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Disney's 'Lilo & Stitch' wins N.America box office for second week
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Olympic champion Zheng battles into French Open last eight
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Dembele, Doue among seven PSG players on Champions League team of the season
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Sabalenka powers into Roland Garros quarter-finals
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'Proud' Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish GP victory
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US says trade row with China could ease after Trump-Xi talks
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Piastri extends championship lead with Spanish Grand Prix victory
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Swiatek passes Rybakina test at French Open, Alcaraz eyes quarters
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McLaren's Piastri wins Spanish Grand Prix
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US, China trade row could ease after Trump-Xi talks: Treasury chief
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Camille Pissarro picture perfect for O'Brien in French Derby
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Key climate target of airline decarbonisation 'in peril': IATA
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Swiatek survives scare to reach French Open quarter-finals
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European champions PSG land back in Paris ahead of victory parade
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Ton-up Carty takes West Indies to 308 all out against England
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Ukraine strikes Russian bombers ahead of Istanbul talks
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Man Utd sign Brazil forward Cunha from Wolves
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Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 31 near aid site
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Gaming fans bring electric energy to Rotterdam as TwitchCon arrives
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Indian airline IndiGo orders 30 Airbus A350 widebody planes
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More than 1,100 migrants crossed Channel on Saturday: UK govt data
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New world no. 1 Kunlavut seals Singapore crown in style
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Svitolina stuns Paolini to reach French Open quarter-finals
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Mo'unga shrugs off broken hand to win Japanese title
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Bangladesh ex-PM accused of 'systematic attack' in deadly protest crackdown
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Fans set to welcome PSG Champions League heroes with victory parade
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PSG's emphatic Champions League triumph gives Qatari owners long-awaited glory
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Two deaths, 559 arrests mar French celebrations after PSG's Champions League win
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Two bridges in Russia collapse in 'blasts', 7 dead
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UK to restore 'war-fighting readiness' with new defence review
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South Korea presidential candidates rally ahead of June 3 vote
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Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 22 near aid site as truce talks falter
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Deaths, arrests mar French celebrations after PSG's Champions League win
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Bangladesh opens fugitive ex-PM's trial over protest killings
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Gaza rescuers say Israeli fire kills 10 near aid site as ceasefire push stalls
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In changing times, young Germans gun for defence sector jobs
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Kyiv exhibition helps relieve stress of war
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LAFC qualify for Club World Cup with win over Club America
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Oil under $65 a boon for consumers, but a burden on producers
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Seven dead, dozens hurt as Russian bridges near Ukraine collapse
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Bangladesh to open trial of fugitive ex-PM
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Poland holds tight vote with EU role at stake
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Mexicans elect their judges under shadow of organized crime
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Gay Chinese couple fulfil wedding dream in 'freer' Thailand
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Trzaskowski: pro-EU polyglot eyeing Polish presidency
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S. Korea presidential candidates rally ahead of June 3 vote
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Pacers beat Knicks to set up NBA Finals clash with Thunder
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Poland holds knife-edge vote with EU role at stake
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Alcaraz tackles Shelton for spot in French Open quarters as Swiatek faces old foe
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Recycling contaminated soil from Fukushima: Japan's dilemma

Chevron champ Saigo takes three-shot US Women's Open lead
Mao Saigo took aim at a second straight major title on Friday, firing a six-under-par 66 to grab a three-shot lead over a group including top-ranked Nelly Korda after two rounds of the US Women's Open in Wisconsin.
Japan's Saigo, who won a five-way playoff to lift her first major trophy at the Chevron Championship, shrugged off a spectacular piece of bad luck to build a 36-hole total of 136 at Erin Hills.
Korda posted a five-under-par 67 to headline a group of six players on 139.
Saigo, 23, last year's LPGA Rookie of the Year, said her victory at the Chevron in April had given her new confidence but hadn't changed her fundamental approach.
"I think that I was able to be more confident about my judgments that I make," she said. "However, I would like to play my play rather than thinking about changing myself."
She teed off on 10 and gained ground quickly with birdies at 11 and 12, but needed all of her mental poise after disappointment at the par-five 14th, where her third shot hit the flagstick and bounced back into a bunker.
Instead of a birdie she ended up with her only bogey of the day.
"I thought that was not my mistake, I just thought to myself that it was unlucky and then I just changed my mind," added Saigo, who posted five more birdies, including three in a row at the 18th, first and second holes.
Saigo can expect a strong weekend challenge from Korda after the American posted her best round score ever at a US Open, a tournament in which her best finish was a tie for eighth in 2022.
"I feel like I've had a very complicated relationship with US Opens," Korda said. "But I'm happy to be in the position I am heading into the weekend."
- Korda trending -
After just one birdie and one bogey in her even-par first round, Korda finally saw some putts drop in a five-under effort that featured seven birdies.
"Honestly, I was hitting really good putts yesterday," Korda said. "I was hitting it exactly where I wanted to and they just weren't falling.
"Today I did the same thing, I didn't really try to do anything different... so hopefully I can keep trending in the right direction heading into the weekend."
Korda was tied with Japan's Hinako Shibuno, Americans Yealimi Noh and Sarah Schmelzel, South Korean Kim A-lim and Sweden's Maja Stark.
Kim and Noh were among six players who shared the first-round lead, each carding a one-under 71.
Kim, the 2020 US Open champion, shook off an early bogey to reach six-under with birdies at the seventh, eighth and 14th.
She was playing the 17th when thunderstorms halted play for almost an hour, returning to complete her par before a disappointing bogey at 18 where she was in the rough off the tee then found a greenside bunker.
Schmelzel had reached six-under with five birdies in her first seven holes, but gave a stroke back with a late bogey that left her with a 68. Former British Open champion Shibuno was six-under through 17 holes but bogeyed the last for a 69.
Noh capped her one-under round with birdies at her last two holes, the eighth and ninth, while Stark had six birdies and three bogeys in her 69.
The demanding Erin Hills layout claimed some notable victims.
World number two Jeeno Thitikul of Thailand and defending champion Yuka Saso of Japan were well outside the projected cut line of even par when darkness halted play with a dozen players on the course.
P.Costa--AMWN