20210418001535691419 Mick Fanning 600x400

Retired three-time world champion Mick Fanning will chase a fifth Bells Beach title after being awarded a wildcard for next month's World Surf League event in Victoria.

Fanning, who retired from the tour in 2018, competed last year as a wildcard at Narrabeen but says a return to Bells is a dream outcome.

"Bells is the one I was really aiming for," he said.

"It's a place that is really close to my heart and if I was ever going to take a wildcard it would be there, so I'm pretty fired up."

The 40-year-old has 22 tour victories including four Bells titles, putting him alongside Kelly Slater, Lisa Andersen, Stephanie Gilmore and Mark Richards for wins at the Victorian point-break.

Only Gail Couper, with five Bells triumphs, has won more times at the venue.

"To go and ring the bell for the fifth time, no one has ever done it apart from Gail Couper," Fanning said.

"During my career I got close, but right now I just want to focus on putting on a good performance.

"My preparation when I was on tour was non-stop training but this time around I've just been focusing on my surfing and making sure it's up to the level of the best in the world."

The window for the event at Bells, the fourth stop on this year's WSL tour, opens on April 10.

Japan's Kanoa Igarashi holds top spot in the men's rankings with Costa Rica's Brisa Hennessy leading the women's competition.

The remaining wildcards for the men's and women's draws will be decided at a local trials event from April 7, with 20 men and 20 women competing for the one spot in each division.

© AAP 2022

Photo: Three-time WSL Champion Mick Fanning of Australia surfing in Heat 1 of Round 2 of the Rip Curl Narrabeen Classic in Narrabeen, Sunday, April 18, 2021. (AAP Image/Supplied by World Surf League, Matt Dunbar)

20220202001619190180 dan andrews 600x400

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews will miss the state memorial for cricket legend Shane Warne after testing positive for COVID-19.

Mr Andrews confirmed his diagnosis on Monday morning, forcing him and his family into isolation for seven days.

The premier decided to take a rapid antigen test after waking up with symptoms including a sore throat and mild temperature.

"Cath and the kids are negative, but as close contacts will isolate with me for seven days. My symptoms are mild and we're well-stocked on Panadol (sic)," Mr Andrews tweeted.

The positive result means he will not be among an expected crowd of 50,000 at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Wednesday evening to officially farewell Warne, who died of a suspected heart attack on the Thai resort island of Koh Samui this month.

His deputy James Merlino will serve as acting premier until April 4, the day before state parliament is due to sit.

While the premier rests and recovers, Opposition Leader Matthew Guy wished him and his family well.

"We may disagree politically but I certainly don't wish him badly in any way in relation to his health. I hope comes through OK," he told reporters.

Mr Andrews had attended the official opening of the Broadway musical Hamilton at Her Majesty's Theatre in Melbourne on Thursday night with wife Catherine.

The pair were photographed wearing masks despite them no longer being mandatory in theatres and most other settings.

Victoria recorded 8739 new COVID-19 cases and no new deaths on Monday - the fourth consecutive day of new infections below 10,000.

The number of COVID-19 patients in Victorian hospitals has fallen to 252, after rising from fewer than 200 a fortnight ago.

VICTORIA'S LATEST COVID-19 FIGURES:

* Total deaths: 2727

* Active cases: 56,997

* Intensive care cases: 21

* Ventilated cases: six

* Positive PCR tests: 2226

* Positive rapid tests: 6513

* Victorians 18 and over with three vaccine doses: 65.2 per cent.

© AAP 2022

Photo: Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews. (AAP Image/Joel Carrett)

COVID UPDATE

Another one person with Covid has died in New South Wales.

The man in his 70s from western NSW had received three doses of a COVID-19 vaccine.

He had significant underlying health conditions.

17450 new cases have been detected in 24 hours.

Victoria is reporting another five deaths.

Below is the number of active cases in the relevant local government areas as 4pm March 26.

Wollongong 7266
Shellharbour 3346
Shoalhaven 2656
Wingecarribee 1565
Eurobodalla 857
Kiama 854
Muswellbrook 539

Jo biden march 27 2022

Joe Biden directly appealed to the Russian people with comparisons between the invasion of Ukraine and the horrors of the Second World War as he called for Vladimir Putin to go.

"For God's sake this man cannot remain in power," the US president said, during a speech from Poland on Saturday.

He said "if you're able to listen: you, the Russian people, are not our enemy" as he evoked the atrocities of the siege of Leningrad by the Nazis.

"These are not the actions of a great nation," Biden said, in front of the Royal Castle, a landmark in Warsaw that was badly damaged during Adolf Hitler's war.

"Of all people, you the Russian people, as well as all people across Europe still have the memory of being in a similar situation in the 30s and 40s, the situation of World War Two, still fresh in the mind of many grandparents in the region."

"Whatever your generation experienced, whether it experienced the siege of Leningrad, or heard about it from your parents and grandparents, train stations overflowing with terrified families fleeing their homes, nights sheltering in basements and cellars, mornings sifting through the rubble in your home - these are not memories of the past - not any more, it's exactly what the Russian army is doing in Ukraine right now."

Shortly after his speech, a White House official attempted to clarify that Biden was not going so far as to call for a regime change in Russia.

"The President's point was that Putin cannot be allowed to exercise power over his neighbours or the region. He was not discussing Putin's power in Russia, or regime change," the official said.

The Kremlin's chief spokesman dismissed the remark, saying only Russians could choose who their leader should be.

Asked about Biden's comment, spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Reuters: "That's not for Biden to decide. The president of Russia is elected by Russians."

Multiple rockets struck the western Ukrainian city of Lviv near the Polish border during Biden's visit, which came as Russia faced the prospect of further setbacks in the war.

The US president said Moscow's troops have "met their match with brave and stiff Ukrainian resistance" and have strengthened the resolve and unity of both the defending forces and the West.

"Russia wanted less of a NATO presence on his border but now he has a stronger presence, a larger presence," he said.

Biden said 200,000 Russians had left their country in a single month in a "remarkable brain drain" as Putin "strangled democracy".

Addressing the thousand-strong audience that included refugees who have fled the war, he told Ukrainians "we stand with you - period" as he defended the nation's president, Volodymyr Zelensky.

"Putin has the gall to say he's denazifying Ukraine. It's a lie, it's just cynical - he knows that," Biden said.

"And it's also obscene. President Zelensky was democratically elected, he's Jewish, his father's family was wiped out in the Nazi holocaust and Putin has the audacity - like all autocrats before him - to believe that might will make right."

But as he made an impassioned defence of democracy, he reminded European nations they must "end its dependence on Russian fossil fuels".

Sanctions, he said, have been sapping Russia's strength and have reduced the rouble "to rubble".

But he warned: "This battle will not be won in days, or months either. We need to steel ourselves for the long fight ahead."

with Reuters

© PAA 2022

Image: Gage Skidmore/Flickr