RFU opens door to hosting Chelsea if they need temporary home

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The Rugby Football Union chief executive, Bill Sweeney, has said Twickenham could host Chelsea matches if the Premier League club is seeking a temporary home – but he believes the local council would attempt to stand in the way.Sweeney acknowledged the financial carrot of hosting an elite football team on a short-term basis and revealed discussions had previously taken place.Chelsea have long since been looking to either upgrade Stamford Bridge or relocate elsewhere in London and in 2017 it was said that moving temporarily to Twickenham was an option being considered.Ultimately Chelsea stayed put and are still exploring their options with either a move to Earl’s Court or the redevelopment of their current home being considered.Should the RFU host Chelsea at Twickenham, it would be a lucrative move for the union, which last November announced record losses and is struggling to break even.

Asked if the RFU’s licence would allow for Twickenham to stage Chelsea fixtures, Sweeney said: “It would allow it to happen.There have been conversations previously about possible Premiership [sic] clubs coming here.Richmond council, Richmond borough is more concerned about that.I just think in terms of impact on local residents, numbers of fans and so on they’re a little bit more sensitive.It may depend on which club it is.

It would be a big financial number, I know Richmond borough would definitely have a conversation about that though,”The RFU is planning a £660m redevelopment of Twickenham, assuming a move to Milton Keynes is off the table,Sweeney said last month that it would be “a very difficult call” to stay at Twickenham if Richmond council did not grant a licence to host more concerts and mentioned Milton Keynes and Birmingham as possible destinations,The RFU is permitted to host three a year and only two on consecutive nights with a limited capacity of 55,000,The union says Twickenham, which has a capacity of 82,000, is empty for 340 days a year with Sweeney previously claiming that, due to the restrictions, the RFU missed out on staging Beyoncé concerts.

As a result the RFU is lobbying Richmond council for 15 events a year at a capacity of 75,000 and expects an answer by September.“We’re making really good progress with Richmond,” Sweeney said.“The conversations with them have been positive, it’s a cooperative process.They see the value that we bring to the area and they understand why we need to have more non-rugby events when you compare it to Tottenham, Wembley, the O2, they can see why we need those non-rugby events to make the thing viable.“We’ve always said our preference was to remain here.

Not just for cultural reasons and the history,Hospitality and ticketing are 50% of our revenue and from a geographical point of view this is a really important part of the country to be in,There was a lot of investigation into what the different options are and we came out saying our preference would be to remain here,”Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionMeanwhile, it is understood England’s summer tour will be shown on Sky Sports after a TV deal was reached after fears that Steve Borthwick’s side would again be overlooked by a major broadcaster,Last summer Sky showed the two defeats in New Zealand but England’s victory against Japan was only streamed online.

Eight years ago, when England toured Argentina during the 2017 British & Irish Lions tour, the BBC struck a last-minute deal to show the two Tests.England will again play two Tests against Argentina this summer before rounding off with a match against the USA in Washington.Borthwick has added Bath’s Lee Blackett and Byron McGuigan of Sale to his coaching staff for the trip.Blackett will oversee the attack with Richard Wigglesworth on secondment with the Lions while McGuigan will assist Joe El-Abd with the defence.
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Ultra-processed food increases risk of early death, international study finds

Consuming large amounts of ultra-processed food (UPF) increases the risk of an early death, according to a international study that has reignited calls for a crackdown on UPF.Each 10% extra intake of UPF, such as bread, cakes and ready meals, increases someone’s risk of dying before they reach 75 by 3%, according to research in countries including the US and England.UPF is so damaging to health that it is implicated in as many as one in seven of all premature deaths that occur in some countries, according to a paper in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine.They are associated with 124,107 early deaths in the US a year and 17,781 deaths every year in England, the review of dietary and mortality data from eight countries found.Eduardo Augusto Fernandes Nilson, the lead investigator of the study, from the Oswaldo Cruz Foundation in Brazil, said that additives such as sweeteners and flavourings harm health not just UPFs’ high levels of fat, salt and sugar

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Being shouted at by parents can alter child’s brain, experts tell UK MPs

Being shouted at by their parents reshapes children’s brains and makes them more likely to have mental ill-health and struggle to maintain friendships, MPs will hear on Monday.Verbal abuse by adults can leave children unable to enjoy pleasure and seeing the world as threatening, experts in child development and mental health will tell a meeting at Westminster.“As children we believe what we are told, deeply folding the words of adults into our understanding of ourselves and the world around us. When those words are hostile, demeaning or humiliating, they can have lifelong consequences,” said Prof Eamon McCrory, a clinical psychologist, chief executive of the mental health charity Anna Freud and a professor of developmental neuroscience and psychopathology at University College London (UCL).“They can profoundly shape our sense of self and whether we feel lovable and confident in navigating an unpredictable world

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Stun guns won’t bring an end to violence in prisons | Letters

The decision to pilot the use of stun guns in prisons was inevitable, but terrible (I hate the idea of British prison officers carrying stun guns – but it may be our only option, 22 April). How to reduce violence in our jails? The response always seems to be some new piece of kit – be it Pava spray, which it appears has been authorised for use on children, and now stun guns.This doesn’t deal with the root causes of a service in perpetual crisis after a decade or more of austerity and a failed 30-year political race of longer sentences and locking more people up as the answer to reducing crime. If we hold people in squalid conditions, it’s hardly surprising more violence erupts. Prisoner assaults are at an all-time high, but so are deaths in prison custody, self-harm and overcrowding

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How my father, Roger Altounyan, helped asthma sufferers | Letter

My father, Dr Roger Altounyan, discovered Intal (sodium cromoglicate) in the 1960s, at a time when many of his medical colleagues wrote off asthma sufferers as hypochondriacs (Letters, 18 April). He was an asthmatic and a doctor, and was determined to prove them wrong. He conducted experiments on himself and in a secret Cheshire laboratory over 10 years, testing about 500 compounds before finally declaring eureka.Then he researched how best to dispense his drug into the lungs of patients. Thanks to his time spent behind a propeller as a wartime fighter pilot, he hit on the idea of the Spinhaler

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Private landlords and hotels ‘cashing in’ on England’s hidden homelessness crisis

Private landlords and hotel owners are charging councils far in excess of market rent to house people who would otherwise end up on the street, an investigation has found, laying bare the depth of England’s hidden homelessness crisis.Local authorities in England are paying 60% more for rooms in places such as bed and breakfasts and hostels than it would cost to rent similar-sized accommodation on the private market, with half of them spending double the local going rate.More than 100,000 households are living in temporary accommodation in England, and the UK now has the worst homelessness problem in the developed world when they are taken into account.Experts have warned the country has created a £2bn industry of underregulated providers of stopgap housing, some of which are supplying dirty, rat-infested and dangerous accommodation, according to those who live there.“Temporary accommodation is the shame of our society – families are stuck for months, even years, in often overcrowded, appalling conditions, and shunted from place to place with little to no notice,” said Mairi MacRae, the director of campaigns and policy at Shelter

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‘It feels very much like a prison’: inside a cramped Birmingham homeless hostel

Three-year-old Ezaan has been homeless his entire life. Instead of making memories in a childhood home, he has spent his formative years stuck in hotels and a cramped student dorm.His mother, Sumaira Fareed, was made homeless more than three years ago. She was asked to leave her single persons hostel – where children were not allowed to live – after giving birth. She tended to her newborn for a month in hospital as the pair had nowhere else to go