Iran warns British warships deployed to the Strait of Hormuz will be met with ‘decisive response’

Iranhas issued a stark warning toBritain, urging it not to “escalate the crisis” in theMiddle Eastby sendingwarshipsto the Strait of Hormuz.

The Independent US

Iran’s deputy foreign minister said that the presence of French and British warships in the key shipping route, effectively controlled by Tehran in retaliation for US and Israeli attacks, “will be met with a decisive and immediate response”.

It comes after the UK’s Ministry of Defence (MoD) said the Royal Navy was sending the HMSDragonwarship to the Middle East, where it could join aninternational missionto safeguard shipping in theStrait of Hormuz.

Sir Keir Starmer has said the mission, planned alongside French president Emmanuel Macron, would only take place once fighting in the region ends.

A ceasefire has been in place between the US and Iran since April, but both countries have accused each other of launching attacks in the strait, where 20 per cent of the world’s oil and liquified natural gas is transported through.

In a post on social media, Iran’s deputy foreign minister Kazem Gharibabadi said: “Any deployment and stationing of extra-regional destroyers around the Strait of Hormuz, under the pretext of ‘protecting shipping’, is nothing but an escalation of the crisis.

“The presence of French and British warships, or those of any other country potentially accompanying the illegal and internationally unlawful actions of the United States in the Strait of Hormuz, will be met with a decisive and immediate response from the armed forces of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

The HMS Dragon has been deployed to the Middle East (Reuters)

“Therefore, they are strongly advised not to complicate the situation further.”

Hours before the warning, Tehran announced it had responded to a peace proposal put forward byDonald Trump’s peace plan proposal, which would end fighting before starting talks on more contentious issues, including Iran’s nuclear programme.

The response is said to focus on ending the war on all fronts, especially Lebanon, and on the safety of maritime traffic in the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz.

It was delivered to Pakistan as a key mediator in the war. Pakistani government officials said the response had been received and sent to the US.

Donald Trump mocked Iran’s drone threat, comparing its drones to ‘butterflies’ (AP)

However, despite the two countries looking to reach a peace agreement, hostilities have continued in the Middle East.

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Iran threatened to tighten its grip on the Strait of Hormuz on Sunday, with its army warning that countries complying with US sanctions against Tehran will now “face difficulties” crossing the key shipping route.

Vessels have been repeatedly struck by Iran in the strait, as it continues to block the waterway.

The US enforced a blockade of Iranian ports in response to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and it has continued to attack ships that attempt to pass through the waters.

Iran warned it would launch a “heavy assault” on US assets in the Middle East if there are further attacks on vessels.

On Sunday night, Mr Trump accused Iran of “playing games”. In a post on his Truth Social platform, he wrote: “Iran has been playing games with the United States, and the rest of the World, for 47 years (DELAY, DELAY, DELAY!)”

It came a day after the US president mocked Iran’s threat by comparing its drones to “butterflies” and posting AI-generated visuals depicting a US warship firing laser beams into the sky, triggering explosions. The caption read: “Bye Bye, Drones”.

Iran has blocked ships from passing through the Strait of Hormuz (Reuters)

Qatari prime minister Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani warned that using the Strait of Hormuz as “a pressure tool” would only deepen the crisis in the Gulf.

He ‌told Iran’s Abbas Araghchi that all ⁠parties in the conflict should respond to mediation efforts to end the war.

The US ambassador to the UN said America would evaluate Iran’s response to its peace plan proposal to its “very clear red line”.

Mike Waltz told Fox News: “We’ll see what the Iranians just came back with overnight in terms of their response to our very clear red line.

“President Trump has been clear they will never have a nuclear weapon and they cannot hold the world’s economies hostage.”

Mr Waltz told ABC the president was “giving diplomacy every chance that he can before going back to hostilities”.

The MoD has been contacted for comment.

Iran warns British warships deployed to the Strait of Hormuz will be met with ‘decisive response’

Iranhas issued a stark warning toBritain, urging it not to “escalate the crisis” in theMiddle Eastby sendingwarshipsto the Strait of Ho...
Texas Lottery results: Powerball, Pick 3 winning numbers for May 9, 2026

TheTexas Lotteryoffers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.

USA TODAY

Here's a look at May 9, 2026, results for each game:

Powerball

15-41-46-47-56, Powerball: 22, Power Play: 2

Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.

When is the next Powerball drawing?

The next Powerball drawing is on Monday, May 11, 2026 at 10:12 p.m.

Pick 3

Morning: 3-0-8, FIREBALL: 0

Day: 6-8-1, FIREBALL: 0

Evening: 7-7-8, FIREBALL: 5

Check Pick 3 payouts and previous drawings here.

Pick 4

Morning: 1-1-0-0, FIREBALL: 0

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Day: 3-9-9-5, FIREBALL: 9

Evening: 4-7-9-8, FIREBALL: 3

Check Pick 4 payouts and previous drawings here.

All or Nothing

Morning: 02-04-05-06-08-09-10-12-15-17-23-24

Day: 01-07-08-10-11-12-14-15-17-20-22-23

Evening: 01-02-05-06-07-08-12-13-14-16-19-22

Check All or Nothing payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky?Explore the latest lottery news & results

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Texas editor. You can send feedback usingthis form.

This article originally appeared on El Paso Times:Texas Lottery results: Powerball, Pick 3 winning numbers for May 9, 2026

Texas Lottery results: Powerball, Pick 3 winning numbers for May 9, 2026

TheTexas Lotteryoffers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here's a look at May 9, 2026, results for each game: ...
Tennessee softball earns No. 7 national seed, will face Northern Kentucky in NCAA regional

Tennessee softballwas selected as the No. 7 national seed in the NCAA Tournament on May 10, earning atop-eight seedfor the fourth straight season.

USA TODAY

The Lady Vols(42-10) will face Northern Kentucky (26-23) to open regional play on May 15. They'll also host Indiana (42-14) and Virginia (38-13) in the double-elimination regional at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium from May 15-17.

As a top-eight seed, Tennessee has hosting privileges for the NCAA regional and super regional, should it advance. Before the 2023 season, the Lady Vols hadn't been a top-eight seed since 2017.

This is Tennessee's 23rd NCAA Tournament appearance overall and its 22nd consecutive appearance. It will also be the 21st consecutive NCAA regional hosted in Knoxville.

Each team will play one game to open the Knoxville regional on May 15, and there will be two elimination games on May 16. The championship will be on Sunday, with the team coming out of the losers' bracket having to win twice to win the regional.

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The regional winner will move on to the super regionals, which will be played May 21-24. The Women's College World Series in Oklahoma City begins on May 28.

The Lady Vols finished in a three-way tie for fourth place in the SEC at 16-8. Texas and Texas A&M also finished 16-8. Oklahoma won the regular-season title and Alabama finished second with Florida in third.

Tennessee started the season ranked No. 4 and finished the regular season ranked No. 5 in the NFCA poll. The Lady Vols spent five weeks as the No. 1 team in the polls as they started the season 26-0, the best start in program history. They never dropped outside the top 10 all season and secured a signature series win over Alabama.

Cora Hallis the University of Tennessee women’s athletics reporter for Knox News. Email: cora.hall@knoxnews.com; X:@corahalll;Bluesky:@corahall.bsky.social‬.Support strong local journalism and unlock premium perks:knoxnews.com/subscribe

This article originally appeared on Knoxville News Sentinel:Tennessee softball selected as No. 7 seed, will face Northern Kentucky in regional

Tennessee softball earns No. 7 national seed, will face Northern Kentucky in NCAA regional

Tennessee softballwas selected as the No. 7 national seed in the NCAA Tournament on May 10, earning atop-eight seedfor the fourth strai...
TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, schedules, scores for Jackson area

The Tennessee high school boys soccer playoffs in the Jackson area have kicked off.

USA TODAY

Follow the TSSAA boys soccer region tournaments here with scores and schedules, which are subject to change.

Region tournaments and sectionals will be updated with schedules and scores as more information becomes available. Submit your school's results and Top Performers to:cvantuyl@usatodayco.com

Region 7-AA

Tuesday, May 12

Haywood at Crockett County

South Gibson at Lakeland Prep

Thursday, May 14

Haywood/Crockett County winner at South Gibson/Lakeland Prep winner

Region 6-AA

Tuesday, May 12

Sycamore at North Side

Lexington at Fairview

Thursday, May 14

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Lexington/Fairview winner at Sycamore/North Side winner

More:Jackson area spring sports top performers for Week 9 of the 2026 season

Region 7-A

Tuesday, May 12

JCM at Riverside

Adamsville at Madison

Thursday, May 14

JCM/Riverside winner at Adamsville/Madison winner

Region 6-A

Tuesday, May 12

Hickman County at Westview

Huntingdon at Cheatham County

Thursday, May 14

Huntingdon/Cheatham County winner at Hickman County/Westview winner

This article originally appeared on Jackson Sun:2026 TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, scores for Jackson

TSSAA boys soccer region tournament brackets, schedules, scores for Jackson area

The Tennessee high school boys soccer playoffs in the Jackson area have kicked off. Follow the TSSAA boys soccer region tournamen...
Gulf Breeze boys volleyball heads to Final 4, Pace baseball eliminated

Final four tickets were punched, weather led to late night battles and local track and field athletes and weightlifters brought home state titles on Friday. Below is a recap of all the action.

USA TODAY

Baseball

Region 1-6A Final

No. 2 Buchholz 10, No. 1 Pace 2 (Game 1, Buchholz leads 1-0)

Once the rain subsided and it was clear to take the field around 8 p.m., the Bobcats rolled.

Buchholz (23-7) only outhit Pace (26-5) 9-6, but the Patriots committed five errors and walked seven batters. Bobcats junior Reed Thomas was in control on the mound. The Florida Gulf Coast signee allowed two runs on six hits and three walks while striking out five, finishing one out shy of a complete game after being pulled due to pitch count limits.

Pace's Dax Brooks went 2-for-3 with an RBI and Emory Allen also went 2-for-3.

Buchholz led 4-0 after the top of the third inning, but Pace started to creep back in the bottom of the frame on a Dax Brooks RBI single and Carson Kelly scoring on a wild pitch. The Patriots loaded the bases with one out but grounded into a double play.

Pace just had one other runner reach scoring position with Caleb Wheeler's two-out triple in the bottom of the sixth. The Bobcats led 5-2 at that point before tacking on five runs in the top of the seventh.

No. 2 Buchholz 10, No. 1 Pace 6 (Game 2, Buchholz wins series 2-0)

The third time was not the charm for the Patriots. The Bobcats ended Pace's season for the third straight year and on its home fieldfor the second straight year.

Game 2 started around 11:10 p.m. CT, and saw Buchholz (24-7) take control early and never give Pace (26-6) an opening.

The Patriots got on the board in the top of the first when Brooks scored on a Nate Filbert groundout and Braiden Cheshire scored on a wild pitch, but Buchholz scored five runs in the bottom of the first and three runs in the bottom of the second.

Pace committed six errors in the first two innings after committing five errors in game one. The Patriots didn't commit an error in a Region 1-6A semifinal sweep of Tocoi Creek.

Wheeler hit a two-run double and Colin Kelly scored on a passed ball to cut the lead to 8-5 in the top of the third, but Tyler Thurmond's RBI double in the the bottom of the fourth and Aidan Kastensmidt's RBI single in the bottom of the fifth pushed Buchholz's lead back out to five runs.

Bryce Hatton doubled home Wheeler in the top of the fifth, which turned out to be Pace's final runs this season. Brooks went 3-for-4 and Wheeler went 2-for-3 with two RBIs.

Buchholz advances to the 6A state semifinals, which will be May 15 at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers.

Pace will graduate nine seniors, including five starters in Allen, Cheshire, Cam Lee, Jackson Wheaton and Wheeler. However, the Patriots do have a good core returning led by Brooks, Filbert, Hatton and Aaron Muldowney.

Boys Volleyball

Region 1-2A final

No. 1 Gulf Breeze 3, No. 2 Beachside 0 (25-20, 25-22, 25-12, Soundside HS)

When Spencer Smith slammed the Final Four clinching goal to the back left court, Gulf Breeze's celebration was muted. When the Dolphins received the Region 1-2A trophy for the second straight year, they shouted and hollered with each other.

Signs of a team excited aboutreaching another goal, but knows there are bigger things ahead. Gulf Breeze will play in the 2A state semifinals on May 15, likely against Belen Jesuit at the Winter Haven Health Center at Polk State College.

"It's something that we've had our eye on since the beginning of the season, since our run last year," Dolphins head coach Jackson Arnold said. "We're just looking to repeat it. We're very glad that we're able to do it, and our goals remain higher. We're looking at that championship and going to get it. We're glad we were able to execute tonight."

All year, Gulf Breeze (21-5) has put the team they expect to play in the 2A state semifinals on the wall in the locker room. Nothing has been able to steer the Dolphins off track, not even a bad practice the night before this match.

Luckily for Arnold, he's not a believer that a team always practices how it plays. It was just a matter of making adjustments and coming out and playing like Gulf Breeze knew it could. In the first two sets that meant a steady dose of Cole Ducote from outside and Spencer Smith from opposite, though the Dolphins weren't putting together complete performances.

Beachside (17-12) fought off five set points in the first set, getting a good run from Caleb Morgan at the service line. Then Gulf Breeze led 18-10 in the second set, a lead the Barracudas whittled down to 24-22 before a kill down the line from Smith put the Dolphins ahead 2-0 in the match.

Gulf Breeze had a similar hot start in the third set, jumping out to a 10-0 lead with senior Elijah Hollis serving. The Dolphins led 17-8 when Beachside called timeout and Smith implored his teammates to not let the Barracudas have any hope.

"I actually said to Jackson...hey, let us finish this one out," Smith said. "Like let us make a statement in the scoreboard going into state really confident."

After being new to the Final Four experience last year, Gulf Breeze believes it's better prepared for the trip to Winter Haven this year. A deeper, more veteran group, hungry to not be one-and-done again. On May 15, the Dolphins will get the shot they've been waiting for all season.

"You just have to make sure you stick to your fundamentals and make sure you don't too much," Ducote said. "Because a lot of times you get into this mindset of this team's really good I have to play even better. When instead you should stick to your game and stick to your fundamentals and what you're good at.

Track and Field

FHSAA 3A and Para State Championship (Hodges Stadium at UNF, Jacksonville)

Pine Forest senior Anthony Gee and Gulf Breeze senior Addison Dahlem won state titles.

Gee won the boys 400-meter hurdle (52.18 seconds) while Dahlem won the ambulatory 200 meters (51.12) and 400 meters (1:51.49). Dahlem previously won the 400 meter ambulatory state championship in 2025.

The Booker T. Washington girls were the top placing local girls team, finishing 20th with 13.5 points. Dillard won its third straight title and fifth overall with 69 points, while Niceville finished second with 64 points.

The Pine Forest boys were the top placing local boys team, tying for eighth with 22 points. Niceville won its fifth state title in the last six years with 88 points, while defending state champion Belen Jesuit Prep finished second with 76 points.

Below is a complete list of results for area competitors.

Girls

100 meters:Danica Wright, so., Navarre (10th, 11.94); Layanna Banks, jr., Tate (12th, 11.95)

100 meter ambulatory:Addison Dahlem, sr., Gulf Breeze (2nd, 21.80)

200 meter ambulatory:Addison Dahlem, sr., Gulf Breeze (1st, 51.12)

400 meter ambulatory:Addison Dahlem, sr., Gulf Breeze (1st, 1:51.49)

1600 meters:Ashton Dahlem, jr., Gulf Breeze (15th, 5:21.18)

4x100 relay:Tate (Clay, Wiggins, Green, Banks, 9th, 48.16); Booker T. Washington (Walker, Smith, Mitchell, Simpkins, 12th, 48.90)

400 meter hurdles:Trinity Jordan, sr., Escambia (17th, 1:08.28)

High jump:Mbayang Niass, so., Booker T. Washington (4th, 5-3.75); Brianna Beacham, sr., Booker T. Washington (5th, 5-1.75); Addison Wand, jr., Tate (5th, 5-1.75)

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Pole vault:Daveigh Meredith, so., Tate (15th, 9-10)

Triple jump:Orriyah Randall, so., Booker T. Washington (4th, 38-0.75); My'rea Brock, sr., Pine Forest (12th, 36-2.75)

Discus:Za'Khiya Shaw-Rease, sr., Pine Forest (13th, 122-11)

Ambulatory shot put:Addison Dahlem, sr., Gulf Breeze (2nd, 13-5)

Javelin:Leighton Osborn, jr., Pace (9th, 119-9)

Boys

100 meters:Zion Heard, jr., Pine Forest (9th, 10.80); Leslie McMillian, jr., Escambia (15th, 10.84)

100 meter ambulatory:Ian Lewis, jr., Pensacola Catholic (5th, 14.11)

200 meter ambulatory:Ian Lewis, jr., Pensacola Catholic (4th, 29.45)

400 meters:Noah Chin, sr., Navarre (11th, 49.14); Jayden Jones, so., Navarre (16th, 49.80)

400 meter ambulatory:Ian Lewis, jr., Pensacola Catholic (5th, 1:12.68)

800 meters:Eric Dennard, sr., Escambia (8th, 1:54.41)

1600 meters:Brody Bruce, sr., Navarre (12th, 4:28.86)

4x100 relay:Escambia (Lyons, Harris, Dunn, McMillian, 13th, 42.72)

4x400 relay:Navarre (Jones, Cameron, Gargus, Chin, 7th, 3:18.93); Escambia (Wright, Harris, McMillian, Dennard, 15th, 3:25.02)

110 meter hurdles:Anthony Gee, sr., Pine Forest (3rd, 14.08)

400 meter hurdles:Anthony Gee, sr., Pine Forest (1st, 52.18); Matthew Beam, sr., Gulf Breeze (12th, 57.54)

High jump:Tylan Chambers, sr., Booker T. Washington (3rd, 6-5.5); Daniel McDaniel, sr., Escambia (6th, 6-3.5); Tate Rodriguez, jr., Milton (9th, 6-1.5); Sergio Robinson, sr., Milton (13th, 6-1.5)

Pole vault:Paul Arthur, sr., Pace (8th, 13-9.25)

Long jump:Darian Blanks, sr., Pine Forest (9th, 22-3.5)

Triple jump:Darian Blanks, sr., Pine Forest (3rd, 48-11); Tristen Pace, sr., Gulf Breeze (11th, 44-8)

Shot put:Kade Rollins, sr., Gulf Breeze (8th, 52-8.25)

Javelin:Tate Jernigan, so., Pace (3rd, 186-2); Alec Leach, jr., Pace (13th, 164-4)

Boys Weightlifting

FHSAA 1A State Championship (RP Funding Park, Lakeland)

Jay junior Chase Dooley swept the 1A Unlimited state titles for the second straight year, lifting 605 pounds (280 snatch, 325 clean and jerk) and 765 pounds in traditional (325 clean, 440 bench).

The Royals were also the highest placing area team, tying for 6th in Olympic with 11 points and finishing third in traditional with 14 points.

Keystone Heights won its first Olympic state titles with 28 points, and shared the traditional title with West Nassau, as both teams scored 20 points. This is Keystone Heights fifth traditional state title, while it's West Nassau's first boys weightlifting state title in school history.

Below is a complete list of results for area weightlifters. Athletes who finished in the top six win medals and land on the podium.

Olympic

129:Tanner Martinez, Jay (3rd, 380 pounds, 170 snatch, 210 clean)

139:Colton Weeks, Pensacola Catholic (8th, 370 pounds, 160 snatch, 210 clean); Dolan Enfinger, Jay (9th, 370 pounds, 150 snatch, 220 clean)

183:Dominian Gomez, Jay (13th, 420 pounds, 175 snatch, 245 clean)

199:Rylan Williams, Jay (7th, 455 pounds, 200 snatch, 255 clean)

238:Shawn Carreon, Pensacola Catholic (7th, 500 pounds, 210 snatch, 290 clean)

Unlimited:Chase Dooley, Jay (1st, 605 pounds, 280 snatch, 325 clean); Thomas Brown, Pensacola Catholic (13th, 430 pounds, 185 snatch, 245 clean)

Traditional

129:Tanner Martinez, Jay (6th, 420 pounds, 210 clean, 210 bench press); Kaleb Mager, Pensacola Catholic (18th, 350 pounds, 165 clean, 185 bench)

139:Matthew Hendricks, Jay (7th, 435 pounds, 185 clean, 250 bench); Colton Weeks, Pensacola Catholic (11th, 410 pounds, 210 clean, 200 bench); Lucas Nezbeth, Central (14th, 390 pounds, 195 clean, 195 bench)

169:Maximus Steinlicht (9th, 495 pounds, 235 clean, 260 bench)

183:Dominian Gomez, Jay (5th, 545 pounds, 245 clean, 300 bench)

199:Rylan Williams, Jay (3rd, 570 pounds, 255 clean, 315 bench)

238:Shawn Carreon, Pensacola Catholic (12th, 570 pounds, 290 clean, 280 bench)

Unlimited:Chase Dooley, Jay (1st, 765 pounds, 325 clean, 440 bench)

This article originally appeared on Pensacola News Journal:Pensacola area high school sports recap May 8

Gulf Breeze boys volleyball heads to Final 4, Pace baseball eliminated

Final four tickets were punched, weather led to late night battles and local track and field athletes and weightlifters brought home st...

 

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