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Dupont’s return heralds fizzing new era for what could be a spectacular Six Nations | Robert Kitson

The tournament looks ferociously competitive and, with attacking verve back in fashion, it promises to be a vintage yearEvery now and again it is useful to be reminded of rugby union’s place in the grand scheme of things. “So, what’s next for you?” a non‑sporty friend asked the other day. He must have spotted my raised eyebrow. “Oh, yes, um, it’s the Six Nations, isn’t it?” Even on Planet Zog, inhabited by people who think a cauliflower ear is a tasty veggie option, they have heard of the annual rugby equivalent of Glastonbury.And, traditionally, that has been the sport’s saving grace

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‘High-energy, risk-taking, intense’ US women’s league shows its rugby colors

Ilona Maher may be dominating headlines in women’s rugby union with her stint with Bristol in England but things are also stirring in the star’s native US, where on Wednesday the Women’s Elite Rugby semi-professional league took another step towards kick-off in March with the release of team names, crests and colors.Katherine Aversano, vice-president of the new league and a historian of the US women’s game, said: “Rugby, its athletes, and fans are not one thing – each is multifaceted and may discover the game in a different way. Our six team identities resonate with that modern complexity but are visually rooted in the bold American sports landscape.”From opening day, the Boston Banshees and the New York Exiles will represent the east coast, the Bay Breakers the west, the Chicago Tempest and Twin Cities Gemini the upper midwest and Denver Onyx the mountain west.Announcing a joint branding project with MATTA, a sports-focused London firm, WER said it would offer a “high-energy, risk-taking, intense” product, “full of inspiring, fearless women athletes and fierce action that will take place on the pitch throughout the season”

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No transparency please, we’re the IOC: Coe makes his pitch for world sport’s top job

It sounds like a brain stumper from a particularly fiendish pub quiz. Which major 2025 election is being fought over by several presidents, a vice-president, a prince, a lord, and a politician from Zimbabwe? And, for good measure, could be won for the first time by someone from Britain?The answer can be found in Lausanne, where the seven candidates hoping to become the next president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC) have gathered to make their one and only direct pitch – via a 15-minute PowerPoint presentation – for the biggest job in global sport.It is also a position that carries significant diplomatic sway. When the current president, Thomas Bach, was elected in 2013, one of the first calls he received was from Vladimir Putin. The IOC was also instrumental in the brief rapprochement between North and South Korea in 2018, when President Trump and Kim Jong-un were trading insults

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How FA mindset guru’s four questions provide building blocks to sporting glory | Cath Bishop

Headlines regularly report the latest outburst on court, a striker’s unexplained goal drought or a coach’s touchline rant. We search to understand how the best teams make game-winning decisions, communicate almost telepathically, recover from failure and deliver breathtaking performances when it matters most. It’s a confusing world of belief systems and mindsets that can be hard to navigate and dominated by urban myths.To help answer these questions more systematically, Kate Hays, one of Britain’s most progressive sports psychologists, shares her insights and approach honed across Olympic sport, rugby and football in her new book How to Win. Hays, head of women’s performance psychology at the Football Association, takes us behind the scenes of some epic sporting achievements, from Tom Daley’s diving career to the Harlequins championship-winning team and Sarina Wiegman’s Euros-winning Lionesses

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Beaumont defends RFU’s Sweeney and takes aim at ‘personal attack’ on CEO

The Rugby Football Union’s interim chairman Bill Beaumont has come out fighting on behalf of the embattled chief executive, Bill Sweeney, writing a letter to urge the ­governing body’s members to vote against a ­resolution to remove Sweeney and taking aim at the “personal attack on one individual”.Beaumont, who was appointed on a temporary basis following the resignation of Tom Ilube, has warned – in a letter on behalf of the RFU’s board and seen by the Guardian – of the risk of “sending the union into paralysis and creating a leadership vacuum”.Sweeney will face a vote of no confidence on 27 March after more than 150 members – led by the Rugby Football Referees Union and the Championship clubs – triggered a special ­general meeting, calling for the removal of the chief exe­cutive. Sweeney insisted last week that it was his intention to stay in the role until at least 2027 and he refused to apologise for accepting the £358,000 bonus that has sparked the grassroots revolution.Beaumont and Sweeney are taking part in a “roadshow” before the SGM, visiting clubs across the country in an effort to unify the game which has been so obviously fractured in recent months

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Henry Slade confident England have fixed defence after sloppy autumn

Henry Slade believes England have taken significant strides to fix their defensive frailties on the basis that “we know what we’re doing”, with the players adopting a more hands-on approach following a disappointing autumn.Slade is the first senior player to admit England had difficulties getting up to speed during a “rushed” transition to the defensive system employed by Joe El-Abd, who was parachuted into the setup for the November international series after the shock resignation of Felix Jones.Jones had implemented an ultra‑aggressive blitz system when he took up the role of defence coach a year ago and it was blossoming by the summer, only for the Irishman to quit Steve Borthwick’s regime. During the autumn, England ­players seemed confused with some ­sticking by Jones’s principles in what the squad refer to as “the Hammer”, while ­others appeared less committed to the all‑or‑nothing approach.Since then, El-Abd has returned to Oyonnax as he continues his job‑share arrangement until the end of the season but he has been putting the squad through their paces at England’s training camp in Girona before their Six Nations opener against ­Ireland on Saturday