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Inside Songkhla: See Secrets, Splendors, Spirits of the South This Sunday

'Lost in Homeland'

BANGKOK — Take a deep look into Songkhla in the Deep South through the people who live there via a series of films in Bangkok this Sunday.

Shot throughout the province by German-American filmmaker Ryan Anderson, “Lost in Homeland” will show a dozen shorts telling stories of what makes it special, from a shaman who calls the spirits of the dead and female Muslim poet to an old lady who serves raw egg yolk on ice cream.

“Songkhla has a rich cultural history. It’s one of the oldest cities in the kingdom, but often overlooked by Thais and foreigners alike,” Anderson wrote. “When [we] visited for the first time, the Songkhla Heritage Society showed us around. We thought, ‘How has this unique town remained a secret for so long?’ … We wanted to help shine a spotlight on Songkhla and its unique cultural history.”

The project was co-created with local volunteers and the Songkhla Heritage Society.

Admission is free. The 60-minute shorts will show in English and Thai, with Thai subtitles, at 7pm this Sunday at Jam. The bar-cafe-gallery is a five-minute walk from BTS Surasak’s exit No. 2 on Soi Charoen Rat 1.

The film has played at small cafes and theaters in Nan, Satun and Phuket provinces. After Bangkok, it will travel to Malaysia and Singapore.

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‘Laugh Juice’ in Short Supply as Fad Sweeps Thailand

BANGKOK — I was halfway through the first bottle when I caught myself staring at a particular spot on my monitor, having abandoned whatever task I’d been working on. Still, I downed the rest of the bottle, and that’s when I noticed my heartbeat slow.

I yawned, but decided against a midday Tuesday nap.

Was it my imagination? No way could a bottled drink from 7-Eleven – presumably FDA approved – could have such a bodily effect. I waited for the weird heart arrhythmia to wear off, and I drank the second bottle.

“Seriously, I feel like my heart is beating in a weird chill way,” I messaged my mildly concerned colleagues, before curling up for that cat nap.

This was my experience as a guinea pig for the “Relaxing Calm Sappe Beauti Drink,” the latest fad to sweep Thailand since the weekend, when online reviews popped up swearing it causes people to laugh uncontrollably.

Two bottles and some time later, a smile did break out across my face, but whether from the absurdity of the situation or the juice, I can’t be sure.

While some remain unconvinced the lavender- and lychee-flavored white grape juice drink could induce any sort of reaction, others report widely varying symptoms of sleepiness, relaxation, alertness and – of course – the giggles.

“I bought it because they said it would improve my mood. It’s true! I laughed at whatever joke people threw at me. I also became more awake. It’s great for work,” @Frvkprp tweeted.

On Wednesday, it was hard to find the stuff on shelves, as people continued sharing their hilarious reactions under hashtag #SevenReview.

Read: Puad Khee! Rose Tea is the New Laxative Trend

The supposed giggle water contains 20 milligrams of chamomile, 20 milligrams of lemon balm, 5 milligrams of lavender, but the active ingredient is clearly the 10 milligrams of amino acid L-Theanine listed on the bottle. Although L-Theanine is a naturally occurring, relaxing substance found in tea. A cup of black tea may contain 20 milligrams of it, and green tea approximately 8 milligrams.

In other words, the drink is potentially as relaxing as a cup of tea with a nice blend of relaxing chamomile and lavender.

The admin of the Sappe Beauti Drink Facebook page responded to an inquiry to assert that L-Theanine “affects the nervous system and can induce relaxation, decrease stress and balance emotions.”

According to Drugs.com, Theanine “may also have effects on the cardiovascular system and play a preventative role in cancer; however, limited clinical information is available to support these claims.”

Were that not enough to assuage fears, the 35-calorie Relaxing Calm Sappe Beauti Drink also won a Healthier Choice seal by public health officials.

https://twitter.com/FRVKPRP/status/852908858578051073

‘I didn’t think it would work. I laughed all the way home from 7-Eleven, including at passers-by. Is this water or marijuana tea?’

 


‘I was laughing after reading the reviews while I was drunk. So when I got to drink it … 55555555555555’

 

‘I drank half a bottle and then put in in the fridge. The result? I’m laughing at my fridge.’

 

‘I’m laughing so hard at my mom while she’s watching TV. Now she’s making rice, and I’m still laughing 55555555.’

 

‘Can’t stop laughing at the phone ringing or dog barking. I’m still smiling as I type.’

Apparently, the fad is emptying convenience stores of product.

‘I didn’t laugh at the blue Sappe drink, but it’s relaxing. The smooth taste makes me smile.’

‘You need 200 milligrams of L-Theanine to feel a difference. There’s only 10 milligrams in the drink, so what the hell are you all laughing at?’

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See Bangkok Before and After Street Food (Interactive)

Thonglor before and after the street food ban.

By Sasiwan Mokkhasen and Todd Ruiz

BANGKOK — On Monday, the latest edict to clear Bangkok’s sidewalks of the vendors which have long lent busy energy late into the night went into effect.

This time in the upscale nightlife stretches of Thonglor and Ekkamai, where City Hall banned vendors from setting up sidewalk cafes and markets. Itinerant push-cart vendors were still allowed to travel up and down the road.

It’s the latest in a years-long push since the 2014 coup to impose cleanliness and order on the otherwise chaotic streets of the Thai capital. It has divided residents, some who support the authorities’ stated aim to reclaim public space for public use, and those who say it is sapping the very character that lends the city appeal.

Compare for yourself how the streets looked before and after the ban with these interactive images. (Slide left and right).

Read: Those Who Toil For Bangkok Deprived by Loss of Street Food

 

Near Soi Thonglor 9

Beneath BTS Thong Lo

Maze Thonglor near Soi Thonglor 4

Near Soi Thonglor 7

This is Soi Sukhumvit 38, a once-bustling street food destination across Sukhumvit Road from Thonglor. Vendors were partly evicted from the east side in early 2016, while small restaurants on the west side were evicted by the landowner to build a condominium.

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Critics Take Notice as Politics Take the Stage

B-Floor’s ‘Fundamental’ performance. Photo: Wipat Lertpureewong / Courtesy

BANGKOK — Political performances concerning the 1976 Thammasat University  massacre grabbed several awards from critics Tuesday night.

It was a big night for Thai theatre circles as directors, actors and producers gathered at the fifth International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand Centre Awards at the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre.

As 2016 marked the 40th anniversary of the student massacre and political turmoil, several artists who addressed the issues in their work made it through to the final awards round. The winners were selected by a panel of association judges which included this reporter.

The night’s biggest winner was B-Floor Theatre for its physical performance “Fundamental,” which questioned and critiqued core aspects of Thai society by communicating through choreographed and improvised movement 1976’s violence and the apathy which enabled it. It won three awards: Best Performance by an Ensemble, Best Movement-based Performance and Best Art Direction of a Play/Performance/Musical.

The youngbloods behind Splashing Theatre Co.’s “The Disappearance of the Boy on a Sunday Afternoon” earned two significant awards: Best Play and Best Original Script of Play/Performance for its portrayal of those who made absent by unknown force and cause.

Exploring the imaginary story of a death surrogate, the bilingual production “Stick Figures” won Best Direction of a Play/Performance/Musical for Pattarasuda Anuman Rajadhon and Best Performance by a Female Artist for Varattha Tongyoo.

Best Adapted Script of a Play/Performance goes to “The Snakes” that Wannasak Sirilar adapted from Chinese legend “Lady White Snake” that tells a tragic love between a human and a snake in disguise as a beautiful lady.

As for musical bests, Thong Lor Art Space’s production “Cocktails The Musical” seized Best Musical and Best Performance by a Male Artist from Witwisit “Pich” Hiranyawongkul, a popular actor and singer who composed all the featured songs and starring as a mixologist who tries to create the special cocktail.

Best Book for Musical goes to a play featuring puppets “Mom The Musical,” an adaptation from Kukrit Pramoj’s sentimental short story on a dog witnessing its owner’s suffering during World War II. The work was beautifully done by a prolific playwright Daraka Wongsiri.

Somporn Fourrage, a Fine and Applied Arts professor from Thammasat University was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award for her contributions to Thai theatre.

The International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand Centre was founded in 2011. Its members are registered with International Association of Theatre Critics, the world’s largest nonprofit organization for theatre critics founded in Paris in 1956.

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Teerawat “Ka-ge” Mulvilai director of “Fundamental” that won 3 awards from IATC. Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Somporn Fourrage, a Fine and Applied Arts professor from Thammasat University was honored with a Lifetime Achievement Award. Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Best Performance by a Female Artist Varattha Tongyoo from “Stick Figures.” Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Best Performance by a Male Artist Witwisit “Pich” Hiranyawongkul from “Cocktails The Musical.” Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Best Musical winner, Thong Lor Art Space’s “Cocktails The Musical.” Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Director and playwright Thanaphon Accawatanyu won 2 awards from “The Disappearance of the Boy on a Sunday Afternoon.” Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.
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Winners and critics at the International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand Centre awards show Tuesday night at the Bangkok Art and Culture Centre. Photo: International Association of Theatre Critics Thailand / Courtesy.

 

Related stories:

Critics Give ‘Best Picture’ Nod to Indie Movie on Massacre

Art, Culture, Politics Continued to Collide in 2016

Not Here to Entertain You: B-Floor Confronts Thailand in Movement and Meaning

Forgotten by State, Butchered Students of 1976 Return to Haunt Stage

Grief Goes Bicultural as Death Surrogates Come Alive in Thai, English

Staged Disappearance: Democrazy Theatre’s Provocative New Production

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8 Suspects Deny Links to Alleged Wealth Ever Tour Scam

Police at the Crime Suppression Division escort eight suspects Sunday accused of involvement with a multi-level marketing scam that left more than a 1,000 travelers  stranded at Suvarnabhumi Airport earlier this month.

BANGKOK — Eight people denied fraud and involvement in the Japan tour scam which left over 1,000 tourists stranded at Suvarnabhumi Airport last week.

Eight suspects were questioned Sunday at the Crime Suppression Division in Bangkok, all of which denied the charges laid against them, including fraud and conspiracy.

Pasist Arinchayalapis, the owner of multilevel marketing firm Wealth Ever, was arrested April 12 in the southern province of Ranong after the sight of so many people burned by the alleged scam drew sympathy and anger. Pasist, a transgender man, remains jailed at the Central Women’s Correctional Institution.

Pasist’s mother, Monthaya Nirundorn, was among the eight to deny involvement, saying she only wanted to help the company’s members work hard to earn benefits. Monthaya also said Wealth Ever is not a tour company but a supplements business.

Supplements are commonly sold by multi-level marketing firms around the world, many of which are pyramid-scheme models and walk a delicate legal line. Wealth Ever was not legally registered as such, according to the authorities.

The other seven suspects are Kongsarun Saengprapa, Tatdao Samukkasikun, Pranom Palanuson, Nichamon Saengprapha, Parinthorn Honghirun Duckor, Sudarat Aneknuan and Kowit Chuaisud.

Tatdao, Pasist’s girlfriend, told police that Wealth Ever was registered as a supplementary food company a few months ago in Nakhon Sawan province. The MLM company’s new members would deposit registration fees into her bank account.

However, Tatdao denied any involvement in the Japanese travel swindle, in which people thought they had paid roughly 10,000 baht to spend the Songkran holidays touring Japan.

Police are investigating whether Wealth Ever’s products have approval from the Food and Drug Administration, assistant national police chief Srivara Ransibrahmanakul said.

The alleged con by Pasist and his company came to attention on the night of April 11 when more than 1,000 holidaymakers were left waiting at Suvarnabhumi Airport where they expected chartered flights to ferry them to Osaka. Hundreds of the victims have so far filed complaints with the police.

Related stories:

‘Japan Tour Scam’ Suspect Denies Fraud

Alleged ‘Japan Scam’ Mastermind Arrested in Ranong

Con Job Strands Thousands of Japan-Bound Thai Tourists at BKK

 

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Pilot Dumped Bear From Loaded Flight to Avoid Cliff

The bear after falling to her death from a helicopter on the way to Khao Yai National Park in February. Photo: Prachachat

BANGKOK — A bear dropped to her death by the helicopter transporting her to freedom earlier this year because the pilot feared he would crash into a cliff, state officials announced Tuesday.

Adisorn Nuchdamrong, an investigator at the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, faulted human error and an unauthorized flight plan for the death of the bear, who was on the way to be released in the Khao Yai National Park in February after spending a decade in wildlife rehabilitation.

“The pilot admitted to unhooking the bear hanging from the helicopter because they were approaching a cliff and needed to lessen the load. If they hadn’t, they would have crashed into the cliff,” Adisorn said.

Read: On Way to New Life in Khao Yai, Bear Falls to Death

Adisorn said national park flight officials did not obtain necessary authorization to fly the bear, and did not file a flight plan detailing all the people who would be on board – including a reporter who joined the operation.

The unnamed Asiatic black bear, a species considered vulnerable, had spent 10 years in wildlife rehabilitation in preparation for release back into the wild. On Feb. 11, a vet drugged the bear, rangers strapped it into a net, and the helicopter took off with it en route to the nation’s second-largest national park, dropping the animal on the way.

bear
A helicopter transports a grizzly bear in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming. Photo: Richard Lake / U.S. National Park Service
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Trump Targets Visa Program He Says Hurts American Workers

President Donald Trump speaks in 2017 at Snap-On Tools in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Photo: Kiichiro Sato / Associated Press

KENOSHA, Wisconsin — Turning back to the economic populism that helped drive his election campaign, President Donald Trump signed an order Tuesday he said should help American workers whose jobs are threatened by skilled immigrants.

At the headquarters of hand and power tool manufacturer Snap-on Inc., Trump signed an order that that asks the government to propose new rules and changes that will stop what he called abuses in a visa program used by U.S. technology companies. Dubbed “Buy American and Hire American,” the directive follows a series of recent Trump reversals on economic policies.

“We are going to defend our workers, protect our jobs and finally put America first,” Trump declared, standing in front of an American flag fashioned out of wrenches.

Much like some prior orders, however, Trump’s executive action Tuesday essentially looks for detailed reports rather than making decisive changes. In this case, the reports are about granting visas for highly skilled foreign workers and ensuring that government purchasing programs buy American made goods as required by law.

Trump chose to sign the directive at Snap-on Inc., based in Wisconsin, a state he narrowly carried in November on the strength of support from white, working-class voters. Trump currently has only a 41 percent approval rating in the state.

He campaigned last year on promises to overhaul U.S. trade and regulatory policy, but his executive orders on those issues reflect the administration bowing somewhat to the limits of presidential power. Also, he has recently reversed several populist promises, including standing up to China, which he contended was manipulating its currency and stealing American jobs, and eliminating the Export-Import Bank, which he billed as wasteful subsidy.

But Trump returned to Tuesday to the economic tough talk of his campaign, saying: “We’re going to make some very big changes or we are going to get rid of NAFTA for once and for all,” referring to the Clinton-era U.S. trade pact with Canada and Mexico.

In his new directive, the president is targeting the H-1B visa program, which the White House says undercuts U.S. workers by bringing in large numbers of cheaper, foreign workers and driving down wages. The tech industry has argued that the H-1B program is needed because it encourages students to stay in the U.S. after getting degrees in high-tech specialties — and because companies can’t always find enough American workers with the skills they need.

The new order would direct U.S. agencies to propose rules to prevent immigration fraud and abuse in the program. They would also be asked to offer changes so that H-1B visas are awarded to the most-skilled or highest-paid applicants.

The number of requests for H-1B visas declined this year by about 15 percent, or roughly 37,000 applications, but the total was still nearly 200,000, far more than the 85,000 limit.

Tuesday’s order also seeks to strengthen requirements that American-made products be used in certain federal construction projects, as well as in various grant-funded transportation projects. The commerce secretary is to review how to close loopholes in existing rules and provide recommendations to the president within 220 days. The order also asks agencies to assess the use of waivers.

The trip brought Trump to the congressional district of House Speaker Paul Ryan, but Ryan was out of the country on a congressional trip. The president was greeted by Gov. Scott Walker outside Snap-on’s headquarters.

During his remarks, Trump weighed in on another economic issue, promising to find a solution to a trade dispute with Canada that has left dairy farmers in Wisconsin and New York without a market they had for their product.

Trump said Canada has been “very, very unfair” to dairy farmers and “we’re going to start working on that.”

Canada has decided to impose import taxes on ultra-filtered milk, a protein liquid concentrate used to make cheese. It had been duty free but Canada changed course after milk producers there complained. About 70 dairy producers in both U.S. states are affected.

As for the visa program, Democratic lawmakers and organizations ranging from the pro-business Chamber of Commerce to the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation say they welcome proposals to improve the visa program, though not always in line with Trump’s ideas.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis., urged Trump to skip further study and support her bill to rebuild U.S. infrastructure with American iron and steel. The Chamber of Commerce added that it would be a “mistake to close the door on high-skilled workers” who can contribute to the growth and expansion of American businesses and make the U.S. more competitive around the world.

Trump has long pledged to support American goods and workers, but his own business record is mixed. Many Trump-branded products, like clothing, are made overseas. His businesses have also hired foreign workers, including at his Palm Beach, Florida, club.

Snap-on makes hand and power tools, diagnostics software, information and management systems and shop equipment for use in agriculture, the military and aviation. In addition to 11 factories in the U.S., financial disclosures show it has plants in China, Argentina, Belarus, Brazil, Hungary, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

During his tour, Trump was shown metal boxes where cremated ashes are deposited. He called it “very depressing.”

Story: Catherine Lucey, Scott Bauer

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Trump Inaugural Attracts Record $107M in Donations

President Donald Trump waves as he walks with first lady Melania Trump during the inauguration parade in January on Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington. Photo: Evan Vucci / Associated Press

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump raised USD $107 million for his inaugural festivities, nearly double the previous record set by President Barack Obama eight years ago.

Trump’s inaugural committee was due to file information about its donors with the Federal Election Commission by April 20 and said it would do so Tuesday  though it hadn’t by 10 p.m. Eastern time. The committee doesn’t need to publicly disclose how the money was spent.

In a statement announcing its windfall, the inaugural committee said the multi-day event “was one of the most accessible and affordable inaugurations for the public in recent history.”

The celebrity businessman’s inaugural involved less hoopla than others in recent years.

He held three inaugural balls, compared with the 10 Obama had at his first inaugural. Trump’s team also shortened its parade to about 90 minutes. The longest parade, with 73 bands and 59 floats, lasted more than four-and-a-half hours, at Dwight Eisenhower’s first inauguration in 1953.

Trump’s inaugural team failed to attract the kind of A-list  and pricey  performers who turned out in force for Obama. Trump’s headliners included teen singer Jackie Evancho, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Radio City Rockettes. The committee put on a free opening day concert and charged USD $50 per ticket to two of its balls. The Armed Services Ball was free.

The slimmed-down affair, which inaugural chairman Tom Barrack said aimed to capture the “soft sensuality” of Washington, raises questions about whether Trump spent the entire record-setting sum. He promised to give any extra money to charity, but didn’t specify which ones.

Trump’s USD $107 million fundraising total is “an awful lot of money  it’s roughly what we spent on two,” said Steve Kerrigan, who was CEO for Obama’s inaugural committee in 2013 and chief of staff in 2009. Kerrigan said the inaugural events may have served as an opportunity for donors who held back during the presidential campaign to try to curry favor by showing support for the incoming president.

Inaugural officials didn’t immediately return requests for comment Tuesday. Their release promised more details about charitable giving at a later date, “when the organization’s books are fully closed.”

Trump placed no restrictions on the amount of money donors could give. Obama limited contributions to USD $50,000 in 2009 but lifted that cap four years later.

After raising about USD $55 million in 2009, Obama used excess funds to help pay for the White House Easter egg roll and other events, his former inaugural committee chief executive officer said.

For Obama’s lower-key second inaugural in 2013, his committee raised about USD $43 million.

Former President George W. Bush raised USD $40 million to USD $42 million for each of his two inaugurations.

Trump’s inaugural committee said it would “identify and evaluate charities that will receive contributions left from the excess monies raised.”

In the past, questions have been raised about Trump’s follow-through on his commitments to make charitable donations. For example, he pledged in January 2016 to donate millions to veterans from a highly publicized fundraiser, including USD $1 million of his own money. Much of that money was distributed in May 2016, after The Washington Post pressed him about whether he had followed through on his promise.

Story: Nancy Benac, Julie Bykowicz

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Madrid Beat Bayern in Controversial Champions League QF (Video)

Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo, center, celebrates after scoring as Bayern players react during the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Real Madrid and Bayern Munich on Tuesday at Santiago Bernabeu stadium in Madrid, Spain. Photo: Francisco Seco / Associated Press

MADRID — With a hat trick that made him the first player to score 100 Champions League goals, Cristiano Ronaldo led Real Madrid to a 4-2 win over 10-man Bayern Munich after extra time on Tuesday and put the defending champions back in the semifinals.

Ronaldo scored once in regulation and twice in extra time, while Marco Asensio also netted late for Madrid, which advanced 6-3 on aggregate after a 2-1 first leg win in Germany.

“In the big moments, Ronaldo always comes through,” Madrid coach Zinedine Zidane said. “He scored five times in these two games, what else can I say?”

Ronaldo had scored both goals for Madrid in the first leg, when he became the first player to reach 100 goals in European club competition.

Bayern played a man down from the 84th minute after Arturo Vidal picked up his second yellow card of the night for a foul on Asensio.

“We deserved more,” said Bayern coach Carlo Ancelotti, who complained about the refereeing. “The calls made by the referee hurt us a lot. The second yellow for Arturo should not have been a card, and Ronaldo had two goals when he was offside.”

Ronaldo appeared to be in front of the defenders, and just offside, for his first goal in extra time.

Vidal appeared to mainly get the ball in his challenge on Asensio, although he could have received a second yellow earlier for a foul on Casemiro.

After Robert Lewandowski had scored a 53rd minute penalty for Bayern, an own-goal by Madrid defender Sergio Ramos in the 78th had given the German side a 2-1 lead in regulation time, and sent the game into extra time.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaF4pweYv_w

The victory at the Santiago Bernabeu Stadium put Madrid into the semifinals for the seventh straight season and kept alive its hopes of becoming the first team to retain the Champions League title since the competition’s new format was created in 1992.

Madrid defeated city rival Atletico Madrid in the final both in 2014 and 2016.

Atletico also made it to the semifinals by eliminating Leicester 2-1 on aggregate after a 1-1 draw in Tuesday’s other quarterfinal, second-leg match.

Bayern, the 2013 Champions League winner, had made it at least to the semifinals for the last five seasons.

“We played a lot of difficult matches this season, but this one was the most difficult one,” Zidane said. “In the end, over the two legs, we deserved to go through.”

The opening 45 minutes were balanced between the two sides, but Bayern was dominant after halftime as it pressed forward, trying to overturn the first-leg deficit.

“The team was courageous,” Bayern defender Philipp Lahm said. “It hurts to go out in extra time, but we were a man down for over an hour across the tie. I think the team deserved to go through.”

Bayern also played with 10 men in the second half of the game in Germany.

Lewandowski, who had missed the first leg because of a right shoulder injury, calmly scored from the spot with a right-foot shot, sending Keylor Navas the wrong way.

The penalty was awarded after a foul by Casemiro on Arjen Robben.

Not long before the penalty, Marcelo had prevented Bayern from scoring by making a goal line clearance after a shot by Robben had beaten Navas.

Ronaldo scored his first goal of the night with a header in the 76th minute after a well-placed cross by Casemiro from the right flank.

Two minutes later, though, Ramos found his own net when his deflection sent the ball trickling across the goal line. The Spanish defender was making his 100th Champions League appearance.

Ronaldo put Madrid back in control when he chested down a pass by Ramos and fired a left-foot shot that went underneath Bayern goalkeeper Manuel Neuer in the 105th minute.

He added another from close range after a run by Marcelo down the left flank in the 110th, and Asensio sealed the victory after getting past a series of defenders and firing home from inside the area in the 112th.

Bayern was trying to become only the third team to reverse a first-leg home loss in Champions League history, along with Inter Milan in 2011 and Ajax in 1996.

“I think we played well overall and we can leave with our heads held high,” Bayern defender Jerome Boateng said.

Security guards and Bayern fans got into a confrontation at the stands at halftime but the altercation ended quickly.

Story: Tales Azzoni

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Done Dreaming: Draw Drops Leicester Out of UCL (Video)

Leicester's Christian Fuchs reacts after his side lost the Champions League quarterfinal second leg soccer match between Leicester City and Atletico Madrid in April at King Power Stadium, Leicester, England. Photo: Rui Vieira / Associated Press

LEICESTER, England — The weariest Leicester players collapsed to the field as their teammates received the consoling embraces of their rivals from Atletico Madrid.

For the unlikeliest of Premier League champions, England’s last remaining representatives in the Champions League quarterfinals, the journey ended in a 1-1 draw Tuesday night.

It was the end not only of Leicester’s first foray in European soccer’s elite competition, but also the incredible ascent of the modest central England club that had gatecrashed the soccer hierarchy in a run that captured global attention.

Leicester didn’t go out meekly  that wouldn’t be the style of the team that seized the Premier League title for the first time last May with a 10-point advantage. Instead, the quarterfinal second leg provided a snapshot of the kind of resolve that stirred a remarkable chapter in the history of Leicester City.

Outplayed in the first half, allowing Saul Niguez space to score unmarked with a header, Leicester went back to the direct style that so unsettled opponents in its title-winning campaign. Jamie Vardy, the striker signed from a non-league club five years ago, powered in an equalizer just after the hour-mark.

In an exhilarating conclusion at the King Power Stadium, Leicester harried Atletico but was left frustrated as Diego Simeone’s well-drilled defense got bodies in the way of shots.

The 1-1 draw left Leicester exiting the Champions League with a 2-1 aggregate loss to a team that has contested two of the last three finals.

“We have to be proud of ourselves, we gave our all,” said captain Wes Morgan, who returned for a month-long absence. “In the second half, we threw everything we had at the goal. They had a few blocks on the line.”

Even Simeone was in awe, with the coach of the notoriously dogged Atletico side meeting his match in Craig Shakespeare’s squad.

“What a great performance from our competitors tonight. It was almost a pleasure to compete against them,” Simeone said through a translator. “They never gave up for one minute. They didn’t let their heads drop. We lived in fear all night of what they might achieve as they were coming forward … they pushed us all the way.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t0ueHy7h7to

Far more so in the second half after a tactical switch from 4-4-2 to 3-5-2 by Shakespeare, who has spent two months as the temporary replacement for Claudio Ranieri, the architect of last year’s Premier League title triumph who was fired in February.

The introduction of flying wing back Ben Chilwell and Leonardo Ulloa to provide a greater aerial threat up front ruffled Atletico.

“What they did superbly was getting lots of people down the flanks. They put lots of crosses into Leo Ulloa,” Simeone said. “He caused plenty of problems in the area.”

Now the Leicester players need to continue that form in the Premier League. This season is ending with a more modest target: Survival. Shakespeare has arrested the freefall of the final weeks under Ranieri, but Leicester is nine points above the relegation zone in 12th place with six games remaining.

“We have given a great account of ourselves (against Atletico),” Morgan said. “Being the last English team getting to the quarterfinals on our Champions League debut is a massive achievement and we can leave the competition with our heads held high.”

Whether Leicester returns to the competition in the near future appears unlikely. But this is a club that was in the third-tier nine years ago. On the basis of that improbable and rapid climb, little will seem impossible for the years or generations to come at Leicester.

For now, Leicester’s players and Thai owners will have to get used to a more mundane reality returning to a club slipping out of the limelight, in the shadows once again of more illustrious English counterparts. The enchanting exploits they produced on the field, will live on.

Story: Rob Harris

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