
The Alfriston hotel review: a reimagined South Downs spa stay
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Score 8/10No expense has been spared on the arts and crafts-style decor in the bedrooms: sofas are upholstered in Colefax and Fowler fabrics, puffy headboards have dramatic elephant prints from GP & J Baker and the carpets are so boingy they're almost trampoline-like. Ground-floor rooms — nearest the restaurant and bar and in the newer part of the building — are mostly standard doubles in the Classic category, although even these come with robes, the Signet Collection's own smellies made by Bramley and a bottle of madeira for a nightcap.
Rooms in the older section vary in size and configuration but offer leaded glass windows and original beams, with the top suites featuring freestanding tubs in the bedroom area, in addition to large rain showers in the bathroom. Family rooms have bunk beds with books and a cuddly lion for little ones. There's room service, but help-yourself pantries stocked with sweets and crisps on each floor will stave off any midnight munchies.
Score 8/10Dinner in the 1554 Brasserie has a slight bias towards seafood, whether it's starters of potted smoked trout, Fowey mussels or daily specials such as a sharing plate of seabass with fennel and salsa verde. But meat fans won't be disappointed with perfectly pink rib-eye steaks, melty slow-cooked lamb and a duck cottage pie topped with heaps of mash. Desserts are imaginative; our favourite was a colossal take on a Ferrero Rocher, with a squidgy chocolate mousse covered in an almond crust.
The wine list is a carefully selected roster of affordable Italian, French and Spanish numbers, plus fine wines available by the glass (from £16) and a special selection of pinot noir and bordeaux.
Breakfast is in the Orangery, with its walls featuring a gorgeous hand-painted woodland design by Florence Sherwood. There is a buffet with serve-yourself teas and coffees and a decent enough selection of components for you to build a full English.
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The 10m heated outdoor pool is popular with families, while inside is a spa with a sauna, relaxation area facing the gardens and three treatment rooms. A new addition since the refurb, the wellness centre has attracted experienced therapists performing bespoke massages and facials from the British beauty brand Gaia. Elsewhere there's a Mucky Boots Welly Wall, where guests can borrow footwear for South Downs yomps. Kayaking on the Cuckmere River and electric bike hire are other ways to explore the local countryside.
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Score 8/10With wonky, half-timbered pubs, elegant tea rooms and a bookshop called Much Ado, Alfriston — inland between Newhaven and Eastbourne — is a cartoonishly quintessential English village. The Alfriston is right on the South Downs Way (you can watch rucksack-clad walkers from the restaurant) so shorter walks to Cuckmere Haven (a nine-mile round trip) through Friston Forest and Westdean are easily done in a day — that's if the Rathfinny Wine Estate's tasting rooms, a 30-minute walk away, don't lure you first (rathfinnyestate.com).
B&B doubles from £150 Restaurant mains from £20Accessible YFamily-friendly YDog-friendly Y
Laura Jackson was was a guest of the Alfriston (thealfriston.com)
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The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Sarina Wiegman takes relaxed approach with Lionesses ready to launch Euro defence
'My approach is the same – I just worry a little bit less,' says a relaxed Sarina Wiegman in a crowded meeting room at England's hillside hotel in Zurich. With their European Championship Group D opener against France approaching on Saturday evening why shouldn't the Lionesses head coach be calm? Wiegman has, after all, reached four major tournament finals in a row. However, she does acknowledge that she has changed since taking over England four years ago, and there are far fewer rules in camp almost three years on from guiding the Lionesses to their first major trophy at Euro 2022: 'My values won't change but I have to adapt to new situations and figure out: 'OK, what's best for the team now?' 'When I came in [2021], everyone was wearing jewellery and watches and I said: 'No, we can't wear jewellery. We measure everything and I want you to take off your earrings and things like that', so they did. [But] I actually hate rules. We are here to perform and be at our best, and if you use your common sense then you make the right decisions. We want to set standards, but I think coaching is also about giving players responsibility – help players make their own decisions.' For that reason, she does not enforce a seating plan for mealtimes, nor ask her players to rotate who they spend time with: 'I don't do that. When I was a school teacher I would do those things, but now it's so intense, the players travel so much, playing at the highest level, they need to find some space away where they can just sit with who they want to. That headspace and relaxation, that's good for the team.' Wiegman also allows her players to have free choice in their use of social media, although many of her squad have decided to avoid it amid a rise in online abuse. 'Yes, there is a concern,' Wiegman says. 'Of course players, especially this generation, want to share what they're doing, but you can't control how the outside world responds. [The FA communication officers] have really been supportive to the team and the individuals about that. With the team we make principles of how to use social media [but] I would never say: 'You're not allowed to use social media', because that's not how I work. 'I stay a lot out of the media and the socials. So I don't [read] everything that comes. Everyone will have a different opinion and that's OK too. I know what we're working on. I know what the team is about. I work with them every single day, so I know what's really going on in our bubble.' A constant of Wiegman's tenure has been to maintain her players' privacy within the camp. That was never more apparent than earlier this summer with Mary Earps and Fran Kirby's sudden international retirements and Millie Bright's withdrawal from Euros contention. Wiegman declined to share details of their private conversations. During that camp, Wiegman's approach to her players was described as direct, even blunt at times, but she says: 'What I try to do is give them as much information as possible. 'The players call that direct, but do not confuse that with being blunt. I am not blunt – well, I hope not. I am trying to be honest and clear about things to give them context. I am actually very caring and that's often not very helpful in this job. I want to take care of people but I have a job where I have to make hard decisions. 'I think I learned a little bit here with England, too. Sometimes in England we can be a little bit [Wiegman gestures to illustrate skirting around a difficult subject]. Yes, you do! So sometimes I'm like: 'OK, is this really the message? Or do I have to interpret this a little bit differently? Do I need to read more between the lines?'' The former Netherlands coach has also found many things to love about England, from Sunday roasts to the nation's obsession with football, and even curry: 'I actually like the Indian food, the chicken [tikka] masala is pretty good, too. But that's not typical English, is it? But I really like it. It's in the English culture. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion 'I really like the culture [in England]. It's such a massive sport culture in England. And in the Netherlands it's also a sport culture, but here, at every corner, the whole day on TV, for example, there's sports, either football or rugby or cricket. And if that's not there, then there's something else, but there's always sports and football is so in society.' The feeling from her bosses in England is clearly mutual, with the FA's chief executive, Mark Bullingham, saying only last week that he could see 'no scenario' where he would not want Wiegman to stay in charge, regardless of how the Lionesses perform at this tournament. She is under contract until 2027's World Cup. Would she like to stay even longer? 'I'm now really focusing on this tournament,' she replies. 'I don't want to look any further. [than her contract length]. You never know what happens in life. Things can change quickly and in your personal life, too. So I just feel that I just love to work with this team. I love to work in England with the FA and I hope that stays for a little bit longer.'


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Sarina Wiegman: ‘My England players can say I'm direct but I am not blunt'
Four years into the England job, and on the eve of her third major tournament in charge of the Lionesses, Sarina Wiegman reflects on how her role has changed, and how it has changed her. "My approach is the same. I just worry a little bit less,' Wiegman says, appearing relaxed and in a typically open and honest mood at England's Euro 2025 base camp at the five-star Dolder Grand hotel, perched like a medieval castle above Lake Zurich in Switzerland. There is some laughter as Wiegman explains how Sunday roasts and chicken tikka masala have become two of her favourites since being appointed England manager in 2021, while the 55-year-old has also enjoyed embracing the appetite for sport in England. 'It's such a massive sport culture,' she says, 'and in the Netherlands, but here, at every corner, the whole day on TV, for example, there's sports. There's either football or there's rugby or there's cricket. And if that's not there, then there's something else.' And, thanks to Wiegman, the Lionesses now form one of the biggest parts of the sporting summer. A result of England's historic victory at Euro 2022 and run to the 2023 World Cup final is that the attention on the Lionesses before Euro 2025 and their opening game against France on Saturday has never been greater. The news of two senior players – in Mary Earps and Millie Bright – withdrawing from the England squad before a major tournament may not have been headline news even four years ago. But the success of Wiegman's team means there is more publicity, and, for the first time as England coach, more questions when there is some disruption behind the scenes. Wiegman, for her part, welcomes it. 'It [the publicity] has increased, and actually that's great because that's what we wanted,' she says. 'Everyone will have a different opinion and that's OK too. I know what we're working on. I know what the team is about.' Of the 16 coaches at Euro 2025, Wiegman has by far the best record at major tournaments, winning the last two European Championships with the Netherlands and England and reaching the final at the last two World Cups. An important, and potentially contentious, part of Wiegman's preparations is giving every player in her squad a clear sense of their role. Those can be difficult conversations when a player is being told that they may be starting on the bench, or are unlikely to play at all, and there have been some signs of disharmony because of it. For Wiegman, it is the hardest part of being a coach, but it is also her job. She would much rather tell players exactly how it is. 'On being direct, when I have conversations with players, I think it's really important to have clarity,' Wiegman says. 'What I try to do is give them as much information as possible. The players call that direct but do not confuse that with being blunt. I am not blunt. Well, I hope not. I am trying to be honest and clear about things to give them context.' It is an advantage of being Dutch, perhaps, leaving nothing to interpretation. Working in England, Wiegman has noticed that people can often talk around issues, rather than saying how they really feel. 'Sometimes I'm like, OK, is this really the message, or do I have to interpret this a little bit differently? Sometimes I need to ask questions again and think, OK, is this really the way it is, or do I need to read more between the lines? I think that's also a little bit Dutch. And I think that's also the part of the Netherlands I come from, they're being mentioned as blunt.' As a former player herself, and as a mother, Wiegman's directness goes against some of her natural instincts. She admits she often has to resist giving players an arm around the shoulder and showing the nurturing side. 'I am actually very caring, and that's often not very helpful in this job. I want to take care of people, but I have a job where I have to make hard decisions,' says Wiegman. 'I'm trying to not put myself in their shoes and think 'oh, they must feel horrible' because I have to shut that out for that moment.' While Wiegman wants to go into tournaments with a plan, she has also tried to shape England into a more unpredictable team. The Lionesses won the Euros in 2022 by naming the same starting line-up for all six games, but most major tournaments are defined by how teams respond to unforeseen challenges, which was how England reached the Women's World Cup final amid injuries and suspensions in 2023. The growth of the sport over the last four years means Wiegman must also be open to new ideas. 'On and off the pitch the game has changed so much that I have to adapt too,' she says. 'People sometimes say I don't change. I think my values won't change but I have to adapt to new situations and figure out, OK, what's best for the team now to help them to be at their best as a team and as individuals too.' Lucy Bronze, England's most experienced player, said before the Euros that Wiegman has 'evolved' since taking charge of the Lionesses. 'I think her flexibility as a manager has definitely changed,' Bronze said. 'She came in with a few more rules set in place, she was the manager and the boss and we all respected Sarina for that reason. Over the years, her getting to know the team and the dynamics of each player, gaining trust with players, you can see how she's changed a little bit.' Wiegman laughs out loud as some of Bronze's comments are ready back to her. 'I don't see that's a negative, it's just funny that we talk about rules because I hate rules,' Wiegman chuckles. Wiegman remembers a point, upon taking the England job, where she banned her players from wearing any items of jewellery that would monitor their physical activity. With her principles now in place, Wiegman does not feel the need to be as enforcing. 'I think it just becomes more natural,' she says. 'You have set the tone at the beginning, how you want things. And then you hope that things become organic.' She compares managing a group of 23 players while being away at a major tournament to situations at home. "I always try to compare it with your family,' Wiegman says. 'In your family, you sometimes have a conflict or a discussion, that's completely normal. I think you need to have those discussions and share what you feel. We all know that we want to go forward to the highest level. We also know we need each other, so have the conversation and move on.' Wiegman goes into Euro 2025 knowing her future is already secured, with FA chief executive Mark Bullingham giving Wiegman his full backing to stay on for the 2027 World Cup even if England crash out of a difficult group. While not wanting to shift focus with the Euros and look beyond her current contract, Wiegman believes she is also in the right place. 'I feel that I just love to work with this team. I love to work in England with the FA and I hope that stays for a little bit longer.'


The Sun
2 hours ago
- The Sun
Universal's UK theme park plans have dropped – here's what you can expect including nightclubs and film studios
PLANS have been dropped for the new Universal theme park coming to Bedfordshire. The attraction will be divided into four main land areas known as the Core Zone, Lake Zone, West Gateway Zone and the East Gateway Zone. 5 Within these zones will be the theme park; retail and entertainment destinations; visitor accommodation including hotels, camping and caravanning; sport, recreation, leisure and spa facilities and conference and convention spaces. The plans state: "[Guests will ]experience blockbuster attractions, adrenaline-pumping coasters, and mind-blowing spectaculars. "They'll come face-to-face with incredible creatures, heroes, and villains. "They'll discover great food, new laughs, new ways to play, and step into immersive worlds they've only ever dreamed of." The application also expresses that in the first year, 8.5million visitors are expected to the Core Zone. Then, in future years, 12.5million visitors are expected annually. The split between domestic and international visitors is expected to be 70 per cent and 30 per cent respectively in the first year. Then 52 per cent and 48 per cent respectively in future years. The attraction is also due to be open each day between 9am and 9pm, with visitors starting to arrive at 7am and depart up until 10pm. Hotel arrivals would take place later, at 3pm, to coincide with check-in times. The Universal UK theme park is expected to open in 2031. Rides, experiences and attractions Many parts of the application reference what will be included in the theme park. This includes indoor and outdoor rides, attractions, games and pools. There is also set to be events spaces for parades, shows and displays. Entertainment venues are set to include theatres and cinemas and sport, recreation, leisure and spa facilities are also planned. Other entertainment venues suggested are music and dance venues, nightclubs and even tattoo parlours. Planned indoor and outdoor cultural spaces include exhibition spaces, art galleries and museums. Under the accessibility section, the proposal also includes ride examples such as a Men in Black experience, One Fish Two Fish fairground ride and a Jurassic Park water-based ride. 5 Interestingly, the document also reveals that the site could have media and film production facilities, stating: "For instance a building may be used as a sound stage, film studio, event space or hosting a Universal Destinations & Experiences show or even a mixture of these uses." The application goes on to explain how the use of some buildings at the site may vary seasonally, "for instance during events such as Halloween Horror Nights". There will also be a maximum height of anything in the theme park of 115metres. Core Zone The Core Zone will be the central part of the attraction and is set "to contain the theme park, amusement park and/or water park". The plans also show that it could have an entry plaza, car and coach parking, a 500-room hotel, valet parking service and a transport hub. Lake Zone The Lake Zone will be the northernmost part of the attraction. In this zone, the proposed plans include business hotels with 2000 rooms, further hotels and accommodation with 3370 bedrooms and entertainment complex support. This zone is also set to include the Convention Centre, which will span across 55,000square-metres. 5 Any shops in this zone will have a maximum size of 1,100square-metres. In addition, this zone would have a new wetland habitat. East Gateway Zone The East Gateway Zone will be located in the eastern area of the Bedfordshire site, located near the village of Wixams. The East Gateway Zone would also adjoin the planned site of the new Wixams Rail Station. West Gateway Zone The westernmost area of the site will feature the West Gateway Zone. This zone is set to include a petrol station with 16 pumps, restaurants up to 5,866square-metres, a 200-bedroom hotel and entertainment resort complex support. Any shops in this zone will have a maximum size of 1,100square-metres. Accessibility and inclusion Universal is also committed to "creating a theme park experience that's inclusive and accessible to everyone, ensuring that all our guests can embark on unforgettable journeys regardless of their abilities". For the UK park this means that there will be wide and smooth pathways for wheelchairs, ramps and lifts, accessible toilets in each toilet block and accessible hotel accommodation. Rides would each have one row or seat that can accommodate wheelchair users or visitors with walking impairments. Assistive technology would also be available throughout the park such as captioning, audio description, tactile maps and a phone app. Transport The overall site also plans to include a new junction on the A421, an expanded railway station on the Thameslink/Midland Main Line at Wixams, improvements to roads and potential land for a new railway station on the proposed EWR Bletchley to Bedford line (if this were to happen in the future). The vision includes a four-platform, four-track station at Wixams with a new station building. The application also reveals that the Core Zone could have a transport hub, where a "rail-related development may be provided". Pedestrian and cycle routes are set to be added to the park too. In the mean time The Sun's Sophie Swietochowski spent three days at Universal's huge new £7bn theme park and has shared all the things worth doing… and the bits to skip. 5