in February over North Queensland, Australia, many locals endured sleepless nights, unsure what level of flooding and damage they would wake up to.
Olly Murs, Supergrass, The Script, and Texas had already been confirmed as performers.Acclaimed English novelist Thomas Hardy and former Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho.
At first glance, not obvious kindred spirits.But Hardy's thoughts - and Mourinho's hard-line pragmatism - actually make the origin of the above lines ambiguous: a post-match quote or a poet's postscript?Understanding the origins and making of Mourinho is a key tenet of a new BBC Sport documentary - How to Win the Champions League: Jose Mourinho.
A huge chunk of that insight can be boiled down to a life-altering change in direction in the summer of 2008.A sliding doors moment in the corridors of the Camp Nou that profoundly changed Mourinho.
A moment of rejection and a resulting shift to realpolitik that the famed Victorian realist Hardy would have been proud of.
"That's the moment where Mourinho becomes the Dark Lord," Guardian journalist Jonathan Wilson explains."Allowing a domestic poultry flock known to be exposed to avian influenza to remain alive allows a potential source of the virus to persist," CFIA said this month.
"It would increase the possibility of reassortment or mutation, particularly with birds raised in open pasture where there is ongoing exposure to wildlife. This could also increase the human health risk."Court records show Universal Ostrich Farms, based in the community of Edgewood, raises the birds for their meat and eggs and for antibody research. The farm said 398 ostriches face being killed. Ms Pasitney said the birds have been kept exclusively for research since 2020.
The farm had sought an exemption from the cull but CFIA said the birds did not meet the necessary criteria.The outbreak began on the farm last December and killed about 70 ostriches over two months, according to court records.