Mary Burke

Mary  Burke If you propose to speak, always ask yourself, is it true, is it necessary, is it kind.

Modric turns 39 in September, so would be in his 40s by the time 2026 World Cup comes round.It is rare for an outfield p...
06/25/2024

Modric turns 39 in September, so would be in his 40s by the time 2026 World Cup comes round.

It is rare for an outfield player to continue at that age, but while he became the oldest goal scorer at a Euros, he is not the oldest player at this tournament.

Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo is 39 but he is trumped by his international team-mate Pepe, who is 41.

The question is whether such a cruel end to his time at this tournament extinguishes this desire to continue to play at this level, or ignites it.

The Serbian Football Association has been charged by Uefa after objects were allegedly thrown during Serbia's Euro 2024 ...
06/17/2024

The Serbian Football Association has been charged by Uefa after objects were allegedly thrown during Serbia's Euro 2024 match against England.

Police said eight people had been temporarily detained following a brawl between England and Serbia fans before the game in Gelsenkirchen, Germany.

The Uefa charges include "transmitting a provocative message unfit for a sports event".

Brazilian pole vaulter Thaigo Braz has been banned for 16 months by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) for committing a ...
05/28/2024

Brazilian pole vaulter Thaigo Braz has been banned for 16 months by the Athletics Integrity Unit (AIU) for committing a doping offence.

Braz, the 2016 Rio Olympics champion, is deemed to have breached World Athletics Anti-Doping rules relating to the presence of the prohibited substance, ostarine.

The United States dominated the World Athletics Relays by winning four of the five golds on offer in the Bahamas on Sund...
05/07/2024

The United States dominated the World Athletics Relays by winning four of the five golds on offer in the Bahamas on Sunday.

Noah Lyles got the men's team over the line in the 4x100m as they won in 37.40 seconds ahead of Canada (37.89s).

Defending champions Italy, led by reigning Olympic 100m gold medallist Marcell Jacobs, were initially credited with bronze but were later disqualified, giving third to France.

American Gabby Thomas claimed two golds, first as part of the women's 4x100m relay team and then in the women's 4x400m relay.

"It's been a great preparation," said Thomas. "At the end of the day I knew the girls would have it regardless because they have a great 4x400m relay squad.

"It's a testament to how we came to World Relays, we came prepared with the mentality to get the job done and we were committed to that."

Britain's team of Alyson Bell, Amy Hunt, Bianca Williams and Aleeya Sibbons won bronze in the women's 4x100m, with France taking silver.

Meanwhile, the US team of Matthew Boling, Lynna Irby-Jackson, Willington Wright and Kendall Ellis set a championship record when winning the mixed 4x400m relay in three minutes 10.73 seconds.

Netherlands won silver with Ireland taking the bronze.

Botswana became the first African nation to win a men’s sprint event at the World Relays with victory in the men’s 4x400m.

The hosts had earlier secured their place in the Olympics by winning their mixed 4x400m relay heat.

Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya stormed to victory in a women's only world-record time of two hours 16 minut...
04/23/2024

Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya stormed to victory in a women's only world-record time of two hours 16 minutes and 16 seconds in the London Marathon.

World record holder Tigst Assefa and Megertu Alemu, both of Ethiopia, and Kenya's Joyciline Jepkosgei also beat the previous women's only record of 2:17:01, set by Mary Keitany in 2017.

Kenya's Alexander Mutiso Munyao held off distance-running great Kenenisa Bekele to win the men's race in 2:04:01.

The British duo of Emile Cairess and Mahamed Mahamed finished third and fourth.

Cairess' time of 2:06:46 makes him the second-fastest British man of all-time over the distance and the first to finish on the podium since Sir Mo Farah in 2018.

Both Cairess and Mahamed are now set to go to this summer's Olympics after finishing well under the qualifying time of 2:08:10.

Sprinter CJ Ujah has been included in Great Britain's squad for the first time since serving his doping ban ahead of nex...
04/11/2024

Sprinter CJ Ujah has been included in Great Britain's squad for the first time since serving his doping ban ahead of next month's World Athletics Relays.

Ujah was banned for 22 months after testing positive for two prohibited substances at the Tokyo Olympics - but he was cleared of intentionally doping.

The 30-year-old's doping violation saw the British men's 4x100m quartet stripped of its Olympic silver medal.

The World Athletics Relays take place in the Bahamas on 4-5 May.

The two-day event doubles as the Olympic qualifying event for the relay competitions at Paris 2024.

Ujah, whose ban ended on 5 June 2023, has been joined in the men's 4x100m relay squad by Zharnel Hughes, Richard Kilty and Nethaneel Mitchell-Blake.

In 2022, Kilty said he would never forgive Ujah, external for his "sloppy and reckless" behaviour that cost them the silver medal.

Reece Prescod, another member of that Tokyo squad, is also named despite quitting the relay team shortly before last year's World Championships in Budapest.

Darren Campbell, head of sprints, hurdles and relays for UK Athletics, said of the 4x100m relay squad: "They have had their fair share of challenges in recent years, but I have had my own discussions with each and every member of the squad and know they are motivated, committed and focused on working together to reach Paris."

Of the women's 4x100m bronze medal-winning quartet in Tokyo, Asha Philip and Imani-Lara Lansiquot have been named but Dina Asher-Smith and Daryll Neita are not in the squad.

At last summer's World Championships in Budapest, GB won mixed 4x400m silver and bronze medals in the women's 4x100m and 4x400m, and the men's 4x400m.

Megan Keith admits "through gritted teeth" the track 10,000m could be the event that suits her best, despite finding it ...
03/29/2024

Megan Keith admits "through gritted teeth" the track 10,000m could be the event that suits her best, despite finding it "pretty boring".

The 21-year-old from Inverness, a European Under-23 cross country and 5,000m gold medallist, clocked 30 minutes 36.84 in California this month.

That is inside the Olympic qualifying standard in her first 10,000m race and Keith is now open to a switch.

"I think it probably is up my street," she told BBC Scotland.

"The only times we have discussed it is when I have told my coach or my training partners or my family that I will never be running one.

"I wanted to stay firmly in the middle-distance camp. But time passes and here I am, so I wouldn't be surprised if it is where my strengths lie. But I am still getting to grips with how mundane it is.

"Through gritted teeth, I could say potentially because I have never actually watched a full 10,000m on TV or whatever because I find them pretty boring."

World record holder Tigst Assefa heads a high-class field in the women's elite race at the London Marathon.The Ethiopian...
03/12/2024

World record holder Tigst Assefa heads a high-class field in the women's elite race at the London Marathon.

The Ethiopian's stunning two hours, 11 minutes and 53 seconds at the 2023 Berlin Marathon took more than two minutes off the previous record of 2:14.04 set by Kenya's Brigid Kosgei.

With Kosgei and fellow Kenyan Ruth Chepngetich also running, three of the four fastest women in history will compete in London.

The race takes place on 21 April.

The women's-only world record stands at 2:17:01 and was set by another Kenyan, Mary Keitany, at the 2017 London Marathon.

That record could fall with Olympic champion Peres Jepchirchir of Kenya and Assefa's fellow Ethiopian Yalemzerf Yehualaw, winner in London in 2022, also among the group capable of chasing it down.

"We are in a golden age of women's marathon running," Hugh Brasher, event director of the London Marathon, said.

"Despite this, the women's-only world record of 2:17:01, set by the great Mary Keitany here at the London Marathon in 2017, has amazingly stayed intact.

"However, I suspect that with Tigst Assefa, Brigid Kosgei and the likes of Ruth Chepngetich, Peres Jepchirchir and Yalemzerf Yehualaw in the field and where a total of 10 women have run under two hours 17 minutes and 30 seconds, Keitany's world record is going to be under serious threat at the 2024 London Marathon."

New York City Marathon champion Tamirat Tola headlines the men's field.

The Ethiopian will be up against fellow countryman Mosinet Geremew, the seventh fastest man in history, and Kenya's Alexander Mutiso Munyao, who finished second at the 2023 Valencia Marathon.

Emile Cairess is the leading Briton in the men's field. He became the third-fastest Briton in history when he ran 2:08:07 at last year's London Marathon.

Marc Scott, bronze medallist over 3000m at 2022 World Indoor Championships, will make his marathon debut.

"People talk about having to travel a rocky road with lots of highs and lows but I feel like we've climbed mountains to ...
02/28/2024

"People talk about having to travel a rocky road with lots of highs and lows but I feel like we've climbed mountains to be where we are."

Lina Nielsen and twin sister Laviai have dreamt of representing their country together on the same relay team almost since they ran laps around the primary school playground.

It should have been so simple. Selected to make their senior British debuts together as part of Britain's 4x400m team for the 2017 European Indoor Championships, their hopes were dashed when Lina was forced to withdraw with a stress fracture in her foot.

It took another five years for them to be picked together again in the relay at the 2022 World Championships, only for Lina to suffer a severe relapse of the multiple sclerosis that afflicts both sisters but which they had kept secret to that point.

The Nielsens hope this weekend will prove third time lucky. Barring further misfortune of illness or injury, the sisters will be the leading lights in Britain's 4x400m team at Glasgow's World Indoor Championships.

A medal for the British quartet is a firm possibility. Finally, a twin ambition 27 years in the making could reach its culmination.

Josh Kerr and Laura Muir have been named in the Great Britain and Northern Ireland team for the World Athletics Indoor C...
02/19/2024

Josh Kerr and Laura Muir have been named in the Great Britain and Northern Ireland team for the World Athletics Indoor Championships in Glasgow.

Kerr, 26, and Muir, 30, will run in the 3,000m at the championships, which take place from 1 to 3 March.

Fellow Scot Jemma Reekie, 25, will race in the 800m having set a championship record at the UK Indoor Championships in Birmingham on Sunday.

New British champion Molly Caudery will compete in the pole vault.

The 23-year-old jumped a personal best, championship record and world lead of 4.85m in Birmingham on Saturday, a height that would have been good enough to secure silver at the Tokyo Olympic Games in 2021.

British sprinter Amber Anning says becoming an Olympian would be the "icing on the cake" after breaking a 25-year-old UK...
02/12/2024

British sprinter Amber Anning says becoming an Olympian would be the "icing on the cake" after breaking a 25-year-old UK indoor record.

By running a 200m time of 22.60 seconds in Fayetteville, Arkansas, last month, Anning eclipsed Katharine Merry's 22.83 mark, set in Birmingham in 1999.

Later the same day, she ran a personal best 50.56secs in her favoured 400m to achieve the Olympic qualification time.

"I was in utter astonishment," the 23-year-old told BBC Radio Sussex.

"I didn't expect to go out and produce those times. I was just shocked because we [Great Britain] have produced so many good athletes over the years.

"I was actually surprised that the record hadn't been broken [earlier]," she added.

Part of the surprise was because Anning didn't know that she had run a British record until she looked at social media afterwards.

In 1961, in a council flat in north London, a baby was crying.Day after day, night after night, those cries, though weak...
02/05/2024

In 1961, in a council flat in north London, a baby was crying.

Day after day, night after night, those cries, though weakening, did not stop.

Eventually, having seen nobody come or go from that flat, or heard any attempts to soothe the infant, a neighbour called the police. Inside, a three-month-old child was found alone; hungry, dirty, and desperately ill.

"I was abandoned, some would say left to die," says Fatima Whitbread.

You may know Whitbread as the javelin thrower - an Olympic medallist, world champion and former world record holder.

You may know her as the reality show contestant - the 'I'm A Celebrity, Get Me Out Of Here' camp-mate who got a cockroach stuck up her nose, or the 'SAS Who Dares Wins' recruit who powered through with cracked ribs.

On Tuesday, at Sports Personality of the Year 2023, she was honoured with the Helen Rollason Award for outstanding achievement in the face of adversity.

Because however you know Whitbread, her story is so much more.

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