School staff to take on Ironman triathlon challenge for Comic Relief 2025
A team of staff members from Brampton's William Howard School will work together to swim 2.4 miles, cycle 112 miles, and run 26.2 miles for Comic Relief on Saturday, March 22.
On Friday, March 21, Red Nose Day 2025, students at the secondary school will also take part in their own fundraising activities.
The secondary school's triathlon challenge will be led by headteacher Kath Pigdon, who will lead the overall event and the cycling portion; site assistant Ian Spriggs, who will be coordinating the runners; and year 10 director of learning and English teacher Sarah Ledger, who will lead the swimming.
A William Howard School staff member who will be taking part in the challenge. (Image: William Howard School) Ahead of their mammoth challenge, the school has set up a JustGiving page and is aiming to raise £500 for Comic Relief as part of Red Nose Day 2025.
Ahead of the challenge, Kath Pigdon was on hand to express her excitement at taking part in the fundraising triathlon.
She said: "I am excited to take part in a 112-mile bike ride for Comic Relief as part of our school staff iron man challenge team.
"This challenge is not only an opportunity to support those in need, but it's about coming together with colleagues, building team spirit, and showing our students the power of resilience and teamwork.
"Every mile we ride brings us closer to making a difference, and I'm proud to be part of this effort."
Ian Spriggs, a regular marathon and ultra marathon runner, added: "As a regular marathon and ultra runner, I was more than pleased to take on this challenge. Even more pleased that lots of staff will be joining me on the run.
Another William Howard School staff member who will be taking part in the challenge. (Image: William Howard School) "We will have a range of abilities on the day with staff members running various distances.
"We hope the day and the run will be lots of fun while raising funds for a great cause."
"Over the last few years, I've really enjoyed wild swimming with colleagues," Sarah Ledger said.
"Although we are not able to swim outdoors on this occasion, it will be great to get a team of swimmers together for such a worthy cause.
"Swimming is a great exercise, particularly if cycling and running is challenging – it takes stress off joints but provides a great cardio workout.
"This Ironman Challenge allows the biggest number of staff to work to their strengths."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NBC Sports
28 minutes ago
- NBC Sports
2025 Women's EURO Final player ratings: Who delivered in England vs Spain?
A thrilling 120 minutes led to the tension of penalties at a major final, where Spain and England mixed it up for the 2025 Women's EURO crown. MORE — England vs Spain recap, as it happened Who were the stars from this affair? Read on... England player ratings vs Spain at Women's EURO Final Hannah Hampton: 8.5 — Four saves and 11 recoveries. Had no hope on the goal and was brilliant in penalty kicks. Alex Greenwood: 6 — Good going forward although her long passes were more hopeful than not on several occasions. Jessica Carter: 7 — Decent with the ball as England's left side was under duress all day. Leah Williamson: 7.5 — Nearly perfect on the ball while racking up near 20 defensive actions. Certainly the top English defender on the day. Lucy Bronze (Off 106'): 6.5 — She was fantastic in implementing Wiegman's physical tactics, but she loses a point for allowing Caldentey to waltz onto a header for Spain's first goal. Keira Walsh: 6.5 — England lost the midfield battle but both Walsh and Stanway were resolute throughout. Georgia Stanway (Off 115'): 6.5 — See Walsh's description above. Stanway and Walsh were a combined 11-of-24 in the duel. Guijarro was 12-of-16. Ella Toone (On 87'): 6 — The Man United midfielder created a chance but was otherwise quiet. Lauren Hemp: 6 — Had a huge chance go missing. Put herself into the battles but second-best on a lot of them. Lauren James (Off 41'): 6 — Quiet day with a couple of good defensive interventions before an injury called time on her final. Alessia Russo (Off 71'): 7 — Largely starved of the ball but quite efficient; Her airborne header between two starring defenders was so well-spun home. Subs Chloe Kelly (On 41'): 7 — Two created chances and two shots to go along with the assist. One-dimensional on the day as Spain controlled what was behind her. Michelle Agyemang (On 71'): 6.5 — At the center of the physical fight, with a combined five fouls committed and suffered over her 50(ish) minutes. Beth Mead (On 87'): N/A Niamh Charles (On 106'): N/A — One terrific intervention in her short shift almost gives her a huge rating. Grace Clinton (On 115'): N/A ENGLAND HAS LEVELED IT!! 😱🏴 Alessia Russo scores the equalizer for the Lionesses! 💪 Spain player ratings vs England at Women's EURO Final Catalina Coll: 7.5 — No one with human arms was going to get to Russo's header, and the in-tight save on Hemp early kept things scoreless. Solid in penalties Olga Carmona (Off 106'): 7 — As quiet a day as possible while racking up triple-digit touches. Nothing bad. Laia Aleixandri: 7 — Both Aleixandri and Paredes were Player of the Match caliber aside from the England equalizer when Russo found her way between them for her header. It was a brilliant header of a terrific cross, to be fair. Irene Paredes: 7 — See Aleixandri. Ona Batile: 8 — Fantastic. Assisted the goal and won almost every duel. Yes she was the closest to Kelly's cross on England's equalizer but she also could've easily had the match-winning assist at the end of the first extra time period. Alexia Putellas (Off 71'): 7 — Solid if unspectacular from the 31-year-old living legend. Aitana Bonmati: 7 — Three created chances, four shot attempts, and a half-dozen or so notable defensive moments. Patricia Guijarro: 8 — Unsure if she lost a 50/50. Athenea del Castillo (Off 89'): 7 — She cued up Batile's run/assist on Spain's goal, and at the time of her substitution her 19 touches in the opposing box were 14 higher than the second-most player. Mariona Caldentey: 7.5 — The goal was great and she could've had 2-3 by the time this was settled in Switzerland. Esther Gonzalez (Off 89'): 5 — Bottled up, the forward managed just 20 touches in 89 minutes. Subs Claudia Pina (On 71'): 7 — Helped Spain's left side become just as dangerous as its right. Vicky Lopez (On 89'): 6.5 — Got into so many dangerous positions but missed all of her chances. Salma Paralluelo (On 89'): 6 — Couldn't bury a winner inside the six during stoppage time in the first period of extra time. Leila Ouahabi (On 106'): N/A


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Lottie Woad, a former Florida State star, wins the Women's Scottish Open in her pro debut
IRVINE, Scotland (AP) — Lottie Woad tapped in one final birdie, plucked the ball out of the cup and gave a simple wave to the crowd as if she had done this before. The English star made it look easy Sunday when she won the Women's Scottish Open in her professional debut. Woad never flinched when Hyo Joo Kim made a charge on a windy day at Dundonald Links, closing with a 4-under 68 for a three-shot victory. Woad is the second player in three years to win on the LPGA Tour in her pro debut, following Rose Zhang in the Mizuho Americas Open at Liberty National in 2023. Woad finished at 21-year 267 and earned $300,000. 'I think it's quite hard to do that, but very special to win in my first event,' Woad said. 'Everyone was chasing me today, and managed to maintain the lead and played really nicely down the stretch and hit a lot of good shots.' Kim had opened with four birdies in seven holes, and when the South Korean added birdies on the 11th and 12th, she shared the lead with Woad. Woad was unflappable, making birdie on the 13th and 14th holes to regain control and dropping only one shot late in her round. She finished with a three-quarter wedge over a winding burn to 2 feet for birdie and a reserved celebration. Her victory is certain to get everyone's attention in women's golf. Woad was the No. 1 amateur in the women's ranking when she won the Women's Irish Open on the Ladies European Tour three weeks ago. Then, she finished one shot out of a playoff in the Evian Championship in France, an LPGA major. That gave her enough points for an LPGA card, so the 21-year-old decided to forgo her final year at Florida State and turn pro. Now she has an LPGA title — the Women's Scottish Open is co-sanctioned with the LET — as she heads south for Royal Porthcawl in Wales for the final major of the year in the Women's British Open. Nelly Korda, who played the opening three rounds with Woad, ran off four straight birdies on the front nine until missing some putts that stalled her momentum. She shot 71 and finished eight shots behind, leaving the American winless this year after a seven-win season in 2024. Julia Lopez Ramirez closed with a 65 and tied for third with Sei Young Kim (73), earning the Spaniard one of three spots available in the Women's British Open next week. The other spots went to Paula Reto of South Africa and Mary Liu of China. Woad first made a name for herself when she won the Augusta National Women's Amateur last year with birdies on three of the last four holes. She said that was more pressure than she felt in her pro debut. 'I think Augusta, that was the biggest tournament I played in at the time and was kind of my big win,' Woad said. 'So definitely felt the pressure of it more there, and I felt like all those experiences helped me with this.' The only difference this week was getting paid for it. Along with winning the Women's Irish Open, Woad tied for 31st in the U.S. Women's Open this year and tied for 10th in the Women's British Open at St. Andrews last summer. She heads to Wales hopeful of keeping the momentum. 'It's been pretty good, yeah. I don't really know how to describe it,' Woad said. 'Just been shooting low scores, which is always nice.' ___


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Euro 2025: Spain leads England 1-0 at halftime in the final on Mariona Caldentey's header
BASEL, Switzerland (AP) — Spain leads England 1-0 at halftime in the Women's European Championship final on Sunday after scoring a very English-style goal. Mariona Caldentey's header in the 25th minute was fair reward for Spain's precise passing patterns around the tightly packed England penalty area. It was the fourth time in England's six games at this tournament that the defending champion trailed to the first goal before halftime. The English flavor to the opening goal was in a full back's cross from the byline finding the head of an Arsenal player to score as Ona Battle sent an accurate cross from the byline to Caldentey. Caldentey had gone close with a shot just minutes before scoring and tournament top scorer Esther González also had three scoring chances. Still, England had a clear chance to lead in the 19th. Spain goalkeeper Cata Coll saved well from Lauren Hemp's low shot after her own reckless pass in the penalty area gifted the ball to the England winger. There was royalty from both nations in the VIP box watching the game. Prince William, who is the first in line to the British throne, was with his daughter Princess Charlotte. He is president of the English Football Association. __