logo
Teen star of Freddie Flintoff's BBC show Field of Dreams Umar Mahmood ‘lost control of his car' before fatal crash

Teen star of Freddie Flintoff's BBC show Field of Dreams Umar Mahmood ‘lost control of his car' before fatal crash

Scottish Sun11-07-2025
The teenager was driving at more than twice the speed limit before the tragic accident, an inquest has heard
'UTTER TRAGEDY' Teen star of Freddie Flintoff's BBC show Field of Dreams Umar Mahmood 'lost control of his car' before fatal crash
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
TEENAGER Umar Mahmood, who appeared on Freddie Flintoff's BBC show Field of Dreams, lost control of his car before fatally crashing, an inquest has heard.
The 18-year-old was driving an Audi A3 Sport when it left the road and collided with trees on Chain Caul Way in Preston, Lancashire, shortly before 11pm on September 10, 2024.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
4
Umar Mahmood (left) featured on Freddie Flintoff's show Field of Dreams in 2022
Credit: BBC
4
The 18-year-old (right) tragically lost his life after being involved in a high-speed crash which also lead to the death of a passenger, 16, in the same car
Credit: BBC
4
Flintoff's show aimed to inspire teenagers - who had never considered playing cricket - to get involved with the sport
Credit: PA
In addition to Umar losing his life, Adam Bodi, 16, was also fatally injured in the crash while the other passenger - aged 17 at the time - was seriously hurt.
Umar had featured on the former England cricketer's show about youth cricket, where the star sought to build a team of 11 teenagers from under-privileged parts of Lancashire.
An inquest into the deaths at Preston Coroner's Court was told that the car Umar was driving in had reached speeds of approximately 80mph while in a 30mph zone before it left the road.
The inquest heard that the vehicle hit the kerb four times before colliding with two trees and overturning on its side, leading to the tragic deaths of both teenagers.
Adam, who had been travelling in the backseat of the car and had not been wearing a seat belt, died in hospital on September 11 while Umar passed away the following day.
The 16-year-old's death came just weeks after getting his GCSE results.
Coroner Kate Bissett said the teenagers' deaths had been caused by "a terrible misjudgement" and were an "utter tragedy".
Umar's former school, Penwortham Priory Academy, described him as "bright, studious and well-loved".
The school said at the time of the tragedy: "We are again saddened as a school to hear the news that Umar Mahmood, who was in the same accident as Adam, and who left Priory 2 years ago, has also passed away.
"Umar was a bright, studious and well-loved member of our school community.
Freddie Flintoff coaching Umar Mahmood in the first series of the BBC documentary Freddie Flintoff's Field of Dreams
"He had a passion for Geography as well as his cricket, playing for Priory's school team and appearing in the BBC One documentary 'Freddie Flintoff's Field of Dreams'."
It added that it was a "privilege" for those at the school to have known Umar - a "young man who was always considerate to those around him and who showed ambition and kindness in all that he did."
Umar's dad also paid an emotional tribute to his son, telling MailOnline: "I am heartbroken. He was just a young lad. To lose my young son is terrible.
"I am very sad. His mother is doing OK but we are very sad."
Flintoff's show Field of Dreams saw the then 46-year-old return to his hometown of Preston on a mission to prove that anyone can play sport, regardless of their background.
Umar was one of a handful of teenagers given the opportunity to feature on the show, which aimed to inspire a new generation of kids to play cricket.
The show's second series came to an end last year, amid rumours this month of a third set of episodes on the way.
TRAGIC LOSS OF 'FANTASTIC YOUNG MAN'
Following the tragic deaths of the teens, tributes were also paid to Adam by the pair's school.
It described the 16-year-old as a "fantastic young man" who had a "fantastic sense of humour."
They said: "Adam was an amazing pupil, of whom we have nothing but fantastic memories.
"He was popular, bright, confident and had a fantastic sense of humour alongside being a first-class footballer, who had been part of our football team here at Priory for five years.
"We know that the rest of his year group will be equally upset at losing one of their own.
"Adam was a fantastic young man, and he, his family and friends are very much in our thoughts and prayers."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Middlesbrough teenager stabbed at skate park
Middlesbrough teenager stabbed at skate park

BBC News

time16 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Middlesbrough teenager stabbed at skate park

A 16-year-old boy is in hospital after being stabbed in a skate Police said the altercation happened at about 19:50 BST on Tuesday at Middlesbrough Sports Village on Marton teenager was taken to hospital, where he remains, for treatment for multiple stab injuries which are not believed to be life-threatening, the force said.A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on suspicion of causing grievous bodily harm with intent and remains in police custody. The force has asked anyone who witnessed the incident or anyone with footage from the skate park around that time to contact them. Follow BBC Tees on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.

The BBC has finally got something right in broadcasting unseen MasterChef
The BBC has finally got something right in broadcasting unseen MasterChef

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

The BBC has finally got something right in broadcasting unseen MasterChef

The BBC has made a right dog's dinner of the MasterChef saga, but its decision to broadcast the culinary contest's latest series after all is the right one. In the 'scrap it or screen it?' debate, screening it won out. It's the only wise move that the BBC has made during the whole sorry fiasco. A spiralling crisis in recent months has seen both the hit programme's judges-cum-presenters, Gregg Wallace and John Torode, exit through the studio kitchen's swing doors, following upheld complaints of inappropriate sexualised language and actions, and use of an offensive racial term respectively. Multiple victims came forward. Inquiries were launched. Self-pitying social media responses were posted. It seemed like every day, there was another twist in this tawdry tale. Throughout, the BBC has hardly covered itself in glory. It took far too long – years, in fact – to tackle Wallace's misconduct, so keen was it to keep the lucrative show on the road. It ignored duty of care concerns and brushed problems under the carpet, despite his unsavoury antics being an open secret. When scandal finally engulfed the franchise, executives prevaricated, panicked and hung Torode out to dry for what was – at least compared to the litany of charges against his co-host – a relatively minor misdemeanour. Now, though, the right conclusion has been reached. Despite controversy continuing to swirl around the disgraced duo, the BBC has announced that it will air the series filmed last autumn, before the allegations became public and the pair were sacked. This is only fair. Canning the entire run would have been an injustice. An over-correction which punished the wrong people. Many TV contests bill themselves as 'life-changing' but MasterChef genuinely is. Many of its amateur alumni go on to work in Michelin-starred kitchens, write recipe books or open their own restaurants. Winning the competition just about guarantees that gifted cooks can quit their day jobs and forge a new career in food. The latest cohort gave up months of their lives but have been left in limbo. It would have been a huge shame if their hard work had been squandered and their hopes dashed through no fault of their own. Beneath the slick editing and flashy trimmings, the show is about the contestants – watching their skills improve, their confidence blossom, their creativity come to the fore. The word 'journey' is flogged to within an inch of its life on such series but MasterChef traced that trajectory more than most. The show has always been bigger than its bellowing blokey figureheads who, it turns out, didn't even like each other very much. It's about the compellingly addictive, all-conquering format, which has been rolled out across 60 countries and watched by 300m viewers worldwide. Most of all, it's about the contestants. Not the ghastly greengrocer and the gaffe-prone Aussie but the talented amateurs whose stories viewers love to follow. Their series was completed and delivered to the BBC by production company Banijay months ago. It has been gathering dust on a shelf ever since, due to the bad behaviour of two individuals. At least it will soon see the light of day. The publicity alone of appearing on the show is priceless to those trying to succeed in the unforgiving hospitality business. Now that a launch date has been confirmed, Banijay ought to re-edit the 24-part series judiciously, to keep Torode and especially Wallace's contributions to a minimum. Any of the latter's clumsy attempts at 'banter' are now cast in a depressing new light and should be consigned to the cutting-room floor. It will be instructive to see if any disclaimers or trigger warnings are aired at the beginning and end of each episode. News of the long-awaited decision has also given the BBC and Banijay some breathing space until autumn. Producers now need to get busy. They must smartly set about the task of wiping the slate clean, recruiting new judges and giving the programme a reset. In the meantime, viewers should pop a TV dinner on Wednesday 6 August in their diaries. Six months after it was originally due to air, MasterChef will return to BBC One and iPlayer. It promises to hold a sort of grim fascination. At least for the contestants, their moment in the spotlight will come at last.

Evin prison: Iran's detainees in 'unbearable' conditions after Israeli strikes
Evin prison: Iran's detainees in 'unbearable' conditions after Israeli strikes

BBC News

time18 hours ago

  • BBC News

Evin prison: Iran's detainees in 'unbearable' conditions after Israeli strikes

One month on from deadly Israeli air strikes on a notorious Iranian prison during the war between the two countries, inmates say they are being kept under unbearable and inhumane conditions after being moved to other promises by the authorities, some of those transferred from Evin Prison in Tehran say they continue to face difficulties such as overcrowded cells, lack of beds and air conditioning, limited number of toilets and showers, and insect BBC has received accounts from the family members of prisoners moved from Evin, who agreed to speak on condition of anonymity out of concern for the safety of themselves and the targeted Evin on 23 June. According to the Iranian authorities, the attack killed 80 people, including five prisoners, 41 prison staff and 13 military conscripts. The prison held thousands of men and women, including prominent political dissidents, human rights defenders, journalists and dual and foreign nationals, as well as members of religious and ethnic minorities. All inmates were subsequently moved out and sent to other prisons following the videos and satellite imagery confirm damage to several buildings within the complex, including the medical clinic, the visitor centre, the prosecutor's office and an administrative the attack, the Israeli military described the prison as "a symbol of oppression for the Iranian people". It said it carried out the strikes in a "precise manner to mitigate harm to civilians" imprisoned has labelled the attack a "war crime". Israel's military also said that Evin was used for "intelligence operations against Israel, including counter-espionage". It did not comment further when asked to provide evidence for the International said on Tuesday that, following an in-depth investigation, the attack constituted "a serious violation of international humanitarian law and must be criminally investigated as war crimes"."Under international humanitarian law, a prison or place of detention is presumed a civilian object and there is no credible evidence in this case that Evin prison constituted a lawful military objective," it added. Through his family members, one political prisoner who was sent to the Greater Tehran Central Penitentiary, also known as Fashafouyeh Prison, said that fellow inmates told him conditions there were inhumane even before Evin detainees were said that the prison was in such a remote and dangerous area outside the capital that his wife had not been able to visit him since he moved to Evin, which is in an accessible, residential area in north Tehran, Fashafouyeh is located 20 miles (32km) south of Tehran, in a desert with nothing around it but a road, according to the family prisoner told his family that many inmates were still sleeping on the floor at Fashafouyeh in overcrowded cells without air conditioning, although the authorities have said repeatedly that they will improve the situation.A video from inside the prison, which has been verified by the BBC, shows a cell crowded with prisoners lying on beds and on the floor. At one point, a group affiliated with the authorities came to the prison to film a video intended to show that prisoners were doing well, but other inmates began chanting "death to the dictator" - a popular protest slogan among Iranian opposition groups directed at the Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei - and stopped them from filming, the family of the prisoner of inmates in Fashafouyeh said that political prisoners were now staying in the same cell as those accused or convicted of violent crimes. This is a tactic that rights groups say Iran uses to intimidate political prisoners and is against the United Nations' rules on the treatment of political detainee transferred to Fashafouyeh described his cell to his family as being unbearable due to lack of hygiene, with bedbugs and cockroaches all around, adding that the prison lacks basic amenities even compared to Evin. Human Rights Watch has previously accused the Iranian authorities of using threats of torture and indefinite imprisonment, along with lengthy interrogations and the denial of medical care for detainees. Iran has rejected these Evin has long drawn condemnation from human rights groups over alleged torture and threats, conditions at Fashafouyeh had been "underreported", prisoners told the Iranian journalist Mehdi Mahmoodian, who was also transferred from Evin to Fashafouyeh, said in a letter published on his Instagram page that due to the non-political nature of prisoners who were held there, they had been "long forgotten" and subjected to "years of humiliation, neglect, and oppression" because "they have no voice". Fariba Kamalabadi, a 62-year-old Baha'i detainee who was transferred from Evin to Qarchak Prison, south of the capital, has said that she "would rather have died in the attack than be transferred to such a prison".Iran's minority Baha'i community has long faced systematic discrimination and persecution, denied constitutional recognition and basic rights like education, public employment and religious freedom, because the Islamic Republic does not recognise it as a religion."Fariba has to live in Qarchak in an overcrowded cell, where it is so cramped that people have to take turns to eat food around the table, and then return to their beds afterwards because of the lack of space", said her daughter, Alhan Taefi, who lives in the UK. "Some of the roughly 60 prisoners who have been transferred from Evin with her are elderly women, and they do not receive proper medical care. There are flies everywhere in the cell. Her son-in-law and grandchildren, who are six and nine, were allowed to visit her in Evin but have not been granted permission to visit her yet, as they are not considered immediate family."The BBC has contacted the Iranian embassy in London for comment on the conditions of prisoners who have been transferred from Evin. Civilian deaths In the month since the strikes, the BBC has verified the deaths of seven civilians related to the attack on Evin, including a five-year-old boy, a doctor, and a members of Mehrangiz Imenpour, 61, a painter and mother of two who lived near the prison complex, told the BBC that she was "caught in the tragedy" of the attack. She left home to use a cash machine and happened to be walking on a street adjacent to the prison's visitor centre as Israel struck the complex, a family member said. She was killed by the impact of the children are devastated, a relative recounted to the BBC."When two states engage in a conflict, people are the ones who pay the price. Both states are guilty, both are responsible, and both must be held to account", the relative said. Additional reporting by Shayan Sardarizadeh, BBC Verify

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store