirkeng (m) / Hailey Swirbul (f) 10 km Classic winners: Andreas Kirkeng (m) / Hailey Swirbul (f) South American Cup September 2–4, 2022: SAC #1 in Cerro Catedral Sprint Classic winners: Franco Dal Farra (m) / Maira Sofía Fernández Righi (f) Men's 10 km Individual Classic winner: Franco Dal Farra Women's 5 km Individual Classic winner: Agustina Groetzner Men's 10 km Individual Free winner: Franco Dal Farra Women's 5 km Individual Free winner: Nahiara Díaz September 21 & 22, 2022: #2 in Corralco Men's 10 km Individual Free winner: Franco Dal Farra Women's 7.5 km Individual Free winner: María Cecilia Domínguez Sprint Freestyle winners: Franco Dal Farra (m) / María Cecilia Domínguez (f) = February 19 – March 4: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2023 in Bakuriani March 20–26: 2023 FIS Junior Freestyle Moguls and Aerials World Ski Championship in Airolo March 27 & 28: 2023 FIS Junior Freestyle Ski Cross World Ski Championship in San Pellegrino Pass August 27 – September 8: 2023 FIS Junior Freeski World Championship in Cardrona = October 21, 2022: FS World Cup #1 in Chur Big Air winners: Birk Ruud (m) / Tess Ledeux (f) November 18 & 19, 2022: FS World Cup #2 in Stubai Slopestyle winners: Birk Ruud (m) / Johanne Killi (f) November 24 & 25, 2022: FS World Cup #3 in Falun Both Freeskiing Big Air events are cancelled. December 14–17, 2022: FS World Cup #4 in Copper Mountain Big Air winners: Birk Ruud (m) / Megan Oldham (f) Halfpipe winners: Birk Irving (m) / Rachael Karker (f) January 12–14: FS World Cup #5 in Font Romeu Both Freeskiing Slopestyle events are cancelled. January 18–22: FS World Cup #6 in Laax Slopestyle winners: Andri Ragettli (m) / Johanne Killi (f) January 19–21: FS World Cup #7 in Calgary Men's Halfpipe winners: Jon Sallinen (#1) / Alex Ferreira (#2) Women's Halfpipe winner: Eileen Gu (2 times) February 1–4: FS World Cup #8 in Mammoth Mountain Halfpipe winners: (m) / (f) Slopestyle winners: (m) / (f) March 9–11: FS World Cup #9 in Secret Garden Both Freeskiing Halfpipe events are cancelled. March 16–18: FS World Cup #10 in Tignes March 23–25: FS World Cup #11 (final) in Silvaplana = December 3 & 4, 2022: MA World Cup #1 in Rukatunturi Aerials winners: Pirmin Werner (m) / Danielle Scott (f) Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Jakara Anthony (f) December 10 & 11, 2022: MA World Cup #2 in Idre Fjäll Moguls winners: Nick Page (m) / Jakara Anthony (f) Dual Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Elizabeth Lemley (f) December 16 & 17, 2022: MA World Cup #3 in Alpe d'Huez Men's Moguls & Dual Moguls winner: Ikuma Horishima Women's Moguls winner: Jakara Anthony Women's Dual Moguls winner: Anri Kawamura January 21 & 22: MA World Cup #4 in Le Relais Men's Aerials winners: Quinn Dehlinger (#1) / Noé Roth (#2) Women's Aerials winners: Marion Thénault (#1) / Laura Peel (#2) January 27 & 28: MA World Cup #5 in Val Saint-Côme Moguls winners: Mikaël Kingsbury (m) / Anri Kawamura (f) Dual Moguls winners: Walter Wallberg (m) / Anri Kawamura (f) February 2–4: MA World Cup #6 in Deer Valley Aerials winners: (m) / (f) Moguls winners: (m) / (f) Dual Moguls winners: (m) / (f) February 11: MA World Cup #7 in Chiesa in Valmalenco Dual Moguls winners: (m) / (f) March 5: MA World Cup #8 in Engadin March 17–20: MA World Cup #9 (final) in Almaty = November 4 & 5, 2022: SC World Cup #1 in Les Deux Alpes Both Ski Cross events were cancelled. December 7–9, 2022: SC World Cup #2 in Val Thorens Men's Ski Cross winners: Johannes Rohrweck (#1) / Mathias Graf (#2) Women's Ski Cross winner: Sandra Näslund (2 times) December 11 & 12, 2022: SC World Cup #3 in Arosa Ski Cross winners: Terence Tchiknavorian (m) / Sandra Näslund (f) December 20–22, 2022: SC World Cup #4 in Innichen Men's Ski Cross winners: Mathias Graf (#1) / Reece Howden (#2) Women's Ski Cross winner: Sandra Näslund (2 times) December 27–29, 2022: SC World Cup #5 in Alleghe All Ski Cross events were cancelled. January 20–22: SC World Cup #6 in Idre Fjäll Men's Ski Cross winners: David Mobärg (#1) / Reece Howden (#2) Women's Ski Cross winner: Sandra Näslund (2 times) January 27–29: SC World Cup #7 in Megève All Ski Cross events were cancelled. February 15–17: SC World Cup #8 in Reiteralm Men's Ski Cross winners: (#1) / (#2) Women's Ski Cross winners: (#1) / (#2) March 3–5: SC World Cup #9 in Oberwiesenthal March 10–12: SC World Cup #10 in Veysonnaz March 17–19: SC World Cup #11 (final) in Craigleith = November 20, 2022: EC #1 in Pitztal Ski Cross winners: Mathias Graf (m) / Daniela Maier (f) = August 1–5, 2022: ANC #1 in Perisher Ski Resort Freeski Slopestyle #1 winners: Cameron Waddell (m) / Mabel Ashburn (f) Freeski Slopestyle #2 winners: Bailey Johnson (m) / Mabel Ashburn (f) Freeski Big Air winners: Cameron Waddell (m) / Daisy Thomas (f) August 30 & 31, 2022: ANC #2 in Perisher Ski Resort Moguls #1 winners: Matt Graham (m) / Anri Kawamura (f) Moguls #2 winners: Matt Graham (m) / Anri Kawamura (f) August 31 – September 3, 2022: ANC #3 in Mount Hotham Ski Cross #1 winners: Satoshi Furuno (m) / Abby Evans (f) Ski Cross #2 winners: Satoshi Furuno (m) / Lin Nakanishi (f) Ski Cross #3 winners: Douglas Crawford (m) / Lin Nakanishi (f) September 1–4, 2022: ANC #3 in Cardrona Freeski Halfpipe winners: Gustav Legnavsky (m) / Hanna Faulhaber (f) Freeski Slopestyle winners: Luca Harrington (m) / Ruby Andrews (f) September 2 & 3, 2022: ANC #4 in Mount Buller Dual Moguls winners: Matt Graham (m) / Avital Carroll (f) October 1–8, 2022: ANC #4 in Cardrona Freeski Big Air winners: Luca Harrington (m) / Daisy Thomas (f) Freeski Slopestyle winners: Luca Harrington (m) / Caoimhe Heavey (f) Freeski Halfpipe winners: Gustav Legnavsky (m) / Sylvia Trotter (f) = August 4–7, 2022: SAC #1 in La Parva Freeski Slopestyle #1 winners: Francisco Salas (m) / Dominique Ohaco (f) Freeski Slopestyle #2 winners: Cristóbal Colombo (m) / Dominique Ohaco (f) August 8 & 9, 2022: SAC #2 in El Colorado Freeski Big Air #1 winners: Francisco Salas (m) / Dominique Ohaco (f) Freeski Big Air #2 winners: Francisco Salas (m) / No events August 10–12, 2022: SAC #3 in La Parva Cancelled. September 7–12, 2022: SAC #4 in Cerro Catedral Men's Freeski Slopestyle winner: Francisco Salas (2 times) Women's Freeski Slopestyle winner: Dominique Ohaco (2 times) Men's Freeski Big Air winner: Cristóbal Colombo (2 times) Here, Women's Freeski Big Air is cancelled. September 15–17, 2022: SAC #5 in La Parva Men's Ski Cross winners: Valentin Signe (1st) / Kay Holscher (2nd) Women's Ski Cross winners: Maria Jesus Bartel (2 times) September 19–23, 2022: SAC #7 in Chapelco Men's Freeski Slopestyle winner: Francisco Salas Here, Women's Freeski Slopestyle and Freeski Big Air competitions are cancelled. = January 27 – February 5: 2023 Nordic Junior World Ski Championships in Whistler February 22 – March 5: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2023 in Planica = November 24–27, 2022: World Cup #1 in Rukatunturi Men's Gundersen Large Hill winners: Julian Schmid (#1) / Jarl Magnus Riiber (#2) Men's Mass Start Large Hill winner: Jarl Magnus Riiber December 1–4, 2022: World Cup #2 in Lillehammer Men's Gundersen Large Hill winner: Jarl Magnus Riiber Men's Gundersen Normal Hill winner: Jens Lurås Oftebro Women's Gundersen Normal Hill winner: Gyda Westvold Hansen (2 times) December 15–18, 2022: World Cup #3 in Ramsau am Dachstein Men's Gundersen Normal Hill winners: Jarl Magnus Riiber (#1) / Vinzenz Geiger (#2) Women's Gundersen Normal Hill winner: Gyda Westvold Hansen (2 times) January 5–8: World Cup #4 in Otepää The Women's Mass Start event was cancelled. Men's Gundersen Normal Hill winner: Julian Schmid Women's Gundersen Normal Hill winner: Gyda Westvold Hansen Men's Mass Start winner: Johannes Lamparter Team winners: Norway (Jens Lurås Oftebro, Ida Marie Hagen, Gyda Westvold Hansen, & Jørgen Graabak) January 19–22: World Cup #5 in Klingenthal Men's Gundersen & Mass Start Large Hill winner: Johannes Lamparter January 20–22: World Cup #6 in Chaux-Neuve Both Men's Gundersen Large Hill events was cancelled. January 26–29: World Cup #7 in Seefeld in Tirol Men's Gundersen Normal Hill winners: (#1) / (#2) / (#3) Women's Gundersen Normal Hill winners: (#1) / (#2) February 3–5: World Cup #8 in Oberstdorf February 10–12: World Cup #9 in Schonach im Schwarzwald March 8–12: World Cup #10 in Oslo March 24–27: World Cup #11 (final) in Lahti = August 26–28, 2022: GP #1 in Oberwiesenthal Winners: Ilkka Herola (m) / Ema Volavšek (f) Team event winners: Germany I (Julian Schmid, Jenny Nowak, Nathalie Armbruster, Johannes Rydzek) August 30 & 31, 2022: GP #2 in Oberstdorf Winners: Franz-Josef Rehrl (m) / Gyda Westvold Hansen (f) September 2–4, 2022: GP #3 in Tschagguns Men's winners: Jens Lurås Oftebro (1st) / Eero Hirvonen (2nd) Women's winners: Nathalie Armbruster (1st) / Gyda Westvold Hansen (2nd) = August 8, 2022: OPA #1 in Klingenthal (Women's only) Winner: Anne Häckel August 12 & 13, 2022: OPA #2 in Bischofsgrün (Women's only) Cancelled. September 9 & 10, 2022: OPA #3 in Oberstdorf (Men's only) Winner: Marco Heinis (2 times) September 17 & 18, 2022: OPA #4 in Schwäbisch Gmünd (Women's only) Winners: Magdalena Burger (1st) / Thea Haeckel (2nd) September 24 & 25, 2022: OPA #5 in Villach Men's winner: Marco Heinis (2 times) Women's winner: Anne Häckel (2 times) October 8 & 9, 2022: OPA #6 in Gérardmer Men's winner: Marceau Liardon Women's winner: Katharina Gruber Men's Team winners: Austria (Levi Hofmann, Moritz Krismayr, Kenji Grossegger) Women's Team winners: Germany I (Mara-Jolie Schlossarek, Pia Loh, Fabienne Klumpp) = September 2 & 3, 2022: YC1 & YC2 in Tschagguns YC1 #1 winners: Lovro Serucnik Percl (m) / Emilia Vidgren (f) YC2 #1 winners: Jan John (m) / Kjersti Græsli (f) YC1 #2 winners: Kenji Grossegger (m) / Anna-Sophia Gredler (f) YC2 #2 winners: Jan John (m) / Ingrid Laate (f) = February 22 – March 5: FIS Nordic World Ski Championships 2023 in Planica = November 4–6, 2022: World Cup #1 in Wisła Men's winner: Dawid Kubacki (2 times) Women's winners: Silje Opseth (#1) / Eva Pinkelnig (#2) November 25–27, 2022: World Cup #2 in Rukatunturi Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (#1) / Stefan Kraft (#2) December 2–4, 2022: World Cup #3 in Lillehammer #1 Women's winners: Katharina Althaus (#1) / Silje Opseth (#2) December 8–11, 2022: World Cup #4 in Titisee-Neustadt Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (#1) / Dawid Kubacki (#2) Women's winner: Katharina Althaus Mixed Team winners: Austria (Marita Kramer, Michael Hayböck, Eva Pinkelnig, & Stefan Kraft) December 16–18, 2022: World Cup #5 in Engelberg Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (#1) / Dawid Kubacki (#2) December 27–29, 2022: World Cup #6 in Villach Women's winner: Eva Pinkelnig (2 times) December 28 & 29, 2022: World Cup #7 in Oberstdorf Men's winner: Halvor Egner Granerud December 30, 2022 – January 1: World Cup #8 in Ljubno ob Savinji Women's winners: Anna Odine Strøm (#1) / Eva Pinkelnig (#2) December 31, 2022 & January 1: World Cup #9 in Garmisch-Partenkirchen Men's winner: Halvor Egner Granerud January 3 & 4: World Cup #10 in Innsbruck Men's winner: Dawid Kubacki January 5 & 6: World Cup #11 in Bischofshofen Men's winner: Halvor Egner Granerud January 6–8: World Cup #12 in Sapporo #1 Women's winners: Katharina Althaus (#1) / Silje Opseth (#2) January 12–15: World Cup #13 in Zaō Women's individual winners: Alexandria Loutitt (#1) / Eva Pinkelnig (#2) Women's team winners: Austria (Chiara Kreuzer & Eva Pinkelnig) January 13–15: World Cup #14 in Zakopane Men's individual winner: Halvor Egner Granerud Men's team winners: Austria (Daniel Tschofenig, Michael Hayböck, Manuel Fettner, & Stefan Kraft) January 19–22: World Cup #15 in Sapporo #2 Men's winners: Ryōyū Kobayashi (#1; 2 times) / Stefan Kraft (#2) January 27–29: World Cup #16 in Kulm Mitterndorf Men's winners: (#1) / (#2) January 27–29: World Cup #17 in Hinterzarten Women's winners: (#1) / (#2) February 2–5: World Cup #18 in Willingen February 10 & 11: World Cup #19 in Hinzenbach February 10–12: Original World Cup #20 in Iron Mountain The two Men's Ski Jumping events were cancelled. February 10–12: Replaced World Cup #20 in Lake Placid Men's individual winners: (#1) / (#2) Men's team winners: February 17–19: World Cup #21 in Râșnov March 10–12: World Cup #22 in Oslo March 13–16: World Cup #23 in Lillehammer #2 March 15 & 16: World Cup #24 in Trondheim The individual Men's & Women's events were cancelled. March 17–19: World Cup #25 in Vikersund March 23–26: World Cup #26 in Lahti March 30 – April 2: World Cup #27 (final) in Planica = September 3 & 4, 2022: CC #1 in Lillehammer Men's winners: Sondre Ringen (2 times) Women's winners: Abigail Strate (2 times) September 17 & 18, 2022: CC #2 in Stams (Men's only) Winners: Michael Hayböck (1st) / Aleksander Zniszczoł (2nd) September 24 & 25, 2022: CC #3 in Klingenthal (Men's only) Winners: Sondre Ringen (1st) / Michael Hayböck (2nd) October 7–9, 2022: CC #4 in Lake Placid Men's winner: Michael Hayböck (3 times) Women's winners: Abigail Strate (3 times) = Summer July 22–24, 2022: GP #1 in Wisła Men's winners: Dawid Kubacki (1st) / Kamil Stoch (2nd) Women's winners: Urša Bogataj (1st) / Nika Križnar (2nd) August 5–7, 2022: GP #2 in Courchevel Winners: Manuel Fettner (m) / Urša Bogataj (f) September 16–18, 2022: GP #3 in Râșnov Winners: Ren Nikaido (m) / Eva Pinkelnig (f) Men's team winners: Austria (Daniel Tschofenig & Manuel Fettner) Mixed team winners: Austria (Julia Mühlbacher, Jan Hörl, Eva Pinkelnig, Daniel Tschofenig) September 24 & 25, 2022: GP #4 in Hinzenbach (Men's only) Winner: Dawid Kubacki September 30 – October 2, 2022: GP #5 in Klingenthal Winners: Dawid Kubacki (m) / Urša Bogataj (f) Mixed team winners: Norway (Silje Opseth, Marius Lindvik, Thea Minyan Bjørseth, Daniel-André Tande) = August 7 & 8, 2022: OPA #1 in Klingenthal (Women's only) Winner: Lilou Zepchi (2 times) August 10 & 11, 2022: OPA #2 in Pöhla (Women's only) Winner: Lilou Zepchi (2 times) August 12 & 13, 2022: OPA #3 in Bischofsgrün (Women's only) Winner: Ajda Košnjek September 10 & 11, 2022: OPA #4 in Oberstdorf (Men's only) Winner: Maksim Bartolj (2 times) September 17 & 18, 2022: OPA #5 in Schwäbisch Gmünd (Women's only) Winner: Taja Bodlaj (2 times) September 24 & 25, 2022: OPA #5 in Liberec (Men's only) Winner: Rok Masle (2 times) October 8 & 9, 2022: OPA #6 in Gérardmer Men's winner: Alexei Urevc Women's winner: Tina Erzar Men's Team winners: Slovenia I (Kai Zakelšek, Blaž Jurčić, Alexei Urevc) Women's Team winners: Slovenia II (Ula Vodlan, Živa Andrić, Tina Erzar) = Summer July 30 & 31, 2022: FC #1 in Otepää Cancelled due to organizational problems. August 12 & 13, 2022: FC #2 in Frenštát pod Radhoštěm (Men's only) Winners: Eric Fuchs (1st) / Janni Reisenauer (2nd) August 20 & 21, 2022: FC #3 in Szczyrk Men's winners: Niklas Bachlinger (1st) / Maximilian Lienher (2nd) Women's winners: Hannah Wiegele (1st) / Ajda Košnjek (2nd) August 26–28, 2022: FC #4 in Einsiedeln Men's winners: Marco Wörgötter (1st) / Jonas Schuster (2nd) Women's winner: Nicole Konderla (2 times) September 2 & 3, 2022: FC #5 in Kranj Men's winners: Anže Lanišek (1st) / Janni Reisenauer (2nd) Women's winners: Nika Križnar (1st) / Nika Prevc (2nd) September 10 & 11, 2022: OPA #6 in Villach Men's winners: Tomasz Pilch (1st) / Francesco Cecon (2nd) Women's winners: Nika Prevc (1st) / Hannah Wiegele (2nd) = February 26 – March 4: 2023 World Championship of Ski Mountaineering in Boí Taüll Resort March 25: 2023 ISMF Long Distance Team World Championships in Ponte di Legno–Tonale = November 25–27, 2022: World Cup #1 in Val Thorens Sprint Race winners: Arno Lietha (m) / Emily Harrop (f) Women's U23 Sprint Race winner: Emily Harrop Mixed Relay Race winners: France (Emily Harrop & Thibault Anselmet) December 16–18, 2022: World Cup #2 in Ponte di Legno-Tonale Individual winners: Rémi Bonnet (m) / Axelle Mollaret (f) Sprint Race winners: Arno Lietha (m) / Celia Perillat-Pessey (f) January 21 & 22: World Cup #3 in Arinsal–La Massana Individual winners: Thibault Anselmet (m) / Axelle Mollaret (f) Vertical winners: Rémi Bonnet (m) / Axelle Mollaret (f) February 7–10: World Cup #4 in Morgins February 16: World Cup #5 in Val Martello March 18: World Cup #6 in Schladming April 11: World Cup #7 (final) in Tromsø = February 19 – March 4: FIS Freestyle Ski and Snowboarding World Championships 2023 in Bakuriani March 24–27: 2023 FIS Snowboard Alpine Junior World Championship in Bansko March 30 & 31: 2023 FIS Snowboard Cross Junior World Championship in San Pellegrino Pass August 28 – September 8: 2023 FIS Snowboard Park & Pipe Junior World Championship in Cardrona = December 10 & 11, 2022: AS World Cup #1 in Winterberg Parallel Slalom winners: Alexander Payer (m) / Sabine Schöffmann (f) Team Parallel Slalom winners: Switzerland (Gian Casanova & Ladina Jenny) December 15, 2022: AS World Cup #2 in Carezza Dolomites Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Andreas Prommegger (m) / Michelle Dekker (f) December 17, 2022: AS World Cup #3 in Cortina d'Ampezzo Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Roland Fischnaller (m) / Gloria Kotnik (f) January 10 & 11: AS World Cup #4 in Bad Gastein Parallel Slalom winners: Maurizio Bormolini (m) / Daniela Ulbing (f) Team Parallel Slalom winners: Austria (Andreas Prommegger & Daniela Ulbing) January 14: AS World Cup #5 in Scuol Parallel Giant Slalom winners: Oskar Kwiatkowski (m) / Carolin Langenhorst (f) January 21 & 22: AS World Cup #6 in Bansko Men's parallel Slalom winners: Dario Caviezel (#1) / Maurizio Bormolini (#2) Women's parallel Slalom winner: Julie Zogg (2 times) January 26 & 27: AS World Cup #7 in Blue Mountain Men's parallel Giant Slalom winners: (#1) / (#2) Women's parallel Giant Slalom winners: (#1) / (#2) March 11 & 12: Original AS World Cup #8 in Piancavallo All Parallel Slalom events were cancelled. March 11 & 12: Replaced AS World Cup #8 in Livigno Parallel Giant Slalom winners: (m) / (f) Parallel Slalom winners: (m) / (f) March 15: AS World Cup #9 in Rogla Ski Resort March 18 & 19: AS World Cup #10 (final) in Berchtesgaden = October 22, 2022: HBS World Cup #1 in Chur Big Air winners: Takeru Otsuka (m) / Reira Iwabuchi (f) November 24–26, 2022: HBS World Cup #2 in Falun Both Big Air events are cancelled. December 9 & 10, 2022: HBS World Cup #3 in Edmonton Big Air winners: Valentino Guseli (m) / Jasmine Baird (f) December 14–17, 2022: HBS World Cup #4 in Copper Mountain Big Air winners: Marcus Kleveland (m) / Mari Fukada (f) Halfpipe winners: Scotty James (m) / Queralt Castellet (f) January 13 & 14: HBS World Cup #5 in Kreischberg Big Air winners: Taiga Hasegawa (m) / Anna Gasser (f) January 18–21: HBS World Cup #6 in Laax Both Halfpipe events are cancelled. Slopestyle winners: Marcus Kleveland (m) / Zoi Sadowski-Synnott (f) February 1–4: HBS World Cup #7 in Mammoth Mountain Ski Area February 9–12: HBS World Cup #8 in Calgary March 10–12: HBS World Cup #9 in Secret Garden Both Halfpipe events are cancelled. March 24–26: HBS World Cup #10 (final) in Silvaplana = December 2–4, 2022: SC World Cup #1 in Les Deux Alpes Individual winners: Martin Nörl (m) / Josie Baff (f) December 15–17, 2022: SC World Cup #2 in Breuil-Cervinia Men's Individual winners: Alessandro Hämmerle (#1) / Loan Bozzolo (#2) Women's Individual winners: Chloé Trespeuch (#1) / Charlotte Bankes (#2) December 18–20, 2022: SC World Cup #3 in Montafon All Snowboard Cross events were cancelled. January 27 & 28: SC World Cup #4 in Cortina d'Ampezzo Individual winners: (m) / (f) February 3–5: SC World Cup #5 in Mont-Sainte-Anne March 10–12: SC World Cup #6 in Sierra Nevada Ski Station March 15 & 16: SC World Cup #7 (final) in Veysonnaz = November 24, 2022: EC #1 in Pitztal Snowboard Cross winners: Martin Nörl (m) / Francesca Gallina (f) = August 1–5, 2022: ANC #1 in Perisher Ski Resort Slopestyle #1 winners: Matthew Cox (m) / Mia Brookes (f) Slopestyle #2 winners: Valentino Guseli (m) / Mia Brookes (f) Big Air winners: Valentino Guseli (m) / Mia Brookes (f) September 1–4, 2022: ANC #2 in Cardrona Halfpipe winners: Lee Cha-eun (m) / Choi Ga-on Slopestyle winners: Jesse Parkinson (m) / Mari Fukada (f) September 1–4, 2022: ANC #3 in Mount Hotham Snowboard Cross #1 winners: Adam Lambert (m) / Josie Baff (f) Snowboard Cross #2 winners: Adam Lambert (m) / Josie Baff (f) Snowboard Cross #3 winners: Cameron Bolton (m) / Josie Baff (f) October 1–8, 2022: ANC #4 in Cardrona Slopestyle winners: Ryoma Kimata (m) / Lucia Georgalli (f) Halfpipe winners: Jason Wolle (m) / Sara Shimizu (f) Big Air winners: Ryoma Kimata (m) / Mari Fukada (f) = August 4–7, 2022: SAC #1 in La Parva Big Air #1 winners: Federico Chiaradio (m) / Amanda Cardone (f) Big Air #2 winners: Valentín Moreno (m) / No events August 8 & 9, 2022: SAC #2 in El Colorado Big Air #1 winners: Federico Chiaradio (m) / Amanda Cardone (f) Big Air #2 winners: Valentín Moreno (m) / No events August 10–12, 2022: SAC #3 in La Parva Cancelled. August 29 & 30, 2022: SAC #4 in Corralco Snowboard Cross #1 winners: Connor Schlegel (m) / Madeline Lochte-Bono (f) Snowboard Cross #2 winners: Noah Bethonico (m) / Madeline Lochte-Bono (f) September 7–12, 2022: SAC #5 in Cerro Catedral Men's Slopestyle winners: Federico Chiaradio (1st) / Manuel Fasola (2nd) Men's Big Air winners: Álvaro Yáñez (2 times) Here, Women's Slopestyle and Big Air events are cancelled. September 15–17, 2022: SAC #6 in La Parva Men's Snowboard Cross winners: Noah Bethonico (2 times) Here, Women's Snowboard Cross competitions are cancelled. September 19–23, 2022: SAC #7 in Chapelco Men's Slopestyle winner: Álvaro Yáñez Here, Women's Slopestyle and Big Air events are cancelled.
2023
72989714
2023 European Cricket League
2023-02-09 19:20:22+00:00
The 2023 European Cricket League (abbreviated as ECL23) was a T10 cricket competition organised by the European Cricket Network. It was the third edition of the European Cricket League and was once again held at the Cartama Oval in Málaga, Spain. It was announced that the tournament would be taking place between February 27 and March 24, with Finals Week starting on March 20. The 30 team format from the previous edition would remain in place, with 30 'National Champions' taking part in 6 groups across 6 weeks, with the winners of the groups joining 2022 winners Pak I Care Badalona in the Finals Week to determine the overall winner. = This tournament was viewed by about 35 million people globally. The following teams were invited to take part as champions of their domestic leagues, or an ECN-related 'Super Series'. The draw was made on January 13, 2023. Previous Champions Pak I Care Badalona will participate in the Finals Week only. The finals were made up of the 6 group winners, plus ECL22 winners Pak I Care Badalona The Group Stage is to be played across the first 3 weeks of the tournament, with each group lasting 4 days. Each group kicked off with a single-round robin stage, before entering a knockout, with seedings based on group standings. The Super 3 stage was eliminated, with teams instead advancing into a single knockout stage following the groups = = = = =
2023
73358156
2023 in ice sports
2023-03-23 00:38:28+00:00
March 28 – April 2: The 2023 Bandy World Championship for Men & Women in Åby, Växjö Men: Sweden defeated Finland, 3–1, to win their 13th Bandy World Championship title. Norway won the bronze medal. Women: Sweden defeated Finland, 15–0, to win their fifth consecutive and 11th overall Women's Bandy World Championship title. The United States won the bronze medal. = December 9 & 10, 2022: 2022 IBSF World Push Championships in Lake Placid Two-man bobsleigh winners: United States (Kristopher Horn & Adrian Adams) Four-man bobsleigh winners: United States (Kristopher Horn, Adrian Adams, Manteo Mitchell, & Martin Christofferson) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Lisa Buckwitz & Neele Schuten) Women's Monobob winner: Lisa Buckwitz Skeleton winners: YIN Zheng (m) / Mystique Ro (f) January 13–15: IBSF Junior World Championships 2023 in Winterberg Junior Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Adam Ammour & Benedikt Hertel) Junior Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Nico Semmler, Oliver Peschk, Rupert Schenk, & Marvin Paul) Junior Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Maureen Zimmer & Lauryn Siebert) Junior Women's Monobob winner: Maureen Zimmer Junior Skeleton winners: Cedric Renner (m) / Hannah Neise (f) U23 Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laurin Zern & Marvin Orthmann) U23 Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laurin Zern, Jörn Wenzel, Tim Kesseler, & Marvin Orthmann) U23 Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Charlotte Candrix & Cynthia Kwofie) U23 Women's Monobob winner: Charlotte Candrix U20 Skeleton winners: Roman Tanzer (m) / Hallie Clarke (f) January 20–22: IBSF European Championships 2023 in Altenberg Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Erec Bruckert) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Great Britain (Brad Hall, Greg Cackett, Taylor Lawrence, & Arran Gulliver) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laura Nolte & Neele Schuten) Women's Monobob winner: Laura Nolte Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Tina Hermann (f) January 26 – February 5: IBSF World Championships 2023 in St. Moritz Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Georg Fleischhauer) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Thorsten Margis, Candy Bauer, & Alexander Schüller) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Kim Kalicki & Leonie Fiebig) Women's Monobob winner: Laura Nolte Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Susanne Kreher (f) Skeleton Mixed Team winners: Germany (Susanne Kreher & Christopher Grotheer) January 27: IBSF Para Sport European Championships 2023 in Innsbruck Para Bobsleigh winner: Arturs Klots February 2 & 3: IBSF Para Sport World Championships 2023 in St. Moritz Para Bobsleigh winner: Hermann Ellmauer February 17: IBSF Junior European Skeleton Championships 2023 in Innsbruck Junior Skeleton winners: Livio Summermatter (m) / Tabitha Stoecker (f) U20 Skeleton winners: Roman Tanzer (m) / Sara Schmied (f) February 17 & 18: IBSF Junior European Championships 2023 in Winterberg Junior Two-man bobsleigh winners: Romania (Mihai Tentea & Ciprian Daroczi) Junior Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Nico Semmler, Rupert Schenk, Marvin Paul, & Tim Becker) Junior Two-woman bobsleigh winners: France (Margot Boch & Talia Solitude) Junior Women's Monobob winner: Maureen Zimmer U23 Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laurin Zern & Marvin Orthmann) U23 Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Alexander Czudaj, Jörn Wenzel, Tim Kesseler, & Nino Vogel) U23 Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Diana Filipszki & Sarah Neitz) U23 Women's Monobob winner: Diana Filipszki = November 24–26, 2022: IBSF World Cup #1 in Whistler Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Alexander Schüller) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Alexander Schüller, Thorsten Margis, & Candy Bauer) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Kim Kalicki & Anabel Galander) Women's Monobob winner: Bianca Ribi Skeleton winners: Marcus Wyatt (m) / Hannah Neise (f) December 1–3, 2022: IBSF World Cup #2 in Park City Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich & Thorsten Margis) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Candy Bauer, Thorsten Margis, & Alexander Schüller) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Kim Kalicki & Leonie Fiebig) Women's Monobob winner: Kaillie Humphries Skeleton winners: Christopher Grotheer (m) / Mirela Rahneva (f) December 16–18, 2022: IBSF World Cup #3 in Lake Placid Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Georg Fleischhauer) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Great Britain (Brad Hall, Taylor Lawrence, Arran Gulliver, & Greg Cackett) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: United States (Kaillie Humphries & Kaysha Love) Women's Monobob winner: Laura Nolte Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Tina Hermann (f) January 6–8: IBSF World Cup #4 in Winterberg Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Georg Fleischhauer) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Candy Bauer, Alexander Schüller, & Thorsten Margis) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laura Nolte & Neele Schuten) Women's Monobob winner: Laura Nolte Skeleton winners: Christopher Grotheer (m) / Kimberley Bos (f) January 13–15: IBSF World Cup #5 in Altenberg #1 Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Georg Fleischhauer) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Great Britain (Brad Hall, Taylor Lawrence, Arran Gulliver, & Greg Cackett) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Lisa Buckwitz & Kira Lipperheide) Women's Monobob winner: Kaillie Humphries Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Tina Hermann (f) January 20–22: IBSF World Cup #6 in Altenberg #2 Same results as the IBSF European Championships 2023 above, except for the following: Two-woman bobsleigh winners: United States (Kaillie Humphries & Kaysha Love) Women's Mononbob winner: Kaillie Humphries February 10–12: IBSF World Cup #7 in Innsbruck Note: The two-man bobsleigh results are unknown. Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Francesco Friedrich, Candy Bauer, Thorsten Margis, & Alexander Schüller) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laura Nolte & Neele Schuten) Women's Monobob winner: Lisa Buckwitz Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Kimberley Bos (f) February 17–19: IBSF World Cup #8 (final) in Sigulda Note: The four-man bobsleigh results are unknown. Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Johannes Lochner & Georg Fleischhauer) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laura Nolte & Neele Schuten) Women's Monobob winner: Kaillie Humphries Skeleton winners: Matt Weston (m) / Tina Hermann (f) = November 9–13, 2022: North American Cup #1 in Whistler Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: (Michael Vogt & Silvio Weber) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: (Simon Friedli & Andreas Haas) Four-man bobsleigh #1 winners: United Kingdom (Brad Hall, Arran Gulliver, Rory Willicombe, & Taylor Lawrence) Four-man bobsleigh #2 winners: (Taylor Austin, Davidson De Souza, William Ashley, & Cyrus Gray) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: (Bianca Ribi & Niamh Haughey) (2 times) Women's Monobob winners: Kaillie Humphries (#1) / Cynthia Appiah (#2) Men's Skeleton winners: Austin Florian (#1) / Florian Auer (#2) Women's Skeleton winners: Hallie Clarke (#1) / Anna Fernstädt (#2) November 18–23, 2022: North American Cup #2 in Park City Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: (Kim Jin-su & Jung Hyun-woo) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: (Kim Jin-su & Lee Kyung-yeon) Two-woman bobsleigh #1 winners: (Viktória Čerňanská & Lucia Kršková) Two-woman bobsleigh #2 winners: (Lauren Brzozowski & Sydney Milani) Four-man bobsleigh winners: South Korea (Kim Jin-su, Jung Hyun-woo, Kim Hyeong-geun, & Lee Kyung-yeon) (2 times) Women's Monobob winners: Lauren Brzozowski (#1) / Viktória Čerňanská (#2) Men's Skeleton winner: Brendan Doyle (2 times) Women's Skeleton winners: Jaclyn Laberge (#1) / Kellie Delka (#2) December 1–4, 2022: North American Cup #3 in Lake Placid #1 Note: The both two-woman bobsleigh events were cancelled. Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: Brazil (Edson Bindilatti & Edson Martins) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: South Korea (Suk Young-jin & KIM Sun-wook) Four-man bobsleigh winners: South Korea (Suk Young-jin, LEE Geon-u, JUNG Hyun-woo, & LEE Kyung-yeon) (2 times) Women's Monobob winners: Viktória Čerňanská (#1) / Lauren Brzozowski (#2) Men's Skeleton winners: Jared Firestone (#1) / Sebastian Zeleznik (#2) Women's Skeleton winner: Agathe Bessard (2 times) March 23–27: North American Cup #4 (final) in Lake Placid #2 Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: United States (Frank del Duca & Darius Joseph) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: Canada (Pat Norton & Keaton Bruggeling) Four-man bobsleigh winners: United States (Frank del Duca, Kristopher Horn, Levi Shelter, & Darius Joseph) (2 times) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Laura Nolte & Lena Neunecker) (2 times) Women's Monobob winners: Breeana Walker (#1) / Laura Nolte (#2) Men's Skeleton winner: Jacob Salisbury (2 times) Women's Skeleton winner: Mystique Ro (2 times) = November 16–20, 2022: European Cup #1 in Lillehammer Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: (Maximilian Illmann & Philipp Wobeto) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: (Maximilian Illmann & Lukas Koller) Four-man bobsleigh #1 winners: Germany (Maximilian Illmann, Henrik Proske, Philipp Wobeto, & Joshua Tasche) Four-man bobsleigh #2 winners: Germany (Maximilian Illmann, Henrik Proske, Philipp Wobeto, & Lukas Koller) Two-woman bobsleigh #1 winners: (Margot Boch & Carla Senechal) Two-woman bobsleigh #2 winners: (Margot Boch & Talia Solitude) Women's Monobob winner: Margot Boch (2 times) Men's Skeleton winner: Haifeng Zhu (2 times) Women's Skeleton winners Freya Tarbit (#1) / Mystique Ro (#2) November 28 – December 3: European Cup #2 in Altenberg Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: Germany (Adam Ammour & Benedikt Hertel) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: Germany (Maximilian Illmann & Lukas Koller) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Nico Semmler, Oliver Peschk, Rupert Schenk, & Marvin Paul) (2 times) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Switzerland (Martina Fontanive & Mara Morell) (2 times) Women's Monobob winner: Breeana Walker (2 times) December 2 & 3, 2022: European Cup #3 in Bludenz Men's Skeleton winner: Stefan Röttig (2 times) Women's Skeleton winner: Mystique Ro (2 times) December 8–10, 2022: European Cup #4 in Innsbruck Two-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Adam Ammour & Nick Stadelmann) Four-man bobsleigh #1 winners: Germany (Nico Semmler, Marvin Paul, Oliver Peschk, & Rupert Schenk) Four-man bobsleigh #2 winners: Latvia (Emīls Cipulis, Edgars Nemme, Dāvis Spriņģis, & Matīss Miknis) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: Germany (Maureen Zimmer & Lauryn Siebert) Women's Monobob winners: Breeana Walker (#1) / Maureen Zimmer (#2) January 19–21: European Cup #5 in Sigulda Two-man bobsleigh #1 winners: Germany (Nico Semmler & Max Neumann) Two-man bobsleigh #2 winners: Germany (Maximilian Illmann & Lukas Koller) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: France (Margot Boch & Carla Senechal) Women's Monobob winner: Giada Andreutti Men's Skeleton winner: Amedeo Bagnis (2 times) Women's Skeleton winners: Amelia Coltman (#1) / Kim Meylemans (#2) February 16 & 17: European Cup #6 in Innsbruck Men's Skeleton winner: Stefan Röttig (2 times) Women's Skeleton winners: Julia Erlacher (#1) / Tabitha Stoecker (#2) February 17 & 18: European Cup #7 (final) in Winterberg Two-man bobsleigh winners: Romania (Mihai Tentea & Ciprian Daroczi) Four-man bobsleigh winners: Germany (Nico Semmler, Tim Becker, Marvin Paul, & Rupert Schenk) (2 times) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: France (Margot Boch & Carla Senechal) (2 times) Women's Monobob winner: Maureen Zimmer = November 11–13, 2022: Intercontinental Cup #1 in Lillehammer Men's Skeleton winner: Mattia Gaspari (2 times) Women's Skeleton winners: Mystique Ro (#1) / Valentina Margaglio (#2) November 26 & 27, 2022: Intercontinental Cup #2 in Winterberg Men's Skeleton winner: Alexander Gassner (2 times) Women's Skeleton winner: Jacqueline Lölling (2 times) December 17 & 18, 2022: Intercontinental Cup #3 in PyeongChang Men's Skeleton winners: Lukas David Nydegger (#1) / Alexander Gassner (#2) Women's Skeleton winners: Jacqueline Lölling (#1) / Amelia Coltman (#2) February 17 & 18: Intercontinental Cup #4 (final) in Innsbruck Men's Skeleton winners: Laurence Bostock (#1) / Lukas David Nydegger (#2) Women's Skeleton winners: Mystique Ro (#1) / Corinna Leipold (#2) = November 19 & 20, 2022: Para Sport World Cup #1 in Lake Placid Para Bobsleigh winners: Guillermo Castillo (#1) / Israel Blanco (#2) January 26 & 27: Para Sport World Cup #2 in Innsbruck Para Bobsleigh winners: Guillermo Castillo (#1) / Arturs Klots (#2) February 11 & 12: Para Sport World Cup #3 (final) in Lillehammer Para Bobsleigh winners: Hermann Ellmauer (#1) / Corie Mapp (#2) = March 10 & 11: Sanctioned Race in PyeongChang Note: The four-man bobsleigh event was cancelled. Two-man bobsleigh winners: South Korea (Suk Young-jin & KIM Sun-wook) Two-woman bobsleigh winners: South Korea (Kim Yoo-ran & JEON Eun-ji) Women's Monobob winner: Kim Yoo-ran Skeleton winners: SIM Hyung-jun (m) / YANG Seok-ju (f) = October 15–22, 2022: 2022 World Mixed Curling Championship in Aberdeen Canada (Skip: Jean-Michel Ménard) defeated Scotland (Skip: Cameron Bryce), 7–4, to win their third consecutive World Mixed Curling Championship title. Switzerland (Skip: Ursi Hegner) took third place. October 31 – November 6, 2022: 2022 Pan Continental Curling Championships in Calgary (debut event) Men's A: Canada (Skip: Brad Gushue) defeated South Korea (Skip: Jeong Byeong-jin), 11–3, to win the inaugural Pan Continental Curling Championships title. The United States (Skip: Korey Dropkin) took third place. Women's A: Japan (Skip: Satsuki Fujisawa) defeated South Korea (Skip: Ha Seung-youn), 8–6, to win the inaugural Pan Continental Curling Championships title. Canada (Skip: Kerri Einarson) took third place. November 19–26, 2022: 2022 European Curling Championships in Östersund Men: Scotland (Skip: Bruce Mouat) defeated Switzerland (Skip: Yannick Schwaller), 5–4, to win their 15th European Curling Championships title. Italy (Skip: Joël Retornaz) took third place. Women: Denmark (Skip: Madeleine Dupont) defeated Switzerland (Skip: Silvana Tirinzoni), 8–4, to win their second European Curling Championships title. Scotland (Skip: Rebecca Morrison) took third place. February 25 – March 4: 2023 World Junior Curling Championships in Füssen Men: China (Skip: Fei Xueqing) defeated Germany (Skip: Benjamin Kapp), 8–7, to win China's first World Junior Curling Championships title. Scotland (Skip: Orrin Carson) took third place. Women: Scotland (Skip: Fay Henderson) defeated Japan (Skip: Yuina Miura), 9–7, to win Scotland's tenth World Junior Curling Championships title. Norway (Skip: Torild Bjørnstad) took third place. March 4–12: 2023 World Wheelchair Curling Championship in Richmond China (Skip: Wang Haitao) defeated Canada (Skip: Mark Ideson), 5–2, to win China's second consecutive and third overall World Wheelchair Curling Championship title. Scotland (Skip: Hugh Nibloe) took third place. March 4–12: 2023 World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship in Richmond Latvia (Poļina Rožkova & Agris Lasmans) defeated the United States (Pam Wilson & David Samsa), 11–8, to win Latvia's first World Wheelchair Mixed Doubles Curling Championship title. Canada (Collinda Joseph & Dennis Thiessen) took third place. March 18–26: 2023 World Women's Curling Championship in Sandviken Switzerland (Skip: Silvana Tirinzoni) defeated Norway (Skip: Marianne Rørvik), 6–3, to win Switzerland's fourth consecutive and tenth overall World Women's Curling Championship title. Canada (Skip: Kerri Einarson) took third place. April 1–9: 2023 World Men's Curling Championship in Ottawa Scotland (Skip: Bruce Mouat) defeated Canada (Skip: Brad Gushue), 9–3, to win Scotland's sixth overall World Men's Curling Championship title. Switzerland (Skip: Yannick Schwaller) took third place. April 22–29: 2023 World Mixed Doubles Curling Championship in Gangneung April 22–29: 2023 World Senior Curling Championships in Gangneung = September 21–25, 2022: 2022 PointsBet Invitational in Fredericton (debut event) Men: Team Reid Carruthers defeated Team Matt Dunstone, 8–4, to win the inaugural PointsBet Invitational title. Women: Team Jennifer Jones defeated Team Casey Scheidegger, 7–4, to win the inaugural PointsBet Invitational title. Note for Women: Kristie Moore replaced Casey Scheidegger. February 17–26: 2023 Scotties Tournament of Hearts in Kamloops Team Canada (Skip: Kerri Einarson) defeated Team Manitoba (Skip: Jennifer Jones), 10–4, to win her fourth consecutive Scotties Tournament of Hearts championship. March 3–12: 2023 Tim Hortons Brier in London Team Canada (Skip: Brad Gushue) defeated Team Manitoba (Skip: Matt Dunstone), 7–5, to win his second consecutive and fifth Tim Hortons Brier championship. = October 4–9, 2022: 2022 National in North Bay Men: Team Brad Gushue defeated Team Niklas Edin, 5–4, to win their fourth National title. Women: Team Silvana Tirinzoni defeated Team Kerri Einarson, 7–3, to win their first National title. October 18–23, 2022: 2022 Tour Challenge in Grande Prairie Men's Tier 1: Team Niklas Edin defeated Team Matt Dunstone, 7–3, to win their second Tour Challenge title. Note for Men's Tier 1: Oskar Eriksson was the skip for the semifinal and final of this event. Women's Tier 1: Team Tracy Fleury defeated Team Kerri Einarson, 8–4, to win their second Tour Challenge title. December 6–11, 2022: 2022 Masters in Oakville Men: Team Joël Retornaz defeated Team Bruce Mouat, 6–2, to win their first Masters title. Women: Team Kerri Einarson defeated Team Tracy Fleury, 6–5, to win their first Masters title. January 10–15: 2023 Canadian Open in Camrose Men: Team Brendan Bottcher defeated Team Niklas Edin, 5–3, to win Alberta's eighth Canadian Open title. Women: Team Satsuki Fujisawa defeated Team Kerri Einarson, 5–3, to win Japan's first Canadian Open title. April 11–16: 2023 Players' Championship in Toronto Men: Team Kevin Koe defeated Team Yannick Schwaller, 5–4, to win their third Players' Championship title. Women: Team Isabella Wranå defeated Team Silvana Tirinzoni, 6–5, to win their first Players' Championship title. May 2–7: 2023 Champions Cup in Regina = January 23–29: 2023 European Figure Skating Championships in Espoo Men's Singles winner: Adam Siao Him Fa Ladies' Singles winner: Anastasia Gubanova Pairs winners: Italy (Sara Conti & Niccolò Macii) Ice Dance winners: Italy (Charlène Guignard & Marco Fabbri) February 7–12: 2023 Four Continents Figure Skating Championships in Colorado Springs Men's Singles winner: Kao Miura Ladies' Singles winner: Lee Hae-in Pairs winners: Japan (Riku Miura & Ryuichi Kihara) Ice Dance winners: United States (Madison Chock & Evan Bates) February 27 – March 5: 2023 World Junior Figure Skating Championships in Calgary Junior Men's Singles winner: Kao Miura Junior Ladies' Singles winner: Mao Shimada Junior Pairs winners: United States (Sophia Baram & Daniel Tioumentsev) Junior Ice Dance winners: Czech Republic (Kateřina Mrázková & Daniel Mrázek) March 20–26: 2023 World Figure Skating Championships in Saitama Men's Singles winner: Shoma Uno Ladies' Singles winner: Kaori Sakamoto Pairs winners: Japan (Riku Miura & Ryuichi Kihara) Ice Dance winners: United States (Madison Chock & Evan Bates) = October 21–23: 2022 Skate America in Norwood Men's Singles winner: Ilia Malinin Ladies' Singles winner: Kaori Sakamoto Pairs winners: United States (Alexa Knierim & Brandon Frazier) Ice Dance winners: United States (Madison Chock & Evan Bates) October 28–30: 2022 Skate Canada International in Mississauga Men's Singles winner: Shoma Uno Ladies' Singles winner: Rinka Watanabe Pairs winners: Japan (Riku Miura & Ryuichi Kihara) Ice Dance winners: Canada (Piper Gilles & Paul Poirier) November 4–6: 2022 Grand Prix de France in Angers Men's Singles winner: Adam Siao Him Fa Ladies' Singles winner: Olga Mikutina Pairs winners: Canada (Deanna Stellato & Maxime Deschamps) Ice Dance winners: Italy (Charlène Guignard & Marco Fabbri) November 11–13: 2022 MK John Wilson Trophy in Sheffield Men's Singles winner: Daniel Grassl Ladies' Singles winner: Mai Mihara Pairs winners: United States (Alexa Knierim & Brandon Frazier) Ice Dance winners: Italy (Charlène Guignard & Marco Fabbri) November 18–20: 2022 NHK Trophy in Sapporo Men's Singles winner: Shoma Uno Ladies' Singles winner: Kim Ye-lim Pairs winners: Japan (Riku Miura & Ryuichi Kihara) Ice Dance winners: Canada (Laurence Fournier Beaudry & Nikolaj Sørensen) November 25–27: 2022 Grand Prix of Espoo in Espoo Men's Singles winner: Ilia Malinin Ladies' Singles winner: Mai Mihara Pairs winners: Italy (Rebecca Ghilardi & Filippo Ambrosini) Ice Dance winners: Canada (Piper Gilles & Paul Poirier) December 8–11: 2022–23 Grand Prix of Figure Skating Final in Torino Senior Men's Singles winner: Shoma Uno Senior Ladies' Singles winner: Mai Mihara Senior Pairs winners: Japan (Riku Miura & Ryuichi Kihara) Senior Ice Dance winners: Canada (Piper Gilles & Paul Poirier) Junior Men's Singles winner: Nikolaj Memola Junior Ladies' Singles winner: Mao Shimada Junior Pairs winners: Australia (Anastasia Golubeva & Hektor Giotopoulos Moore) Junior Ice Dance winners: Canada (Nadiia Bashynska & Peter Beaumont) = August 24–27: ISU Junior Grand Prix in France in Courchevel Men's Singles winner: Shunsuke Nakamura Ladies' Singles winner: Hana Yoshida Ice Dance winners: South Korea (Hannah Lim & Ye Quan) August 31 – September 3: ISU Junior Grand Prix in the Czech Republic in Ostrava Men's Singles winner: Nozomu Yoshioka Ladies' Singles winner: Mao Shimada Pairs winners: United States (Sophia Baram & Daniel Tioumentsev) Ice Dance winners: Czech Republic (Kateřina Mrázková & Daniel Mrázek) September 7–10: ISU Junior Grand Prix in Latvia in Riga Men's Singles winner: Nikolaj Memola Ladies' Singles winner: Shin Ji-a Pairs winners: United States (Cayla Smith & Andy Deng) Ice Dance winners: Germany (Darya Grimm & Michail Savitskiy) September 21–24: ISU Junior Grand Prix in Armenia in Yerevan Event cancelled. September 28 – October 1: ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland in Gdańsk #1 Men's Singles winner: Lucas Broussard Ladies' Singles winner: Mao Shimada Pairs winners: Australia (Anastasia Golubeva & Hektor Giotopoulos Moore) Ice Dance winners: Canada (Nadiia Bashynska & Peter Beaumont) October 5–8: ISU Junior Grand Prix in Poland in Gdańsk #2 Men's Singles winner: Takeru Amine Kataise Ladies' Singles winner: Ami Nakai Pairs winners: Australia (Anastasia Golubeva & Hektor Giotopoulos Moore) Ice Dance winners: Canada (Nadiia Bashynska & Peter Beaumont) October 12–15: ISU Junior Grand Prix in Italy in Egna Men's Singles winner: Lucas Broussard Ladies' Singles winner: Hana Yoshida Ice Dance winners: Czech Republic (Kateřina Mrázková & Daniel Mrázek) = February 27 – March 5: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division III – Group B in Sarajevo Kyrgyzstan was promoted to Division III – Group A. Malaysia was relegated to Division IV. March 23–26: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division IV in Ulaanbaatar The Philippines was promoted to Division III – Group B. April 15–21: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division II – Group A in Madrid Spain was promoted to Division I – Group B. Iceland was relegated to Division II – Group B. April 17–23: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division II – Group B in Istanbul The United Arab Emirates was promoted to Division II – Group A. Mexico was relegated to Division III – Group A. April 17–23: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division III – Group A in Cape Town Chinese Taipei was promoted to Division II – Group B. North Korea withdrew from tournament and was relegated to Division III – Group B. April 23–29: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division I – Group B in Tallinn Japan was promoted to Division I – Group A. Serbia was relegated to Division II – Group A. April 29 – May 5: 2023 IIHF World Championship Division I – Group A in Nottingham Great Britain and Poland were promoted to the Top Division. Lithuania was relegated to Division I – Group B. May 12–28: 2023 IIHF World Championship in Tampere & Riga Canada defeated Germany, 5–2, to win their 28th IIHF World Championship title. Latvia defeated the United States, 4–3 in overtime, to win the bronze medal. Hungary and Slovenia were relegated to Division I – Group A. = December 11–17, 2022: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I Group A in Asker Norway was promoted to the Top Division. Slovenia was relegated to Division I – Group B. December 11–17, 2022: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division I Group B in Bytom Japan was promoted to Division I – Group A. South Korea was relegated to Division II – Group A. December 11–17, 2022: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division II Group A in Kaunas Croatia was promoted to Division I – Group B. Romania was relegated to Division II – Group B. December 26, 2022 – January 5: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships in Halifax & Moncton Canada defeated Czechia, 3–2 in overtime, to win their second consecutive and 20th overall WJIH title. The United States defeated Sweden, 8–7 in overtime, to win the bronze medal. Austria was relegated to Division I – Group A. January 16–22: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division II Group B in Reykjavík China was promoted to Division II – Group A. Mexico was relegated to Division III. January 26 – February 2: 2023 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships – Division III in Istanbul Australia was promoted to Division II – Group B. = March 12–18: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III Group A in Akureyri Israel was promoted to Division II Group B. Luxembourg was relegated to Division III Group B. March 13–16: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division III Group B in Cape Town New Zealand was promoted to Division III Group A. March 27 – April 2: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II Group B in Sofia The Netherlands was promoted to Division II Group A. Belgium was relegated to Division III Group A. April 9–15: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division II Group A in Belgrade Lithuania was promoted to Division I Group B. Spain was relegated to Division II Group B. April 10–16: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I Group B in Bled Austria was promoted to Division I Group A. Poland was relegated to Division II Group A. April 20–30: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championships in Basel & Porrentruy The United States defeated Sweden, 3–2 in overtime, to win their eleventh World U18 Championship title. Canada defeated Slovakia, 4–3 in overtime, to win the bronze medal. Germany was relegated to Division I Group A. April 23–29: 2023 IIHF World U18 Championship Division I Group A in Angers Kazakhstan was promoted to the Top Division. France was relegated to Division I Group B. = February 20–26: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II – Group B in Cape Town Belgium was promoted to Division II – Group A. Croatia was relegated to Division III – Group A. March 26–31: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division III – Group B in Tnuvot Serbia was promoted to Division III – Group A. April 2–7: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division II – Group A in Mexico City Latvia was promoted to Division I – Group B. North Korea withdrew from tournament and was relegated to Division II – Group B. April 3–9: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division III – Group A in Brașov Hong Kong was promoted to Division II – Group B. Estonia was relegated to Division III – Group B. April 5–16: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship in Brampton The United States defeated Canada, 6–3, to win their tenth World Women's Championship title. Czechia defeated Switzerland, 3–2, to win their second consecutive bronze medal. Hungary and France were relegated to Division I – Group A. April 17–23: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I – Group B in Suwon South Korea was promoted to Division I – Group A. Kazakhstan was relegated to Division II – Group A. August 20–26: 2023 IIHF Women's World Championship Division I – Group A in Shenzhen = January 8–15: 2023 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship in Östersund Canada defeated Sweden, 10–0, to win their second consecutive and seventh World Women's U18 Championship title. The United States won the bronze medal. Japan was relegated to Division I – Group A. January 9–15: 2023 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship Division I – Group A in Ritten Germany was promoted to Top Division. Norway was relegated to Division I – Group B. January 9–15: 2023 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship Division I – Group B in Katowice Denmark was promoted to Division I – Group A. China was relegated to Division II – Group A. January 21–27: 2023 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship Division II – Group A in Dumfries Australia was promoted to Division I – Group B. Mexico was relegated to Division II – Group B. January 26 – February 1: 2023 IIHF World Women's U18 Championship Division II – Group B in Sofia Kazakhstan was promoted to Division II – Group A. = October 7, 2022 – April 13, 2023: 2022–23 NHL season Presidents' Trophy and Eastern Conference winners: Boston Bruins Western Conference winners: Vegas Golden Knights Art Ross Trophy winner: Connor McDavid ( Edmonton Oilers) January 2: 2023 NHL Winter Classic at Fenway Park in Boston The Boston Bruins defeated the Pittsburgh Penguins, 2–1. February 4: 2023 National Hockey League All-Star Game at FLA Live Arena in Sunrise Fastest skater: Andrei Svechnikov ( Carolina Hurricanes) Hardest shot: Elias Pettersson ( Vancouver Canucks) Breakaway challenge: (Tie) Sidney Crosby ( Pittsburgh Penguins) & Alexander Ovechkin ( Washington Capitals) Accuracy shooting: Brock Nelson ( New York Islanders) The Atlantic Division defeats the Central Division, with the score of 7–5. February 18: 2023 NHL Stadium Series at Carter–Finley Stadium in Raleigh The Carolina Hurricanes defeated the Washington Capitals, with the score of 4–1. April 17 – June 13: 2023 Stanley Cup playoffs Eastern Conference champions: Florida Panthers Western Conference champions: Vegas Golden Knights The Vegas Golden Knights defeated the Florida Panthers, 4–1 in games played, to win their first Stanley Cup title. Conn Smythe Trophy winner: Jonathan Marchessault ( Vegas Golden Knights) June 28 & 29: 2023 NHL Entry Draft at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville #1 overall pick: Connor Bedard (to the Chicago Blackhawks from the Regina Pats) = September 1, 2022 – February 26: 2022–23 KHL season Continental Cup and Western Conference winners: SKA Saint Petersburg Eastern Conference winners: Ak Bars Kazan March 1 – April 29: 2023 Gagarin Cup playoffs CSKA Moscow defeated Ak Bars Kazan, 4–3 in games played, to win their second consecutive and third overall Gagarin Cup title. = American Hockey League October 14, 2022 – April 16: 2022–23 AHL season Macgregor Kilpatrick Trophy and Western Conference winners: Calgary Wranglers Eastern Conference winners: Providence Bruins April 18 – TBD: 2023 Calder Cup playoffs ECHL October 21, 2022 – April 16: 2022–23 ECHL season Brabham Cup and Western Conference winners: Idaho Steelheads Eastern Conference winners: Newfoundland Growlers April 19 – June 9: 2023 Kelly Cup playoffs The Florida Everblades defeated the Idaho Steelheads, 4–0 in games played, to win their second consecutive and third overall Kelly Cup title. United States Hockey League September 9, 2022 – April 18: 2022–23 USHL season Anderson Cup and Western Conference winners: Fargo Force Eastern Conference winners: Chicago Steel April 21 – May 19: 2023 Clark Cup playoffs The Youngstown Phantoms defeated the Fargo Force, 3–0 in games played, to win their first Clark Cup title. Most Outstanding Player: Jacob Fowler ( Youngstown Phantoms) Junior (OHL/QMJHL/WHL) September 22, 2022 – March 25: 2022–23 QMJHL season Jean Rougeau Trophy and East Division winners: Quebec Remparts Central Division winners: Sherbrooke Phoenix Maritimes Division winners: Halifax Mooseheads West Division winners: Gatineau Olympiques March 31 – May 21: 2023 QMJHL playoffs The Quebec Remparts defeated the Halifax Mooseheads, 4–2 in games played, to win their sixth Gilles-Courteau Trophy title. September 23, 2022 – March 26: 2022–23 WHL season Scotty Munro Memorial Trophy and East Division winners: Winnipeg Ice B.C. Division winners: Kamloops Blazers Central Division winners: Red Deer Rebels U.S. Division winners: Seattle Thunderbirds March 31 – May 19: 2023 WHL playoffs The Seattle Thunderbirds defeated the Winnipeg Ice, 4–1 in games played, to win their second Ed Chynoweth Cup title. September 29, 2022 – March 26: 2022–23 OHL season Hamilton Spectator Trophy and East Division winners: Ottawa 67's Central Division winners: North Bay Battalion Midwest Division winners: London Knights West Division winners: Windsor Spitfires March 30 – May 21: 2023 OHL playoffs The Peterborough Petes defeated the London Knights, 4–2 in games played, to win their tenth J. Ross Robertson Cup title. May 26 – June 4: 2023 Memorial Cup at Sandman Centre in Kamloops The Quebec Remparts defeated the Seattle Thunderbirds, 5–0, to win their third Memorial Cup title. College (NCAA Division I) March 9 – 19: 2023 NCAA National Collegiate women's ice hockey tournament (Frozen Four at AMSOIL Arena in Duluth) The Wisconsin Badgers defeated the Ohio State Buckeyes, 1–0, to win their seventh NCAA National Collegiate Women's Ice Hockey title. Most Outstanding Player: Cami Kronish ( Wisconsin Badgers) March 23 – April 8: 2023 NCAA Division I men's ice hockey tournament (Frozen Four at Amalie Arena in Tampa) The Quinnipiac Bobcats defeated the Minnesota Golden Gophers, 3–2 in overtime, to win their first NCAA Division I Men's Ice Hockey title. Most Outstanding Player: Jacob Quillan ( Quinnipiac Bobcats) Women (Premier Hockey Federation) November 5, 2022 – March 12: 2022–23 PHF season Regular season winners: Boston Pride March 16 – 26: 2023 Isobel Cup playoffs The Toronto Six defeated the Minnesota Whitecaps, 4–3 in overtime, to win their first Isobel Cup title. MVP: Tereza Vanišová ( Toronto Six) = Champions Hockey League September 1, 2022 – February 18: 2022–23 Champions Hockey League Tappara defeated Luleå HF, 3–2, to win their first Champions Hockey League title. MVP: Christian Heljanko ( Tappara) IIHF Continental Cup September 23, 2022 – January 15: 2022–23 IIHF Continental Cup HK Nitra; Ducs d'Angers; Cardiff Devils Euro Hockey Tour November 10, 2022 – May 7: 2022–23 Euro Hockey Tour = Asia League September 3, 2022 – March 26: 2022–23 Asia League season HL Anyang defeated Red Eagles Hokkaido, 3–2, to win their seventh Asia League title. IIHF Asia and Oceania Championship March 11 – 17: 2023 IIHF U18 Asia and Oceania Championship in Ulaanbaatar Uzbekistan; Turkmenistan; Mongolia April 30 – May 7: 2023 IIHF Women's Asia and Oceania Championship in Bangkok Thailand defeated Iran, 3–1, to win their second consecutive Women's Asia and Oceania Championship title. Singapore defeated India, 3–1, to win the bronze medal. = September 14–18, 2022: 2022 Amerigol LATAM Cup in Coral Springs Men's Division 1: Puerto Rico; Argentina; Mexico Selects Puerto Rico defeated Argentina, 4–3, to win their first Men's LATAM Cup Division 1 title. Men's Division 2: Egypt Pharaohs; Stars of Israel; Chile Egypt Pharaohs defeated Stars of Israel, 3–0, to win their first Men's LATAM Cup Division 2 title. U20: Puerto Rico; Team Caribbean; Colombia Puerto Rico defeated Team Caribbean, 8–1, to win their first U20 LATAM Cup title. Women's: Mexico Warriors; Chile; Colombia Mexico Warriors defeated Chile, 9–4, to win their first Women's LATAM Cup title. May 2–6: 2023 IIHF Development Cup in Bratislava Liechtenstein; Argentina; Colombia May 7–13: 2023 Arab Cup in Kuwait City Lebanon defeated Kuwait, 9–4, to win their first Arab Cup title. Oman defeated Bahrain, 6–3, to win the bronze medal. = December 16 & 17, 2022: 2022 FIL Junior European Luge Championships in Altenberg Junior Singles winners: Kaspars Rinks (m) / Antonia Pietschmann (f) Men's Junior Doubles winners: Latvia (Kaspars Rinks & Vitalijs Jegorovs) Women's Junior Doubles winners: Austria (Lisa Zimmermann & Dorothea Schwartz) Junior Team winners: Germany (Antonia Pietschmann, Marco Leger, & Moritz Jäger and Valentin Steudte) December 16 & 17, 2022: 2022 FIL America-Pacific Luge Championship in Park City Singles winners: Tucker West (m) / Emily Sweeney (f) Men's Doubles winners: United States (Zack DiGregorio & Sean Hollander) Women's Doubles winners: Canada (Caitlin Nash & Natalie Corless) December 17, 2022: 2022 FIL Asian Luge Championships in PyeongChang Individual winners: Kobayashi Seiya (m) / WANG Jiaxue (f) January 14 & 15: 2023 FIL European Luge Championships in Sigulda Singles winners: Max Langenhan (m) / Anna Berreiter (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) Women's Doubles winners: Italy (Andrea Vötter & Marion Oberhofer) Team Relay winners: Latvia (Elīna Ieva Vītola, Kristers Aparjods, & Mārtiņš Bots and Roberts Plūme) U23 Singles winners: Gints Bērziņš (m) / Elīna Ieva Vītola (f) U23 Men's Doubles winners: Latvia (Eduards Ševics-Mikeļševics & Lūkass Krasts) U23 Women's Doubles winners: Latvia (Anda Upīte & Sanita Ozoliņa) January 14 & 15: 2023 FIL World Junior Championships in Bludenz Junior Singles winners: Kaspars Rinkns (m) / Yulianna Tunytska (f) Junior Men's Doubles winners: Latvia (Kaspars Rinkns & Vitālijs Jegorovs) Junior Women's Doubles winners: Latvia (Viktorija Ziediņa & Selīna Zvilna) Junior Team winners: Germany (Anka Jänicke, Marco Leger, & Moritz Jäger and Valentin Steudte) January 28 & 29: 2023 FIL World Luge Championships in Oberhof Singles winners: Jonas Müller (m) / Anna Berreiter (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) Women's Doubles winners: Germany (Jessica Degenhardt & Cheyenne Rosenthal) Relay winners: Germany (Anna Berreiter, Max Langenhan, Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) Sprint winners: Felix Loch (m) / Dajana Eitberger (f) U23 Singles winners: Timon Grancagnolo (m) / Merle Fräbel (f) U23 Men's Doubles winners: United States (Zack DiGregorio & Sean Hollander) U23 Women's Doubles winners: Germany (Jessica Degenhardt & Cheyenne Rosenthal) = December 3 & 4, 2022: World Cup #1 in Innsbruck Singles winners: Nico Gleirscher (m) / Madeleine Egle (f) Men's Doubles winners: Austria (Juri Thomas Gatt & Riccardo Martin Schöpf) Women's Doubles winners: Austria (Selina Egle & Lara Michaela Kipp) December 9 & 10, 2022: World Cup #2 in Whistler Singles winners: Felix Loch (m) / Madeleine Egle (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) Women's Doubles winners: Italy (Andrea Vötter & Marion Oberhofer) Relay winners: Germany (Julia Taubitz, Felix Loch, Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) December 16 & 17, 2022: World Cup #3 in Park City Singles winners: Dominik Fischnaller (m) / Dajana Eitberger (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) Women's Doubles winners: Italy (Andrea Vötter & Marion Oberhofer) Women's Sprint winner: Julia Taubitz Men's Sprint Doubles winners: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) Women's Sprint Doubles winners: Austria (Selina Egle & Lara Michaela Kipp) January 7 & 8: World Cup #4 in Sigulda Singles winners: Kristers Aparjods (m) / Dajana Eitberger (f) Men's Doubles winners: Latvia (Mārtiņš Bots & Roberts Plūme) Women's Doubles winners: Latvia (Anda Upite & Sanija Ozoliņa) Relay winners: Latvia (Elīna Ieva Vītola, Kristers Aparjods, Mārtiņš Bots & Roberts Plūme) February 4 & 5: World Cup #5 in Altenberg Singles winners: Max Langenhan (m) / Julia Taubitz (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Toni Eggert & Sascha Benecken) Women's Doubles winners: Italy (Andrea Vötter & Marion Oberhofer) Relay winners: Austria (Madeleine Egle, Wolfgang Kindl, Yannick Müller & Armin Frauscher) February 11 & 12: World Cup #6 in Winterberg #1 Singles winners: Max Langenhan (m) / Julia Taubitz (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) Women's Doubles winners: Germany (Jessica Degenhardt & Cheyenne Rosenthal) Women's Sprint Doubles winners: Latvia (Anda Upite & Sanija Ozoliņa) February 18 & 19: World Cup #7 in St. Moritz-Celerina Singles winners: Max Langenhan (m) / Dajana Eitberger (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) Women's Doubles winners: Germany (Jessica Degenhardt & Cheyenne Rosenthal) Relay winners: Germany (Dajana Eitberger, Max Langenhan, Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) February 25 & 26: World Cup #8 (final) in Winterberg #2 Singles winners: Max Langenhan (m) / Madeleine Egle (f) Men's Doubles winners: Germany (Tobias Wendl & Tobias Arlt) Women's Doubles winners: Austria (Selina Egle & Lara Michaela Kipp) Relay winners: Austria (Madeleine Egle, Jonas Müller, Juri Thomas Gatt, & Schoepf, Riccardo Martin Schöpf) Women's Sprint winner: Julia Taubitz Women's Sprint Doubles winners: Latvia (Anda Upite & Sanija Ozoliņa) = December 2–4, 2022: 2022 ISU Four Continents Speed Skating Championships in Quebec City 500 m winners: Laurent Dubreuil (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Laurent Dubreuil (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1500 m winners: Antoine Gélinas-Beaulieu (m) / Nadezhda Morozova (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Vitaliy Chshigolev Women's 3000 m winner: Valérie Maltais Mass Start winners: Chung Jae-won (m) / Valérie Maltais (f) Men's Team Pursuit winners: South Korea (Chung Jae-won, Um Cheon-ho, & YANG Ho-jun) Women's Team Pursuit winners: Canada (Béatrice Lamarche, Maddison Pearman, & Valérie Maltais) Men's Team Sprint winners: Canada (Christopher Fiola, Laurent Dubreuil, & David La Rue) Women's Team Sprint winners: China (ZHANG Lina, PEI Chong, & YANG Binyu) January 6–8: 2023 European Speed Skating Championships in Hamar Men's 500 m Sprint winners: David Bosa (#1) / Merijn Scheperkamp (#2) Women's 500 m Sprint winners: Femke Kok (#1) / Jutta Leerdam (#2) Men's 1000 m Sprint winner: Hein Otterspeer (2 times) Women's 1000 m Sprint winner: Jutta Leerdam (2 times) All-round 500 m winners: Patrick Roest (m) / Antoinette de Jong (f) All-round 1500 m winners: Sander Eitrem (m) / Antoinette de Jong (f) All-round 5000 m winners: Sander Eitrem (m) / Ragne Wiklund (f) All-round Men's 10000 m winner: Patrick Roest All-round Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund February 10–12: 2023 World Junior Speed Skating Championships in Inzell 500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Serena Pergher (f) 1000 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Angel Daleman (f) 1500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Angel Daleman (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Sigurd Henriksen Women's 3000 m winner: Momoka Horikawa Mass Start winners: Lukáš Steklý (m) / Angel Daleman (f) Men's Team Pursuit winners: Netherlands (Sijmen Egberts, Tim Prins, & Remco Stam) Women's Team Pursuit winners: Netherlands (Chloé Hoogendoorn, Jade Groenewoud, & Angel Daleman) Men's Team Sprint winners: United States (Jonathan Tobon, Auggie Herman, & Jordan Stolz) Women's Team Sprint winners: Netherlands (Pien Hersman, Pien Smit, & Angel Daleman) March 2–5: 2023 World Single Distances Speed Skating Championships in Heerenveen 500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Femke Kok (f) 1000 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Antoinette de Jong (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Patrick Roest Men's 10000 m winner: Davide Ghiotto Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund Women's 5000 m winner: Irene Schouten Mass Start winners: Bart Swings (m) / Marijke Groenewoud (f) Men's Team Pursuit winners: Netherlands (Patrick Roest, Beau Snellink, & Marcel Bosker) Women's Team Pursuit winners: Canada (Valérie Maltais, Ivanie Blondin, Isabelle Weidemann) Men's Team Sprint winners: Canada (Christopher Fiola, Laurent Dubreuil, & Antoine Gélinas-Beaulieu) Women's Team Sprint winners: Canada (Brooklyn McDougall, Carolina Hiller, & Ivanie Blondin) = November 11–13, 2022: LTSS World Cup #1 in Stavanger 500 m winners: Yuma Murakami (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Miho Takagi (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Patrick Roest Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund Mass Start winners: Felix Rijhnen (m) / Ivanie Blondin (f) Team Pursuit winners: United States (m) / Canada (f) November 18–20, 2022: LTSS World Cup #2 in Heerenveen 500 m winners: Laurent Dubreuil (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Ning Zhongyan (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Connor Howe (m) / Antoinette de Jong (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Patrick Roest Women's 3000 m winner: Irene Schouten Mass Start winners: Bart Hoolwerf (m) / Irene Schouten (f) Team Sprint winners: China (m) / Netherlands (f) December 9–11, 2022: LTSS World Cup #3 in Calgary #1 500 m winners: Laurent Dubreuil (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Hein Otterspeer (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Wesly Dijs (m) / Miho Takagi (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Patrick Roest Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund Mass Start winners: Andrea Giovannini (m) / Irene Schouten (f) Team Pursuit winners: United States (m) / Canada (f) December 16–18, 2022: LTSS World Cup #4 in Calgary #2 500 m winners: Kim Jun-ho (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Kjeld Nuis (m) / Miho Takagi (f) Men's 10000 m winner: Davide Ghiotto Women's 5000 m winner: Irene Schouten Mass Start winners: Bart Swings (m) / Irene Schouten (f) Team Sprint winners: Poland (m) / United States (f) February 10–12: LTSS World Cup #5 in Tomaszów Mazowiecki #1 500 m winners: Wataru Morishige (m) / Kim Min-sun (f) 1000 m winners: Hein Otterspeer (m) / Kimi Goetz (f) 1500 m winners: Kjeld Nuis (m) / Marijke Groenewoud (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Davide Ghiotto Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund Mass Start winners: Bart Swings (m) / Marijke Groenewoud (f) Team Pursuit winners: Norway (m) / Canada (f) February 17–19: LTSS World Cup #6 (final) in Tomaszów Mazowiecki #2 500 m winners: Yuma Murakami (m) / Vanessa Herzog (f) 1000 m winners: Wesly Dijs (m) / Jutta Leerdam (f) 1500 m winners: Jordan Stolz (m) / Ragne Wiklund (f) Men's 5000 m winner: Sander Eitrem Women's 3000 m winner: Ragne Wiklund Mass Start winners: Bart Hoolwerf (m) / Momoka Horikawa (f) Team Sprint winners: Canada (m) / United States (f) = November 10–12, 2022: 2023 Four Continents Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Salt Lake City 500 m winners: Steven Dubois (m) / Shim Suk-hee (f) 1000 m winners: Park Ji-won (m) / Courtney Sarault (f) 1500 m winners: Park Ji-won (m) / Courtney Sarault (f) Men's 5000 m Relay winners: China (LI Kun, LIU Guanyi, SONG Jiahua, & ZHONG Yuchen) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: South Korea (Choi Min-jeong, KIM Gil-li, LEE So-youn, & Shim Suk-hee) Mixed Relay winners: United States (Andrew Heo, Marcus Howard, Kristen Santos-Griswold, & Corinne Stoddard) January 13–15: 2023 European Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Gdańsk 500 m winners: Pietro Sighel (m) / Suzanne Schulting (f) 1000 m winners: Stijn Desmet (m) / Hanne Desmet (f) 1500 m winners: Jens van 't Wout (m) / Suzanne Schulting (f) Men's 5000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Itzhak de Laat, Friso Emons, Jens van 't Wout, & Melle van 't Wout) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Selma Poutsma, Suzanne Schulting, Yara van Kerkhof, & Xandra Velzeboer) Mixed Relay winners: Netherlands (Itzhak de Laat, Suzanne Schulting, Jens van 't Wout, & Xandra Velzeboer) January 27–29: 2023 World Junior Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Dresden 500 m winners: Michał Niewiński (m) / Florence Brunelle (f) 1000 m winners: LEE Dong-hyun (m) / KIM Gil-li (f) 1500 m winners: LEE Dong-hyun (m) / KIM Gil-li (f) Men's 3000 m Relay winners: South Korea (LEE Do-gyu, LEE Dong-hyun, LEE Dong-min, & SHIN Dong-min) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: South Korea (KIM Gil-li, KIM Ji-won, OH Song-mi, & SEO Su-ah) March 10–12: 2023 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships in Seoul 500 m winners: Pietro Sighel (m) / Xandra Velzeboer (f) 1000 m winners: Park Ji-won (m) / Xandra Velzeboer (f) 1500 m winners: Park Ji-won (m) / Suzanne Schulting (f) Men's 5000 m Relay winners: China (Li Wenlong, Lim Hyo-jun, LIU Guanyi, & ZHONG Yuchen) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Selma Poutsma, Suzanne Schulting, Yara van Kerkhof, & Xandra Velzeboer) Mixed Relay winners: Netherlands (Teun Boer, Suzanne Schulting, Jens van 't Wout, & Xandra Velzeboer) = October 28–30, 2022: STSS World Cup #1 in Montreal Men's 500 m winner: Steven Dubois Men's 1000 m winners: Roberts Kruzbergs (#1) / Pascal Dion (#2) Men's 1500 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 5000 m Relay winners: South Korea (HONG Kyung-hwan, Lee June-seo, LIM Yong-jin, & Park Ji-won) Women's 500 m winner: Xandra Velzeboer Women's 1000 m winners: Xandra Velzeboer (#1) / Suzanne Schulting (#2) Women's 1500 m winner: Suzanne Schulting Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Selma Poutsma, Suzanne Schulting, Michelle Velzeboer, & Xandra Velzeboer) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: South Korea (HONG Kyung-hwan, Kim Geon-hee, LIM Yong-jin, & Shim Suk-hee) November 4–6, 2022: STSS World Cup #2 in Salt Lake City Men's 500 m winners: Maxime Laoun (#1) / Jens van 't Wout (#2) Men's 1000 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 1500 m winner: Jens van 't Wout Men's 5000 m Relay winners: Canada (Pascal Dion, Steven Dubois, Maxime Laoun, & Jordan Pierre-Gilles) Women's 500 m winners: Kim Boutin (#1) / Xandra Velzeboer (#2) Women's 1000 m winner: Suzanne Schulting Women's 1500 m winner: KIM Gil-li Women's 3000 m Relay winners: South Korea (Kim Geon-hee, KIM Gil-li, Seo Whi-min, & Shim Suk-hee) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: China (Li Wenlong, WANG Xinran, Zhang Chutong, & ZHONG Yuchen) December 9–11, 2022: STSS World Cup #3 in Almaty #1 Men's 500 m winner: KIM Tae-sung Men's 1000 m winner: Jens van 't Wout Men's 1500 m winners: HONG Kyung-hwan (#1) / Park Ji-won Men's 5000 m Relay winners: Canada (Steven Dubois, Maxime Laoun, Jordan Pierre-Gilles, & Felix Roussel) Women's 500 m winner: Kim Boutin Women's 1000 m winner: Courtney Sarault Women's 1500 m winners: Suzanne Schulting (#1) / Hanne Desmet (#2) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Canada (Kim Boutin, Rikki Doak, Claudia Gagnon, & Courtney Sarault) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: South Korea (Choi Min-jeong, HONG Kyung-hwan, KIM Gil-li, & LIM Yong-jin) December 16–18, 2022: STSS World Cup #4 in Almaty #2 Men's 500 m winners: Diane Sellier (#1) / Denis Nikisha (#2) Men's 1000 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 1500 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 5000 m Relay winners: Canada (William Dandjinou, Pascal Dion, Maxime Laoun, & Jordan Pierre-Gilles) Women's 500 m winners: Suzanne Schulting (#1) / Yara van Kerkhof (#2) Women's 1000 m winner: Suzanne Schulting Women's 1500 m winner: Courtney Sarault Women's 3000 m Relay winners: South Korea (KIM Gil-li, LEE So-youn, Seo Whi-min, & Shim Suk-hee) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: South Korea (KIM Gil-li, LIM Yong-jin, Park Ji-won, & Shim Suk-hee) February 3–5: STSS World Cup #5 in Dresden Men's 500 m winner: Lim Hyo-jun Men's 1000 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 1500 m winners: Lee June-seo (#1) / Park Ji-won (#2) Men's 5000 m Relay winners: China (Li Wenlong, Lim Hyo-jun, LIU Guanyi, & ZHONG Yuchen) Women's 500 m winner: Suzanne Schulting Women's 1000 m winner: Suzanne Schulting Women's 1500 m winners: Choi Min-jeong (#1) / KIM Gil-li (#2) Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Selma Poutsma, Suzanne Schulting, Yara van Kerkhof, & Xandra Velzeboer) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: Italy (Thomas Nadalini, Arianna Sighel, Pietro Sighel, & Arianna Valcepina) February 10–12: STSS World Cup #6 (final) in Dordrecht Men's 500 m winner: Lim Hyo-jun Men's 1000 m winners: Steven Dubois (#1) / Park Ji-won (#2) Men's 1500 m winner: Park Ji-won Men's 5000 m Relay winners: South Korea (KIM Tae-sung, LEE Dong-hyun, LIM Yong-jin, & Park Ji-won) Women's 500 m winner: Xandra Velzeboer Women's 1000 m winners: Kim Boutin (#1) / Courtney Sarault (#2) Women's 1500 m winner: Hanne Desmet Women's 3000 m Relay winners: Canada (Kim Boutin, Rikki Doak, Courtney Sarault, & Renée Marie Steenge) Mixed 2000 m Relay winners: Netherlands (Itzhak de Laat, Suzanne Schulting, Jens van 't Wout, & Xandra Velzeboer)
2023
76428505
Bite Maker: The King's Omega
2024-03-24 01:34:28+00:00
Bite Maker: The King's Omega (Bite Maker~王様のΩ~, Baito Mēka ~ Ōsama no Omega ~) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Miwako Sugiyama. It was serialized in Shogakukan's &Flower web magazine from October 2018 to December 2022. = Written and illustrated by Miwako Sugiyama, Bite Maker: The King's Omega was serialized in Shogakukan's &Flower web magazine from October 5, 2018, to December 2, 2022. Its chapters were collected into eleven shinsōban volumes from January 25, 2019 to March 24, 2023. The series is licensed in North America by Seven Seas Entertainment. A sequel manga, titled Bite Maker: AK, began serialization on Shogakukan's Ura Sunday website and MangaONE app on May 27, 2023. The sequel's chapters have been collected into two tankōbon volumes as of February 2024. Volumes Bite Maker: AK = A voice comic adaptation was released on the Flower Comics YouTube channel on April 26, 2021. It featured the voices of Tatsuhisa Suzuki, Yurina Amami, Yūki Ono, Junpei Baba, Yuki Sakakihara, Miki Hase, and Aoi Goda. A voice comic adaptation of the sequel manga, Bite Maker: AK, was released on the same channel on February 26, 2024. It featured the voices of Atsumi Tanezaki and Ryōhei Kimura. By February 2024, the series had over 5 million copies in circulation. The series was ranked fourteenth in Honya Club's Nationwide Bookstore Employees' Recommended Comics of 2020.
2023
75461997
Firefly Wedding
2023-12-02 06:09:48+00:00
Firefly Wedding (ホタルの嫁入り, Hotaru no Yomeiri) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Oreco Tachibana. It began serialization on Shogakukan's Ura Sunday manga website and MangaONE app in January 2023. = Written and illustrated by Oreco Tachibana, Firefly Wedding began serialization on Shogakukan's Ura Sunday manga website and MangaONE app on January 1, 2023. The series is licensed in English by Comikey. Its chapters have been collected into four tankōbon volumes as of April 2024. In May 2024, Viz Media announced that they would release volumes of the series in Q2 2025. = A voice comic commemorating the release of the first volume was released on Flower Comics' YouTube channel on June 19, 2023. A television commercial and promotional video commemorating the release of the second volume was released on MangaONE's YouTube channel on September 12, 2023. The voice comic features the performances of Yui Ishikawa as Satoko Kirigaya and Koki Uchiyama as Shinpei Goto, while the promotional video and commercial features only Uchiyama reprising his role as Shinpei. The series had 1 million copies in circulation by December 2023. The series was ranked fifth for the Tsutaya Comic Award. The series also ranked ninth in the 2024 edition of Takarajimasha's Kono Manga ga Sugoi! guidebook for the best manga for female readers. The series won the grand prize at NTT Solmare's "Minna ga Erabu!! Denshi Comic Taishō 2024" competition in 2024. The series was ranked first in the Nationwide Bookstore Employees' Recommended Comics list of 2024. The series was also nominated for the 48th Kodansha Manga Award in the shōjo category. The manga has been nominated for the 2024 Next Manga Award in the web category.
2023
74489384
Good Night World
2023-07-31 10:33:13+00:00
Good Night World (Japanese: グッド・ナイト・ワールド, Hepburn: Guddo Naito Wārudo) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Uru Okabe. It was serialized in Shogakukan's Ura Sunday website and MangaONE service from December 2015 to January 2017, with its chapters collected into five tankōbon volumes. An original net animation (ONA) series adaptation by NAZ premiered in October 2023 on Netflix. A dysfunctional family of four (consisting of shut-in gaming addict Taichiro Arima, his overachieving younger brother Asuma, their estranged and disregarded father Kojiro, and their disorganized and neglectful mother Sayaka) all cope with their real-world struggles by playing Planet, a virtual reality MMORPG that involves socializing with other players, forming teams, clashing with other guilds, having adventures, and fighting monsters all under the same end goal of being the first to overpower a final boss monster called the "Black Bird of Happiness". In doing so, the Arimas unknowingly form a simulated happy family unit in a team they call "The Akabane Family" with each other, a far more stable simulated family than their real-world counterparts for as long as they follow their one "family rule": no prying information on each other's offline lives. However, when the game eventually becomes part of the real world, learning each other's true identities could make or break their family bond in both realities as well as determine the fate and survival of themselves and others. Taichirō Arima (有間 太一郎, Arima Taichirō) / Ichi (イチ) Voiced by: Daisuke Hirose (Japanese); Nicolas Roye (English) Asuma Arima (有間 明日真, Arima Asuma) / AAAAA (あああああ) Voiced by: Nobunaga Shimazaki (Japanese); Kieran Regan (English) Kojirō Arima (有間 小次郎, Arima Kojirō) / Shirō (士郎, Shirō) Voiced by: Akio Otsuka (Japanese); Christopher Swindle (English) Sayaka Arima (有間 雅, Arima Sayaka) / May (メイ, Mei) Voiced by: Aya Endō (Japanese); Erin Yvette (English) Pico (ピコ, Piko) Voiced by: Aoi Yūki (Japanese); Jeannie Tirado (English) Leon (レオン, Reon) Voiced by: Ryōhei Kimura (Japanese); Todd Haberkorn (English) Sasumata (サスマタ) Voiced by: Hiroki Nanami (Japanese); Benjamin Diskin (English) Shigatera (シガテラ) Voiced by: Kenjiro Tsuda (Japanese); Ray Chase (English) Hana Kamuro (神室 花, Kamuro Hana) Voiced by: Rie Takahashi (Japanese); Carrie Keranen (English) Aya Arima (有間 綾, Arima Aya) Voiced by: Inori Minase (Japanese); Anne Yatco (English) = Written and illustrated by Uru Okabe, Good Night World was serialized in Shogakukan's Ura Sunday website and MangaONE service from December 28, 2015, to January 8, 2017. Five tankōbon volumes were published from April 2016 to March 2017. A prequel series, titled Good Night World End (グッドナイト・ワールドエンド), began serialization on the MangaONE service on August 1, 2023. The prequel is set to end serialization on May 21, 2024. The prequel's chapters have been collected into two tankōbon volumes as of March 2024. Volumes Good Night World End = An original net animation adaptation was announced on July 31, 2023. It is produced by NAZ and directed by Katsuya Kikuchi, with scripts written by Michiko Yokote, character designs handled by Rena Okuyama, and music composed by Takatsugu Wakabayashi. The series premiered on Netflix on October 12, 2023. The opening theme song is "Black Crack" by VTuber Kuzuha of Nijisanji, while the ending theme song is "Salvia" by Nornis, a vocal unit composed of Nijisanji members Machita Chima and Inui Toko. Episodes
2023
74326365
1st Astra Creative Arts TV Awards
2023-07-12 02:04:40+00:00
The 1st Astra Creative Arts TV Awards, presented by the Hollywood Creative Alliance, recognized and celebrated outstanding achievements in television across various genres. The winners were announced on January 8, 2024, alongside the 3rd Astra TV Awards. The creative arts awards were created as a companion to the Astra TV Awards to reward specific technical categories as well as categories that were previously presented at the main ceremony in 2021 and 2022. "We are thrilled to announce our inaugural Creative Arts Awards, an event dedicated to celebrating those behind the scenes who don't often get the level of recognition they deserve," states HCA President Nikki Fowler. The nominations were announced on July 11, 2023, alongside the nominations for the 3rd Astra TV Awards. In terms of the Creative Arts TV Awards, The Last of Us led the nominations with six, followed by The Boys, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and Saturday Night Live (all with five each). Channelwise, HBO led the nominations with 22, followed by Netflix with 17; ABC and Prime Video both received 16 each. This year, the Astra TV Awards spread across 25 Broadcast and Cable, 22 Streaming, and 26 Creative Arts categories. = = =
2023
76288352
4th Critics' Choice Super Awards
2024-03-07 21:58:24+00:00
The 4th Critics' Choice Super Awards, presented by the Critics Choice Association, honored the best in genre fiction film and television, including Superhero, Science Fiction/Fantasy, Horror, and Action. The nominees were announced on March 7, 2024. The winners were announced on April 4, 2024. Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning and The Last of Us led the film and television fields with five and seven nominations respectively. Godzilla Minus One, Dead Reckoning, Poor Things and Talk to Me won two awards each, while The Last of Us won all seven nominations. = =
2023
75132573
5th Critics' Choice Real TV Awards
2023-10-24 07:47:18+00:00
The 5th Critics' Choice Real TV Awards, presented by the Broadcast Television Journalists Association and NPACT, which recognizes excellence in nonfiction, unscripted and reality programming across broadcast, cable and streaming platforms, were held on June 15, 2023. The ceremony was not held in-person due to the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike, instead a television special saluting the winners was aired the day after on KTLA. The nominations were announced on May 15, 2023, with RuPaul's Drag Race leading with five. Winners are listed first, highlighted in boldface, and indicated with a double dagger (‡). = Impact Award Lisa Vanderpump
2023
75218411
14th Hollywood Music in Media Awards
2023-11-03 23:49:16+00:00
The 14th Hollywood Music in Media Awards recognized the best in music in film, TV, video games, commercials, and trailers of 2023. The ceremony was held on November 15, 2023, at The Avalon in Hollywood. The nominations were announced on November 2, 2023. Greta Gerwig's fantasy comedy film Barbie led the nominations with five, followed by Disney's live-action adaptation remake of The Little Mermaid and musical fantasy film Wonka with four each. American composer and lyricist Marc Shaiman was honored with the Career Achievement Award. The category "Original Song – Sci-Fi/Fantasy Film" was revived after being discontinued in 2019, while the categories "Music Design – Trailer" and "Song – Onscreen Performance (TV Show/Limited Series)" were introduced. = Marc Shaiman = = = = = =
2023
75339521
17th Cinema Eye Honors
2023-11-17 18:40:19+00:00
The 17th Cinema Eye Honors, destined to recognize outstanding artistry and craft in nonfiction filmmaking of 2023, will take place at the New York Academy of Medicine in East Harlem, New York on January 12, 2024. The broadcasts category nominees as well as the annual shorts list and the Unforgettable honorees were announced on October 19, 2022. The full set of nominations were announced on November 16, 2023. In the feature film categories, Kokomo City led the nominations with six, followed by 20 Days in Mariupol, 32 Sounds, and The Eternal Memory, with five each. In the broadcast categories, The 1619 Project and Nothing Lasts Forever were the most nominated programs, with three nominations. The winners will be listed first and in bold. = = = TBA
2023
75642798
Cœur (song)
2023-12-25 16:00:21+00:00
"Cœur" (French pronunciation: [kœʁ], lit. 'Heart') is a song by French singer Zoé Clauzure, released as a single on 27 September 2023. It was France's winning entry in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2023. Zoé Clauzure, aged 13 at the time, won the competition with a total of 228 points, 27 points ahead of second-placed Spain, earning France its second consecutive and third overall victory at the contest. The song is about school bullying. It was written by Noée Francheteau and composed by Julien Comblat and Jérémy Chapron. Zoé had previously dealt with the topic in her song "Ma place" (lit. "My Place"), but this new track was more on the "sunny side", delivering a strong positive, supportive message. While not making any direct references to school bullying, the singer encourages the listeners to "move forward towards victory" despite some people wanting to see the listener fail. In the chorus, she communicates the sentiment of togetherness with her listeners and highlights the excitement of performing for them on stage and making their existence known to the world: "My heart beats in rhythm, it beats so fast when I sing for you. When I sing, I want the whole world to see us exist." According to the singer, she received messages from people saying that her song saved their lives. = On 27 September 2023, France Télévisions announced Zoé had been internally selected to represent France at the 2023 Junior Eurovision Song Contest with her song "Cœur". On the same day, the song was released as a single. = The music video was released online on 18 October 2022 at 18:00 CET. It was directed by Alexandre Saltiel and choreographed by Cain and Céline Kitsaïs (founders of a dance school named Neodance Academy) and Sabrina Lonis. It has an emphasis on the colors red and white. = The contest took place on November 26 at the Nikaïa Concert Hall in Nice, France. Zoé's stage performance had her surrounded by backing dancers in a "Barbie pink" ambiance. Zoé Clauzure won the competition, scoring 228 points, ahead of Spain with 201 and Armenia with 180 points. This was France's second consecutive and third overall victory in the contest.
2023
73856490
San Salvador crowd crush
2023-05-21 15:05:40+00:00
On 20 May 2023, a crowd crush killed 12 people during a football match at Estadio Cuscatlán, a stadium in San Salvador, El Salvador. The incident happened during a Primera División match between clubs Alianza and FAS. Estadio Cuscatlán is one of the largest stadiums in El Salvador, with a capacity of over 53,400 spectators. It is home to Alianza, who play in the Primera División, the country's top flight of association football. Alianza hosted the second leg of a 2023 Clasura quarterfinal against FAS, in which they were trailing 1–0 on aggregate. Before the game began, a group of fans gathered outside the stadium to enter, while others were entering the stadium. Many of the first people who were already in the stadium watching the game were trapped as a result of the massive entry of people into the stadium, causing many moments of tension at that time. At least 12 people were killed and dozens of others were injured. Nine people were killed in the stadium and the other victims died in hospitals. Although the reasons behind the tragedy are largely unknown, it has been confirmed that several supporters of the teams tried to force their way into the stadium to watch the football match. This caused a large crowd rush of hundreds of people making their way into the stadium despite the ongoing match. All national level football matches that were due to take place the following day were suspended. Some football clubs and teams showed support via Twitter for the people affected by the tragedy, such as Cádiz, Real Madrid, Borussia Dortmund, and Atlético Madrid. Later, FESFUT stated that Alianza fans would be banned from the stadium for a year and that they had until July 21, 2023 to pay a $30,000 fine following the tragedy.
2023
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