• Medals go aplenty as U.S. finish top, again, at the Paris Olympics

    The U.S. collected gold in men’s basketball and women’s soccer and earned three more golds in a huge night at the track Saturday at the Paris Olympics.

  • Medals to honour the coaching heroes of the coronavirus lockdown

    As part of UK Coaching Week 2020, UK Coaching has announced a new public-driven awards initiative to recognise those coaches who delivered sport and physical activity during the UK’s coronavirus lockdown.

    Through UK Coaching Heroes, the great British public will be able to nominate coaches who implemented great coaching ideas and made a considerable difference to others despite the adversity we faced because of the pandemic.

    One such coach, dubbed the nation’s PE teacher, Joe Wicks, delivered 18 weeks of his fitness show ‘PE with Joe’, helping millions of parents and children stay active whilst schools were closed and raising hundreds of thousands of pounds for the NHS.

    Nominations are open until the 11 October. Then from the 26 October - 8 November, the public will be able to vote for their favourite coaches from the shortlist of finalists.

    Two supporters of the initiative are charities Coach Core Foundation and Dallaglio RugbyWorks – the former delivering inclusive and impactful sports coaching apprenticeships across the UK for 16-24 year olds not in education or employment and the latter offering young people of secondary school age (either excluded or on the verge of exclusion from mainstream education) a chance to succeed and progress onto further education, employment or training. Both charities will benefit from any voluntary donations made through the nominations or public vote process.   

    UK Coaching’s Director of Coaching Emma Atkins, said: “As part of this year’s campaign, we wanted to implement a unique way in which coaches could be celebrated and recognised by the public for the unparalleled role they’ve had in helping communities stay happy and healthy in this coronavirus era.

    “UK Coaching Heroes is for those of us who have benefitted from great coaching during lockdown to show our appreciation for what coaches have done for us and our wider communities. We have seen coaches go online to keep us connected, active and healthy, and have seen coaches step up to run around their local neighbourhoods to ensure those shielding from COVID-19 have food parcels and other everyday essentials.

    “There is also a wonderful opportunity to donate money to two amazing charities, who are ensuring that young people, who are often in vulnerable situations, can excel through coaching apprenticeships and development programmes that will help them succeed in life – and ensure the next generation of great coaches!”  

    RugbyWorks’ Managing Director Sarah Mortiboys, said: “We’re delighted to support this activity because we know through our interventions that coaching and mentoring can have a great effect on the lives of young people. By creating person-centred relationships with our young people through rugby, we’re helping them to develop resilience, personal responsibility, an understanding of mental well-being and keeping them engaged in learning and education.

    “Any donation to RugbyWorks will help us to support a young person in England or Wales achieve a positive and productive future.”

    Coach Core’s Chief Executive Officer Gary Laybourne, added: “At Coach Core, we understand that coaching is a very powerful way of upskilling and developing young people of all ages both professionally and personally, whilst also ensuring they become real assets to their local community. Through our programmes, we use apprenticeships to help target deserving young people living and working in some of the UK’s most challenging areas onto a fantastic, long-term career pathway and then put them back into their own communities so that they can become fantastic, inspiring young coaches helping to change people lives.

    “As we all know, coronavirus has had a huge impact on the sport and physical activity sector, with substantial decreases in employment for young people in particular really starting to affect our own programmes. If people could keep us in mind for a donation whilst they are nominating so we can continue the work we do, we would be extremely grateful.

    Thank you.”  

    UK Coaching Heroes is looking for nominations of people who have:

    • Connected people utilising sport and physical activity and had a positive impact on people’s well-being
    • Created an environment where people felt empowered and motivated either to get active or to stay active during the covid-19 lockdown
    • Made a difference and had an impact on others (eg family member, friend, participant).

    UK Coaching Week – which empowers athletes, coaches and the public to celebrate great coaching – this year centres on the need to ‘Support Your Coach’, kicking off with the #GreatCoachingPledge that will call on the nation to give some of their own time, sharing thanks and support for the coaching community.

     

  • Melbourne to hear the roar of British & Irish Lions in 2025

    Melbourne, hailed as the sporting and events capital of Australia, will be hosting the much anticipated British & Irish Lions face off against Australia’s national rugby team, the Wallabies, on 26 July 2025.

  • Melbourne to host ‘English football frenzy’ next month

    Tottenham Hotspur FC, Newcastle United FC and Arsenal Women FC will make their way to Melbourne, Australia, for a series of international football club matches next month.

  • Memory of special city teenager honoured in Queen’s Baton Relay

    The memory of a remarkable Wolverhampton teenager will be honoured this summer as her mum carries the Queen’s Baton Relay through the city in her place.

    Skye Gardner, of Wednesfield, had been nominated to carry the Baton ahead of the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games.

  • Mental health charity working with Albion to support new wellbeing strategy

    A leading mental health and wellbeing charity has supported West Bromwich Albion Football Club to develop its Mental Health and Wellbeing strategy which was launched by the club earlier this month.

    The Kaleidoscope Plus Group has worked with the club to devise its strategy, which aims to support and promote the welfare of its staff and volunteers and will provide Mental Health First Aid Training as well as ongoing advice and support.

  • Mental preparation a concern for Olympics legend following Tokyo rejigs

    The cancellation, or postponement, of many a major event - due to the global pandemic that is coronavirus - has not only created a huge nightmare in the diaries (and coffers) of organisers, participants and fans alike, but, for the likes of sporting, entertainment, major family get-togethers and other mass official gatherings, the future is darkened by uncertainty and confusion.

    E where the fall-out of the can create added corncerns.

    The postponement of the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games is where the issue of the mental health of its competitors could come to the fore.

    There is a record number of athletes and others whose respective intense Olympics preparations were due to pinnacle this summer.

    With that in mind, there is a growing concern for their mental health preparations – amongst other issues.

    Following the first Olympic Games postponement in its history, the most decorated Olympian, Michael Phelps, has backed the decision.

    He said: “At first I was shocked at the cancellation”, he said. “It didn’t seem like something that could be managed, or controlled”.

    For the athletes, he said: “Your whole life is pointed towards this moment and then this curveball. Now you have to wait for an extra year.

    “I just feel so bad for the athletes who have made it this far. On the one hand I’m relieved that they’ve got an extra year to prepare. But the waiting makes it much harder”.

    With that he added: “I really hope we don’t see an increase in athlete’s suicide rates because of it. This postponement is uncharted waters”.

    With him suffering deep post-athletics depression, mental health awareness has since been the foundation of Phelps’ life.

    Every athlete is in a singular place and he is worried about Tokyo Olympians being abruptly being asked to re-calibrate their lives.

    “As someone who has gone through some who has gone through some really deep stages of depression, and still dealing with it, I hope and pray than every one of these athletes gets some kind of help with the mental health of this situation. This is a very big thing, and we can’t even leave our homes – no matter who or where we are”.

    “So, if you’re an athlete, go online, or pick up the phone. Find someone to talk to”.

     

  • Menzies sprints to bronze on Day 4 of the World Para Champs

    Finlay Menzies added to the Novuna Great Britain & Northern Ireland team's medal haul in New Delhi by bagging bronze in the T72 100m on day four of the World Para Athletics Championships 2025.

  • Mercedes legend, Hamilton, set for shock move to Ferrari

    Formula 1 multi-world champion legend, Sir Lewis Hamilton is said to be set to make a a shock move to Ferrari for the 2025 season.

  • Messi beats Massi to win fight to trademark his surname

    Footballer Lionel Messi can register his name as a trademark after a nine-year legal battle, the EU's top court has ruled.

     

    The European Court of Justice dismissed an appeal from Spanish cycling company Massi and the EU's intellectual property office, EUIPO.

     

    The Barcelona footballer first applied to trademark his surname as a sportswear brand in 2011.

     

    But Massi argued the similarity between their logos would cause confusion. The European Court of Justice (ECJ) said that the star player's reputation could be taken into account when weighing up whether the public would be able to tell the difference between the two brands.

     

    In doing so, it upheld a ruling by the EU's General Court in 2018 that the footballer was too well known for confusion to arise.

     

    Massi, which sells cycle clothing and equipment, was successful in its initial challenge to the Barcelona striker's application. But it lost out when Lionel Messi brought an appeal to the General Court, which ruled in his favour.

     

    Messi, 33, who wears the number 10 shirt, has been crowned world football player of the year a record six times and is the world's highest-paid soccer player, according to Forbes. It puts his total earnings for 2020 at $126m (£97m).

     

    In August, he made headlines by sending a fax to his club declaring his intention to leave.

     

    But when Barcelona responded by insisting that any team that took him on would have to honour a €700m (£624m) release clause, he changed his mind, saying he did not want to face "the club I love" in court.

     

  • Messi Golden Ball win trumps Mbappe Golden Boot in epic finals shoot-out

    With Lionel Messi finally achieved his dream, as Argentina won their third crown on penalties, in what was said to be one of the greatest finals in the tournament's history, it brought a fitting end to what was the first FIFA World Cup to be held in the Arab world, during what, for many countries, was the first to be held in the middle of a football season, which provided arguably the most open in its history.

  • Messi to stay at the Nou Camp after all

     

     

    Barcelona's all-time leading goal scorer Lionel Messi says he is staying because it is "impossible" for any team to pay his release clause and he does not want to face "the club I love" in court.

    The Argentine, 33, sent a fax to the club saying he wanted to exercise a clause in his contract which he said allowed him to leave for free. But they said his 700m euro (£624m) release clause would have to be met.

    The legendary maestro said: "I thought and was sure that I was free to leave.

    "I told the president and, well, the president always said that at the end of the season I could decide if I wanted to go or if I wanted to stay and in the end he did not keep his word. Now I am going to continue in the club because the president told me that the only way to leave was to pay the 700m clause, and that this is impossible."

    Messi, whose contract expires next summer, says the fact he did not tell Barca he wanted to leave before 10 June was crucial, and had he done so his release clause would not have had to be met.

    He added: "Now they cling to the fact that I did not say it before 10 June, when it turns out that on 10 June we were competing for La Liga in the middle of this awful coronavirus and this disease altered all the season.

    "There was another way and it was to go to trial. I would never go to court against Barca because it is the club that I love, which gave me everything since I arrived. It is the club of my life; I have made my life here."

    His father Jorge had held talks in Barcelona this week and insisted his son could leave for free, only for La Liga to back Barca's stance over the release clause.

    Manchester City were among the clubs linked with Messi when he made clear he wanted to end his 20-year stay at the Nou Camp, nine days after an 8-2 defeat by Bayern Munich in the Champions League quarter-finals.

    That result meant Barca ended the season with no silverware, and they replaced manager Quique Setien with former Everton and Netherlands manager Ronald Koeman.
    Messi is yet to train with his team-mates since Koeman's arrival and admits the club's lack of recent success influenced his decision to ask to leave.

    "I looked further afield and I want to compete at the highest level, win titles, compete in the Champions League," he said. "When I communicated my wish to leave to my wife and children, it was a brutal drama.

    "The whole family began crying, my children did not want to leave Barcelona, nor did they want to change schools.
    "I love Barcelona and I'm not going to find a better place than here anywhere. Still, I have the right to decide.

    "I was going to look for new goals and new challenges. And tomorrow I could go back, because here in Barcelona I have everything."

  • Met apologises to champion British sprinter over ‘stop-and-search’

    Team GB sprinter Bianca Williams has received an apology from the Met Police after she and her partner were pulled over in their car in a stop-and-search. Ms Williams's three-month-old son was also in the car when it was stopped in Maida Vale.

    Met Commissioner Dame Cressida Dick told a committee of MPs officers had visited Ms Williams to apologise for "distress" caused by the stop. The force has also launched a review of its handcuffing practices, she added.

    Footage of the stop-and-search has been shared widely on social media.

    Ms Williams believes officers racially profiled her and her partner Ricardo dos Santos, a Portuguese international 400m runner, because they are Black and were driving a Mercedes. They say police handcuffed them while their son was in the car.

    Despite two reviews by the force's directorate of professional standards, Dame Cressida said the force had found no misconduct by its officers. However, because of the public interest in the case, the Met has referred itself to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC).

    Earlier, Dame Cressida told the Home Affairs Select Committee: "We apologised yesterday to Ms Williams and I apologise again for the distress this stop clearly caused her.

    "I think all of us watching could empathise with somebody who is stopped in a vehicle, who has a young child in the back, who does not probably know what exactly is going on, and is subsequently found, together with her partner, not to be carrying anything illicit."

    Dame Cressida said she has asked a senior officer to review the Met's handcuffing practices to make sure it hasn't become a "default", and has set up an "oversight group" looking at the use of force.

    "Every time we see a video that is of concern we review them, we see if there are any lessons to be learned," she told MPs.

    In 2018-19, police officers in England and Wales used handcuffs just over 300,000 times.
    Around 16% of those people cuffed were Black.

    This means that, when we look at people who were handcuffed relative to their population in the 2011 Census, Black people were roughly six times more likely to be handcuffed than white people. Not all people who get arrested are handcuffed and not all handcuffed people get arrested.

    However, the ratio of handcuffing to arrests shows a great discrepancy between Black and white people:

    In 2018-19, 452,000 White people were arrested and 210,000 were handcuffed
    Over the same period, 60,000 Black people were arrested and 49,000 were handcuffed

    Ch Supt Karen Findlay, who is in charge of the Territorial Support Group which conducted the stop, and local area commander Helen Harper, also informed Ms Williams about the IOPC referral and the next steps in the process.

    But Assistant Commissioner Helen Ball told the committee that there had been "good grounds" for the car to be stopped and at that point the officers involved did not know who was in it.

    Nothing was found in the search, which the Met said was carried out by officers patrolling the Maida Vale area in response to an increase in violence involving weapons. The force also said the vehicle was seen driving suspiciously, including on the wrong side of the road, and that the driver sped off when asked to stop.

    But this account was rejected by Ms Williams, who has said she is considering legal action against the Met.

    "I feel very hurt by their actions, and to witness my partner being taken away and for me to be taken away from my son, my heart hurts," she said.

  • Mexico beat England to retain Homeless World Cup

    Mexico defeated England 6-5 with a goal in the dying seconds to win the Seoul 2024 Homeless World Cup in a frantic spectacle that will live long in the memory.

  • Microplus announced as title sponsor for the 2024 UK Athletics Championships

    UK Athletics is delighted to confirm Microplus as the title sponsor for the UK Athletics Championships which will act as the Trials for the Olympic Games, taking place in Manchester on 29-30 June 2024.

  • Microplus announced as title sponsor for the 2024 UK Athletics Indoor Championships

    UK Athletics is pleased to announce Microplus as the title sponsor for the UK Athletics Indoor Championships on 17-18 February 2024 at the Utilita Arena in Birmingham.

  • Midlands Football Legends Golf Day and Dinner returns in support for local Mental Health charity

    The Midlands Legends Charity Golf Day and Dinner will return on Thursday 30 March 2023, and will again support West Bromwich based charity, the Kaleidoscope Plus Group. The star-studded event will take place at Forest of Arden Marriott Hotel and Country Club and will feature teams made up of ex-professionals representing the Midlands' eight biggest football clubs on the golf course, as well as the opportunity to enter your own team.

  • Midlands Football Legends in Charity Golf Tournament

    Former footballers from seven Midlands clubs will try their hand at a different sport in aid of a mental health charity.

    Leicester City’s Alan Smith, Aston Villa’s Stephen Warnock and West Bromwich Albion’s Chris Brunt are just some of the names who will be playing in The Midlands Legends Charity Golf Day in support of The Kaleidoscope Plus Group. Event organisers Watson Metters Golf have organised the event in aid of the charity which supports people living with mental ill health and are encouraging keen golfers and football fans alike to join in the fun and form a team.

    Gary Wheway, Head of Business Development and Fundraising said: “We’re excited to be clubbing together with Watson Metters Golf to launch the first Midlands Legends Charity Golf Day in support of Kaleidoscope.

    “It’s going to be a great day and we’ve got some big names involved. You could be teeing off in a team of four alongside one of your favourite footballing legends in a bid to be crowned champion team of the Midlands.

    “There will be prizes for closest to the pin and fines for anyone that goes in the bunkers. We’ve also got a live interactive scoreboard so no matter where you are on the course, you’ll know who you’ve got to beat to reach the top of the board.” The event will be held at the Forest of Arden Golf Club, an 18-hole course, in Birmingham, on October 29 and compered by Talksport’s Tom Ross.

    Mike Watson from Watson Metters added: “With household names taking part representing Wolves, West Brom, Aston Villa, Birmingham City, Leicester City, Derby County and Nottingham Forest the day is shaping up to be one to remember.

    “It’s been an absolute pleasure to work alongside the Kaleidoscope Plus Group. We have no doubt the day will be the springboard for a fantastic relationship for years to come and we can't wait to see the benefits the day will bring to those that need it most.”

    All players will receive breakfast before the action on the course begins. This will then be followed by a dinner reception in the evening which includes a live auction, prize giving and entertainment. Golf and Dinner Tickets are £199pp+VAT with dinner-only tickets and sponsorship packages also available.

  • Midlands students team up with football giants PSG in prestigious deal

    An academy in the Midlands has teamed up with one of Europe's most famous football clubs to develop future players.

  • Millions of fans bracing themselves for ticket ballot results

    As the highly anticipated Euro 2024 football tournament fast approaches, fans across Europe are bracing themselves for the bittersweet moment of ticket ballot results.