NEWS NOT FOUND
‘Take a chill pill’: Benji Marshall’s defence of Lachlan Galvin exposes NRL circus | Jack Snape
Benji Marshall seemed to be playing another game to his opponents over his 346-game NRL career, moving in ways that didn’t make sense and then, in his advancing years, adapting to became one of the sport’s great conductors.As a coach, he has been belittled and ridiculed, questioned for what some believe is an unjustified elevation to the Wests Tigers job. He has been taunted for his team’s subsequent failures, and teased for daring to think of a life of family, of authenticity, of something bigger than rugby league.Marshall may dance to a different beat but it was hard to do anything but follow along as the sharpest minds in the NRL’s media surrounded the former five-eighth at the season’s most anticipated press conference on Thursday. A drumbeat of questions seemed to wear Marshall down
Women’s Tour of Britain gets go-ahead for northern England and Scotland
The 2025 women’s Tour of Britain will go ahead in northern England and the Scottish Borders in early June, despite speculation that this year’s event was in difficulty.Buoyed by news that the men’s and women’s Tour de France will start in Britain in 2027, this summer’s four-day women’s race will start in Yorkshire on 5 June and end in Glasgow.The opening two stages will take in Dalby Forest, the North York Moors national park and the Tees Valley, before heading to the Scottish Borders on stage three, before the final stage on a city-centre circuit in Glasgow.The Scottish rider Neah Evans said: “I started my cycling journey after a taster session at the Sir Chris Hoy velodrome so Glasgow is a special place to me for that.”Jonathan Day, managing director of British Cycling Events, said: “We have first visits for the race to Dalby Forest and the North York Moors national park, from where we will race through North Yorkshire and into the Tees Valley
Field Of Gold lights up Flat season by racing to Guineas favouritism
It is 21 years since the winner of Newmarket’s Craven Stakes followed up in the 2,000 Guineas over the same course and distance two‑and‑a‑half weeks later, and 34 years since Mystiko took the Free Handicap at the Craven meeting – a Classic trial that no longer exists – and went on to become the last grey to win the first colts’ Classic.Every statistic, though, is in the queue to be broken, and John and Thady Gosden’s Field Of Gold is the new 7-2 favourite to snap both sequences at once after a convincing success in the Craven Stakes here on Wednesday.On paper this looked like an unusually open running of the Craven and the market struggled to find a favourite before settling on Field Of Gold, at 100-30, just before the start. He travelled smoothly for Kieran Shoemark towards the near side before a sharp turn of foot carried him into the lead with just under a furlong to run, and Field Of Gold then extended his advantage to three-and-a-half lengths at the post.It was a second success in a major 2,000 Guineas trial in the space of five days for the Juddmonte bloodstock operation, as Andrew Balding’s Jonquil, who was with the now‑retired Sir Michael Stoute as a two-year-old, took the Greenham Stakes at Newbury on Saturday
A Boat Race ritual that would bring me joy | Brief letters
I enjoyed the picture of a jubilant Cambridge women’s crew after their tradition dunking of their cox in your print edition (Water winners, 14 April) and congratulate you on choosing to highlight the winning women’s crew rather than the men’s. However, I’d have enjoyed it even more had the image been of the dunking of the entire board of Thames Water in recognition of its outstanding contribution to the fouling of the planet.Anne JohnsDerby Eighteen people in two boats on the Thames have, for nearly 100 years, enjoyed unprecedented national broadcast coverage. In two weeks’ time in the Isles of Scilly, 130 boats with 442 international crews comprising over 2,600 people will compete in the World Pilot Gig Championships, and will barely feature on the local news. Welcome to the “classless” UK
Hampshire’s Barker to return in July after year-long ban for failed drug test
Hampshire’s Keith Barker has said he “feared for the loss of my career” during a nine-month wait to learn his punishment for a failed drug test caused by what he described as “a genuine administrative error”.Barker has been cleared to return to professional cricket on 4 July, 12 months after he was told he had tested positive for the prohibited substance indapamide, which he had been prescribed to treat high blood pressure, and provisionally suspended. The length of his ban was decided last month and announced on Wednesday, one week short of 11 months after he took the out-of-competition test.“Over the last nine months I have been part of a very tense, very gruelling process leading to the results of my hearing,” the 38-year-old said. “Having been forced to step away from my career and the sport I have loved since I was a young child due to a genuine administrative error has been mentally taxing and left me fearing for the loss of my career
Ju Wenjun outclasses rival Tan Zhongyi to retain women’s world chess title
Ju Wenjun has once again proven herself the undisputed queen of the chessboard.On Wednesday in Chongqing, the 34-year-old Chinese grandmaster clinched the 2025 Fide Women’s World Championship, defeating compatriot and longtime rival Tan Zhongyi by a commanding score of 6½–2½. With the victory, Ju becomes only the fourth woman in history to win the title five times, joining a storied class that includes Vera Menchik, Nona Gaprindashvili and Maia Chiburdanidze.The best-of-12-games match ended with three contests to spare after Ju secured a calm, risk-free draw in game nine to punctuate a stretch of four straight wins that all but sealed the result. She takes home the winner’s purse of €300,000 ($340,580) while Tan earns €200,000
Nigel Farage and the unions: Reform leader walks line between friend and foe
Reeves says inflation fall shows ‘plan for change is working’ – as it happened
UK trade secretary to visit China with aim of reviving key joint trade commission
Reform a ‘racist and far-right’ party, says teaching union after Farage attack – as it happened
Liz Truss to launch ‘uncensored’ social network to counter mainstream media
‘Cutting DEI won’t fill potholes’: Labour ready to play long game against Farage