UK house prices jump to new high as stamp duty rise looms, says Halifax
Patrick Mahomes, the Super Bowl’s final boss who evolved towards greatness
The Kansas City Chiefs quarterback is one win away from a third-straight championship. But he is a different player from when he first lit up the NFLPatrick Mahomes is the final boss. Somehow, some way, it always comes down to him. From the moment he became the Kansas City Chiefs’ starting quarterback in 2018 he has turned the NFL into a video game of sorts, waiting at the highest levels to knock off all challengers. The longer he looms at the top, the more he seems like a glitch
Arkle-bound Sir Gino faces uncertain run-in after injury scuppers Newbury tilt
Sir Gino, the odds-on favourite for the Arkle Trophy at Cheltenham’s festival meeting next month, will miss his intended prep run in the Game Spirit Chase at Newbury on Saturday after sustaining “a small wound” during routine exercise, Nicky Henderson, the gelding’s trainer, said on Friday.Sir Gino, who was the hot favourite for last season’s Triumph Hurdle before he was forced to miss the festival when Henderson’s string was badly affected by a virus, made a huge impression on his chasing debut at Kempton in December, beating Ballyburn – a Grade One winner in Ireland last weekend – with ease.He was expected to start at short odds at Newbury on Saturday on the way to a much-anticipated meeting with Willie Mullins’s Majborough at Cheltenham.“Regrettably, Sir Gino will be unable to run at Newbury tomorrow as he has sustained a small wound to the inside of his near-hind leg,” Henderson said in a statement on X. “We anticipate that he will be back to normal by the beginning of next week, so the timing is very unfortunate
Favoured Italy face return of Faletau as Wales look to stop their slide
Italy are the biggest favourites of the weekend to win their Six Nations match. And it is highly unlikely that sentence has been written before.Admittedly, there is barely anything in it. At the time of writing, Italy are widely available at evens with a handicap of seven; for France and Ireland, the handicap is six. All three are a little shy of 2-1 on to win their respective matches
‘Sorry, good game’: why English rugby attitudes still infuriate France
Always eager to keep its readers up to speed, the Guardian marked the inclusion of the France rugby team in the Five Nations by providing a quick glossary of pertinent terms. “Marquer” was one, “plaquer” another, “melee” a third, all familiar enough now after a hundred-and-some years of playing each other. Another essential phrase has come into the French game in that time, one borrowed from the English, who are, amusingly, almost entirely oblivious to its significance: “Sorry, good game.”This phrase, or something like it, is what the English captain Vince Cartwright said to the France players after they went down 35-8 in the first fixture at the Parc des Princes in Paris in 1906. “Sorry, good game,” or something like it, is what Ian Preece repeated after he had kicked the key drop goal in an 8-3 victory in 1949, when France were on a run of 43 years without winning in England
Wallabies on hunt for new coach once again as Super Rugby turns into casting call | Angus Fontaine
Joe Schmidt’s decision to walk away as Wallabies coach puts Australian rugby back in flux. Five coaches in six years doesn’t reflect well on any organisation, and the aftershocks of Thursday’s announcement on fans, players, administrators and coaches will be seismic. Two years out from a World Cup on home turf and the host nation is starting over. Again.Schmidt’s decision was not unexpected
NBA trade deadline verdict: grading winners and losers after a chaotic week
The Spurs and Cavaliers got better, but only one team pulled off a trade so unbelievable the whole internet assumed the reporter who broke it must have been hackedWell, if last year’s NBA trade deadline was a snooze, this year’s could be likened to something closer to a Red Bull laced with amphetamine. This particular deadline was already destined for the NBA history books with the shocking swap of Luka Dončić of the Dallas Mavericks for Anthony Davis of the Los Angeles Lakers on Saturday, marking what many agree is the biggest trade in league history. But the seismic move shifted the proverbial tectonic plates of the rest of the league, too, as other teams followed suit with their own dramatic dominos. The annual February musical chairs have never had a more feverish soundtrack, so let’s break down the preliminary assessment of which teams came out ahead, and which ones got left seatless.Los Angeles Lakers Several teams got markedly better at the deadline
US job creation slowed in January; UK can’t say ‘job done’ fighting inflation, say’s BoE’s Pill – as it happened
US economy shows steady job growth in January amid Biden-Trump transition
UK house prices jump to new high as stamp duty rise looms, says Halifax
Green campaigners fear UK to renew subsidies to Drax power station
HSBC considering boosting new CEO’s pay package to £15m
‘Stagflation’ fears as Bank of England cuts growth forecast and warns of price rises